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Selective "illiteracy"

I went to a friend's house on weekends and saw a motorcycle parked at the door downstairs, leaving only a narrow road to pass. On the post in front of the motorcycle, there is a "No Parking" sign in Zhang greatly. I asked, "Isn't there a parking space? Why did someone stop at the door and block the road? " The friend replied, "Those people take the bus as soon as they get downstairs for convenience, so they don't have to go far." I took a look. The distance from the door to the fixed parking spot of motorcycle is one minute. I looked at the words "No Parking" on the post again and thought: Can't people who park read? Are you illiterate? But on second thought, oh, no, China attaches great importance to literacy. After more than 20 years' efforts, literacy education has made great achievements. Parking people should be mostly illiterate, but selectively "illiterate"!

This reminds me of a cartoon "Pseudoilliteracy" I read many years ago: in the cold winter, there was a sign on a station that clearly said "Mother and son get on the bus", but four strong young men got on the bus carelessly, and the woman next to the poor sign looked at them helplessly while trying to put the children to sleep. In fact, things reflected in comics can be seen everywhere in life. Like running a red light! At school, the teacher taught us "stop at the red light, go at the green light, wait at the yellow light". On the main road, the slogan "Life is only once, please obey the traffic rules!" . However, too many people ignore the rules! They forgot the traffic rules. In their eyes, they are the biggest and their time is the most precious. They stepped on the accelerator and roared past, regardless of red light, yellow light and green light! Another example is the problem of queuing. At the subway waiting place, the slogan "Get off first, get on later and wait in line" is posted on the switch door of each entrance, and the waiting position is marked with yellow arrows on the ground. But when the train arrived, the people who didn't wait to get off the bus swarmed, and the people in front watched all the gaps get in. The people behind simply went to the exit passage and squeezed in desperately, for fear that the train would leave a second late. The poor people who got off the bus pushed forward and pushed back, and finally squeezed down ... All these behaviors were not that they were illiterate, but that they chose convenience between obeying the rules and facilitating themselves and became "illiterate".

Illiteracy is not terrible, but selective "illiteracy". For their own convenience, the choice blinded their hearts, automatically reduced the level and quality of education, and went its own way.

"Without rules, there would be no Fiona Fang". I hope everyone will no longer be selective "illiterate", fear the rules, consciously abide by the rules and restrain themselves. Convenient for others is convenient for yourself.