I finally finished watching "Hitler is Back" today. The first part is still quite joyful, such as the phrase "great rivers and mountains" by the head of state in the field. For example, ID 2333333 was occupied when registering the mailbox.
But after watching the whole film, I felt a chill on my back.
One is when the old lady scolded, "I know you!" and "Go away!" as if I had experienced it myself. The old lady survived the nightmare of war and massacre, but in her twilight years, she encountered the demon of that time, a demon who has returned-is he immortal?! "Do something!" "Do something quickly!" "Kill this demon!!"
It was touching.
The second thing that made me shudder was the ending, where the little reporter who had been trying to turn around finally found out that it was the real Hitler and pointed his gun at him. Hitler said, I may be a monster, but it was the people who elected the monster to be the Führer, and I represent the people. So you won't shoot me either.
The young reporter finally fired, and the Führer fell from upstairs without seeing the body. At that moment, a voice behind him said, "You can't get rid of me; I'm part of you."
It's a beautiful scene within a scene, but it's also really scary.
Democracy was given to you, and you elected monsters yourself—who can blame you?Those who are not smart watch with joy; those who are smart are imprisoned together with the truth in the dungeon.
Isn't this our reality?
Part 2
I think the question should be thought of like this: people outside of our political arena are always just novice players, and those politicians are all high-level players, and they play with routine strategies. When they say they give you democracy, they are just an illusion. After all, people are just pawns on the chessboard, and pawns can't make decisions. And why politicians take such pains may be to fight for the right to choose.
Is democracy just letting the people take the blame? I think there is a problem with this understanding.
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