That's part of the drama and morality of the stories. Batman doesn't kill, he doesn't kill be cause he was created by the death of his parents. To him, what he strives for every day is a place were people don't get killed.Da Orky Man said:Fair enough. I suppose I never really got into a particular comic series, so I never got to the point where I could notice such arcing plots.
However, and I forgot to put this in my post, I do have more of a thing about a lot of superheroes having relatively little brain matter.
For example, Batman doesn't carry a gun, correct? Well, if he did and killed the Joker in 'self-defence' then he would potentially save hundreds of lives which would otherwise be lost. Someone who doesn't do that is kinda a dick.
And I remember one scene somewhere, may or may not be canon, where Superman crushes coal into diamonds. If he can do that, why not go a step further and create uranium from a few other elements? He could solve the energy crisis, yet doesn't.
Yes, killing the Joker is quick and expedient. The storyline called Hush even had him considering to just snap the Joker's neck and be done with it. But the moral dilemma, the morality of Batman's story is that when he kills Joker, he becomes no better than Joker and thus no longer has the moral high-ground to do what he does. Commissioner Gordon even tries to stop him, even after the Joker tried to kill him, crippled his daughter (Batgirl/Oracle) and DID kill his wife. It's then Batman truly realizes he's not above morality, even if the Joker ignores it.
Superman probably could solve all our problems for us in a week. But that doesn't do anything for humanity as a whole. In the story No Man's Land. Gotham is destroyed and declared a No Man's Land by the Federal Government, if you stay there... you're not in the US, expect no help. Superman shows up to help Batman. Fixes a power plant with the help of it's former head engineer and defeats Mr. Freeze. When he goes back to the engineer he's collecting tribute in exchange for giving people electricity. He realizes its something we have to fix, not have fixed for us.
Goes back to the idea of superhero stories as morality places and tragedies. Yeah a lot of it could be solved by killing villains, solving our problems for us and just lording over us as the best people on the planet. But they don't because they represent the best of us, even the alien Superman (who was raised by human parents.) They are the ones who remind us that we can be better than the crap we perpetuate. That's what makes them admirable heroes.