Pu Yi witnessed the fall of Chinese empire, the republic of China, World War 1, the fall of Russian empire, the Warlords era, the fall of Mongol monarchy, the Russian Civil war, the Chinese civil war, the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, the birth of empire of Manchukuo, the 2 sino-japanese wars, World war 2, the fall of Japanese empire, the communist victory over Kuomintang, the Cold war and the cultural revolution
The actor of the prison guard is Ying Ruocheng, Chinese Communist Party's vice minister of culture at that time. He is ethnic Manchu and was also forced to the provinces to do manual labor during the Cultural Revolution.
@@sakuranippon4434mao did the culture revolution to root out his opposition with in the communist party, it was mao way to regain power over his opponents
The warden Ying Ruocheng played was/is a real person. He was born in Korea and immigrated to Manchuria to escape Japanese occupation (before Manchuria was also occupied later of course). I read his memoir.
@@sakuranippon4434well of course they do, the whole reason Mao started the cultural revolution was to keep control of the CCP whose upper echelons increasingly wanted to get rid of Mao because they viewed him as increasingly incompetent and incapable(which they were totally correct about, Mao was a great fighter of guerilla war but not a great administrator)
Pu Yi had the most depressing story of any 20th century "leader". First he was a puppet to the Empress Dowager, then a puppet to the warlords, then KMT, then the Japanese, then tried for collaboration even though he practically has no choice when it came to the will of the Japanese, then a puppet of the communists. Despite being a "leader" at least once in his life, he had no say in anything in his life.
My wife’s family lived through cultural revolution, and some were part of Red Guards. They told me this movie was absolutely accurate, and they usually don’t like to talk about it. It was a crazy and just mad Times.
It's funny how the mainland Chinese refused to speak more about their ugly past during the communist reign such as the cultural revolution, but when it comes to the Japanese's atrocities during WW2 and Kuomintang's "tyrannical" reign, they can speak novels.
Zennoix riel3620 There are plenty ugly history to go around. Japanese atrocities cannot be forgiven. Has all the Jews forgive all the Nazis criminals, even though Germany has been very forthcoming with their guilt? Chinese Nationalists had plenty of corruption. They used Du Yusheng, biggest drug dealer in Shanghai to their causes. Sure Chinese mobs were very patriotic, but they still had ugly enterprises like gambling, extortion, prostitution, and finally doping dealings. Chiang KaiShek brother in law, HH Kung made plenty of money on American aid to China. His mansion is still standing in Long Island today. You can even google HH Kung personal pictures with Adolf Hitler.
@Major Calvary The CCP were disgusting The KMT was ugly And Sun Yat Sen would be spinning in his grave when the Communist and the Nationalist fought for control, not what Dr.Sun said
마언 Thanks for your reply. I think Sun YatSen expected the outcome. He was actually ousted as President of Republic of China in 1913, the same government that was founded by him. There was an assassination attempt on him, but he summoned Chiang KaiShek to rescue and escorted him out of harm. Chiang was a very junior ranking KMT member then. The fact that Sun picked him was because he had military training because China needed a strong military leader to fight the war lords. Chiang was the legitimate successor to Sun. That was clear. Many CCP members were also KMT members. In fact, Sun never discourage communists from joining KMT. Chiang initially did object either, until Soviet had plot to assassinate Chiang, and after Chiang visited Moscow and understood the true intends of the Soviets.
This scene completes the circle of Puyi's character arc through his turnaround. Puyi was raised to be a spoiled brat. His upbringing and social status never really allowed him to develop basic values such as empathy and compassion for other people. The movie actually toned down his cruelty. Puyi would actually beat his eunuch servants with a stick for entertainment. At one point he even killed one. Throughout his younger years we see how his encapsulation in his own world made him selfish and ignorant about what was going on with his country, the world, and how life works in general. It was only after his incarceration that he becomes a changed man. In this scene we see him care for another soul. Something he could not do when he was emperor. He is a commoner now. He has to work to put food on the table. He finally understands now humanity.
It certainly depicts his development in the way you have observed here, but it also shows how what replaced the old system also dehumanizes those who get in its way. Hopefully, you're not saying the end justifies the means. "Meet the new boss." "Join us, Commrade, or f*** off!"
Puyi can see the irony, he was once worshiped as a god but now mao is now being worshipped as a god and isn't officially an emperor nor is china a monarchy anymore.
The Chinese term translated into english as 'Emperor' is 'Huangdi', it's more akin to 'Son of Heaven/Living God' than to 'Emperor' but to a Christian and Islamic west it was easier to translate as emperor. Mao was certainly worshipped with a devotion much like that given to a god
@098765 Craper Being the "Son of heaven" implies divinity though. Anyway, Wikipedia said: "The three Huang (皇,"august, sovereign") were godly rulers credited with feats like ordering the sky and forming the first humans out of clay; the five Di (帝), also often translated "emperor" but also meaning "the God of Heaven" were cultural heroes credited with the invention of agriculture, clothing, astrology, music, etc. In the 3rd century BCE, the two titles had not previously been used together. Because of the god-like powers of the Huang, the folk worship of the Di, and the latter's use in the name of the God of Heaven Shangdi, however, the First Emperor's title would have been understood as implying "The Holy" or "Divine Emperor". "
@098765 Craper You might be understanding the terms in "Huangdi" from direct translations in modern Chinese, but I believe that the terms have a more religious background from Classical Chinese. Aaaaand the comparison of Western notions of Divine Right fails because of different backgrounds. The Kings of Western countries never said they had religious character, as that would be heresy. They served on the privilege of God, either directly or through the church. The Chinese as I understand it, don't have the same dichotomy between Heaven and Earth, so that the Emperor would be the mediator between those. Filmer, Hobbes and Locke argued that God did not punish bad rulers, because king/sovereign's right to rule was absolute and God of "another realm". There were also little to find in old christianity that a bad harvests were the result of bad ruling, but rather the moral failings on the church or people. The Chinese believed that an unjust Emperor was one that could not control the world, and thus the world would punish the realm. Bad crops were a sign that the Emperor did not do his duty towards the Heavens and the Earth. The religious West depended on a a more Plato-inspired clear-cut divide between Heaven and the worldly sphere, while these merge together in Chinese. Therefore, the Western term for "Emperor" depends on the rule of a territory, while the Chinese depend on the rule of the "world". The Chinese emperors influenced stretched far beyond their border, while emperors in the West recognized other rulers as their semi-equals.
No, the Son of Heaven revere Buddha, the Jade Emperor and Heaven, at least they follow the Mandate of Heaven, they know their power are not absolute and Heaven will punish them if they do wrong. while the communists want to destroy all scriptures, temples, buddha statues, and deny everything related to belief and Gods, and nothing is above the Party. The Party is not an "emperor" they are scoundrels
Despite the attempt to foster a cheerful atmosphere with all the dancing, music and singing, everyone has a hypnotized and somber expression on their faces.
That is exactly what the movie is trying to express ... it's all about stereotypes ... they are ACTORS, in a Western-made film ... see their faces when they play a nazi officer, or a soviet spy, etc ...
Just guessing, probably the accordion was introduced into China by the Soviets, although the ones in the clip are "Parrot" which were already made in China in the 1950s. I assume that Bertolucci paid attention to these details.
Just a bit information, when the cultural revolution started, the central made a list of people who should be protected from the so called red guard youth, Emperor Puyi and his close royal relatives, Song Qinglin, Vice President of PRC but also the widow of Sun Zhongshan, the builder of Republic China in 1911, Li Zongren, the former president of Republic of China (1911-1949), and the family of Confucius, the biggest noble family which lasts for over 2000 years, Mao didn’t treat them as what Lenin did to the Romanovs. As Mao said “I may disagree with Confucian, but I when was at school during the Qing dynasty, I read all of Confucius classics, and I can’t say it has no impact on me”. Confucius said: those with noble and grace ambitious, will not seek to success or alive to harm the Ren (Ren, Confucius created a word for the highest moral standard in his mind), but will rather sacrifice their lives to protect Ren, what is Ren, the one with Ren must a man loves people”. In the view of Confucius, what Lenin did to the Tsar Nicolas and his family, cannot be accepted no matter what condition it might be, because a real hero will not do such thing. The historical meeting of Mao and Emperor Puyi in early 1960s was dramatic, Mao invited the warlords who kicked the emperor out of Forbidden City Palace in 1924 to come to the dinning, those warlords arrived first, Mao made jokes with them “today, we are going to meet our old supervisor, you will see”. When the emperor entered into the dining room, Mao said “see, we have Puyi here tonight, we both born in the late Qing dynasty, and when we were young, we were the subjects of Puyi as he was the emperor, he’s indeed the old boss of all of us right?”
Technically Lenin didn't order to shoot the Romanovs. It was ordered by the Soviet of the Ural Region. Nevertheless it still is disputed if Lenin alongside Sverdlov unofficially instigated it.
Swen Htet They probably would’ve slaughtered puyi(or anyone) for that matter for even approaching them in one of those little parades that would have to of been a death sentence back then
Here’s where you gotta finally feel sorry for pu-yi. The way he and his brother were watching this procession with fear and confusion means that he doesn’t really know how to move forward from his dream to be emperor and just survive in ways he never imagined he’d have to. When he’s at that camp, you see that he has trouble moving forward from being emperor and the warden helped him to learn how to live land do things on his own. Puyi realizes what this warden did for him and defended him later not fully realizing exactly what had happened in that country. To see him go from sadistic and arrogant to humble is the closest thing to a arc we get here
Reminder: The Cultural Revolution is now hated by China and even the Communist Party of China. Yes, you didn't read that wrong. In the official 'pocket' book of the Communist Party of China, and also speech by Deng Xiaoping while he was the Supreme Leader of China, the Cultural Revolution is recognized as a grave mistake and a product of stupidity. China also blamed it on Mao, even though only partially, but it shows how China has seen the importance of culture and moderation, and the danger of extremism. Mao is now only regarded as the Founding Father. However, he is not worshiped anymore. Excessive worship toward him is even taken as dangerous by the government. For instance, the Maoist organization in China established by Mao fanatics in 2008 was disbanded by the government with its members arrested in 2009.
The Communist Party of China now hates the Cultural Revolution because the very capitalist roaders that Mao was trying to get rid of have taken over the party.
Yeah, it was a surprise to many that the Chinese govt even allowed this to be filmed on their soils. Maybe it was an attempt for the communist party at the time to open up to the west. But Tiananmen Square happened later in the same decade which is probably why we don’t see any other western film makers making films like this ever since.
@@larsthorwald56 three body problem was not similar at all and has chinese adaptions. The netflix version changed things to be pro western for no reason
The irony is that the prison warden was likely being humiliated by the red guard for some petty reason such as he had a relative who was a wealthy landowner or he said something taken as an insult to Mao and they called him the emperors lacky yet the emperor himself was speaking to them face to face and they didn’t even realize it. Puyi was nothing than a run of the mill old man to them at this point not someone who personified everything they hated.
It's really sad to watch. My maternal grandfather returned to China after graduation in the US during the second sino-japanese out of patriotism to fight the Japanese. We was a professor when the communist party took over. He taught countless young minds to help rebuild a new China, but was branded a rightist and put into political prison for more than 10 years. When this movie was made, the communist party had finally recognized it's wrongs and release him from prison, and allowing this movies to be made was like a form of apology. For a while we had hope for a more righteous China, the Xi came to power and things retrograded, and we are watching the history repeats like Cultural Revolution 2.0 playing out again in slow motion.
Es una pena que China siga en una dictadura 2.0 y no se ve que tenga final. Por eso también incremento la migración China a Estados Unidos, dónde ya también quieren poner más restricciones a esas migraciones. Que triste todo esto.
It’s only a matter of time before they hold people against their will and put them And subject Them to public humiliation forcing them to wear a dunce cap and making them bow to a Picture of chairman mao while demanding them to confess their crimes
Naive young are easy pickings for bourgeoisie propaganda and cult of success, with the individualism culture, and waste best period of life to drugs, alcohol and other senselles shit, simultaneously blame youth, who lived in socialist countries and gain free education and worked for the wealth of all society, not only for wealth of miniscule layer owners of means of production. Have a good day.
@@todoldtrafford English revolution. Spanish revolution. Dutch revolution. Great French Revolution. Hungarian revolution. Well, all this revolutions had failed, and then monarchy restored. Have a nice day.
Mao was an idealist, and people love to take out the part where he cracked down on the red guard, fixed his mistakes, and resigned into a period of introspection. Mao genuinely wanted to help the people, there is no doubt about it. His ability to do it was lacking, and he was most certainly an overconfident radical bolstered by his success in the civil war. But in no ways was it the same as a Monarch. Although yeah, very much tyrannical.
My grandfather was about to Enter Tsinghua University in the 1960s, like the top one in China and 15th Worldwide. What happened was that cuz of his father's background, who held an famous local enterprise, which even supported the Kuomingtang Army in WWII. My grandfather was beaten so badly when he was young and the school only gave him the worst quality of the food which caused him Nephriti... However at last, luckily went to Shanghai Ocean University for Food Can Engineering, and the warm weather and sufficient amount of seafood there cured his illness ... (Where there was a lack of food and tin cans can save for a long time) Very Luckily as the top student graduating he was appointed after the Open and Reform Policies to HK to become a Vice CEO of China Resources 华润, one of the TOP 500 Enterprise in the World in terms of size but only entered the party by his retirement. I also know and contacts with a lot of family who were forced to relocate or "donate" their ancestral and family business. The closest one to me is the 乐 or 樂 Le family of Chinese Medicine Tongrentang... At first they were very optimistic about the founding of PRC, cuz the first 5-year plan was extremely successful and China was rock in the Korean War. Yet, after a series events such as the 大躍進, Cultural Revolution,etc Their family was forced to become Chinese teachers after 1960s
Well I'm curious about this: back then I've heard about some state funded academy specializing in martial arts during KMT era. Is that true?. If it is what is the name for the academy?. What's become of it?.
@@MCP-MZT So delusional - 100 years from now the 3 people remembered most from the 20th century will be FDR and Deng Xiaoping for greatness and Hitler for evil.
@@fengch1971 They are over but does China allow it to be portrayed in a realistic way in films or even documentaries? Nope. They continue to censor and rewrite history books. What happened in tiananmen square in 1989? Try typing it on Chinese social media.
This was the extended version DVD version that i have, always go back & watch it on my imac but id like to know the song that played in the prison where the Governor is walkin down the steps to the courtyard where the stone benches are & the stage is where all prisoners sat or stood up while the governor was up on stage talking to them. It's some cultural revolutionary song that plays i can't really make it out because it's kinda distorted when they play it in the movie as he's walkin down where the ground is all covered w snow he's walkin to his little office walks in & shuts the door & pulls the kettle off pouring himself some hot warm water to drink & is where he starts reading Mr Johnston's book of Puyi & his trip to China to get the facts straight about Puyi.
Funny thing is that if things turned out well for the Emperor and the revolutions had never happened, all those kids marching in the streets would be surviving off of bread and rotten vegetables while Puyi plays tennis in his Palace courtyard. Really puts things in perspectives.
@Frank Guo Western concepts do not work everywhere. They were/are totally alien to China. By the way, do not idealize constitutions, parliaments etc. Democracies can be very autocratic and miserable too.
@@AntonesPap”Democracies” are autocratic. They are built to give an illusion to the middle class, give a sense of compliance. In reality oppressive institutions teeter on the edge of tyranny, and Capitalists already control vast swathes of the world’s wealth. Instead of redistribution, they hoard it, breeding materialistic natures and selfish acts.
this is a movie about the cultural revolution made by the chinese. from the perspective of the last emperor, Pu Yi, a crazy and inhuman era. i remember that when this movie was shown throughout China, it caused a lot of discussion and reflection.
A lot of the actors would have been involved in one way or another in the Cultural Revolution. Wonder what the people in the neighbourhood thought of this scene being filmed...
more literally: revolution is not a crime, uprising is justified the true usage of words in chinese is somewhat stronger than what I've just written in english though.
It is right. Ironically mao zedong was influenced in his youth by george washington and american revolutionaries, unfortunately he lacked the grace to step down
@@hotcold7340 Vancouver and Seattle Chinese-American/Canadians are almost all exclusively Cantonese or Nationalist Chinese with anti-CCP ties I dont know what kind of racism you’re talking about. The diaspora have more in common with the Singapore and Peranakan Chinese than their own homeland because they too fled before the Communists took over.
its like the chinese movies/dramas set in chinese dynasties over 2000 years ago....and the actors are speaking mandarin, im sure mandarin wasnt used back then but its what the audience understands
A lot of the actors are actually Chinese-American actors but the extras and the people in the background are Chinese from China. So they are Chinese-Americans who speak English as their main language.
@@seasalt489 This era put China behind other counties, not on par with them. The Chinese people I met called it an era of insanity. So much culture was lost. So much valuable knowledge. So much sanitation.
@@juliesteimle3867 but the gains outran the negatives. It was able to pull China together as one, defend the country from further foreign invasions. The rapid development of China in recent years owes much to the system set up then. Brutal but necessary time. On the contrary, China doesnt want to end up like how India is like now.
@@SM-ku3uo You should credit today's china more to Deng, and less to the cultural revolution. Although some bad traditions where abolished, so did lots of great traditions and cultural heritage.
Love this scene. Chinese history can be summed up by passage of dynasties and we are currently in the era of the red dynasty and its line of emperors with Mao as the legendary founder.
This movie and “Farewell My Concubine” really showed the senseless violence - perpetrated by children and encouraged by a power-hungry egomaniac and his followers- during the Cultural Revolution. I wonder how many people can truly appreciate how horrifying and bloody this time in Chinese history was. The whole country nearly burned down, and so many people died for no reason. Zealotry is dangerous!
I am a Chinese in mainland. Very sadly to see the comments don't really understand what Comrade Mao means and what he relly wants. Generally, it mainly caused by western mainstream narratives, which totally confilt with historical materialism educating me. Mao's Cutural Revolution is a sad attempt, hoping ordinary people arm themselves with smart mind to fight with bureaucracy. The test failed sadly. I assume that Mao even denied the fact that people had to live with captalism for many years, until his last moment. Story after that is wiidely known. China embraced the "market economy" and developed fast in recent decades. And now, in 2020, the over production, inequality, big social gaps are looming. Many people wake up and try to look back to the leftism era for the answers. The globe is walking into a right wing side for bigger gaps between poor and rich, ironically reflecting the forgotten history: There was a great man tried to save us from that hopeless end, but it seems that ordinary people unable to seize the chance.
My friend, people generally like to criticize what they do not fully understand. It is very true and very sad that rich people are getting richer and poor people are getting poorer.
Not even close this was the change of an entire government and overthrowing of a political system that lasted for thousands of years, the blm riots are just mobs who would stop if governors moved money from police departments to stuff like education or more access to resources no one ever said join or be shamed
The only thing I don't like about this scene is that Puyi is speaking in English for the audience while the red guard are shouting and parading in Chinese. This part is definitely NOT historically accurate
French King : executed publicly British King : executed constitutionally Russian Tsar : executed faraway in his exile Chinese Emperor : stripped of his power and give him peasantry job China always do things differently
April, 2024 Why am I reminded of Democrats when I watch this........???? ps: I grew up in Cuba. My late father grew up in NAZI Germany. It IS always the same. Totalitarianism. Freedom, once revoked is never relinquished.
I learned about that in school in Estonia ( 3rd highest in the Pisa test countries), and we learned that everyone who actually did criticise the government was executed or set to prison camps.
MVD-UPCA † Sure, Mao did tell people to openly criticize the government, and then he arrested those who did criticize the government and sent them to re education camp
That is not true. Stalin’s father was a shoemaker. He grew up in poverty. He excelled at academia, earning scholarships and studying hard. Many of his peers in his institution were well off, while he lived a nearly ascetic life. He always wondered, why his father, who worked so much every day earned so little, and found it unfair. Stalin also worked as a meteorologist, attended various extracurricular activities in his youth. He even wrote columns. He spent about 8 years in total in exile or imprisonment for his views. I think to become someone like Stalin or other people you mentioned, you must br special and have appropriate qualities. I’m not saying that he was a good man, but he definitely was great, as his passion and enthusiasm, as well as the power of his will made him the man he became. I think his willingness to fight and spend years in prison for what he thought was right deserves respect. Before the people you mentioned became that powerful, they were criminals, their ideas outlawed and their cause persecuted. They had to work underground, risking their freedom and life. People like that do not become so powerful by chance, they get this power because they are willing to fight for it, and earn it. I am not saying their cause and methods were just, but they changed the history and affected their countries and the world.
Once I read his biography on Wikipedia out of curiosity and I really couldn't help but cry. The guy was used as a puppet right from his childhood to his death. I am a person who rarely cries. At most times even the most heart throbbing scenes refuse to make me cry but seeing how his life was it was really heart breaking. Out of all the evil historical figures I would say Mao Zedong is the worst. His revolutions destroyed Chinese culture and led to a lot of moral decline in the people
What a shit comparison. Mao did not commit genocide. The excesses of thr Cultural revolution are not Maos fault they were ultimately the masses choice. Also Hitler killed 40 million in his genocidal war.
If one slogan sums up the excesses of the Cultural Revolution, *_Smash the four olds (破四旧)_* was it. It exhorted young cadres to destroy anything regarded as "old" - loosely defined as old ideas, customs, culture, and habits. and anything that makes the whole 3,000 years of Chinese's continous written history was Thanos-snapped by that.
Cultural revolution should be inspected from different perspectives. It is regrettable that all the history was being destroyed and innocent people being tortured, but it did bring positive changes--at least in the long run. It completely changed the mindset of the Chinese people. They became more able to undergo critical thinking against those who’re supposed to be ‘on the right side of history’. Also the population of atheists soared which unleashed China’s potential to develop further. Before Mao the Chinese had to be starved to death before even thinking about revolting but to some degrees after the cultural revolution they had the ability to challenge whoever disagrees. Now that does not justify the cruelty of cultural revolution tho, it was too radical and the civilians were simply victims of the conflict between the modest and radical left within the CCP
@@ducmingnguyen1891 lol no it’s nothing like antifa. America has no history. All they have is the anti-communist sentiment and even that isn’t historical
@@aliwakanda7327 amongst many things eradicated by Cultural Revolution, are the concept of *five constant virtues* or _wu chang (五常)._ In descending order of importance, those virtues are : *benevolence* or _ren (仁),_ *righteousness* or _yi (义),_ *propriety* or _li (理),_ *wisdom* or _zhi (智)_ and *fidelity* or _xin (信)._ as you have said, even now CCP are still oppressing those who clings to that idea (Falun Gong for instance). and seeing that Chinese travellers wouldn't even dare to practise _open defecation_ abroad before 1966, shows that Cultural Revolution succeeded in their crusade against human civilization.
@@user-np3cp2cb7u ok now I see u r a Falun Gung fanboy I don’t think we ought to continue on this conversation. Falun Gung is a Chinese cult which is deemed legitimate in the west solely because it’s anti-CCP, not because it actually legitimate for practice. I’ll drop u this link ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1JaPzJKycxc.html This guy called JJ is an anti-CCP freelance journalist (which means he’s not affiliated by anybody, a startling contrast to Chris Chappel) and he did this research on Falun Gung
What is the song that is being played by the accordion, it's very catchy... as most of the Communist propoganda songs? Lol! Also am I the only one that thinks Ying Ruocheng (the actor that played the prison governor) was handsome, even at his age in this movie? The actor who played Pujie was cute too lol!
This clips so naive.... Puyi didnt understand the new era 🙁🙁🙁 why his teacher being tied....🙁🙁🙁 Pu Yi had lived in 3different shock cultural 1. Emperor Era 2. SunYatsen Kuomintung Era ... puyi as prisoner for 10 years his teacher .. tought him to be citizen 3. Republic era born ... mao zhe dong era .... Now his teacher is a prisoner ... 😟 what ashame all that u had learn is a wrong
In the book Pu Yi felt the wrath of this revolution on his deathbed, even from his former concubines. Officials had risk their live to protect him as his health was deteriorating.
over so many revolutionaries, the circle of life is still the same for women nothing changed at all. Women celebrated the new revolution after these men killed each other but in the end, she is just something to entertain others.
Nothing like a good old fashioned Struggle Session to make counterrevolutionaries renounce their desires for luxury goods! Good thing that can't happen nowadays... 🙄
It wholly was. The market reforms and opening up in the late 1970s mostly opened up the country, but it’s remained wholly under control of the party and lately is starting to regress back to the party being more omnipresent in life.
North Korea of today and yesteryears was totally influenced by Maoist China from the cult of personality disorder to the Red Guards and patriotic slogan propaganda.
If the election goes the wrong way, the republic will fall just like in Hungary and other illiberal states - into an increasingly corrupt plutocracy. Real patriots are fighting for a blue wave to remove Trump and his acolytes from power!
@@jt7638 The Wrong way is Dem/Liberal sweep in November (which is becoming less likely). The Virulent Progressive wing would send people to re education camps Just like their Idol Mao did. FIGHT BACK PEOPLE !
The "governour of our prison"? I understand why that criminal would be walking there. Anyway, i didn't catch the response of those other three when asked about the guy's crime. Does anyone know?
Let me give you the accurate version 革命无罪,造反有理 x2 要革命就跟我走,不革命就滚他妈的蛋 revolution is no crime, to rebel is justified x2 Follow me if you wanna revolution, or just fuck away
WTF are you talking about? He was sent to the camp for 10 years as a war criminal. He did what he had to in order to survive at that time. I like to see how heroic you can be in the cultural revolution
This scene is yet another illustration of why youngsters should not meddle in politics before they have had their first paycheck and even their first kid. Before that, they understand nothing, and do naught but embarrass themselves and annoy people.
@@SempraLaura feminism? In Red China? China's rigidly conservative in that regard. Although, to be fair they restricted rights for everyone, not just women.
@@noco7243 All world is rigidly conservative, and escpecially the socialist countries, thank you, we dont need your western shit, like 100 genders and "SJW" troopers.