Under the cover of Covid, and now in the shadow of the infamous Election Irregularities of that fated 2020 presidential election, with current emerging alleged election fraud in Nevada and Pennsylvania inconveniently slipping into the public discourse, there is proved a colluded ongoing Election Interference in the nomination of the Republican candidate, the likes of which has never occurred in our Constitutional Republic's history, albeit, the question remains: Do you support the plain-sight Election Interference of the Democratic Socialist party, employing its minions in their Propagandistic Media, and their Two Tiered Justice System?
98.86% No, I do not support Election Interference; I am a patriot unto our Constitution.
1.14% Yes, I do support Election Interference; the alternative, Donald Trump, to this mentally diminished president is far worse.
The neighborhood barbershop (above), owned by Martin, John Carroll Lynch, is an iconic fixture that every young man of substance must learn to navigate in Walt's oldened-day world. So it is Thao, played by Bee Vang, if he is to transition to Walt's world, which is all Walt knows to teach, and Thao better learn fast if he is to survive evil that is so prevalent here in the dying Detroit: Below.
Film maker Eastwood once said, "Most people who'll remember me, if at all, will remember me as an action guy, which is OK. There's nothing wrong with that. But there will be a certain group which will remember me for the other films, the ones where I took a few chances. At least, I like to think so."
Every real man knows that growing into a man is real work, and Walt Kowalski, Actor Eastwood, is well in the the knowledge that the surest path to manhood is one learning the meaning of industrious behavior, and how that lifestyle helps one to function as an asset to one's immediate society. Thao, Bee Vang, has the perfect professor for this life lesson: Above.
Gran Torino is that film. It will be a classic film that is not about a classic car, it is about a classic American, Walt Kowalski, and moreover, a classic film maker, Clint Eastwood.