156 Game of Vices 32

Although he didn't want to admit it, when Mu Li had just finished listening to the question, the reflex answer in his mind was that bad people would blow up the good guys' ships for their own survival.

After all, after she became a space-time administrator, she was used to seeing and punishing so many "bad guys", and she always had a benchmark of her own in her heart.

In her heart, those "bad guys" are selfish and do everything, but they don't clean up.

The answer given by "Devil" was like a huge spike, piercing straight into her heart, unceremoniously picking up the topic she had been avoiding, intentionally or unintentionally.

She had wondered if "Devil" had made up such "facts" to her just to disturb her thoughts.

But, after thinking about it, she was almost certain that it was true.

First of all, "Devil" really doesn't need to go to great lengths to make up these things to fool her, if he doesn't want to absorb her, it's not difficult to directly use mental power to suppress her and play her to collapse, if he really wants to absorb her, why lie to her?

Secondly, when Mu Li put herself in the same scene to conceive, she realized that this matter was so scary.

If she was really the captain of that ship, would she take it for granted that those bad people should be cut by a thousand cuts, and it would not be a pity to die?

Will she, for granted, think that good people should live longer, and then easily press that button and lay her future life on the blood of another boatload of people?

Perhaps, she will.

Perhaps, most of the "good people", will.

After all, people are selfish, self-interested, and hypocritical.

What's more, if you have to choose between your own precious life and the lives of those who "deserve death" in your own eyes, then isn't the answer obvious?

If she is the captain of the ship, perhaps, she will eventually be like the "good guy" of the ship, and she will not understand how she died until the moment she dies.

It's just that what do those "bad guys" think? Why did the usually vicious underworld boss smash the remote control?

Mu Li was not that kind of person, and she had no way of understanding their thoughts.

It's just that through this question, she can't help but have some other ideas.

What is a "good guy" and what is a "bad guy"?

Are the "good guys" destined to shine, while the "bad guys" can only hide in the corners and survive?

She has experienced so many worlds, and she has seen people with tattoos on their arms give up their seats on the bus, and she has also seen people's teachers go into bars and dance striptease;

Who knows what kind of abuse the murderer with a knife has experienced, and who knows how much gray mountain and sea delicacies are stuffed into the belly of a suit and tie?

Migrant workers are busy in the city, grinding their hands in order to build buildings, but wherever they appear, where is there no white eyes and contempt?

The one who is dressed brightly must be a gentleman? The one who is dressed unusually revealing must be a female cousin?

Who says hooligans are all bad guys? Who can say that there is no bitterness behind everyone's story?

In a big way, why does the Temporal Authority have the ability to adjudicate time and space, and why are all those who stand in the way of the original owner being villains and must be eliminated?

Who is it that gives them the right to judge others?

Who gave them the privilege of deciding the lives of others?

It is said in the space-time management regulations that they carry out tasks to maintain the stability of space-time. However, is the proposition of maintaining the stability of time and space necessarily correct?

Mu Li has studied life sciences, and she also knows that in the growth and development of human embryos, some cells are destined to be "sacrificed".

It's like a baby's hand, at the beginning it's just a round ball of flesh, and only when some cells are programmed to die, the real "five fingers" appear.

If the baby is regarded as a whole, then these sacrificed cells only contribute to the overall happiness, because only when they are apoptosis can the baby have healthy fingers and enjoy a healthy life.

And what about the Temporal Authority?

There are so many planes and so many spaces in this world, if you look at them all as a whole, then who knows if the worlds that Mu Li saved back were supposed to be "programmed to die"?

Going around a little further, maybe for the whole whole, for the set of all planes and spaces, the collapse of a particular plane is beneficial, but what about the collapsed plane itself?

This collapsed plane, all the creatures living on this plane, should be sacrificed in vain?

To put it a little further, there is no way to judge the right and wrong of the plane, and there is no way to judge the right and wrong of people, so what about the right and wrong of other creatures?

Whether you admit it or not, in the eyes of most people, human life is more noble than other creatures.

If, in front of you, there is a man and a tiger, and you have to choose one to die, then, which one will you choose?

Mu Li is a person, of course she will choose people.

However, having traveled through so many worlds, she has also tried to attach to other animals, such as Xiao Hei.

However, if this choice is put in front of anyone: let one person die, or let Xiao Hei die, then, Xiao Hei is dead.

Did Blackie do something wrong?

Xiao Hei is simple and kind, he only wants Liu Yi to be happy, and is even willing to fight tattooed men for Liu Yi's sake without regard for his own safety.

However, it will still be sacrificed, not for any reason, just because it is a cat.

So, the question is, who determines that people must be nobler than cats?

Mu Li has been a cat, and she knows that cats may have their own rich inner world and their own value evaluation standards like humans. Sometimes, cats' three views may be more positive than people's.

So, on what basis?

She suddenly remembered the black cat, the black cat Hongyu.

He is a cat himself, so in his eyes, will the life of a cat be more precious than that of a human?

So, what is right, and is there a unified criterion?

Are these tasks really right, and on what level?

Are all the people she punishes really wrong? Do they really all deserve to die?

Mu Li didn't know, there was only a piece of gibberish left in her mind.

In a trance, there was the sound of something collapsing, and the scenery in front of him began to drift, and Mu Li was unstable again

(To be continued.) )