a hopeless life

Kennedy 2022-04-22 07:01:10

The result is pleasing, but also disgusting.
After 15 years of injustice, the male protagonist who was imprisoned for 15 years was rehabilitated. The people who really committed the crime, and the officials who took their lives at risk, were only criticized by public opinion, no more, and almost no damage.
On the bus from home to work this morning, I couldn't help but choked out of the province. My father fell ill in the middle of the night and was taken to the hospital. Julie asked if I wanted to be with Dad, if I could be by his side. The guard replied: I want to ask for this. Then he couldn't help but wiped his eyes and said, "Take him back to the prison." I'm not a male lead, I can't put myself in my shoes. But the feelings of the guards resonated with me at once. An innocent person who has made no mistakes should endure the death of a loved one in prison like this. Even such a small right to be by his side when his father was seriously ill was deprived.
Before, I could not have imagined that God would joke with a person like this.
Feeling no fatherly love as a child, he was forced to become a scapegoat and a convicted murderer soon after he became an adult. God abandoned him, abandoned him, and gave him no chance to start a good life. The encounter asked him to come to the world hopelessly and then leave hopelessly.

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Extended Reading

In the Name of the Father quotes

  • [after hearing of his father's death]

    Gareth Peirce: [With tears in her eyes] Well, I think they ought to take the word 'compassion' out of the English dictionary.

  • Gerry Conlon: I'll be older than you when I get out of this place. If I get out. Are you listening to me?

    Giuseppe Conlon: I'm not talking to you.

    Gerry Conlon: Now who's being childish?

    Giuseppe Conlon: I've not heard a sensible word out of you in two weeks. That stuff will kill you.

    [talking about drugs]

    Gerry Conlon: Sure I'm dead anyway. Look I'm sorry. I'll not take it again as long as you live. Are you happy now?

    Giuseppe Conlon: No.

    Gerry Conlon: Why not?

    Giuseppe Conlon: I don't want you to take it whether I live or die.

    Gerry Conlon: Oh, give me strength. Ok, I'll do nothing to annoy you in your grave. Now are you happy?

    Giuseppe Conlon: Is that a promise?

    Gerry Conlon: Ay, maybe.