鬼撞墙
鬼撞墙

揭露易富贤和反节育派造假,就跟鬼撞墙一般,一次次兜兜转转,把自己撞得头破血流,却怎么都撞不破那屹立如墙、颠扑不破的谎言与谣言。不过一想到这个国家的历史也是如鬼撞墙一般兜圈子,我也就释然了。

Auntie Ben, I also followed the show: "South Park" (South Park)

(edited)
I sometimes wonder, why did the writers of this show set up a character like Kenny, and let him die in such a brutal way every episode?

In fact, I can't remember exactly when and where I started chasing this show. Should it be after a close friend of mine went abroad to study with me in 2003? As for the source of this drama, it should be a website that has disappeared. It is very sure that the source of the film is pirated. In today's increasingly strict intellectual property laws, my actions should be illegal.

I think I should admit this frankly: at the beginning of the 21st century when it was difficult to get legal access to foreign film and television works from China, I was one of the consumers of domestic pirated literary and artistic works.

Closer to home, the main reason for chasing this drama at that time was to learn English and practice listening. Of course I got a quick laugh out of the show too - although I can't remember any of the episodes. In short, the characters in the play are a lot of swear words, and there are a lot of things that satirize current affairs.

But there is one character in the play that really impressed me - in fact, I can't remember his name. I just googled it and found out that his name is Kenny . It's the kid who looks like he's wearing an orange spacesuit. He has very little dialogue and seems to be a dispensable character in the play.

Why would Kenny impress me? Because he dies almost once in every episode. A very tragic way of dying, either by being shot in the head or hit by a car... Any way of dying that you can imagine or can't imagine, it's just that blood must be splashed when you die.

This character makes me feel a little bit uncomfortable, and it inspires my sympathy. His mouth was covered by a hat, and his few lines were always inaudible, which seemed to symbolize the little people's lack of voice.

He reminds me of myself, and more people who are more vulnerable than me.

When I was young, I was very short, and I was always the last one in the girls' team in PE class, which meant that I was one of the shortest students in the class. I want to add "one" because when I was in elementary school, there was a male student in our class who suffered from polio. His legs became deformed and he needed to walk with a bamboo stick. He was slightly shorter than me. .

Fortunately, my academic performance was barely passable, and I was not bullied too much in the class. But the male classmate was different. He was often laughed at by other classmates. After being bullied several times, he had to lie on the desk and cry silently.

The worst thing is that once he was bullied by the teacher. It turned out that the teacher found that the student didn't really need the bamboo stick to walk. Sometimes, on the way home from school, he could actually trot along with the children in the same village with the bamboo stick.

So one day, the teacher took away his bamboo stick while he was not paying attention. The classmate was taken aback at first, then felt that he was being bullied, and suddenly cried aggrieved.

The whole class was stunned, and even the most naughty male classmates looked at him with sympathy. The teacher also seemed to feel that what he did was inappropriate, and quickly explained that he just wanted to help the male classmate get rid of the bamboo stick and walk out of good intentions.

But the classmate did not give up the bamboo stick because of the teacher's "kindness". Instead, he relied on the bamboo stick more because of his damaged self-esteem. It was like that until graduation from elementary school.

Years later, we are all adults. I reunited with that classmate and found that he finally stopped walking with bamboo sticks. I didn't ask him when he threw away the bamboo stick. I think, in his heart, the scene where the elementary school teacher took away the bamboo stick might still hurt him.

Going back to "South Park", I sometimes wonder, why did the writers of the show set up a character like Kenny, and let him die in such a brutal way every episode?

Perhaps, the writers want to remind us that there is still bullying in this world.

The screenwriter should not want the audience to be amused or happy when watching Kenny fall to the ground with blood splattered, but to use such an uncomfortable scene to arouse everyone's empathy. For a reason, people who need love and care.

For example, a child with a special experience in Matt City was criticized by some netizens with harsh words because of a little unintentional mistake. Do you really need to treat her like that?

Everyone grows up from weak babies who cannot survive on their own. Everyone makes mistakes in the process of growing up and encounters such and such ups and downs. In the eyes of a mentally strong adult, some words may be innocuous, but for a more sensitive child, such a sentence may be very stressful.

Even if there is a fierce tiger in your heart, facing the delicate rose, please hold your breath and smell it gently, so that the trace of sweet fragrance can penetrate into your heart.

Thank you for reading, and I hope you all have a wonderful summer.

CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

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