Smallville: The Lois secrets non-paradox
Oct. 27th, 2006 12:15 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Apparently there are people who see a conflict between Lois's S4 advice to Chloe re: secrets and what she has to say to Clark here. I'm (again) rather baffled by that.
Aside: Smallville may be the most baffling fandom ever. Seriously, though I never believed in the whole 'Spike can be good without a soul' theory, I could understand where it was coming from. Most of what the vocal bits of Smallville fandom say makes no sense to me. It's like I'm living in an alternate universe... or they are. Something.
Anyway, Lois's advice regarding secrets seems to all hold together from what I can tell.
A) She knows that Clark has secrets (he's saved her life a couple of times, Chloe implies more than once that there's something going on with him, and the Kents as a group are incredibly tight-mouthed about a lot and Lois noticed that). She doesn't really care. They're his secrets.
B) This approach is both told to us in her advice to Chloe ("I wouldn't tell [the person that I knew their secret]. I've learned the hard way that people keep secrets for a reason.") and shown to us in her actions towards Clark (most noticeably in the gift of the journal, which is implicit permission to keep secrets).
C) However, when faced with a particular reason to keep secrets, namely, to 'protect loved ones', Lois calls 'bullshit'. And not only is Clark's reasoning faulty, but it isn't even (mostly) true.
Clark has never been lying mostly to protect others -- he lies to protect himself (the one exception that I can think of is Reckoning, when he had reason to believe that knowing his secret would lead directly to Lana's death). Lying to protect others demonstrably does not work (just look at all the concussions Lex, Lana, and Lois have all gotten while not knowing secrets). And when we've been allowed to look into Clark's fears, we see him being hurt by knowledge of his secrets, and not (generally) other people.
Lying to protect other people simply doesn't work (it totally didn't work with Lex, and Chloe was in danger just as often before she knew Clark's secret). Clark himself admits in his conversation with Oliver that loving someone and not telling them the truth about yourself just leads to a short and unhealthy relationship.
Seriously, not seeing the contradiction here.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-31 11:07 am (UTC)Exactly!
And it’s a call I agree with. Lying isn’t done to protect other people as much as it’s done to protect oneself. Because if Lana, Chloe, Lex (and Pete before that reveal) knew, they would have been able to make better decisions about how to keep themselves safe.
Definitely. And in the episodes Scare and Splinter, when Clark's afraid about people finding out about his secret, we see that he's afraid of those people hurting him (Lana stabbing down with a hunk of Kryponite is an image that lingers in the mind).
And I hope they expand on this topic to illustrate why Clark will open up to Lois in the way he hasn’t to the non-superheroes in his life. Everyone has a rght to self preservation, even if it means keeping secrets. However, I hope Lois will be the one to open his eyes on the importance of people being able to make informed decisions about their lives.
I hope she does, too.