Interracial (ethnic) thinking

Melyna 2022-04-24 07:01:02

When I watched it, I kept thinking about whether the problem between two races (ethnic groups) depends on a shortcoming - that is, the wave of people who actively choose not to believe in another race (ethnicity) and believe that 'other races must have different hearts' Is it this wave of people who pushed things to the worse? In the movie it's like the dead man who built the dam and Koba in the ape because it seems like this wave of people started the war in the end, but if there weren't these two types of people Will there be no war? Can Caesar maintain the long-term peace of the ape-man based on the principle of not committing crimes against me and not taking the initiative to provoke trouble? After the dam is repaired, will humans and apes be at peace forever? Wouldn't human beings grow stronger by restoring energy and one day declare war like apes to regain dominance of the earth?

Putting it into the reality of society's deteriorating ethnic issues, is it the wave of 'killers' that exist on both sides to push things to the brink of becoming more and more difficult to solve? Does one side need to make more efforts to understand and release goodwill and tolerance? Like helping humans build dams) can a turnaround occur?

The stupidest thing is to distinguish between good and bad by race It doesn't matter. Stupid humans always categorize people simply because of one-sided short-sightedness. For example, people from any country are all bad people. People from all ethnic groups are all bad people. People from all places are all bad people.

This movie is for me. The biggest reflection is to think about whether I have made similar mistakes over the years

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