First of all, it is not so much cartoons as social. The earthquake, the tsunami, the dead — I understand all this, but in such cases I always remind you — the assessment should be not for pity, but for work. He's hardly here at all. Angelic girls who don’t know if there is a god and don’t know what they’re doing in their tree. Well, landscapes, apparently, watercolor. The text is a strange read: “I am sad because I cannot be you, you are sad because you cannot be me.” It looks more like a translation error than a real attempt to invent something. Finally, traditional Japanese religion is a mixture of Buddhism and Shintoism, there are few Christians there (2.5 million) and in the East this is not the place at all, and the cartoon is clearly a Christian cake that is pushed by the victims of the tragedy. I also didn’t like how they lied in the generalization: “In childhood, my mother always answered that there is a God.” Whose? Not all moms are adepts.
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