etc., aren't we talking about "Running in the Night"?
Yes, thinking about the problem of stray cats and dogs, we may be able to understand "Running in the Night".
Otherwise, why the last scene of the whole show is the ugly cat who was almost "humane", right?
You probably guessed what I wanted to say. The stray dogs and cats are a metaphor, a
metaphor for all the people who appear in court, jail, station and morgue in the play.
In fact, it is not complicated. Everyone lives in the net of power and has their own experience.
This is not a suspense drama, this is not a legal drama, not "CSI", not "Boston Legal", not at all.
Yes, you can use this to discuss homicide, discuss the law, just like you discuss any "should be".
After people discuss some great principles, it is easy to forget the living people.
I used to care about stray cats very much.
Feed them often when they are in school.
But to be honest, I have never cared for homeless people so much, at least after the age of eight.
Seeing pitiful kittens and puppies, I am often sympathetic;
for homeless people, for people with skin diseases, and for all people who are labeled, sorry I am not sure.
Many ugly cats have been destroyed by humanity, in the shelter, that's for sure.
Many ugly cats have been destroyed by humanity. In prison, on the street, in the eyes of doubt and resistance, this is also certain.
This play tells the story of a lucky cat. At the end of the story it was not locked in a small room.
Better than gas room I guess.
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