The best era of freedom

Sonny 2022-03-21 09:02:22

During the western pioneering period, because the United States had no police force and the laws were not perfect, the theme at that time was "equality, freedom, and democracy" that had never been seen before!

Law enforcement relies on highly skilled bounty hunters, and villains are both good and evil.

If you don't like me, you will come and catch me--The bad guys say if you are upset,

you will go home--The law enforcer said

we will duel in the square, or I will kill you--The freedom chasing people say that

there are too many heroes due to this mechanism with legend. There is also a native who is friendly with the wolf tribe, upholds the belief, and is in the continental United States.

This film is not as simple as telling a story.

Recalling the cowboy spirit: abide by justice, do not betray, do not doubt, stay wherever you go, and bring light wherever you go. They'll also stick with a slut who has a morbid need for sex out of cowboy spirit. The greatness of love does not lie in how deep it is, but in its persistence.

Reminiscing about the Wild Sands of the West. The set setting and the crowd in the market fully restore the boiling cowboy land.

Memories of a real hero:
20 people alone!
Decide to move forward and never look back!
Believe in your partner, just do your part!
Never doubt your partner, just follow him forward!
. . .

they will grow old, and they may be very embarrassed when they are old, but they were once glorious. The days of living on guns will end, but their era is the best era of freedom!

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Extended Reading
  • Pauline 2022-04-23 07:02:56

    There is a Taiwan version or a Hong Kong version of the translation called Stallion. I thought it was funny before reading it, but after reading it, I thought it was very appropriate.

  • Zita 2022-04-23 07:02:56

    I always feel like I don't understand

Appaloosa quotes

  • [after a shoot-out]

    Everett Hitch: That was quick.

    Virgil Cole: Yeah, everybody could shoot.

  • Everett Hitch: [narrating] Like my father, I'd been West Point, and I was good at soldiering. But soldiering didn't allow for much expansion of the soul. So after the War Between the States and a year of fighting Indians, I turned in my commission and rode away to see how much I could expand it. First time I met Virgil Cole was when I and my eight-gauge backed him up in a showdown he was having with some drunken mountain men. Virgil asked me right there on the spot if I'd care to partner up with him and his peacekeeping business. Which is why I was with him now, and why I still carry the eight-gauge. We'd been keeping the peace together for the last dozen years or so. And as we looked down on a town called Appaloosa, I had no reason to doubt we'd be doing just that for the foreseeable future.

    Everett Hitch: But life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable that which your life becomes.