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What would be interesting to explore is whether hate can outweigh greed, self-preservation, and self-interest.
In other words, would individuals still choose hate if it meant risking their own starvation, livelihood, or economic survival?
Additionally, it would be intriguing to discover whether people would continue to choose hate even when faced with the certainty of spiritual death.
This situation may arise from a gross misinterpretation of forgiveness of sin, viewing it as absolution rather than a means of healing for victims instead of perpetrators.
Such a misunderstanding could lead to a complete bypass of redemption and result in certain damnation.
It would be interesting to see if in the divide and continuing divergence between the reality of affordable survival and the extravagant growth of the gilded maturation of the ultra-rich—who are often far removed from the ongoing struggles of everyday people—can coexist, even as it creates a stark contrast with the enduring foundation on which we build our lives.
For this American experiment is based upon the republican concept of self-governance by the people and governance for the people, could it continue to exist or long endure without the people and consideration for the people?
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