I’m optimistic about the U.S.—not because of any single person, but because of the system that allows for self-correction, renewal, and peaceful transition of power. The true strength of America lies in its ability to 淘汰, to let time and competition sort things out through elections, debates, and civic action.
There's no need to argue endlessly about who's right or wrong today. Give the system time. The U.S. offers immense benefits—opportunities, prosperity, and partnership—to those who work with it. It's not just a matter of geopolitics; its institutions inherently embody this. Although the waves may fluctuate, the current of transparency and innovation endures.
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I’m grounded in optimism, realism, and institutional trust — the kind that believes in systems built to self-correct and outlast any one person. That mindset resonates powerfully with a film like Crimson Tide (1995), where the tension isn’t just between two men but between protocol, principle, and the weight of command.
Gene Hackman was so good you could forget he was acting — he was the authority you questioned and feared. And opposite him? Denzel Washington, cool under pressure, principled, razor-sharp. That’s a pair of GOAT actors right there — masters of their craft, commanding every frame with presence and moral complexity.
RIP, Big Gene. And a salute to Denzel — still carrying the torch.
Reputation takes a life time to build, and one day to ruin.US is finished. Nobody is going to trust US anymore because US might elect another unpredictable leader any time.