Board Thread:Episode Discussions/@comment-25643824-20170524131236/@comment-734582-20170528171508

King..Royalty.. wrote: Now my question is, does Hinata have the Tenseigan. The movie never really specified that. At least not for me. (After all, she is the Byakugan princess) No, she doesn't have the Tenseigan. Hagoromo was able to control how Naruto and Sasuke got their power, presumably Hamura can do the same. Considering Toneri needed some time to adjust to the Tenseigan, giving Hinata that power would almost certainly be bad, rather than good, as battle was imminent. She also doesn't have the genes of Toneri's side, so similar to Naruto and Sasuke, one can only awaken the KKG already in your flesh. Either explanation will do. Ninjachris wrote: I don't think that there is a connection between toneri and mitsuki I agree. The moon has often been used for symbolism (Itachi's silhouette in the moon, Shukaku howling to the moon, red moon on every major event, etc). Mitsuki can also be interpreted to be "moon" if memory serves.

BakumatsuWarrior wrote: So does that mean the Geezer Toad's prophecy about Naruto being the Chosen One or whatever just a helplessly limited vision? The answer to pain's question is that the question is wrong. There's no such thing as perfect peace, because humans have different personalities which inevitably will end up in conflict.

What Madara (and pain) missed however, is that people can be convinced to work towards peace. Compared to the olden days of Kaguya, where the world was at war, modern-day Shinobi have it infinitely better. From days of endless strife to clans specialized in fights to villages protecting the young and having fewer but more major battles to a world where children can grow up without maybe ever seeing conflict.

I know it may not look like it, but in our own world, we're currently in the most peaceful era humanity has ever seen. The past was far, far bloodier, and while we may not see it ourselves in daily life, we've come a long long way when it comes to peace.

There will never be a perfect era of peace. But that doesn't mean war can't be made less frequent, less intense and less damaging.