Spoiler Alert:
spoilers galore; do not read if you want to experience the anime to the fullest.
(This post is the third in a planned series of posts looking at Death Note through a 5GW lens. The previous two entries were:
- Intimations of 5GW: Death Note, the Players
- Intimations of 5GW: Death Note, the Rules of the Game)
I was living for a dream, loving for a moment Taking on the world, that was just my style Now I look into your eyes, I can see forever The search is over, you were with me all the while
(from The Search is Over, Survivor)
| |
TOWN OF THE SOUND OF A TWIG BREAKING
Their faces I thought were knives. The way they pointed them at me. And waited. A hunter is someone who listens. So hard to his prey it pulls the weapon. Out of his hand and impales. Itself.
( Anne Carson, from The Life of Towns in The Best of the Best American Poetry) |
In studying
Death Note for clues into how 5GW might be waged, it will prove helpful to give at least as much weight to the particular errors committed by the players who are conducting or combating 5GW as to their particular characters and the broad powers and requirements of 5GW. In fact, each of these ultimately intertwine and correct or corrupt the operations; the battlespace consists not only of dreams, but also of realities, and it is in the combat between dreams and realities where mistakes may be born.
Jujitsu & at Least One Riposte
Light Yagami
Intelligence and will are not enough; the actor must have or conspire to gain access to a “choke point” from which he can, in jujitsu fashion, leverage the connectivity of a complex system against itself.
(ZenPundit, “Who Would Declare War on the World: The Nature of Super Empowered Individuals”, July 27, 2007)
In ZenPundit’s examination of the nature of the superempowered individual, he failed to focus on the full range of superempowerment, merely focusing on the bogey man bent on destruction. Nonetheless, I find parallels between his picture of the psychology of superempowered individuals and my recent picture of the players of Death Note:
Kaczynski demonstrated four characteristics that are likely to be shared with superempowered individuals:
a) “Lone Wolf” actor
b) Superior Intelligence
c) Opportunity for leveraging Complex Systems
d) Profound alienation, isolation or societal disconnection

In many ways, “d” in our primary players, along with “b”, leads to each becoming an “a”. Being lone wolves leads Light Yagami, L., and N., to contemplate how best they may do “c”, or leverage complex systems, because no direct and open confrontation with their respective opponents allows them to successfully attack while remaining alive. In other words, each alone is rather weak, but utilization of the powers of others — including, using their opponent’s powers against them — in order to attack an opponent permits both attack and defense.
Within Death Note, a more limited analogy, insufficient to the larger allegory but interesting nonetheless, would see Light Yagami in his earliest stages operating very much like
Dr.Theodore John Kaczynski: the Unabomber’s use of a complex system, the USPS, to directly attack and kill his victims resembles Light Yagami’s use of the media (news reports) to attack and kill
his victims (criminals all displayed, with full names, on television or in newspapers.)
However, for the larger allegory, this represents Light Yagami’s first major mistake: Light had recently acquired the Death Note;
without fully understanding it or the potential repercussions, he set out to attack directly the victims he chose in order to accomplish the larger vision he had just conceived (ending crime). Even given the fact that no mortal could instantly see how he was doing this — so it
was indirect — nonetheless many mortals could see it happening after enough criminals within a short period of time suffered heart attacks and died while within custody. The new-found power (re: megalomania) and limited vision/targeting (monomania) had conspired to give Light a false sense of immunity. If I may interpolate now vis-a-vis the larger issue of
real 5GW: this kind of nascent and clumsy 5GW will likely occur many times before any fully-developed 5GW occurs; also, even given a fully-developed and fully-conceived 5GW in process, others within the battlespace
may be making many clumsy attempts.
The sense of immunity begins to crumble for Light Yagami, although in truth this process of crumbling spans the entire 37 episodes of Death Note — after so many jujitsu maneuvers and ripostes, the sense of immunity returns only to depart again, repeatedly — when L. is introduced into his equations. Light’s first mistake leads Interpol to hire L., who is widely known as the best detective on the planet with a perfect record of apprehending criminals. At first, L.’s introduction seems a momentary blip on Light’s radar; but L. performs a combo jujitsu maneuver and riposte that greatly shakes Light’s sense of immunity. L.’s first action is to use a convicted criminal, in his guise, to announce his own arrival on the stage via broadcast television. This blip seems like nothing to Light, who promptly kills the impostor while the broadcast is in progress. L.’s jujitsu is to use Light’s power of causing distant deaths against him:
The impostor was broadcast only within one area of Japan, so now L. has narrowed down Light’s location. The riposte after this defensive maneuver strikes at Light’s sense of immunity: The real L. broadcasts what he has just done, and why he did it, behind a symbol for “L” on the television screen. Suddenly, Light knows he has a formidable but hidden opponent, whose name and image — necessary for using the Death Note — are not known.
L. contacts the local authorities in that area of Japan and joins forces, albeit imperiously. (They will become his proxies rather than he theirs.) Light just happens to be the son of the police chief, able to hack into his father’s computer to keep track on their investigation of “Kira” (Light.)
This is his second major mistake. Still unsure of all the potential uses of the Death Note (beyond merely killing directly), and with an unbroken although shaken sense of immunity, Light’s vision and megalomania prevent him from realizing the repercussions of spying on his father and the police unit. L. ultimately determines that someone, of over one hundred or so people with knowledge of the investigation, must be Kira. This could be a member of the task force or someone close to the task force.
Light’s third mistake results similarly. After L. informs the leaders of the task force about the leak/nearness of Kira, the FBI is ultimately either a) pulled in by higher-ups to investigate everyone on the task force, or b) sent by officials in the USA for their own investigation now focusing on the task force. (Bear in mind, this is an anime, and I am using it as an allegory, so overlook the inclusion of the FBI for an investigation within Japan of a Japanese police unit!) Light discovers the fact that he is being followed, which leads to him conducting the most intricate killing he has yet devised. He first uses the Death Note’s powers to cause a wanted criminal to hijack a bus on which he and his follower are riding, ultimately tricking the FBI agent to reveal his identity as such during the take-down of the criminal. Then, later he uses that FBI agent to kill all the other FBI agents in Japan, by coercing him to write their names down — happenstance is, Light’s given the FBI agent a page from the Death Note, so that agent ends up killing his cohorts while writing the list. Finally, Light kills his pawn. Only problem is, that agent had only investigated two people in Japan so far, one of whom was Light; so, after studying all the evidence of these FBI deaths, L.narrows down to two potential Kiras. As with his other mistakes,
Light’s third mistake is to directly kill those directly pursuing him. Once Light realizes he has moved into the spotlight, however, his game changes as he shifts into a more developed 5GW. This shift results not only from a realization of his past mistakes and his precarious position but also due to a fortuitous turn of events: another Kira appears on the stage. This Kira, Misa Amane, also has possession of a Death Note. Her appearance, before Light can co-opt her, reveals to him a greater potential for his operations, since L.’s investigation is thrown for a loop. Hitherto, Light was the primary suspect; suddenly, deaths beyond his
modus operandi, or not fitting the prevailing profile of Kira, begin to occur. Light realizes that he must find this other Kira if he is to protect himself — else, her Death Note and knowledge of it could fall into the hands of L., severely crippling Light’s efforts — but he discovers rather quickly that she has something he does not have:
Shinigami eyes. Unlike Light, who would never do so, Misa has made a deal with her Shinigami to halve her remaining years of life in exchange for being able to see a person’s true name and natural lifespan by merely looking at him. Light decides to co-opt her (and is easily able to do so, because she wants to be co-opted) and use her to discover L.’s true name.
Thus begins Light’s shift to co-option and the use of proxies and pawns for his 5GW effort. His most significant errors for the remaining of the series will be related to this new style of fighting, even if the old error of doing things too directly is not altogether eliminated from his operations. Unfortunately for him, however, and particularly important for our study of 5GW via Death Note: His initial errors are almost too much for him to overcome. While it might have been possible for him to overcome these initial, clumsy errors, and he
does succeed in killing L., the fact that he committed his early errors and allowed L.’s investigation to narrow down to him will come back to bite him ultimately.
During his initial transition to the use of proxies/pawns, he realizes something any 5GWer might come to realize. Within the anime, once L. appears Light occasionally expresses frustration at the fact that he must spend so much energy and time maintaining secrecy. He decides early in his cat-and-mouse with L. that he must focus on L. and kill L. if he is going to be able to focus on completing his vision for the world, and he hates the fact that this is necessary. Even though he will attempt to utilize Misa and another superempowered proxy to kill his main opponents — L. and N. — he ultimately uses these proxies mostly for keeping his initial activities going: i.e., killing criminals in huge numbers. He himself remains almost entirely focused, for the rest of the series, on a) maintaining his secrecy and his proxies’ secrecy, and b) killing those investigating him, while he sets his superempowered proxies upon the world of criminals.
However great his initial errors were (and remain), his later errors are as grave. Light’s megalomania causes him to misjudge his superempowered proxies and even his close normally-powered pawns. They do not always do what they
should do according to his calculations.
The only great error he commits w/ co-opting Misa, in his transition to co-option, is related to his initial errors. Because she is in love with him, he must keep her close to keep her co-opted. Unfortunately, her own initial actions were clumsy: she had mailed out video tapes of messages to the world from “Kira”, to be played on television stations; but she had failed to take into account DNA evidence left on the tape to seal the packages. Light actually asks her, when he first meets/co-opts her, whether she had been careful, and she replies that she was. He chose to believe her. Because he must keep her close, L.’s discovery of the identity of the “second Kira” in the DNA, plus his ongoing suspicion that Light might be Kira, serve to corner Light. (Light takes the challenge of the corner and turns the tables, or uses jujitsu to infiltrate L.’s investigative team.)
Once Light is the “new L” and has the investigation team under his thumb — they are still investigating “Kira” and he, Kira, is their leader — he trusts his father to shoot and kill a very close and powerful associate of N. when the opportunity arises; but his father can not bring himself to do so. This incidentally might be considered the greatest mistake in the whole series, because it is that person (Mello, presumably “M.”, who went to school with both L. and N. in the cabal-orphanage for raising genius detectives) who causes the final chain of events that leads to Light’s downfall.
Late in the series, Light carefully selects his final superempowered proxy — a devout zealot of Kira named
Teru Mikami, who becomes the “fourth Kira” — a genius and fanatic who would be a perfect proxy in every way if not for the fact that he is also religiously punctual. He does everything he does on a strict repetitious schedule. If not for the abilities of N., this would have been perfectly fine. In fact, Teru Mikami’s regularity serves to mask his activities from N. and allow Light and Teru to pull off a jujitsu maneuver against N. — using N.’s powers of observation against him — but the previous mistake already mentioned, Mello’s survival at the hands of Light’s father, leads to a deviation from that strict schedule when Mello throws a little chaos into the battlespace. Light would never have guessed that Teru would deviate the slightest from his normal routine, but Teru’s concern for Light’s plan leads him to take matters into his own hands when he should not. The observant N. obviously notices the deviation, Light does not even suspect the possibility of a deviation — and the results of this error are too great for Light to overcome.
L.L. enters the fray at a distinct disadvantage. While his powers of observation are great, and his obsession for experimentation unmatched within the anime, he simply does not know about the existence of the Death Note. Most fans of the anime would say that L., one of the “two greatest minds in the world”, is THE greatest mind; but I do not think he is more intelligent than Light. Although Light commits errors, great errors, in his combat with L., L. commits the greatest error of all: not respecting his own ignorance. Conversely, Light is not only extremely aware of his own ignorance — does not know L.’s face or true name — but also knows about the Death Note and knows L. does not know about the Death Note.
L.’s ignorance of the very existence of the Death Note, at the beginning of their combat, ultimately leads L. into a cul-de-sac. He has been able to narrow down his suspects to two, and he suspects from his very first experiment that Kira must have the face and name of a victim in order to kill the victim, but beyond this his efforts can lead him no closer to Kira. If a jujitsu maneuver can safely protect him while injuring his opponent, nonetheless he can not use an opponent’s strength against him if he does not know that strength (the Death Note.) L.’s conundrum forces him to make his greatest mistake, from which he will never recover. He introduces himself to Light Yagami — who may or may not be Kira — by leaning over to him at a university commencement event and saying, “Hi, I’m L.”
L.’s reasoning is simple, it would seem: if he can get no nearer Kira than he has already, then he might try to draw Kira closer to him (if, that is, Light Yagami, one of two suspects, is the Kira.) In this regard, he is successful. But once Light has his foot in the door, L. is lost.
L.’s monomania and megalomania combine to kill him. The experiment is ALL, to him; and, he is an obsessive observer. Even from before his self-introduction to Light, and until his death, L. is still
wanting to see, wanting to make sure, that Light is Kira. Light uses L.’s powers of observation and desire for experimentation against him, time and time again. One of the more interesting examples: as described in the previous post in this series, Light commits himself for observation by L., to “prove he’s not Kira,” as a step in his infiltration of L.’s investigative team. While within a holding cell, Light relinquishes his Death Note, to be delivered to a new proxy, and thus loses all memory of a) having been Kira and b) of the Death Note entirely. L.’s observations of Light, stretching out over more than 50 days, reveal no signs that Light could possibly have been Kira. In fact, “Kira” is still killing, albeit different targets than before — not criminals, but corporate leaders. Eventually, L. lets Light out of the cell but — again,
just to be sure — invites Light to join the investigative team but has himself handcuffed to Light. Together, they and their team hunt down this corporate Kira. They corner the Kira, get the Death Note — the first time L. becomes aware of the Death Note — and Light, upon touching the Death Note, gets all his memories back, as
planned. Also as planned, there are two new
fake “rules” written in the Death Note:
- If the owner fails to consecutively write names of people to be killed within 13 days of each other, then the user will die.
- If you make this note unusable by tearing it up or burning it, all those who have touched the note up until then will die.
According to the first fake rule, and given the fact that Light had been under constant observation for 50+ days in his holding cell, Light could not be Kira. L.’s general ignorance of the existence of the Death Note, until this time, leaves him little reason to doubt this logic. But
still, he just wants to make sure….
Finally, L., pursuant to his nature, decides to test out that rule by using it on a convicted criminal. If the criminal dies after not writing in it for 13 days, he’ll know that he can move from suspecting Light to be Kira. Unfortunately, this would also reveal Misa Amane as the Second Kira — she had been in a holding cell next to Light for all those days, and had also relinquished her Death Note. When her former Shinigami hears this, his love for Misa (a very rare emotion for Shinigami) drives him to write L.’s name in his own Death Note, killing L. (Shinigami naturally have Shinigami eyes and can see the true names of any one they observe.) Of course, Light had planned it this way. The last thing L. sees is Light bending over his dying body with a self-satisfied smile: confirmation at last, and too late, that Light was indeed Kira.
In terms of the allegory, Light’s 5GW had operated on auto pilot once he set it into motion (with very careful consideration of initial conditions; all other developments would flow from that.)
Light becomes “second L.”, fully co-opting the old L.’s investigative team.
N.
Commits no errors. Captures Light.
At least, no irredeemable errors. And not “capture” insofar as Light stumbles away to die.
It might be said that Light captured himself; his own errors throughout his campaign had the cumulative effect of delivering him into the hands of N. N. is not as intelligent as L., but he joins the fray with advantages L. did not have; namely, all of L.’s previous efforts have changed the context of the entire battle before N. appears.
Light’s inability to anticipate his proxy’s deviation from obsessive patterns leads to N.’s discovery of the subterfuge Light and Teru Mikami are conducting. N. comes into possession of a real Death Note, Teru’s, and Light does not know this. In other words, in the language of this allegory, N. becomes fully aware of the 5GW being conducted and also, it might be said, co-opts the 5GW, or uses jujitsu against Light. Furthermore, N.’s suspicion that “second L.” is Kira is Light, has already led to some counter-co-option: Early in his battle with Light, he announces to Light and Light’s investigative team that he believes Light is Kira, and this persuades two of Light’s pawns on the investigative team to become double agents, in order to get to the truth. They tell N. everything that has gone on before, giving N. a much fuller awareness of the Death Note and Light than L. possessed at the beginning of
his battle with Light. Most significantly, N. is made aware of the two rules of the Death Note, how they “exonerated” Light — and, N. is able to do what L. could not: determine that the rules are fake.
In conclusion:Broadly speaking, the megalomania and monomania of both Light and L. led to their respective defeats.
Light’s errors fall into two broad categories: direct activity & too much dependence on misunderstood proxies. In many ways, the latter is also a result of too great a focus on direct effects, since his proxies failed him most when he had very specific tasks for them resembling his own prior direct activity.
We might say also that Light’s vision was much too narrow. He began believing that merely killing criminals in vast numbers would lead to the creation of a crime-free world (of which he would be God, and that’s not too unrealistic given his powers, reach, and effect). Most of his utilization of complexity and the ignorance others have for complexity he focused upon defending himself or maintaining his secrecy. Beyond killing criminals in great numbers, he had no coherent plan for shaping other systems (beyond media and the criminal population) for creating his New World, nor for using other systems in his combat w/ L. and N. (The fact that, by the end, many governments and police agencies had declared themselves on his side, did not much help him. N., as with L., was a superempowered individual, operating outside any states.)
L. broke the rule of secrecy when he presented himself as a target thinking to draw out his opponent.
L. could not use jujitsu, or a sufficiently developed 5GW (he never used 5GW in any case, but only some tactics in common w/ 5GW tactics), because he did not know his opponent’s abilities or strengths or moves. He could not use jujitsu. What moves he could make resembled shadow boxing more than anything else.
However this may be, and however dead Light becomes, the 37 episodes end without a firm ending to the 5GW. Startling fact introduced by Light at the end, once he is cornered:
All war had been eliminated and crime had been reduced 70% globally in the 6 years he had operated. N., and his pawnish investigative team(s), do not seem to care about the elimination of war and reduction of crime worldwide. N. ends up in possession of two Death Notes; but as of the end of that 37-episode run, we don’t have any way of knowing what will become of the world, although ironically the final episode is called “New World.”
As allegory, Death Note provides far more than can be included in any series of blog posts. One final point for now: The “Death Note” owned by and utilized by Light Yagami, along with all he does as a result of his possession/use of it, can be considered to stand in for “5GW” in the allegory, but this gets us no closer to understanding precisely how 5GW will be conducted. In other words, within the anime the Death Note is a kind of magical device. In the real world outside the real anime, the many methods for effecting complex changes within a complex environment will require exploration for anyone contemplating a 5GW campaign. Unfortunately, these methods are largely absent from consideration within the full body of 5GW theory development on the WWW. Outlines of characteristics of 5GW may be found in many places, but making the leap from dream to reality daunts too many 5GW theorists.
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