I feel like some of the commenters aren't understanding that this world's setting is placed in an apocalypse where food and medicine is scarce at worst and limited at best. Yes, they do have a doctor that could probably do a check up with the son but ultimately there isn't ultimately there isn't much that can't be done. The child was chronically sick and in a normal world with better conditions he could've probably gotten help, but this isn't that.
Where medicine is a valuable resource in a zombie apocalypse, it's understandable (and cruel) to keep those kinds of treatment reserved for the ones that actively participate in the community to keep their village alive and going. Giving the son the medicines willfully would have been a gamble for their village's rate of survival and probably shortened ther shortage of medical supplies.
For what we know, the child could've have still ended up sick and not be able to participate with gathering the supplies and being a protective member of the village which would risk the lives of the village.
Guwon is the leader of this village (as we know of, there could be a darker source at play). He bares the responsibility of the livelihood of the entire village which includes the supplies the "Hounds" are hunting and gathering along with the insiders the village folks are storing, he also is responsible for the children (newly found) education center where he himself has to monitor what is being taught to them, but that's a bit difficult seeing as he isn't on the same educational level as the adults in the village as he takes private lessons from the teach to keep up what is at best a grade school level of education.
It's obvious that he isn't human and therefore isn't capable of understanding basic set of morals or ethics as he doesn't seem to remember anything else prior before the apocalypse came to be. It looks as though he was placed on to this leadership role despite him lacking in a few departments of qualifying to be one.
Guwon seems to think that brute force is what keeps the community in tact and takes that basic understanding into any kinds of situation where he has to uphold the leadership role without fully understanding the more ethical parts of it.
One of the villagers mentions that they had history with theft within the community before and it costed them the lives of one of their scavengers (The Hounds). Guwon seems to learn from experience and if we take into account and that the village has basically Frankenstein's monster for a leader that only seems to learn from experience and has consistently used brute force to fix any complicated issues that might disrupt the harmony of the way the village operates. It's understandable that Guwon will use the one thing he's good at. His brute.
The trial also seems to use a democratic way of giving out punishment, so it further proves that Guwon isn't the brain behind what goes and what doesn't with the rules. He takes public voiting as the nominator for what will happen.
I feel like some of the commenters aren't understanding that this world's setting is placed in an apocalypse where food and medicine is scarce at worst and limited at best. Yes, they do have a doctor that could probably do a check up with the son but ultimately there isn't ultimately there isn't much that can't be done. The child was chronically sick and in a normal world with better conditions he could've probably gotten help, but this isn't that.
Where medicine is a valuable resource in a zombie apocalypse, it's understandable (and cruel) to keep those kinds of treatment reserved for the ones that actively participate in the community to keep their village alive and going. Giving the son the medicines willfully would have been a gamble for their village's rate of survival and probably shortened ther shortage of medical supplies.
For what we know, the child could've have still ended up sick and not be able to participate with gathering the supplies and being a protective member of the village which would risk the lives of the village.
Guwon is the leader of this village (as we know of, there could be a darker source at play). He bares the responsibility of the livelihood of the entire village which includes the supplies the "Hounds" are hunting and gathering along with the insiders the village folks are storing, he also is responsible for the children (newly found) education center where he himself has to monitor what is being taught to them, but that's a bit difficult seeing as he isn't on the same educational level as the adults in the village as he takes private lessons from the teach to keep up what is at best a grade school level of education.
It's obvious that he isn't human and therefore isn't capable of understanding basic set of morals or ethics as he doesn't seem to remember anything else prior before the apocalypse came to be. It looks as though he was placed on to this leadership role despite him lacking in a few departments of qualifying to be one.
Guwon seems to think that brute force is what keeps the community in tact and takes that basic understanding into any kinds of situation where he has to uphold the leadership role without fully understanding the more ethical parts of it.
One of the villagers mentions that they had history with theft within the community before and it costed them the lives of one of their scavengers (The Hounds). Guwon seems to learn from experience and if we take into account and that the village has basically Frankenstein's monster for a leader that only seems to learn from experience and has consistently used brute force to fix any complicated issues that might disrupt the harmony of the way the village operates. It's understandable that Guwon will use the one thing he's good at. His brute.
The trial also seems to use a democratic way of giving out punishment, so it further proves that Guwon isn't the brain behind what goes and what doesn't with the rules. He takes public voiting as the nominator for what will happen.