Chapter 6422 (Six Thousand Four Hundred and Twenty-Two) Discrimination
The man with the brown hand said to the man with the gray hand, "Say whatever you want."
"But you can't move out the owner?" asked the gray-handed man.
"It's not that we can't move the owner out at all." The man with brown hands said.
"It's just a condition, right?" The gray-hand man asked you.
The man with brown hands said "hmm".
"Probably don't think of the user as the same as you and me?" the gray-handed man asked.
"That's fine if you think so." The brown-hand man said.
"What about you? Don't you think so?" asked the man with gray hands.
"No, I haven't thought of that much." The man with brown hands said.
"Do you think I'm overthinking it?" the gray-handed man asked.
"'Thinking too much' and 'thinking too much' don't seem to be the same thing," the man with brown hands asked.
"What's the difference?" the gray-handed man asked.
"I think 'overthinking' seems to have a meaning that needs to be changed." The brown-hand man said, "Of course, this meaning is not so obvious. Do you feel it?"
"Even if you feel it," the gray-hand man said, "but I felt it after you said this."
"Whether you feel it before I say this or after I say this, it doesn't seem to be very important, right?" the brown-handed man said with a smile.
The man with gray hands said to the man with brown hands: "There seems to be some difference."
"What is the specific difference?" asked the brown-hand man.
"The difference is that the time is different." The gray-handed man said.
"What?" said the brown-hand man, "is this what you want to say?"
"Is the time different?" the gray-handed man asked.
"It's different, but is this really what you're talking about?" the brown-hand man asked.
"It's not just this." The gray-handed man said.
"What else?" asked the brown-hand man.
"The order is also different." The gray-handed man said. The man with brown hands didn't expect the man with gray hands to say this, so he asked, "You're not saying this seriously, are you?"
"Of course I didn't say it seriously." The gray-handed man said.
"Are you going to say it seriously next?" the brown-hand man asked.
"Not necessarily. Sometimes I may say it seriously, but other times it may not be so." The gray-handed man said.
"When do you say it seriously, will you remind me?" the brown-hand man asked.
"You don't need any prompting," the gray-handed man said.
"Why do you think I don't need prompting?" asked the man with brown hands.
"You are very good at distinguishing, aren't you?" asked the gray-hand man.
"Can you tell whether you are serious or not?" asked the man with brown hands.
"It's not just this." The gray-handed man said.
"Why did this happen again?" said the brown-hand man, "did it happen just now?"
"It has appeared before, but it is also appropriate to use it here, so that it can appear again." The gray-handed man said.
The man with brown hands said to the man with gray hands: "You said it's not just this, but what else is there? What are you good at distinguishing?"
"There are many things that are good at distinguishing, and they are not limited to a specific place." Gray Hand said.
"Can you give me an example?" asked the man with brown hands.
"'Thinking too much' and 'thinking too much' don't seem to be the same thing. That's what you said." The gray-handed man said.
"I said it, do you think this counts as my identification?" the brown-hand man asked.
"It is indeed a distinction." The gray-hand man said, "You don't think this doesn't count, do you?"
"You have the final say. I thought about it and found it makes sense, so I'll admit it." The brown-handed man said.
"You are fast enough." The gray-handed man said.
"What speed?" asked the brown-hand man.
"The speed of admission." The gray-handed man said.
(End of chapter)