When I heard the lyrics of I'll fight, stand and defend you. in the ending song, my nose got really stuffy.
We put aside those personal experiences, suffered several cancers, and still worked; conservatives grew, liberals raised their voices; and women's rights were pioneered. We put aside all of these, and only talk about people's original intentions and methods when they pursue their beliefs.
The trigger point of RBG's original intention was the red terror that the country had killed in ideology when she was young, and she saw that there were American lawyers who stood up and fought to defend the constitution. RBG was triggered and she wanted to do the same. She set a goal, she did it step by step (case by case), and under the combined influence of the right time, place, and people, she was pushed to a symbolic position.
She herself has become a symbol.
RBG's intimacy with her husband is, presumably, a model. I have always believed that "appreciating" the other person should be the most important part of intimacy, not "heartbeat", "hormone surge", or "worship". "Appreciation" is an equal and reciprocal mentality, you have your good, I have mine, proud of your success, and contributing to your success. There is no jealousy, no "threatened feeling", because you are confident enough in yourself and appreciate the other party enough. This kind of relationship makes people yearn because most of us are not immune to vulgarity.
No small talk is the consistent evaluation of her colleagues and friends around her, no gossip or gossip. Sometimes just doing no small talk is a challenge. To introspect, this time is slack.
In defense of single fathers, although many people in the documentary think this is an "excellent strategy", in fact, in RBG's view, this may just be a simple follow-up of beliefs, consistent.
After all, "I don't ask for privilege because of my gender, I just want men to take their feet off our necks."
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