I really can't understand why some people can so brazenly treat compassion as a game and use kindness as a performance.
I really like the phrase "Virtue supports all things." Virtue is the root. When a person's virtue is gone, it's like a tree with rotting roots—no matter how lush the branches and leaves appear, the tree will eventually break and wither. Never believe you can remedy a rotten root with fertilizer or any physical means.
Whether it's for cooperation, making friends, or choosing a partner, these three types of people—no matter how eloquent, attractive, or wealthy—will always be blacklisted from my social circle: 1. People with no moral bottom line; 2. People who lack principles in their actions and behavior; 3. People who have broken their word more than three times;
Faking a donation once might be excused as negligence; but to do so again is pure moral decay. Charity is not a stage, and suffering is not a script. Using disaster as a prop and sympathy as currency, exploiting public goodwill just to gain traffic and personal profit, not only betrays the true spirit of philanthropy but also desecrates life and suffering.
In the "dark forest" of the crypto world, anyone can seek their own way to survive, but what makes us human ultimately comes down to public virtue. Wealth can be accumulated, reputation can be crafted, but once virtue is damaged, it's like a rotten tree root—it's almost impossible to nurture a strong and upright life from there.
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I really can't understand why some people can so brazenly treat compassion as a game and use kindness as a performance.
I really like the phrase "Virtue supports all things." Virtue is the root. When a person's virtue is gone, it's like a tree with rotting roots—no matter how lush the branches and leaves appear, the tree will eventually break and wither. Never believe you can remedy a rotten root with fertilizer or any physical means.
Whether it's for cooperation, making friends, or choosing a partner, these three types of people—no matter how eloquent, attractive, or wealthy—will always be blacklisted from my social circle:
1. People with no moral bottom line;
2. People who lack principles in their actions and behavior;
3. People who have broken their word more than three times;
Faking a donation once might be excused as negligence; but to do so again is pure moral decay. Charity is not a stage, and suffering is not a script. Using disaster as a prop and sympathy as currency, exploiting public goodwill just to gain traffic and personal profit, not only betrays the true spirit of philanthropy but also desecrates life and suffering.
In the "dark forest" of the crypto world, anyone can seek their own way to survive, but what makes us human ultimately comes down to public virtue. Wealth can be accumulated, reputation can be crafted, but once virtue is damaged, it's like a rotten tree root—it's almost impossible to nurture a strong and upright life from there.