Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Is there a problem with the "fake style of writing" that stars love to use?

Is there a problem with the "fake style of writing" that stars love to use?

Like ordinary people, stars often take false celebrity quotations. Either Zhang Guan Dai Li, or immersed in literary chicken soup, Weibo is simply a large-scale rumor scene-very early, Shu Qi once shared Mo Yan's quotations, among which "If you are well, it is sunny" is impressively listed; Jin Dong sent a message to share his feelings of killing young people and fell into a long sentence with profound literature and art. Van Gogh: I never said that.

However, false quotations can no longer be explained by "there are a thousand Hamlets in the eyes of a thousand people"-it only shows that we really don't know enough about the original. Sandra then forwarded the rumor against Weibo, saying that she would accept it with an open mind and continue to study, and would not give up sharing her ideas for fear of making mistakes.

Words are things without pictures, and pictures must be generated in your mind through thinking. It never shows emotions directly in front of people, but lets people use their thinking ability to decode themselves.

Therefore, in the process of reading, we cultivate the ability to absorb and understand objective knowledge to know the world, and also the ability to understand other people's experiences and emotions.

It never teaches people to show off that they are more demanding than others, or to revolve around their emotional needs all day. It is to let people learn to break through their own limitations, see others and see the world.

If we agree that social education aims at an independent and complete personality, then reading classics must be an extremely important link in education.

Therefore, this "uneducated" pot is not only the fault of the stars' "arty" jokes. The whole society must face the consequences of not reading, the current situation of educational awareness and inadequate implementation.