The beginning of the story is doomed to be a tragedy, the protagonist wrongly inherits the beliefs and prejudices of the deceased, and the worst is still very impulsive and inflammatory influence.
The despair at the end is probably endless hatred and grievances, what if the final murderer dramatically happens to be the brother of the protagonist's friend in prison? The chasm still exists and remains difficult to bridge.
The irony is that although white people in prisons keep warm and despise people of color, the discrimination is very selective, and they also cooperate when it is profitable. The little angry young male protagonist pursues the pure and ultimate belief - racial discrimination should be hostile, old and dead - but become an outlier and be ridiculed by white people, repaired and taught a lesson.
In the final analysis, racial discriminators feel that their interests have been violated, the blacks at the bottom need social welfare assistance-the use of taxes will prevent turmoil, and the blacks at the top can "squeeze" the opportunities of whites because of their race and political correctness.
Norton's acting is amazing! The extreme, irritable, and influential young people are also very touching after being taught by white people that they are sexually assaulted. The second male younger brother is indescribably beautiful, and he plays the immature feeling of a child in adolescence, and is rebellious and gloomy because of the tragic experience of his family. The little black man in prison is so nice! He insisted on talking to white people who were dismissive of himself, even though he was sentenced to a long prison sentence because of the prejudice of the white police, he did not shoot haters against white people, and he also kept the loner male protagonist from being bullied. He was a little angel!
Finally, a clip of the male protagonist's speech (copied from Douyou's film review) may also be mentioned why white people don't like hard-working yellow people. Excellent and non-excellent other races have harmed interests, why not racial discrimination? But the premise is wrong, why divide you and us according to skin color? We are not reproductively isolated, we are one.
"Listen now, we're going to open our eyes, there are two million illegal immigrants sleeping on this continent tonight, three billion dollars was spent on this continent last year, three billion dollars on these people who didn't have the right to live here $400 million spent on detaining illegal immigrant criminals, they can come in because the government doesn't think it's worth the effort to screen serious criminals. Who cares? Our government doesn't care at all, our border policy is a joke , so it's not surprising that people south of the border laugh at us, they laugh at our laws, and thousands of parasites flock across the border every night, like pouring crabs.
Don't laugh, it's not funny, it's about your life and mine.
Kind and hard-working Americans are ignored and treated unfairly by the government, because the government cares more about the constitutional rights of non-nationals. The statue of liberty is engraved with "Let the tired, hungry, and poor come to me." But the sleepy, hungry, and poor are Be Americans, don't let immigrants in unless you take care of Americans because we are losing, losing our right to our destiny, losing our freedom so that fucking foreigners can come and exploit our country, this It didn't happen in the distance, it didn't happen out of our reach, it happened right here, in our community, in that building where we grew up in Mayatt's grocery store, David in That worked, so did Mike, Mayat went bankrupt, a fucking Korean bought that store, and fired David and Mike, he hired forty illegal immigrants, made a fortune, I see this This is unfair and no one cares about it. It makes me very angry, look around you, this is not our home, this is the battlefield, we are on the battlefield now, let's make a decision. Are we standing by and watching our country be raped? Should we come together to do something? That's right, we're going to do that now. "
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