All destroyed, nothing left

Paxton 2022-03-20 09:01:37

The story starts with a few gunshots and ends with another.
Nicole comes to Dogtown to break the calm or balance
. Take in a woman who has been reported missing. The
town asks her for a reason to make them believe.
Nicole stays like a 1930 The hourly housekeeper in a small American town does chores for everyone and gets paid meagerly
. Of course, her real pay is actually being allowed to stay,
unbalanced, rebalanced, and the
town's concerns and unease about her identity being compensated for her labor
. Beginning to New Balance Everyone likes her
"She thinks she has friends in Dogtown" Quote from the movie What did
these people who she thought were friends then do to her?
Some people have come to the conclusion that kindness is relative.
I don't want to agree, maybe he's more pessimistic than I am
because I believe absolute goodness not relative
goodness is a proposition to me. Any part of the false proposition leads to the falsehood of the proposition goodness,
even if goodness doesn't materialize in humans. Doesn't get in the way of it being there
so kindness is totally true and absolute

La von Ter is not used to accepting lazy comedy endings
His thinking and assumptions play
out like this in the continuation movie: The
cops are here again and posted with Nicole's protagonist's notice
turned into a wanted robber this time , and the
calm of the dog town was broken again because the disappearance turned into a wanted They became a lawbreaker for taking her in,
their inner pressure suddenly surged, they reached out their hands and said they needed compensation
What should I do? Woolen cloth? The man who thought he liked Nicole gave her the stupid measure: Satisfy them
Satisfying them means Nicole has to pay a bigger price
and we have a very bad hunch that this is going to be terrible.
Nicole doubles her work for less money
but the townspeople are demanding so much that she's like It was the reclamation of Jingwei that
doubled the work and got the dissatisfaction from the crowd that all the men filled her heart with her body The pressure
became a symbol of power and entitlement once again
The failure to escape resulted in Nicole being completely deprived of any rights: a bell on her neck With a giant wheel on our feet
we see a prisoner alive! The unjust judgment of the multitudes is shocking.
Was the power to judge them come from the consensus of the majority?

At the intersection of our waiting thoughts,
Nicole's underworld father appears again to rescue Nicole and give her power to "judg" the townspeople in turn: kill them all.
Has evil been destroyed by the destruction of the wicked?
Is it possible to use evil methods to destroy the wicked?
This is actually a related problem: if evil is treated with evil, it will not be eliminated but passed on to those who practice evil with evil.
Ni can kill everyone with a gun and fire, and she has also become the best spokesperson for the new evil.
Think of the resentment she has accumulated in her for all the insults she has endured
and this is also the essence of revenge

3 hours of "Dog Town" completely frees you from the previous pointless debate about whether human nature is inherently good or inherently evil
. Provide arguments for a series of reasons in the future.
Because human nature is inherently evil, what will happen to this person...
This is a lazy and illogical circular argument
. Good or evil in a certain state will only reflect people's profit-seeking nature. It is not necessary to go into the outline and go straight to the problem of nature,
but it is just a means to be implemented in the process of confrontation

Interesting details, the details of the movie are always interesting
. The only thing in the movie is the sound of the dog barking. The invisible dog appears on the screen after all the people are dead. The

truth is always cruel.

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Extended Reading

Dogville quotes

  • Narrator: How could she ever hate them for what was at bottom merely their weakness? She would probably have done things like those that had befallen her if she had lived in one of these houses. To measure them by her own yardstick, as her father put it. Would she not, in all honesty, have done the same as Chuck and Vera and Ben and Mrs Henson and Tom and all these people in their houses? Grace paused and as she did, the clouds scattered and let the moonlight through, and Dogville underwent another of those little changes of light. It was as if the light previously so merciful and faint finally refused to cover up for the town any longer. Suddenly, you could no longer imagine a berry that would appear one day on a gooseberry bush, but only see the thorn that was there right now. The light now penetrated every unevenness and flaw in the buildings and in the people. And all of a sudden, she knew the answer to her question all too well. If she had acted like them, she could not have defended a single one of her actions and could not have condemned them harshly enough. It was as if her sorrow and pain finally assumed their rightful place. No. What they had done was not good enough. And if one had the power to put it to rights, it was one's duty to do so - for the sake of other towns, for the sake of humanity and not least, for the sake of the human being that was Grace herself.

  • Narrator: [as McKay explores even further with his hand] It was not Grace's pride that kept her going during the days when fall came and the trees were losing their leaves, but more of a trance like state that descends on animals whose lives are threatened - a state in which the body reacts mechanically in a low tough gear, without too much painful reflection. Like a patient passively letting his disease hold sway.