film took place in a small town in the southern United States in the 1960s where the affirmative movement suddenly flourished. According to the pessimistic description of Rapoaishi's "Voluntary Slavery": People are forced at first, but they become habit in the next generation. Just as Abby Lin, a black maid, knew when she was a child that she would become a maid when she grew up. Of course, this is not an ideal, it can only be regarded as the answer on a life planning sheet sent by my own ethnic group. In a closed and conservative town, for a long time, even though they knew the absurdity of this life plan, few black maids dared to tear this list and break the fate of life.
The chance for the population mutation of the birch moth lies in the trees that were tainted by a steady stream of black smoke during the second industrial revolution. The black maid in the small town dared to break through the constraints and confessed to the small town female reporter Skeet. The opportunity was also the shelter of the affirmative movement. Skeeter may only rely on perseverance to do the same observation and record work as an entomologist.
In 1964, Lyndon Johnson signed the "Civil Rights Act" under the watchful eyes of Martin Luther King. The birch moths no longer need to worry about the surrounding environment about the color of their wings and are truly free. But how about the population development level? Some scholars have found that the civil rights movement has played a fundamental role in improving the social status of southern blacks and strengthening the ranks of the black middle class, but it has failed to eradicate racism in the United States, and thus cannot completely solve the housing segregation of urban blacks. , Educational isolation and employment inequality and other social issues.
Viola Davidstein, who plays the first black servant Abilion to be interviewed in the film, said: Obama was elected president. It seems that racial issues have been completely resolved. If Hillary becomes president, there will be no gender discrimination. ? This is not the case. Just fifty years is not enough to calm everything down. Of course, if there are no deep-seated issues involved, everything is okay.
If you want to really have the energy level to cover the sky and the sun in the jungle, maybe the birch moth has to wait fiercely.
Every little creature in nature may have a reference to us. Portia spider is another strange creature that feeds on other spiders. It can lurch on other spider webs to create an imaginary, breath or amplitude. When other spiders mistakenly believe that the signal comes from every meal or mate , When hurried forward, Portia spider can start to wrap the napkin.
Regardless of the past, the white birch moth has the "Civil Rights Act" in the jungle as the foundation of the raging ethnic group, and the future has unlimited imagination. But in a sense, the Portia spiders once enjoyed the privileges but still have not been effectively restrained. It can be seen that checks and balances are necessary. It is impossible for all spiders to use the Portia spiders as the evolutionary model. The future of the population that eats each other is difficult. Imagine...
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