What attitude should a man take when facing an injustice and evil world, should he be in the same way, cynical, or rise up to resist?
What should a man do to a woman whom he loved so much that he has hurt him, revenge or forgive?
Faced with love and more lofty goals, does a man choose the former or the latter?
Everyone who wants to be a man must consider these questions and give a definite answer.
If "The Godfather" is a man's bible, then "Kasabranka" will tell you a greater and noble revelation.
When I was young, I once saw a case on "Democracy and Legal System".
A young doctor fell in love with a fruit seller on the street and spent a lot of money on her. But this girl was attracted by a high-ranking cadre's son again, so she married someone who could arrange a formal job for herself. I don't want to think that after a few months, she suddenly suffered from appendicitis and was sent to the hospital. It happened to be the young doctor on duty. Although they were both very embarrassed, the girl's family had no choice but to plead with him, so he walked into the operating room.
After more than two years, the girl was still not pregnant. She went to the hospital for an examination and found out that an important reproductive organ had been removed from her body and she could no longer give birth in this life.
The doctor was arrested and confessed to the crime of removing genital organs during appendix surgery.
I always think that the way a man treats women is the way he treats the world and human beings. And the attitude of a nation towards women determines the national character of the country. The great countries in the world are more tolerant towards women, and those countries that take women as scapegoats, and even impose the guilt of subjugation on a woman, I can only say that men in this country are very selfish. Also cowardly, they can always find an excuse to shirk their responsibilities.
People's evaluation of Casablanca seems to be mostly limited to the themes of love and separation, without paying attention to the moral meaning and spirit of resistance.
Both Rick and Laszlo are real men. Although one of them showed themselves as a typical cynical face, the other appeared as an upright revolutionary. But they are all real men, because they treat a woman who has hurt herself-no matter what reason she has, she is still moving between the two men. Any one of them has good reason to accuse her of failing to teach her and betraying her. But both men chose tolerance and demeanor, to maintain the woman's self-esteem, not to ask her faults, or even to explain. If, in the writings of our literati, there is just another dead soul with thousands of swords and swords to pay homage to the so-called ethics.
I think our Chinese men are not forgiving enough. For example, it is often seen that a man throws sulfuric acid on his former girlfriend and publicizes his private photos. Anyway, he is particularly wronged and uneconomical, and he has to die quickly, without a bit of masculinity. Even weak scholars have to brutally kill those sluts in the book.
To be tolerant to women or the weak, and brave to the strong, this is the real man.
At the airport, Rick said goodbye to Elsa. He gently touched her chin and said, Never forget, little girl!
A man must always remember this sentence.
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