The other characters accept the bitter truth, Rorschach doesn't.
If you recall he shared his diary with the newspaper, info that will destroy the peace millions died for cos he can't let his convictions go, meaning possible annihilation for the world at the end of the story
"We should accept lies that kill millions of people and you're the bad guy for pointing it out" is a strikingly honest confession from this necromorph and exactly why they and their boosters are not acceptable in society.
Did Moore intend to portray the leaking of the journal as a villainous act? I know Rorshach was supposed to be a cautionary tale, everyone does. But did he actually think he was portraying his actions in the conclusion as evil?
Did Moore intend to portray the leaking of the journal as a villainous act?
That's up for the readers to decide, but that retard misses the point. Ozzy's plan is ultimately set to fail. As Manhattan pointed out to him: "nothing ever ends". The diary is presented as that element of inevitability.
What Moore was trying to say tho, is that a couple of men with power shouldn't decide the fate of innocent people. Not with a nuclear war nor by effectively nuking a city to prevent said war. If anything, Rorschach is presented as the escapegoat here, wich is really funny when you consider the metatext sorrounding the book...
They will not understand morals or principles or integrity as they keep seething about certain character. https://twitter.com/KaskaJessica/status/1746335962647466229
"We should accept lies that kill millions of people and you're the bad guy for pointing it out" is a strikingly honest confession from this necromorph and exactly why they and their boosters are not acceptable in society.
Did Moore intend to portray the leaking of the journal as a villainous act? I know Rorshach was supposed to be a cautionary tale, everyone does. But did he actually think he was portraying his actions in the conclusion as evil?
That's up for the readers to decide, but that retard misses the point. Ozzy's plan is ultimately set to fail. As Manhattan pointed out to him: "nothing ever ends". The diary is presented as that element of inevitability.
What Moore was trying to say tho, is that a couple of men with power shouldn't decide the fate of innocent people. Not with a nuclear war nor by effectively nuking a city to prevent said war. If anything, Rorschach is presented as the escapegoat here, wich is really funny when you consider the metatext sorrounding the book...
Couple men who are right leaning shouldn't decide the fate of innocent people