I hope!

Cale 2022-03-21 09:02:32

I can't breath! George floyd Jul 23, 1967, May 25, 2020 at 8:00 pm. More than 50 years later, racial discrimination and some police brutality have not changed much. What we see is not hope but despair. If weapons are the tools that empower the police to defend justice, ignorant violent law enforcement is indeed the trigger that turns the police into criminals. The history of racial discrimination accompanying the development of the country has long been deeply rooted in people's minds. Film art comes from life but is higher than life. "Detroit" I didn't deliberately choose this movie, but as I gradually deepened, the atmosphere of despair and suffocation made me truly understand the horror of racial discrimination and violent law enforcement. The gap between film and reality is gradually being broken. With this wave of anti-racism in the United States, maybe those criminals were not brought to justice 50 years ago. I hope this kind of thing will not happen today. I hope everyone understands that racial discrimination is harmful and beneficial, whether white, black, or yellow, we are all human beings, and we all have basic human rights, freedom, democracy, and fairness. These are universals that we have been pursuing since the birth of mankind. power. And this problem is not just a national problem, it is a problem for all of us. I know change will never come without action, but this change should not be violence against violence. The world may be so real and desperate, but I hope to quote Mr. Martin Luther King:

I have a dream today. I dream that one day, the valley will rise, the mountain will fall, the rough and twisted road will become a smooth road, and the holy light will be revealed, and the world will shine!

View more about Detroit reviews

Extended Reading

Detroit quotes

  • Krauss: [to Greene] You don't talk about this to anyone, ever.

  • Dismukes: [to Lee] I need you to survive the night.