In the face of such a subject, the simplest form of interview may be the most moving.
What’s more terrifying than “power is morality” is evil without knowing it, it’s unafraid to face the camera and talk about the murder experience, it is writing a book to record the atrocities, so that latecomers can remember their own heroic actions. No one admits that they are in charge. Stained with blood: I'm just obeying orders, I'm just defending my country, those who are killed have no faith at all, don't talk to me about politics & this is politics.
Even in the face of the victim’s face-to-face questioning, the first reaction is that you asked too many questions, your questions are too deep, which make me angry. The occasional guilt of the younger generation is not persuasive: I am sorry my father killed yours, forgive him, consider us as family. No one remembers, no one reflects, only the anger and blame for the victim to reiterate the old things: the younger generation said — we were only kids, we knew nothing; Can the past happen again? If you do this, things in the past may be repeated.
The event itself has not been forgotten, but it continues to exist in people's lives after a facelift. People’s eyesight will decline and their memory of history will be blurred. Perhaps the truth of the story will be obliterated with the passing of witnesses and the refusal of those in power to look directly at it, but fortunately the image persists. Although there are no murderers and no victims, there are many pictures that you and I can’t understand. Face, always alert us, how terrible the banal evil in human nature can be.
Finally, attach a screenshot of the credit card division list to pay tribute to all the'anonymous' people.
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