And I think, honestly, what's amazing about it is that they got away with telling one of the most, I mean, dangerous to capitalism stories that there's ever been.
And I think, honestly, what's amazing about it is that they got away with telling one of the most, I mean, dangerous to capitalism stories that there's ever been.
Tries to free the slaves, realizes that it's actually God who has enslaved all of us, and instead of being like, okay, I'm the son of God, they kill God. How about that? Is this actual Jesus or metaphorical Jesus? Metaphorical Jesus. Okay, because I feel like if it were literal, this would be trouble. But again, that's what I'm saying. This is so much like a story of a people over-reliant upon one resource and a guy who is saying to everybody, listen. It is a bad idea to keep doing this, and regardless of the harm it will cause, we must remove the resource entirely. So the point is, he sets up the entirety of the people for a hundred years of extreme misery in order to free them from an evil god who tries to make them over-reliant again on a specific resource.