How to evaluate Song Libai?
I think this song is a pity. First of all, secularity is defined by the author himself, which is very important. Then the tone is anti-secular, and many people think it is vulgar. Of course, the former custom is aimed at the author, and the latter custom is aimed at some people. They are different. Emotionally, randomness and indifference run through the whole song. In the first half of the song, the author has a disdainful attitude towards the secular. Most people want me to learn to observe? A worldly vision. From the beginning, the lyrics put the author on the opposite side of the secular world, and most secular people asked him to "learn to look into the secular eyes". The mood at this time is mainly helplessness. After that, the concrete feelings should be like this (based on my own understanding, of course): on the one hand, I want to see what the so-called secularism is, on the other hand, I have a little doubt about my anti-secularism position because I don't know enough about secularism, and finally I want to make myself more firmly deny secularism through contemptuous understanding. I have carefully studied the secular vision. Secular till dawn. A foreign movie that doesn't understand a word is a joke after watching the ending. With this complex emotion, the author is "secular until dawn" and draws the conclusion that "watching the ending is a joke". In the process of this attempt, the author is still anti-secular, and I hear disdain for the secular, but here the emotion in the lyrics has changed from a little helplessness to a touch of ridicule. Look how good, smart and obedient I am. How treacherous. This sentence releases emotions in the contrast between "more treacherous" and the previous sentence (whether it is the contrast of words, tone or emotional expression), and the ending is really amazing. "Look how good, smart and obedient I am" contains a mockery of trying to secularize. Yes, it's a joke, but I still try to be secular, which includes sarcasm to pretend to be secular to escape secular pressure.