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The Bloodbath Of St. Valentine Analysis

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The Bloodbath of St. Valentine The Earth on which the reader of this piece exists is a world that knows more violence, suffering, and strife than comparable by any other world in universal history. On this Earth, humanity is driven to commit horrible acts against itself out of hate, despair, and sinful desire; these three mechanisms are that which only yield chaos and tragedy. However, this idea is not a new one, and this concept is not unthinkable, as it is human nature to place one’s personal desires above all else, even sacrificing other human lives in the process. Humans are capable of an evil so great that they would sacrifice innocent souls for their own personal gain, neglecting any possibility that does not allow them to attain the most rewarding result out of a given situation. Human society both denies and enforces a system of forcing despair onto others to create hope on their own terms, not able to …show more content…

The words before you, reader, must be absolute truth, or why, then, would human governments spend billions of dollars on weapons of war and military funding rather than expand charities, help the poor, find miracle cures, spread love, and create hope? However, no two worlds are the same and some worlds do not face this disappointing reality. They value hope, joy, love, and peace and shun despair, sin, hatred, and chaos. For a world like this to exist, surely it must be a strange, sleeping dystopia, masked as a utopia that is deluded by the false reality that humanity would rather place the good of their species above their own desires. A world like this would have experienced many

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