Let me talk about it first, the entertainment level of this piece has nothing to say, 9 points. But if you understand this piece, there will actually be a chill on your back:
In the movie, the U.S. government secretly supports the starfish project, acquiescing to the experiment on living people, that is, the DC version of Unit 731, and also tries to destroy the corpse. However, despite the obstruction, a just colonel is willing to sacrifice his life to make this crime public. This is also the concept of "redemption" advocated in Western culture. One person's "redemption" is instantly beautified as a representative of the moral commanding heights, and because the colonel is the representative of "Americans" in the movie, the individualism advocated by Europe and the United States has also been sublimated, and the concept of the collective evil behind the abstract is instantly sublimated. Whitewashing, because collective sin is not sin, but individual justice is the point! ! ! This is why when discussing the heinous crimes committed by the United States with some American brains, they will righteously say: "At least we admitted that we were wrong!" (At least we admitted our mistakes!). In their eyes, this light as a goose feather can clean up the crimes their country has committed in the collective name (such as when Powell waved a test tube full of washing powder at the United Nations, claiming that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction). The description of the role of the colonel in the film echoes this mainstream European and American values, and also conforms to the "criminal culture" of Europe and the United States, that is, as long as one repents, the sins committed can be forgiven by God, and finally the kindest, Those who can enter heaven are still demons with blood-stained hands. People all over the world are also being brainwashed unknowingly during the two hours of laughing and laughing, but Hollywood, the cultural output machine, has successfully implanted in countless brains "Even if the United States commits heinous crimes, it is the most authoritative justice." "This horrible value. The most ironic thing is that, in the face of the whole street with starfish corpses on its faces, and facing this living accusation of biochemical experiments orchestrated by the US government, the last scene of the film is a supporting actor excitedly announcing "We finally have democracy." La!"
I wonder if the people of South America who have been fooled by the United States for democracy and provoked civil strife for so many years, the Islamic people who have been successfully subjected to color revolutions, and the so-called allies who have been abandoned by the United States in Afghanistan these two days will be because of this sentence "We finally There is democracy.” Once again, you have a longing for it, and you are moved by it?
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