The understanding of the current world often begins with a simple but constantly validated premise: order is not a stable, unified existence. We need first to observe as comprehensively as possible how order is established, how it operates, and how it is continuously pulled, deformed, and even alienated by different forces in reality; on this basis, a more direct judgment can be formed: real-world order is not stable, nor does it always point to fairness and consistency. In many areas, it is constantly eroded by incentive structures, interest relationships, and implementation deviations, and in some cases, apparent distortion and imbalance can occur. However, this critique is not merely an emotional negation, but a clear way of cognition—while acknowledging the existence of problems, maintaining one's own independence of judgment, and ultimately returning to the personal level, finding one's place in this imperfect and highly complex order through continuous growth and action.

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