Friday, April 11, 2008

What Moral are they talking about?

On page 20 it talks about a moral being represented behind the thumb. What is that moral and why was it important to put in the book?

8 comments:

kat_09 said...

I did not see the moral as a moral about the thumb. I saw it as a joke about the guy being a pot head.

correct me if i am wrong.

Anonymous said...

I would have to agree with ket_09...that's pretty great...what is the moral behind smoking pot? Is there any? Anywho...yeah.

Knightley said...

I'm wondering if the moral behind the thumb is that a lot of teenagers and children fought against Americans so I think that the thumb belonged to a teenager or child that they had to kill before he killed them?????? I have NO IDEA if that is anywhere close to the moral but that is what I thought when I read it.

ballerina princess said...

i think the author put the thumb in to show how much the war damaged the men...they were so desparate for some humor or entertainment that the man cut a thumb off a poor dead vietnamese boy. there isnt a moral, the guy just said that sarcastically

Quincy said...

I don't think Sanders really had a specific moral in mind. Not something he could put into words. It simply struck a cord with him. He felt that there was something to be learned.

Jo Eldridge said...

At the bottom of page 13, when asked about the moral, Sanders says: "It's like with that old TV show- Paladin. Have gun, will travel." I think the moral may be that it proved that the war doesn't care how old you are nor does the enemy. You have a gun in a war zone you're gonna get shot at and possibly hit regardless if you're a kid or an old man. I think the kid's thumb was a reminder of that and a charm to hopefully put of dying young.

lilsuperspy said...

Nice thought imeon i never thought anything of that comment really, but i guess that would change things quite a bit.

HammyWammy said...

There is no moral to it but the men needed a bit of amusment and it was probably said for a comical relief