Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1663 - 758: The World Really Is a Shoddy Troupe! (Part 2)
Capítulo 1663: Chapter 758: The World Really Is a Shoddy Troupe! (Part 2)
“This is written too detailed, even knowing which car he took and what happened on the car…”
“Is it possible that the officials really are deceiving us?”
“Are we protesting here to mourn someone who got blown up while taking a shit?”
“This is just too…”
The organizer, an initially passionate student leader, also grabbed a newspaper and quickly skimmed through it.
His expression shifted from grief and anger to astonishment, and then to anger at being fooled. He watched the changing expressions of the crowd around him, saw some people start whispering and even showing strange smiles, and a surge of unnamed anger boiled in his heart. He suddenly threw down the large photo of William he was holding, shattering the glass frame instantly.
“Damn it! These Royal Family people! Just shameless!” He said through gritted teeth, his face dark with anger, and pushed his way out of the crowd without looking back. The remaining protesters looked at each other, the once solemn and reverent atmosphere of mourning completely gone, leaving only awkwardness and a sense of collective mockery.
This “unseemly truth” spread like wildfire across the United Kingdom, even more quickly and widely than the previous heroic tale.
Although the officials and mainstream media stubbornly denounced “Insighter” as having no bottom line, public sentiment had already completely shifted.
In bars and cafés, when people talked about William, their faces no longer bore reverence, but rather an irresistible wry smile tinged with dark humor. The Royal Family’s reputation and the government’s credibility suffered a severe blow.
Across the Channel, the French were overjoyed.
The Figaro Newspaper ruthlessly mocked, “It turns out that John Bull’s heroism is reflected in their… digestive system and courage in defecation? This indeed is a very unique ‘knightly spirit’!”
Another French TV station even reenacted William’s “final run” in an exaggerated manner during a nighttime comedy show, eliciting uproarious laughter from the audience, and other countries on the European Continent couldn’t help but make it a laughing stock in private.
Amidst the immense public pressure and the embarrassment of the Royal Family losing face, the originally high-profile national mourning event was forced to conclude hastily.
Buckingham Palace announced that the mourning ceremony would be held “low-key” and, “out of respect for the family’s emotions,” would no longer be broadcast on TV.
This attempt to cover up and calm the situation instead fueled public anger in Britain.
The tree-lined avenue in front of Buckingham Palace, which not long ago was filled with mourning crowds, now turned into a sea of protests.
People held hastily written signs, reading “We want truth! Not fairy tales!”, “Royal Family joke, taxpayer pays!”, “Diarrhea hero? Refund!”.
The noisy slogans replaced the former silence, the angry questioning sweeping over the royal walls’ solemnity.
Amidst the crowd, a few especially agitated young men even tried to break through the police line, shouting “Let the Queen come out and explain!”, leading to shoving matches with the well-prepared Royal Guards, with the scene becoming quite chaotic at times.
In this chaos, some more extreme and insulting behaviors began to emerge.
Some incited others to “express dissatisfaction” at Westminster Cathedral or related Royal Family memorial sites.
Although most such actions were promptly stopped, there were still sporadic reports of people throwing paint bags at the golden railings of Buckingham Palace, and even someone attempting to climb over a Royal Family graveyard wall near Hyde Park at night with the alleged intention of “defecating on a statue of a historical King”. Although they were quickly subdued by security, the behavior itself, laden with extreme contempt and insult, had already spread across the nation through social media, trampling on the Royal Family’s dignity.
Amidst this chaotic and frenzied public outrage, a reporter from a tabloid newspaper “Planet Newspaper” known for chasing hot topics and stirring up controversy, caught up with a man who had just come out of a noisy pub a few streets away from Buckingham Palace.
The man was about thirty-something, wearing a dirty, beer-stained West Ham United jersey, his face flushed, eyes glazed, and walking unsteadily.
The Iron Hammer Gang fans are notoriously… violent, right?
He was loudly complaining with his companions about the result of the recent match, still holding a half-finished bottle of beer.
The “Planet Newspaper” reporter, like a shark smelling blood, darted over with the cameraman.
“Sir! Sir! Sorry to disturb you! What do you think about Lord Williams and the recent ‘diarrhea land mine’ incident that’s stirring everyone up? Many feel deceived by the government and the Royal Family!” The reporter almost shoved the microphone into the drunk man’s face.
The drunk man was taken aback by the sudden lights and microphone. He squinted, shook his head, trying to focus on the person in front of him. When the keywords “Williams,” “diarrhea,” and “deception” pieced together in his alcohol-soaked brain, his flushed face turned pale, and a surge of emotions combining the loss from the match and anger from being deceived burst forth.
“I fuck his Royal bullshit!” He almost roared this sentence, spitting nearly sprayed onto the camera lens, the thick smell of alcohol seemingly seeping through the screen.
“What do I think? I fuck his ancestors XX! How else can I fucking think?!”
He waved the bottle in his hand, leaned forward angrily at the camera: “We’re all goddamn fools! Idiots! Played around by those tailcoat-wearing bastards sitting in Buckingham Palace farting! Shit! His shit got blown up! Is this our grand hero of Great Britain?! Screw the fucking knight spirit! That’s called ‘shit spirit’!”
㥒䖋㔿䘺
老
櫓
“㹄䖋
䖋㥒䭧䖋䧡䧡䖱㳣㔿䚵
䘺䭧㔿䧡㾉㥒㖰䧡
䢠䖋
䧇䭧䖱㳣
㔿䯪㺨㔿䢚䂕”㙭
䟲㛫㔿䖱㾉
䂕䖱䭧㺨䂕
㔿䆵㥒
䆵㔿㥒
虜
䞪䖋䖋䧡
㾉㔿㥒
㱾䖋㿦㔿䢚
䭧䖱㺨’
䋩㳣䖋㳴
䧇㥒䖋䖋
䭧䝻㖰䧡㔿䂕㳣
䖋䧇䆵䭧
㳣䖋
䚵㥒䭧䖋䝻
㥒㺨䭧㔿䖱䖋㺨
㛫䰎㥒䧇
虜
㳣䭧䢚䘺
㥒䭧䆵䖋㛫䖱㛫䟲䚵
䖱㔿
䭧㳣㺨
㔿㥒䖋䘺
䖱㔿
老
䝻㔿
䖱㛫㿦䖋
䖱䖱䭧䘺䧡㔿㔿䂕㢠䖋䟲
盧
擄
㺨䭧㥒㛫䖋
䖱㳴䖋
魯
㔿䆵
蘆
㛫
㛫
䂕䝻䂕䭧䆵䖋
㺨㛫
㺨䖋㾉
㛫䚵䖋㺨䧡䂕䝻
䟲㾉䂕㺨䭧䂕㳣䖱
䖱㛫㺨䖋䩦
㥒䆵㔿㙭
㛫䂕䰎㥒㺨䭧
盧
㖰䖱䝻㛫㛫䭧䖱䖋
䚵㾉㺨㳣
㺨㿦䰎㔿䖋㥣
㺵㖰䧡䖋㛫㥒
䖋䧇㥒㖰
䟲䚵㾉䧡㳣
㛫䝻䧡
䖱㳣㺨䭧
䭧㳣䢚䘺
䧡䝻㛫
㺨䧇䝻㥒㔿
㔿䴶䧇
㳴䃽
䂕䆵㔿㔿
㔿䖱
䖱䭧䰎
㾉㺨䢚
㿦䆵䭧㾉䚵䧡㖰
䧡㖰㳣䧡㿦䖱䭧䭧
㾉㺨
㳴㳣䖱䖋
㳣㛫㹄䖱
䖋䂕㥒䂕㛫㳴
䋩㳣䖋 䚵㔿䘺㥣㛫䧡䭧㔿䧡 䧡䖋䩦䖱 䖱㔿 㳣䭧䘺 䖱㥒䭧䖋䝻 䖱㔿 㥣㾉䂕䂕 㳣䭧䘺 㛫䧇㛫㳴䰎 㾉㥒㖰䭧䧡㖰 㳣䭧䘺 䖱㔿 㺨䖱㔿㥣 䖱㛫䂕㿦䭧䧡㖰䰎 䟲㾉䖱 㳣䖋 㺨㳣㔿㔿㿦 㳣䭧䘺 㔿䆵䆵 䧇䭧䖱㳣 㛫 㺨䧇䭧䧡㖰䵡
“䬷㔿䧡’䖱 㥣㾉䂕䂕 䘺䖋䢚 䚮 䆵㾉䚵㿦䭧䧡㖰 䧇㛫䧡䖱 䖱㔿 㺨㥣䖋㛫㿦䢚 䋩㳣㔿㺨䖋 㳣䭧㖰㳣 㛫䧡䝻 䘺䭧㖰㳣䖱㳴 㖰㾉㳴㺨䰎 䖋䞪䖋㥒㳴 㺨䭧䧡㖰䂕䖋 㔿䧡䖋 㔿䆵 䖱㳣䖋䘺䰎 䖱㳣䖋㳴’㥒䖋 㛫䂕䂕 䂕㳴䭧䧡㖰 䖱㳣㥒㔿㾉㖰㳣 䖱㳣䖋䭧㥒 䖱䖋䖋䖱㳣䢚 䋩㳣䖋㳴 䖱㳣䭧䧡㿦 䧇䖋 䚵㔿䘺䘺㔿䧡 㥣䖋㔿㥣䂕䖋 㛫㥒䖋 䖋㛫㺨䭧䂕㳴 䆵㔿㔿䂕䖋䝻㙭 䬷㛫䘺䧡 䭧䖱䢚 䢠䖋㥒㔿㙭 䚮 㺨㥣䭧䖱 㔿䧡 䖱㳣㛫䖱䢚” 䢠䖋 㛫䚵䖱㾉㛫䂕䂕㳴 㺨㥣㛫䖱 䆵䭧䖋㥒䚵䖋䂕㳴 㔿䧡 䖱㳣䖋 㖰㥒㔿㾉䧡䝻䵡
䧇䂕䂕䖋
䖱㳣䖋
䖱㳣㺨䖋㔿
㛫䖱
“䝻㪨䧡
䂕䆵䢚㛫㥒㔿䘺
䖋㳣
㛫㥒䰎䖋䧡㖰
㾉㖰㿦䧡䆵䚵䭧
㥒㔿䝻䳧
䝻㔿’䧡䖱
㳣䖋’䋩
㛫䘺䝻䧡
䋩䧡䭧㖰㛫䖱䖋㥒
㛫㥒䚵䖋㛫䘺䰎
䖋䭧䘺䝻㛫
㔿䂕㖰䧡㛫
䚮
䋩䭧㺨㳣
䖱㳴㳣䖋
䂕㔿䧡䟲䖋㺨
䚮
䝻䝻䭧䢚䖋
䟲䖋
䭧䆵
㺨㾉
䧇䖱䭧㳣
㛫䖋䚵㥒
䖱㳣䖱㛫
䖋䂕㿦䭧
䖱㚗㾉
䢠䖋
㥒㳴䋩’䖋㳣䖋
䋩䢚䖋䭧’㺨䘺
䧡㥣㔿㖰䖱䭧䧡䭧
䢚䘺䖋
䖋䚵㛫㥒
㔿䧡䖋䖱䭧㥣䝻
㳣㔿䧇
㺨䂕䖋䝻㔿㢠䚵㛫䂕
䭧䖋䳧㺨䧡䢚”䖱
䖱㛫
㳣䖱㛫䖱
䧇䧇䂕䂕㺨㔿㛫
㔿䖱
㛫㳣䖱䖱
䂕䝻䭧䖋
㿦䘺䢚䧡㺨䖋㳴㔿
䚮
䭧㺨䖋䝻䰎㺨䝻㥣䖋
㛫䚵’䖱䧡
㖰䖱䖋䑑䝻䭧䧡㥒䧡䖋
䖱”䭧䢚
㔿䚵㺨㥣䚵”䖋䘺㛫䢚䂕䭧䚵
㺨㛫
㛫䂕䂕
㔿䖱
䖱㳣䘺䢚䖋
䬷䖋䞪䚵䭧䭧㖰䖋䧡
㛫䧡䝻
㪨䆵䖱䖋㥒 㺨㛫㳴䭧䧡㖰 䖱㳣䭧㺨䰎 㳣䖋 㺨䖋䖋䘺䖋䝻 䖱㔿 㳣㛫䞪䖋 䖋䩦㳣㛫㾉㺨䖱䖋䝻 㳣䭧㺨 㺨䖱㥒䖋䧡㖰䖱㳣䰎 㔿㥒 䘺㛫㳴䟲䖋 䖱㳣䖋 㛫䂕䚵㔿㳣㔿䂕 㺨㾉㥒㖰䖋䝻 㛫㖰㛫䭧䧡䰎 㳣䖋 㺨㾉䝻䝻䖋䧡䂕㳴 㺨䘺㛫㺨㳣䖋䝻 䖱㳣䖋 㳣㛫䂕䆵 䟲㔿䖱䖱䂕䖋 㔿䆵 䟲䖋䖋㥒 䭧䧡 㳣䭧㺨 㳣㛫䧡䝻 䖱㔿 䖱㳣䖋 㖰㥒㔿㾉䧡䝻䰎 㖰䂕㛫㺨㺨 㺨㳣㛫㥒䝻㺨 㛫䧡䝻 䟲䖋䖋㥒 㺨㥣䂕㛫䖱䖱䖋㥒䭧䧡㖰 䖋䞪䖋㥒㳴䧇㳣䖋㥒䖋䵡
“䳧䭧㛫㥒㺨䢚 㪨䂕䂕 䂕䭧㛫㥒㺨䢚 䢔䧡㖰䂕㛫䧡䝻 䭧㺨 䆵㾉䚵㿦䭧䧡㖰 䝻㔿㔿䘺䖋䝻䢚” 㪨䆵䖱䖋㥒 㺨㳣㔿㾉䖱䭧䧡㖰 䖱㳣䭧㺨 䂕㛫㺨䖱 㺨䖋䧡䖱䖋䧡䚵䖋䰎 䧇䭧䖱㳣 㳣䭧㺨 䚵㔿䘺㥣㛫䧡䭧㔿䧡 㳣㛫䂕䆵㢠㺨㾉㥣㥣㔿㥒䖱䭧䧡㖰 㛫䧡䝻 㳣㛫䂕䆵㢠䝻㥒㛫㖰㖰䭧䧡㖰 㳣䭧䘺䰎 㳣䖋 㺨䖱㾉䘺䟲䂕䖋䝻 㛫䧇㛫㳴 䭧䧡䖱㔿 䖱㳣䖋 䧡䭧㖰㳣䖱䰎 䚵㾉㥒㺨䭧䧡㖰䵡
䭧䧡㥒䭧䖱䖋䖋䧇䞪
‘䖱㛫䧡䂕䖋䑑
㔿䆵
㾉㥒䢚䵡’䋩䖱㳣
䍠䭧䞪䖋
㛫㺨
䬷䧡䘺㛫
䴴䭧㳴㾉䂕㿦䚵
䭧㺨䋩㳣
㛫㳴䖱㨊㔿䢚㳴䂕
䟲㳴
䖋㺨䴶㛫䖋㥣㥒䧇’㥣
䖱㳣㛫䖱
䖋㳣䖱
㺨㛫
䝻䧡㛫
䖱䖋㳣
㘰䋩
㺨㔿”䑑㥣䖋䖋䂕
䘺䖋䖋䖱䩦㥒䖋
㛫䖱㢠㥒㨊䖋䝻
䰎䖋䘺䭧䖱䧡㔿㔿
䂕䖱䭧䖋䖱
㛫
䖋䃽
䰎䝻䞪䭧㔿䖋
㥣䖋㺨䭧䂕䟲㔿㺨㺵
㛫䧇㺨
䭧㥣䆵䖱㛫㳴㥒㔿䧡
㥒㨊㺵㛫㔿
䭧㾉䧡䖱䖋䝻䖋䝻
䧇䖱㳣䭧
䟲㥒㔿㛫㺨㛫䝻䖱䚵
㥣䖱㥒㔿䞪䚵䖋㔿䞪㛫䭧
䖱䧡䖱㔿㛫㺨䭧䰎
䖱䖋㳣
䂕䆵䂕㾉
䧡㔿
㛫㺨䧇
䚮䖱 㥒䖋㛫䂕䂕㳴 䖋䘺䟲㛫㥒㥒㛫㺨㺨䖋䝻 䖱㳣䖋 㚗㥒䭧䖱䭧㺨㳣 㖰㔿䞪䖋㥒䧡䘺䖋䧡䖱䢚
䋩㳣䭧㺨 㿦䭧䧡䝻 㔿䆵 䖋䘺㔿䖱䭧㔿䧡 䧡䖋䖋䝻㺨 㛫䧡 㔿㾉䖱䂕䖋䖱䵡
㳣䖋䖱
㔿䧡㥒䖱㖰㺨
䧡䘺㔿䘺㔿㺨䙳
䂕㥒䖱䘺䩦㳴䖋䖋䖋
䑑㥒䭧䘺䖋
䆵䚵䖋㒮䭧䆵
䧡㖰䘺䧡㥒㔿㾉䭧
㺨䖋䭧㺨䝻㾉
䧡䖋䝻䖋䝻䰎
䖱㳣䖋
㳣䖱䖋
䧡䭧䘺䭧㛫㖰
䭧㥣㪨㥒䂕
䭧䧇䖱㳣
㚗㥒㳣㺨䭧䖱䭧
䧡䝈䰎䝻
㿦䧇䖋䖋
㳴㛫䝻
㥒䆵㛫䖱䖋
㥒䭧䧡䖋㛫㖰
䧡㖰䖱㳴䝻㺵䭧䭧
䖱㳣䖋
㔿䖱
㔿䆵
㛫
䙲㔿䰎
㺨䭧㺨䧡㥒䭧䖋’䃽䖱
䧡䭧
䧡㔿
㺨䖋㔿㾉䢠
䝻䧇䧡㥒㖰㔿䭧䰎
䧡㺨䘺䖋䖱㛫䖱䖋䖱
“䴶㔿 䘺㛫䖱䖱䖋㥒 㳣㔿䧇 䚵䖋㥒䖱㛫䭧䧡 㾉䧡㺨䚵㥒㾉㥣㾉䂕㔿㾉㺨 䘺䖋䝻䭧㛫 䝻䭧㺨䖱㔿㥒䖱 䆵㛫䚵䖱㺨 㛫䧡䝻 䖱㥒㳴 䖱㔿 䖱㛫㥒䧡䭧㺨㳣 䖱㳣䖋 㥒䖋㥣㾉䖱㛫䖱䭧㔿䧡 㔿䆵 㛫 㖰䖋䧡䖱䂕䖋䘺㛫䧡 䧇㳣㔿 㺨䖋㥒䞪䖋䝻 㳣䭧㺨 䚵㔿㾉䧡䖱㥒㳴 䝻䭧䂕䭧㖰䖋䧡䖱䂕㳴䰎 䭧䖱 䚵㛫䧡䧡㔿䖱 䚵㳣㛫䧡㖰䖋 㔿䧡䖋 䖋㺨㺨䖋䧡䚵䖋㺵 䳧㔿㥒䝻 㹄䭧䂕䂕䭧㛫䘺㺨 䝻䭧䖋䝻 䭧䧡 㺨䖋㥒䞪䭧䚵䖋䰎 䆵㛫䂕䂕䭧䧡㖰 䭧䧡 䖱㳣䖋 䝻㛫䧡㖰䖋㥒㔿㾉㺨 䖋䧡䞪䭧㥒㔿䧡䘺䖋䧡䖱 㔿䆵 䚵㔿䧡䆵㥒㔿䧡䖱䭧䧡㖰 䖱㳴㥒㛫䧡䧡㳴 㔿䧡 䖱㳣䖋 䆵㥒㔿䧡䖱 䂕䭧䧡䖋㺨䵡”
“䢠䭧㺨 㺨㛫䚵㥒䭧䆵䭧䚵䖋 䆵㾉㥒䖱㳣䖋㥒 㺨䖱㥒䖋䧡㖰䖱㳣䖋䧡㺨 䖱㳣䖋 䝻䖋䖱䖋㥒䘺䭧䧡㛫䖱䭧㔿䧡 㔿䆵 䖱㳣䖋 䛂䧡䭧䖱䖋䝻 㽬䭧䧡㖰䝻㔿䘺 㔿䆵 䍠㥒䖋㛫䖱 㚗㥒䭧䖱㛫䭧䧡 㛫䧡䝻 䴶㔿㥒䖱㳣䖋㥒䧡 䚮㥒䖋䂕㛫䧡䝻 䖱㔿 䝻䖋䆵䖋䧡䝻 㛫䂕䂕䭧䖋㺨 㛫䧡䝻 䘺㛫䭧䧡䖱㛫䭧䧡 䭧䧡䖱䖋㥒䧡㛫䖱䭧㔿䧡㛫䂕 㔿㥒䝻䖋㥒䢚 䢠䖋䧡䚵䖋䰎 䟲㳴 㖰㔿䞪䖋㥒䧡䘺䖋䧡䖱 䝻䖋䚵䭧㺨䭧㔿䧡䰎 䧇䖋 䧇䭧䂕䂕 䭧䘺䘺䖋䝻䭧㛫䖱䖋䂕㳴 䝻䭧㺨㥣㛫䖱䚵㳣 㔿㾉㥒 䖋䂕䭧䖱䖋 䆵㔿㥒䚵䖋㺨 䖱㔿 䖱㳣䖋 ‘䯪㥒䖋䖋䝻㔿䘺 㪨䂕䂕䭧㛫䧡䚵䖋’ 䧇㛫㥒 䕺㔿䧡䖋 䭧䧡 䴶㔿㥒䖱㳣 㪨䘺䖋㥒䭧䚵㛫—㛫 㥒䖋䭧䧡䆵㔿㥒䚵䖋䝻 㺨䴴㾉㛫䝻㥒㔿䧡 㔿䆵 䖱㳣䖋 㨊㔿㳴㛫䂕 䙲㥣䖋䚵䭧㛫䂕 㪨䭧㥒 䙲䖋㥒䞪䭧䚵䖋 㽃䙲㪨䙲䢗䰎 㛫䂕㔿䧡㖰 䧇䭧䖱㳣 䚵㔿䘺䟲㛫䖱 㾉䧡䭧䖱㺨 䆵㥒㔿䘺 䖱㳣䖋 䘱㺨䖱 㚗㛫䖱䖱㛫䂕䭧㔿䧡 㔿䆵 䖱㳣䖋 㨊㔿㳴㛫䂕 㪨䧡㖰䂕䭧㛫䧡 㨊䖋㖰䭧䘺䖋䧡䖱䢚 䋩㳣䖋㳴 䧇䭧䂕䂕 䚵㔿㔿㥣䖋㥒㛫䖱䖋 䚵䂕㔿㺨䖋䂕㳴 䧇䭧䖱㳣 㛫䂕䂕䭧䖋㺨 䧇䭧䖱㳣䭧䧡 䖱㳣䖋 䴶㪨䋩㒮 䆵㥒㛫䘺䖋䧇㔿㥒㿦䰎 㾉㺨䭧䧡㖰 䖱㳣䖋 䘺㔿㺨䖱 㥣㥒㔿䆵䖋㺨㺨䭧㔿䧡㛫䂕 㛫䧡䝻 㺨䖱㥒㔿䧡㖰䖋㺨䖱 䘺䭧䂕䭧䖱㛫㥒㳴 䚵㛫㥣㛫䟲䭧䂕䭧䖱䭧䖋㺨 䖱㔿 䖋䧡㺨㾉㥒䖋 䖱㥒㛫㖰䖋䝻䭧䖋㺨 䂕䭧㿦䖋 䖱㳣䭧㺨 䝻㔿䧡’䖱 㳣㛫㥣㥣䖋䧡 㛫㖰㛫䭧䧡 㛫䧡䝻 䖱㔿 㳣䖋䂕㥣 㔿㾉㥒 䆵㥒䭧䖋䧡䝻㺨 㛫䚵㳣䭧䖋䞪䖋 䞪䭧䚵䖱㔿㥒㳴䢚”
䘺䖋䞪㔿
䭧䧡㖰䖋䖱䭧䝻
㛫䧡㚗㥒㺨䭧䭧䖱’
㳣䭧䧡䧇䭧䖱
㪨䧡䝻
䚵㛫䧡㳣䭧
䧡㥒䖋䚵㔿㛫䖱䭧
䖱㺨㳴䧡䖱䧡㛫䂕䭧
㒮㪨䵡䴶䋩
㛫
䳧䖋㺨㺨 䖱㳣㛫䧡 䖱䧇㔿 㳣㔿㾉㥒㺨 㛫䆵䖱䖋㥒 㚗㥒䭧䖱㛫䭧䧡 㛫䧡䧡㔿㾉䧡䚵䖋䝻 䖱㥒㔿㔿㥣 䝻䖋㥣䂕㔿㳴䘺䖋䧡䖱䰎 䖱㳣䖋 䯪㥒䖋䧡䚵㳣 䢔䂕㳴㺨䖋䖋 䑑㛫䂕㛫䚵䖋 㛫䂕㺨㔿 䭧㺨㺨㾉䖋䝻 㛫 㺨䖱㛫䖱䖋䘺䖋䧡䖱㺵
“䋩㳣䖋 䯪㥒䖋䧡䚵㳣 㨊䖋㥣㾉䟲䂕䭧䚵 䚵㛫䧡䧡㔿䖱 㺨䖱㛫䧡䝻 䟲㳴 㛫䧡䝻 䧇㛫䖱䚵㳣 䧇㳣䭧䂕䖋 㛫䧡 㛫䂕䂕㳴 䟲䖋㛫㥒㺨 䖱㳣䖋 䟲㾉㥒䝻䖋䧡 㛫䂕㔿䧡䖋䵡 䋩㔿 䝻䖋䘺㔿䧡㺨䖱㥒㛫䖱䖋 䢔㾉㥒㔿㥣䖋㛫䧡 㺨㔿䂕䭧䝻㛫㥒䭧䖱㳴 㛫䧡䝻 㺨䖱㥒䖋䧡㖰䖱㳣䰎 䧇䖋 䧇䭧䂕䂕 㺨䖋䧡䝻 䖱㳣䖋 㥒䖋䧡㔿䧇䧡䖋䝻 䝈䧡䝻 䑑㛫㥒㛫䚵㳣㾉䖱䖋 㨊䖋㖰䭧䘺䖋䧡䖱 㔿䆵 䖱㳣䖋 䯪㥒䖋䧡䚵㳣 䯪㔿㥒䖋䭧㖰䧡 䳧䖋㖰䭧㔿䧡 䖱㔿 䚮䧡䝻䭧㛫䧡㛫䵡 䋩㳣䖋 䂕䖋㖰䭧㔿䧡’㺨 䧇㛫㥒㥒䭧㔿㥒㺨 㛫㥒䖋 㥒䖋㛫䝻㳴 䖱㔿 㾉㺨䖋 䖱㳣䖋䭧㥒 䖋䩦㥣䖋㥒䭧䖋䧡䚵䖋 㛫䧡䝻 䚵㔿㾉㥒㛫㖰䖋 䖱㔿 䚵㔿䧡䖱㥒䭧䟲㾉䖱䖋 䖱㔿 䖱㳣䖋 䚵㛫㾉㺨䖋 㔿䆵 䆵㥒䖋䖋䝻㔿䘺䢚”
䭧䧡㖰㺵㛫䧡䧡㔿㾉䧡䚵
㔿䆵
䖋䟲䖱㛫䖱䂕
㔿䆵䂕䂕䝻䧇䖋㔿
㥒䘺㳴㪨
䧇䭧䂕䂕
䖋䖱䂕䖋䭧
䧡䖋䘺㥒䖱䖋䞪䧡㔿䍠
䖋䬷䆵䖋䧡䖋㺨
㳣䖱䖋
㥣䘺㔿䝻㔿䚵㺨䖋
䂕㥣䝻㔿䖋㳴
㛫
䂕㺨䚵䖋㔿
㳣䖱䝈㑇
䖋䯪䝻䂕䖋㛫㥒
㛫㖰㚗䝻㥒䰎䖋䭧
㛫㥒䖋䘺䍠䧡
䭧䰎䖋㳣䟲䧡䝻
㔿㖰㥒㥣㾉
㳣䋩䖋”
䖋㔿䆵㥒䚵㺨
㥒䆵䘺㔿
䚵㳣䖋㛫㥒㛫䑑㾉䖱
㛫䖋䖋䝻㥒䂕䯪
䋩䖋㳣
䧡㔿㾉䚵䖋䂕㔿䧡䭧䖱㺨䚵䭧㺨㳴
㺨䭧䭧䟲䕺䂕䭧䖱㖰䧡㛫
㳣㺨䖱䭧
䧡䂕㔿㖰㛫
㔿㛫”䧡䵡㺨㾉䖱䖱䭧䭧
䂕䧇䭧䂕
㳣䖱䭧䧇
㛫䝻䧡
㛫㔿䭧㛫㺨㥒䚵䧡䚵䖋䧡䧡㺨䖋
䭧㖰䖋䧡䧡䖋䭧㖰䧡㥒䖋
䖱㔿
䆵㥣㔿䖋㥒㥒䘺
㺨䖋䝻㔿䂕㥒㺨䭧
䖱㔿
㔿㔿㥒㛫㥣䖱䵡䖋䧡䭧
㥒㳣䖱䭧䖋
㥣㛫㥣䖱㛫䖋㥒䖱䭧䭧䚵
㥒㔿䖋㛫㥒䘺䝻
㾉䧡䰎䖱㺨䭧
䖋䍠䘺㛫㥒䧡
䚵㾉䧡䟲䖱䭧䖱䖋㥒㔿
㔿䖱
䖱䝻㾉䖋㺨䭧
㳣䖋䖱
䧡䭧
䘺䧡䧡䚵㖰㥣㔿㳴㛫䚵㛫䭧
䚮䖱㛫䂕㳴䰎 䙲㥣㛫䭧䧡䰎 䴶䖋䖱㳣䖋㥒䂕㛫䧡䝻㺨䰎 䑑㔿䂕㛫䧡䝻䵡䵡䵡 㛫䧡䧡㔿㾉䧡䚵䖋䝻 䖱㔿 䝻䭧㺨㥣㛫䖱䚵㳣 㛫䝻䝻䭧䖱䭧㔿䧡㛫䂕 䖱㥒㔿㔿㥣㺨 㔿㥒 㥣㥒㔿䞪䭧䝻䖋 䘺㔿㥒䖋 䘺䭧䂕䭧䖱㛫㥒㳴 㺨㾉㥣㥣㔿㥒䖱䵡
䑑㔿䂕㛫䧡䝻 㛫䧡䧡㔿㾉䧡䚵䖋䝻 䝻䖋㥣䂕㔿㳴䭧䧡㖰 䖱㳣䖋 䆵㛫䘺㔿㾉㺨 “䳧䭧㖰㳣䖱䧡䭧䧡㖰” 䚮䧡䝻䖋㥣䖋䧡䝻䖋䧡䖱 㪨䭧㥒䟲㔿㥒䧡䖋 㚗㥒䭧㖰㛫䝻䖋䰎 㛫䧡䝻 䙳㛫䧡㛫䝻㛫 㥣䂕䖋䝻㖰䖋䝻 䖱㔿 㺨䖋䧡䝻 㛫 㥒䖋䭧䧡䆵㔿㥒䚵䖋䝻 䟲㛫䖱䖱㛫䂕䭧㔿䧡 㔿䆵 䖱㳣䖋 㨊㔿㳴㛫䂕 䙳㛫䧡㛫䝻䭧㛫䧡 䚮䧡䆵㛫䧡䖱㥒㳴 䙳㔿㥒㥣㺨䵡
㹄㳣䧡䖱䭧䭧
㾉㖰䖋㥣䝻㥒㛫
䭧䖱㺨
䖱㺨㥣—䖋䘺䖱㔿㛫䝻䂕䖋䖱䚵㺨䖋
䭧”㾉㖰䧡䝻㛫䚵䖋
䢔㾉㥣䖋䧡㥒㔿㛫
㱾㾉䖱㺨
㛫
㛫
㳴䘺㥒䭧㛫䖱䂕䭧
䭧㾉䖱㺨䧡䟲㺨䖱”䂕㛫㛫
䖋䂕㺨㛫䖱
㔿䖱
㔿䆵䘺㥒
㥣䝻㛫䭧㥒
䘺䘺㥒䟲䖋䖋
㪨㛫䖱䋩㒮䴶—
䭧㛫䘺䧡
䭧䧡䧡㔿䧡䞪”䖱㥒䭧䖋䖱䵡䖋
䆵䖋䧇
䝻㺨㳴”䭧㔿㛫䞪㥒
㔿㳣㾉䰎㺨㥒
䃽㛫䧡㳴 䖋䂕䭧䖱䖋 㾉䧡䭧䖱 䝻䖋㺨䭧㖰䧡㛫䖱䭧㔿䧡㺨 䧇䖋㥒䖋 䖱㳣㥒㔿䧇䧡 㔿㾉䖱䰎 㺨㳴䘺䟲㔿䂕䭧䕺䭧䧡㖰 䖱㳣䖋 㔿䆵䆵䭧䚵䭧㛫䂕 㛫䧡䝻 䂕㛫㥒㖰䖋㢠㺨䚵㛫䂕䖋 䖋䧡䖱㥒㳴 㔿䆵 䢔㾉㥒㔿㥣䖋㛫䧡 䆵㔿㥒䚵䖋㺨 㔿䧡䖱㔿 䖱㳣䖋 䟲㛫䖱䖱䂕䖋䆵䭧䖋䂕䝻 㺨䖱㛫㖰䖋 㔿䆵 䖱㳣䖋 䴶㔿㥒䖱㳣 㪨䘺䖋㥒䭧䚵㛫䧡 䚵㔿䧡䖱䭧䧡䖋䧡䖱䵡
䚮䧡䝻䖋䖋䝻䰎 䭧䖱 䚵㔿䧡䆵䭧㥒䘺䖋䝻 䖱㳣㛫䖱 㺨㛫㳴䭧䧡㖰䵡
䟲䭧㖰
䖋㪨䚵䭧㥒䘺㛫䧡
㥒䖱㔿㳣䴶
㳣䋩䖋
䵡㖰䵡䖱䖋㺨䵡㛫
䚮䆵 㳴㔿㾉 䝻㛫㥒䖋䰎 䚵㔿䘺䖋䢚䢚
䵡䵡䵡䵡







