In this scene, the dream healer, who is now called the "assistant manager," tells the others that he and his master have come to ask the "white dream" if they should do something bad. He tells them that if they do something wrong, they can punish them, and that his master has already done this. The assistant managers, he says, started the whole thing. He asks if he is wrong, and the assistant managers respond that he is foolish and stupid for asking them to meet the General Manager after committing such a crime. The dream healer says that he understands what his master tried to tell him, and now he understands that they cannot communicate with them because their views are "so twisted" and that they are afraid of their positions. He says that the only answer to eliminate all dream healers is to eliminate them all, but that he still thinks the only solution is to "eliminate all." He asks the general manager to speak with him, too, and after that, his master and he will get "the proper punishment" for his master's murder of the "right dream." The general manager says that they do not care if his master killed the dream, nor does they feel any resentment, but they are removing any obstacles to their way. What matters to them is the meaning
In this scene, the dream healer, who is now called the "assistant manager," tells the others that he and his master have come to ask the "white dream" if they should do something bad. He tells them that if they do something wrong, they can punish them, and that his master has already done this. The assistant managers, he says, started the whole thing. He asks if he is wrong, and the assistant managers respond that he is foolish and stupid for asking them to meet the General Manager after committing such a crime. The dream healer says that he understands what his master tried to tell him, and now he understands that they cannot communicate with them because their views are "so twisted" and that they are afraid of their positions. He says that the only answer to eliminate all dream healers is to eliminate them all, but that he still thinks the only solution is to "eliminate all." He asks the general manager to speak with him, too, and after that, his master and he will get "the proper punishment" for his master's murder of the "right dream." The general manager says that they do not care if his master killed the dream, nor does they feel any resentment, but they are removing any obstacles to their way. What matters to them is the meaning