In 1994, an American science fiction film previewed the war in Iraq.

The Iraq War of 2003 can be regarded as a model in the history of modern warfare. Under the banner of “laundry detergent” of mass destruction, the Western countries, led by the United States, struck a devastating blow against the independent Asian country of Iraq, and under the suppression of the modern warfare forces of the U.S. military and various internal infiltrations, the Iraqi army of Saddam Hussein, the leader of the Iraqi army, offered almost no resistance. In a short period of time, the Iraqi regime was ousted with a devastating force. After that, a long period of disgrace and humiliation began in Iraq.

To this day, Iraq has gone from being an independent nation to a devastated battlefield. I don’t know how the war-weary Iraqi people feel when they see the scarred land in their eyes.

However, in the face of such a situation, the new regime is unable to undertake large-scale reconstruction. The U.S. Army, which once fought to liberate the Iraqi people, has quietly slipped away. What awaits the Iraqi people is not only a shattered landscape, but also countless wounded people and a terrible situation that no one is willing to pay for.

And here, we can’t help but ask, what was the point of all this? There is no answer to this question, not even the United States, the world’s policeman in the name of democracy and freedom, will give one.

A tube of laundry detergent to topple a regime may be a joke in our imagination, but in reality, such a joke can come true. This is the United States of America, short for a territory made up of all kinds of selfish people. Since then, countless families have not even dared to put oil in their cooking for fear of being liberally democratized if there is too much.

You think that the U.S. invasion of Iraq is a joke in the history of human civilization, but it is actually the mainstream value of the U.S. itself. Why I say so. After watching the movie today, we basically have an idea in our minds that the United States was not just like this in 2003, it was probably like this all along, but we just didn’t know it before.

The 1994 movie “Stargate” is a traditional science fiction movie in the present day. The movie takes the history of human civilization as its main thread, and tells us step by step the secrets from the Egyptian pyramids.

Of course, in 1994, no one thought anything was wrong with such hegemony, but today, when we see the film again, we feel that the scenes in the film would be perfect for the Iraq war in 2003, which is the new era that the film brings.

It was a great film at the time, and if you haven’t come across any information about the war in Iraq, it’s still a classic science fiction film, and even though the special effects look terrible now, it still manages to shock us.

Even as a movie that reveals unsolved mysteries. But once you learn a little bit about the war in Iraq at the time, that hard-earned feeling dissipates. This film, made in 1994, is a completely ancient version of the Iraq War.

Modern civilization needs to explore some of the architecture and culture of antiquity, but in the beginning the American idea of exploration was to secretly smuggle fossilized artifacts found in other countries into their own.

Then it conducted its own research on the ancient artifacts that were of significance to all human civilizations. If it was only research, what was the American approach? They had made preparations for the destruction of what should have been a research project.

Among the members of the expedition team, the captain, who had the power of life and death, carried a nuclear bomb with him. This was so that the bomb could be activated and all the research results destroyed at any time, anywhere, in the event that danger was discovered during the research. Of course, this also included the local people.

In all fairness, this is not a responsible research mentality. Every civilization has a purpose. But the hegemonic United States simply and violently judges the existence of these civilizations by its own values.

In the eyes of the United States, any civilization that is advanced, but not under its control, can only be destroyed in the end. This is the meaning of the existence of the ultimate boss in the film, and also the meaning of the existence of Iraq under Saddam Hussein’s regime.

Even though Iraq has vast oil resources, which are the lifeblood of modern development, the Americans do not see any threat to the country. Because in reality, Iraq was only treated as a gatekeeper for the American oil fields.

Just like the dictators in the film, who control a huge technological system. They are still a challenge in the eyes of the Americans. In the end, their so-called great technological superiority is no match for America’s backward “civilization”. What an irony this is.

In fact, no one is begging the United States to save his country. Any country, any region in the world is independent, and it is not for others to comment on their own affairs, let alone send troops.

“People in backward regions are defenseless against invasion, and that’s why they get beaten up. But this is not an argument to justify those who beat people.

No one can just attack someone else without being condemned, and the same is true for the United States, where every country in the world is equal. Yet in the world order that the United States itself has constructed, this equality has become a joke.

Therefore, it should come as no shock that the Iraq war would happen. After all, there is no possibility of reasoning with bandits.

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Hello and goodbye.