In his novel "Where", Jerzy Kosinsky shows how today's culture deviates from Platon's ideal society depicted in his cave fables. In his parable, Plato uses a cave to describe the different stages of life and education. On the first floor of the cave, Platon explains the prisoner who was bound and faced a blank wall. Behind it there is a firewall with a partition where objects are placed and operated by people in different groups. These shadows are the only actions I've ever seen.
Can adults without education grow after a wealthy family grows up? In the story of Jerzy Kosinski's "Where", opportunities grew up in a mansion with wealthy adopted parents. The only knowledge he got was from the television. He is isolated from the outside world and is only allowed to stay inside or to the garden. Opportunities are raised in wealthy families. He lives in a large house full of housekeeper, maid, housekeeper. "He suddenly heard the snoring on the windows and the voice of a fat maid." They only cherished him. 7 "No one will tell him who the father is even the old man." He did not know who his parents were when he grew up.
In the 1970s, America presented "there there," Jerzy Kosinski's popular satire novel (and later filmed with Peter Sellers) presented an idea for a simple president. In books and movies, gardeners will become presidential advisors (and perhaps his successor) when some people make a mistake for his mediocre observations. It is a bit familiar. But in the world of imaginary existence, the opportunity is benign, almost like Christ. His opponent in the real life is more vicious. Like opportunities, Donald Trump knows the world mainly from television. The relationship between Mr. Trump and the television is exhausted - as far as he knows, he murmured on policies according to news reported in Fox News. As Trevor Noah of the "Daily Show" said, "It's too crazy, the Chief Commander gains his intelligence from your racist grandfather"