Honey, you are a good man.
Damn, you are a bad person...
If you bring this usual definition into it, then there should be no good people among counterfeit money makers, or in other words, all the good people are dead, and the bad people are left facing the sea, with no flowers and no flowers. The counterfeiter is of course a bad guy, not to mention that he also runs the forgery industry that we have always despised, not to mention that he is always uprising, not to mention that he helps the evil Nazis for his own survival. There are also bad people in the factory, at least they help the bad guys. Is it so important to be alive? If we cannot uphold justice, we might as well die. This is what the Bolsheviks said, full of righteous indignation and awe-inspiring justice. I thought he might splatter blood on the spot in the next scene, but unfortunately he didn't. He was slow to work and treated the Nazis in the concentration camp with a non-violent and uncooperative attitude. At the price, he completed the feat of self-sacrifice, but unfortunately God still failed his wish. I really wanted to die, but I couldn't.
Is he a good man? If so, should they rush out the door shouting slogans and rush into the enemy camp with arrogant postures, instead of only daring to shout with the Jews who are also imprisoned around them.
Is he a hypocrite? If so, should he do more harmless things to prove his falsehood?
That Nazi officer, I'm sorry, I forgot his name. He should be regarded as an out-and-out bad guy, but the last sentence made me suddenly forgive him, "The world is tough, and I can't do anything about it."
Just want to live, find all kinds of excuses, insist on self-esteem, or simply bury it.
Concentration camp is a place where there is no right or wrong, no good or bad.
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