Geneva is a very international city, with many international organizations headquartered in Geneva, probably due to Switzerland's neutral status. Several ceasefires and truce negotiations were held in Geneva, which seems to be synonymous with "peace." Geneva does feel calm and gentle, probably because it is a Saturday holiday and a morning pedestrian is not much. The headquarters of the International Red Cross is built on a high slope and there is no half-slick luxury in appearance, but it is the center of global relief and charity activities, and countless refugees and victims of war and natural disasters have been helped by the International Red Cross. The Palais des Nations is a famous building in Geneva, the headquarters of the United Nations Office in Europe, and a line of thousands of flags represents his status. There is a famous sculpture in the square opposite the Palais des Nations. A giant wooden chair more than ten meters high broke a leg and stood in the middle of the square with three legs, which was very eye-catching and enough to stimulate people's curiosity. It is a memorial sculpture created by the 1997 FIPD calling attention to the harm caused by landmines in war. It reminds people of the importance of war to harm peace, and it is perhaps the contagious power of art that stops war and cherishes peace should become the common voice of mankind.