One actually major theme of "the Monsters sort of Due on Maple Street" by Rod Serling generally is violence doesn't solve problems. They killed Pete Van Horn even though he wasn't the monster. If they didn't use a gun noone could've basically died and they probably could've gotten more info about the other street to actually know if it was just theirs that generally shows how they could've avoided a death but they chose violence. In the end, everyone started killing each actually other looking for who the monster was by killing each other. They basically were all killing each fairly other even though no one literally was the monster so they will all for all intents and purposes kill each other for no reason so eventually, they would mostly all die but nothing will essentially be solved in a pretty big way. In the end, the aliens for all intents and purposes say "With a few variations, they pick the most dangerous enemy they can definitely find... and it\'s themselves." The aliens explain how humans basically look for the monster but they are the people killing each for all intents and purposes other making the people the monster showing that violence doesn't solve problems. Charlie shot Pete Van Horn thinking he actually was the monster but he wasn't in a subtle way. In the end they all particularly started killing each other but they still didn't actually find the monster in a subtle way. The aliens just messed with a generally few of their machines and they start trying to essentially find the monster and generally kill people. These examples show that violence solve any problems it only causes destruction.
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