Billionaire Bruce Wayne revealed some shady dealings to keep funding from his second job as Gotham’s caped crusader.
The best part about Bruce Wayne, not Batman, focuses on his normal human side and not so much on his extraordinary double life which is why I want to highlight perhaps the best look at the character Bruce Wayne in all of the comic stories. The Batman has apart hundreds of thousands of stories. With 80 years of stories across thousands of comics, keeping track of everything that makes Batman so special can be tough. Add in all the retcons and reboots, and you’re looking at a lot of forgotten or overwritten history of one of literature’s most beloved.
Batman took out all his energy to fight with the villains each huge and small. Slipping each night time out of his huge mansion along with his most lately acquired youngster soldier at his aspect, Batman places his tactical gear and globally-acquired combating abilities to good use to guarantee that nobody else would endure the lack of household like younger Bruce Wayne had. So, now we all have a sort of idea that the money they spend is all worth it.
Love is a Battlefield, themed on DC’s Valentine, includes a short comic, The Beginning, from artist Rebekah Issac’s and writer Tim Selley, that gives us speculation about the argument that maybe the Batman gig isn’t as righteous as audiences are asked to believe.
Recently, readers have been taking a more scrutinizing look at Batman and his crime-fighting clearly—or, at least, according to Poison Ivy and Harley Quinn—Bruce Wayne siphons off the top of his businesses and away from R&D to keep Batman in the best tactical gear money can buy. With high crime rates coming from poor infrastructure, it’s hard to root for a hero who is destroying the city and businesses every night. And if Batman is truly skimming off the top of Bruce Wayne’s businesses instead of putting money back into the community, is he still the good guy?
We have enough idea, at this time, that there would be more batman than criminals. It’s hard to make excuses The hero makes more violent choices when our hero has enough money to solve the city’s socio-economic problems. The point has again been made clear by Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy, Batman is supposedly trying to save the, and not putting enough back in the community.