Use child's play to demonstrate such a serious proposition of abolishing the death penalty

Herta 2022-09-07 07:04:06

2 points are a bit too much, and 1 point is malicious. But I still have to be a little biased, and finally give 1 point.

1. The argument for abolishing the death penalty is extremely sensational, and does not stand on a rational and objective standpoint. The reason for abolishing the death penalty is actually that the governor said that he would not kill a good person by mistake because of the death penalty. Then he used his own life to make a trick, which was just child's play.

2. On the one hand, the Western system stimulates the original sin in the human bones to the fullest, but on the other hand, it teaches you to let go of hatred and abolish the death penalty, because the death penalty will destroy the family (there is a line in the film). But game theory tells us that tit-for-tat is the best strategy, which is ridiculous. I don't speak big truths, but it is only right and proper to kill people to pay their debts and pay their debts.

3. On the question of position, do I clearly support the death penalty, and science students still have to use data to speak, and compare the number of wrongful killings with the number of wicked people who did not succeed? The legal position of the West is different from our own. I stand for socialism and firmly support the death penalty.

Fourth, everyone has mentioned that there are too many clues in the front, there is no suspense in the ending, and almost no audience can't guess the ending. At the end of the video, Spacey was shocked when he showed his face, and the Virgin is still easy to coax. This is the first time I hate Western propaganda so much, it's worse than XXX

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The Life of David Gale quotes

  • Constance Harraway: Stop that!

    David Gale: What?

    Constance Harraway: Active listening, I hate active listeners. I always feel like they're to busy *pretending* to be listening to hear what I'm saying.

    David Gale: I can listen and actively listen at the same time. I'm good at that.

  • David Gale: Fantasies have to be unrealistic because the moment, the second that you get what you seek, you don't, you can't want it anymore. In order to continue to exist, desire must have its objects perpetually absent. It's not the "it" that you want, it's the fantasy of "it." So, desire supports crazy fantasies. This is what Pascal means when he says that we are only truly happy when daydreaming about future happiness. Or why we say the hunt is sweeter than the kill. Or be careful what you wish for. Not because you'll get it, but because you're doomed not to want it once you do. So the lesson of Lacan is, living by your wants will never make you happy. What it means to be fully human is to strive to live by ideas and ideals and not to measure your life by what you've attained in terms of your desires but those small moments of integrity, compassion, rationality, even self-sacrifice. Because in the end, the only way that we can measure the significance of our own lives is by valuing the lives of others.