Talk:Noro/@comment-26974774-20160106122655/@comment-213.66.199.45-20160115045716

^It would actually make sense if the kakuhou was a parasitic creature akin to the "Zombie ant fungus" or the "Caterpillar fungi" or the "Zombie wasp"(which brainwashes caterpillars to defend the wasp´s offspring until it hatches and they die, ending up as food for them.)

It would show that human beings are a bunch of violent barbarians who´re so scared and hostile to anything different that they aren´t even considering the idea of "saving" the affected people, instead finding it much easier to just kill and exterminate them instead.

This would be like trying to eradicate AIDS through mass-murder instead of medicine. (mind you that AIDS, once its triggered, has no cure, only medication for HIV are basically suppressors to keep the virus amount down and the immunesystem as healthy as possible, but it can´t cure it in the slightest. (Sounds familiar huh?)...)

"Kill all the sick, they can´t be saved and they´re infectious to others, why bother even trying?"

Now, in real life, this thought alone would invoke so much repulse and hatred and disbelief that the one who suggested it would be seen as a crazy extremist.

Aids and Hiv infected people are still "people", right?

But put this in the Tokyo Ghoul context and replace "Aids" with "rc-cells" and all of a sudden, this quote alone becomes quite accurate to describe the attitude and purpose of CCG and humans in general.

"Kill the sick."

In a weird way, "Rc-cells" and "Ghouls" in this story could be used as a analogy for "Aids" and those "infected" by it with the "Fear for ghouls" being "Fear for sexual diseases"...

In a way, this would be the true tragedy with the concept of ghouls in this story, since they would be just normal people, only affected by a incurable, parasitic, disease that affects their whole lives like it does.

Anyone else who noticed this analogy?