he is out of tune with modern society, that's for sure. It is also certain that he wants to escape this society.
But when the director explained: I can only see the indifferent nature of the weak in the faces of these bears, and I'm fucking fucked.
People don't eat animals? I tell you, eating animals is natural, moral, and concentration camp-style cruelty to animals is a crime.
People don't eat people? I won't say how many records of people eating people have been recorded since ancient times. I tell you, cannibalism is moral, that's natural, and that only happens when cannibalism is the only option for survival. Assembly-line killing is a crime. The atomic bomb wasn't invented by bears, right?
Anyone who has raised animals knows that mammals are very close to humans. People, don't be too self-righteous. If there are higher-level creatures, look at us as pigs and dogs.
Let's put it this way: Timothy is a social escape, mentally handicapped, paranoid, fanatical. . .
But I hate mechanical Darwinists like the director of this film and the scientist in it. Animals to them are nothing but a mechanical chain of material circulation, puppets governed by the laws of nature.
The poster child for this kind of thinking is the Nazi concentration camps: what is the most efficient way to control a race? Building a killing factory, a killing assembly line, and in order to avoid Nazi soldiers witnessing horrific killing scenes, gas chambers are the best solution.
I think everyone should see clearly: bears eat people, they are hungry, and if they don’t eat, they may not be able to live. When people kill people, they are premeditated, planned, and systematic, and they do everything possible to cover up the truth.
Remember when Goebbels poisoned the whole family (6 children)? When the Three Kingdoms were destroyed, didn't Liu Chan's son also commit suicide (2 children)? If you say you commit suicide, then why do you kill your child? There are also the nine tribes, all kinds of torture, germ warfare, and Empress Lu's shenanigans.
What's better than a bear?
View more about Grizzly Man reviews