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6/29/2025, 9:41:28 PM
>>23356201
Witch from Mercury definitely is very anti-war, and it's not just about the Suletta slap. The school in G-Witch might not be a military academy designed to create soldiers, but it is creating workforce for the use of mobile suit industry. Over the course of the show, students go from viewing MS as cool things to see them as machines capable of truly hurting people. We see effects of violence in both space and Earth, and how violence only brings suffering to both kids and adults. G-Witch inherently views violence as a negative force that only contributes to a wider cycle of violence, prejudice, and suffering. No violence ever brings ultimately any good to people, and it only ends up being exploited by others. This is the overarching theme with the "curse of Gundam" in the show, a machine originally created for human progression is turned into a weapon of vengeance. In the end, the show completely rejects violence as a solution. Only when both Spacenoid and Earthnoid students openly start talking with each other and realizing they're both similar people with hopes, dreams, and important people, they start changing. And this is what the Gundams disappearing ultimately means: By everyone coming together, Gundams were able to perform a miracle that saved people without causing further suffering to anyone. Effectively, Gundams proved that they can be more than just machines capable of violence, and this is why the ghosts of Norea and Sophie were smiling at El5n in the ending.
Witch from Mercury definitely is very anti-war, and it's not just about the Suletta slap. The school in G-Witch might not be a military academy designed to create soldiers, but it is creating workforce for the use of mobile suit industry. Over the course of the show, students go from viewing MS as cool things to see them as machines capable of truly hurting people. We see effects of violence in both space and Earth, and how violence only brings suffering to both kids and adults. G-Witch inherently views violence as a negative force that only contributes to a wider cycle of violence, prejudice, and suffering. No violence ever brings ultimately any good to people, and it only ends up being exploited by others. This is the overarching theme with the "curse of Gundam" in the show, a machine originally created for human progression is turned into a weapon of vengeance. In the end, the show completely rejects violence as a solution. Only when both Spacenoid and Earthnoid students openly start talking with each other and realizing they're both similar people with hopes, dreams, and important people, they start changing. And this is what the Gundams disappearing ultimately means: By everyone coming together, Gundams were able to perform a miracle that saved people without causing further suffering to anyone. Effectively, Gundams proved that they can be more than just machines capable of violence, and this is why the ghosts of Norea and Sophie were smiling at El5n in the ending.
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