If I show this cartoon to my future child, what I want him to know most is to be vigilant against beliefs that make you sacrifice your own life or other people's life, and don't do anything to attack in the name of "truth" and "justice" , hurt things, respect each person's special.
I also understand that in a certain era of slavery, the premise of leading everyone to resist is to unify belief, believe in the same story, and have the same beautiful yearning.
We are also fortunate because we were not born in that era, and looking at it with current values, the "Ten Disasters" are too cruel, the punishment is too heavy, and God is too ruthless.
The Egyptians didn't care about the lives of the Hebrews because they were slaves; the Hebrews didn't care about the lives of the Egyptians because they were Egyptians... Does it sound familiar, the beginning of countless wars is "Not my race, must be punished."
The meaning of disaster is not the disaster itself, but the reflection on the disaster.
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