It's easy to understand why people like Seagate-the harbor overlooking the reef, and I see a seagull flying freely. Its wings flat backward, and the higher it is, the higher it is, until it is higher than all other sea birds, and then glides a gorgeous arc. It constantly acts as if it knows that a camera is aligning with it, recording its elegance.
But in the seagull group, it has completely changed. All elegance and dignity have fallen to the foul fight and cruelty. The Seagull rushed into the group like a bomb, stealing a bit of flesh and chips, arousing the scattered feathers and angry scream. There is no concept of sharing and courtesy between seagull, only jealousy and fierce competition. If you stick a red ribbon on a seagull's leg to make it look different, you would have sentenced it to death. Other seagulls use their claws and mouths to attack it, so that it can be opened with flesh and blood until it falls down to the ground and becomes a bloody blur.
If we must select a bird as an example of human society, Seagull is definitely not a good choice. On the contrary, we should learn the behaviors of geese. Have you ever wondered why the geese are lined up with "v"-shaped geese? Scientists told us that the flying speed of the geese in the wild geese is 71% higher than that of the single flying geese. At the "v" tip, the geese are the most difficult task and need to bear the greatest air resistance. Therefore, the leader geese rotate every few minutes, so that the geese can fly long distances without having to rest.
The two positions at the tail of the yundun are the easiest. The strong yundun makes the young, weak, and aging yundun occupy these labor-saving positions. Yundun keeps singing. This is a strong geese encouraging backward companions. If any geese fall behind due to fatigue or illness, the geese will not abandon them. They will send a healthy geese, and their companions will fall onto the ground until they can continue to fly.
This closely-formed social order plays a critical role in the survival and healthy development of the geese ...... However, sometimes our society is more like a group composed of hundreds of millions of lonely seagulls. People quarrel for personal interests, at the cost of being unable to withstand their own pressure.