Is @roleerob the rocky mountainman?

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Watching @roleerob, I remembered the movie Jeremiah Johnson starring Robert Redford.

I was able to deduce that @roleerob lives in the least populated area in the US.😄
The Rocky Mountains had a reputation for being the least populated and remote rural area in the United States.

I was surprised that such a vast area had only a few million people. I guessed it would be difficult for neighbors to see each other if they lived in such an area.

East Asians generally perceive New York, Boston, Washington, D.C., Texas, and California as symbols of the United States. So, I don't know much about the people who live in the Rocky Mountains.

Of course, @roleerob probably doesn't know much about East Asia either.😃

I have been very fond of Jeremiah Johnson films starring Robert Redford since childhood.
That movie was nothing like a western movie that created the myth of American heroism starring John Wayne.

It was a very special piece of memory for me because it was a movie starring ordinary Americans like @roleerob.

An American froze to death in the mountains, a woman whose went mad because her family was killed by an Indian, and Jeremiah Johnson, who lost his family to an Indian, takes revenge on the Indians.

I realized that in America it wasn't uncommon for an entire family to die.😨
It is not uncommon for people to disappear or die in those vast, uninhabited Rocky Mountains.

The Rocky Mountains were a beautiful and prosperous region, but they were cruel and ruthless.😰
So, all humans who could not adapt in the Rocky Mountains had to die.

The murders taking place in the peaceful and quiet song are contradictory, but rather give more realism.
The birth and death of life in Mother Nature were only a part of the events that always took place.

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@valued-customer once boasted to me that he was sure to hunt deer by chasing 40 kilometers a day.
As I listened to his words, I thought that in the end, all humans and all living things had to kill other creatures for their own survival.

So, the scene where Jeremiah Johnson kills the Indians felt like a struggle for survival.

I was convinced that the appearance of Jeremiah Johnson revealed a fate that all Americans have in common.
Americans left Europe for freedom and came to the New World. They destoryed the Indian tribe societies and built America.

I felt similar to the fate of all human beings who must kill other living beings for their own survival!

However, in the unconscious of all Americans, Cain's consciousness of original sin may be contained in that they destoryed the Indian tribe societies and built America.

So, are Americans passionate about spreading the Christian faith around the world to break free from the sense of original sin?

I have countless thoughts and emotions, but my English writing skills are not good enough to write more sentences.
So, I decided to write a new work at the next opportunity....

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In conclusion, I imagined @roleerob as being the rocky mountainman like Jeremiah Johnson!😄

It is a pity that if I can write English at the level of @joeyarnoldvn, I will be able to write more sentences.😄

Next time, I will complete a new work by inventing English sentences.

Ps: I've always wondered what Jeremiah Johnson meant by raising his hand towards the Indian in the ending scene.
What does the action mean for Americans? I guessed it meant reconciliation.

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