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Deon 2022-10-09 17:35:17

(It is a short comment super-word immigration contestant)

To reiterate: It's heartwarming to watch smart people execute good deeds. I have never been clear about how charity is done before. I roughly think that it is donating money, brackets, and the residual value of capitalists sitting on it;

This film shows where Mr. Gai and his team's charitable project started, how to find relevant talents, conceive plans to mobilize funds, and then push forward in the next three years and five years. You can see that Mr. Gai does not superficially follow the principle of "from the society to give back to the society", but throws in time and really engages with the problem. What impressed me more was that Mr. Gai decided to change this problem after reading the environmental report and began to read related materials. The team recruited and compiled relevant talents with local backgrounds, and from the collection of ideas, to continuous iteration, and then to on-the-spot investment. The repeated emphasis, respectively, led me to bow to its keen goodwill, prudent choice, and clearly anchored purpose. However, the story of global warming and nuclear power in the back reminds me of the recent environmental slogan that my sister scolded adults for not talking about money. The fact that Mr. Gai chose to cooperate with my country makes me think that the built-in logic of capital is doomed that some things will not be pushed by nature and have to resort to centralized power. It was an unexpected reflection. At the end, with the stacks of books, I wish I could also have a brain (?

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