You can interpret however you want; that doesn’t change the fact that the author designed the protagonist to be the hero in her story, and created a plot to validate and valorize her choices.
Real life, on the other hand, isn’t shaped, which means the choices people make reflect the messiness of reality, rather than the moral clarity of a kid’s book.
You again missed the point — and went off on a completely irrelevant tangent — so I’m done engaging with you. (I do, however, look forward to seeing what phrase of mine you misuse in your next response.)