Chapter 9; Locke and Demosthenes.
Peter Ender is 174 cm.
Peter Ender was born in 1958, in Duisburg, Germany.
Peter Wiggin, Ender's older brother. This is ironic because, growing up, Peter was always vile and cruel and Ender was nice. Then Peter ends up saving a world while Ender destroys another.
In "Ender's Game," Peter admires his brother Ender's intelligence and strategic abilities. However, Peter also harbors jealousy and resentment towards Ender due to feeling overshadowed by him. Overall, while Peter may respect Ender's skills, his feelings towards him are complex and fraught with competition and manipulation.
In Chapter 9 of Ender's Game, Peter and Valentine collaborate on an online pseudonym called Locke and Demosthenes respectively. They use their alter egos to influence public opinion and politics through writing and online discussions. They each have their own viewpoints and goals, which they try to achieve by manipulating the online community.
He is not, Peter has a natural violent nature, jealousy provokes him to be violent in the book. Ender, on the other hand, does not attack or threaten others unless in the act of self-defense.
Buggers and Astronauts
Ruthless
Several things are going on in that chapter. One of them is that Ender is playing the computer game, and it has shown him a picture of his brother, which is a big mental roadblock for him. Graff knows this, and he is mad. He wants to find out how it happened, but the programmer guy says that the game is doing it on its own, and that somehow Ender needed to face that. So, Graff goes to Earth to talk to Valentine and convince her to write a letter to Ender. She knows it won't fool him, but she gives him the message that Graff wanted to send, because she agrees that it could help. She realizes also in this chapter that she and Peter are a lot alike... not in pure evilness, but in the ability to manipulate and convince others, and she goes along with Peter because she thinks she can temper him, and because he is working for things that she wants too. Anyway, Ender reads the letter and knows he is being manipulated, which hurts him, but it also kind of helps him because he is angry enough to go farther in the game, and he realizes that the perfect image he has in his mind of Valentine maybe isn't absolutely accurate--or at least that it shouldn't stay static. He is able to see her in the game instead of Peter next time he goes into it, and together they move on, so he feels like she will be with him going forward, and it isn't just a memory that he has to freeze in time. It is a win for Ender, but also a win for Graff, because Ender is engaging and moving forward again... motivated to do battle.
Ender acknowledges his resemblance to Peter in the "Ender's Game" to come to terms with his own actions and decisions. By admitting this similarity, Ender faces the darker aspects of his personality, confronts his fears, and recognizes that he is capable of both good and bad deeds like his brother. This realization allows Ender to better understand himself and strive for balance in his identity.
Ender see's Peter as a person who puts on a face for the adults while they are children. During this period Ender watches Peter only to detect anger or boredom because either emotion could end in him becoming the "bugger" in the game that they played, and the buggers always lost in those games. Throughout Ender's Game Ender finds himself acting like Peter whenever he does anything slightly vicicous such as killing Bonzo. As they get older the book doesn't show any interaction between them until Peter secures his position as a leader of earth. At that point it is through Valentine when she tells Ender that he cannot return to earth because Peter will use him as a pawn to make himself look better.
Ender see's Peter as a person who puts on a face for the adults while they are children. During this period Ender watches Peter only to detect anger or boredom because either emotion could end in him becoming the "bugger" in the game that they played, and the buggers always lost in those games. Throughout Ender's Game Ender finds himself acting like Peter whenever he does anything slightly vicicous such as killing Bonzo. As they get older the book doesn't show any interaction between them until Peter secures his position as a leader of earth. At that point it is through Valentine when she tells Ender that he cannot return to earth because Peter will use him as a pawn to make himself look better.