You are passionate, because the take-off of the motherland makes your blood boil. You may be sitting at home on that shabby couch, looking at the stinking pile of garbage on the road, thinking about the issue of social integrity. You're scrolling through your phone, worrying about your sick kids at home, your hard-working wife, and getting a stable job.
What you care about in reality may be trivial things in life, such as firewood, rice, oil, salt, and food safety. You may be worrying about how to live this day like a decent person, even if it is a New Year's holiday, you may only be able to carry a generous salary, go to the streets, buy a bag of comfort, in order to spend the day.
In your response, you said that you can only look up at the starry sky by being down-to-earth, and I would like to ask you, what do you have a deep understanding of? When the spaceship lifts off, you shed tears of excitement, but do you know that the country you praise is the world in which you live.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not asking you to praise my arguments. But I want to tell you that patriotism is not about focusing on a feat, not blindly praising it, but really paying attention to those things that really affect you, your society, and everything you care about.
Seriously, where is your love for those who call for patriotism? Do you care about the depressed and displaced? Where do you care about those who are struggling to live but are unemployed and unemployed?
I want to tell you that patriotism is not only about caring about national affairs, but also about many small things that you need to care about. The phrase "what does aerospace have to do with me" may not represent a lack of family and country awareness, but a fact that each of us should understand: patriotism is not only about the country's affairs, but also about those issues that directly affect one's own life. Only when we care about our own lives and the lives of others can we truly understand what a country is and what is truly patriotic.