Thanks man. Eventhough I will never understand or relate about what you feel towards Chainman Mao. But I appreciate the experience a lot. I enjoy china so much, been visiting so many cities and provinces including my ancestral town in Fujian but I never been to Beijing. I will do someday
@@mariokang14 thanks for you comment. This year, I have a strong desire to travel to Fujian for photography, as there are many intriguing folk activities there that are exceptionally enjoyable.
@HowsChina I bet so. Maybe Fujian Tulou worth visiting. But Im not Hakka myself. I am from zhangzhou county, very close from xiamen. Xiamen is very worth to visit, very peaceful and quiet city. Dont forget to visit Gulangyu as well. For overseas chinese like me Xiamen feels like home as we familiar with the food, understand the dialect, and know lot of historical figure there (e.g Chen Jia Geng)
Due to work reasons, I had to drive past Tiananmen every day for more than two years. Even so, I still cried when I watched your video. Mao Zedong was also an idealist. His "idealism" saved countless people, but it also caused many people to suffer. Either way, Mao Zedong changed China.
@@amimi-ricky thanks for you comment. My mother suffered during CR, but when I grownup I’ve read a lot of documents about the “suffer”part then I found out it’s not his fault. Others caused my mother to suffer not him, but the most of us don’t know the truth.
I went to college in Shanghai and worked there for three years after graduating, so I have a good perspective on the city. Shanghai's rapid economic growth has led to many consumer goods becoming really expensive, leaving a lot of everyday people behind. You've got sky-high prices for food, drinks, and housing. In fact, over the past couple of years, we've even jokingly called Shanghai "沪国" online, which combines its short name "沪" and means "Hu Country," with the currency there called "沪币." Because of this, most people in China struggle to feel that sense of pride connected to Shanghai's development; it can sometimes feel like there's a gap between us. On the other hand, with Beijing, everyone has a clear connection, especially when it comes to places like Tiananmen Square, where there’s a strong sense of national pride that brings people together without any barriers.
I’ve been to Shanghai a couple times myself, and I was raised and grownup in Beijing until 17 years old and study in America. Tbh I don’t against Shanghai, that’s a beautiful city indeed. But Shanghai is not Beijing, we live here we feel the vibe here. I remember this summer after watching a show at a theater near Tiananmen Square, I was out of cigarettes so try to find a grocery store buy one. I purchased the cigarettes, and then turned my head, a photo of Mao was hanging on the wall. I was glad, you know, not like in NYC or DC, that’s my home, that’s my people, that’s the vibe I often dream about across the pacific
The words "Long live the great unity of the people of the world" written on Tiananmen Square in this country's capital are unforgettable to me!
@@feynmans-ub5jn that’s the goal of China and Chinese people
Thanks man. Eventhough I will never understand or relate about what you feel towards Chainman Mao. But I appreciate the experience a lot. I enjoy china so much, been visiting so many cities and provinces including my ancestral town in Fujian but I never been to Beijing. I will do someday
@@mariokang14 thanks for you comment. This year, I have a strong desire to travel to Fujian for photography, as there are many intriguing folk activities there that are exceptionally enjoyable.
@HowsChina I bet so. Maybe Fujian Tulou worth visiting. But Im not Hakka myself. I am from zhangzhou county, very close from xiamen. Xiamen is very worth to visit, very peaceful and quiet city. Dont forget to visit Gulangyu as well. For overseas chinese like me Xiamen feels like home as we familiar with the food, understand the dialect, and know lot of historical figure there (e.g Chen Jia Geng)
Thank you for this video, Tiananmen Square is beautiful!
Due to work reasons, I had to drive past Tiananmen every day for more than two years. Even so, I still cried when I watched your video.
Mao Zedong was also an idealist. His "idealism" saved countless people, but it also caused many people to suffer. Either way, Mao Zedong changed China.
@@amimi-ricky thanks for you comment. My mother suffered during CR, but when I grownup I’ve read a lot of documents about the “suffer”part then I found out it’s not his fault. Others caused my mother to suffer not him, but the most of us don’t know the truth.
没有人能如此无私且具有反抗精神,他是所有被压迫的人民的教员。
The eternal red sun.
@@inochi-mitsumu Shining across all of China.
from bilibili bro. why dont you make movie contents in english on youtube? bro
北海呀,这边的流量还没B站大呢
我是搜索进来的,刚刚看到播放为0 结果进来居然有评论,懂得都懂啦
这是肯定的
Got a new subscriber
@@athulrizwan3405 thanks
B站来的,支持北海。
I think to be more proud of being Chinese, you need to visit Shanghai, because it's the most developed and biggest city by GDP contribution.
I went to college in Shanghai and worked there for three years after graduating, so I have a good perspective on the city. Shanghai's rapid economic growth has led to many consumer goods becoming really expensive, leaving a lot of everyday people behind. You've got sky-high prices for food, drinks, and housing. In fact, over the past couple of years, we've even jokingly called Shanghai "沪国" online, which combines its short name "沪" and means "Hu Country," with the currency there called "沪币."
Because of this, most people in China struggle to feel that sense of pride connected to Shanghai's development; it can sometimes feel like there's a gap between us. On the other hand, with Beijing, everyone has a clear connection, especially when it comes to places like Tiananmen Square, where there’s a strong sense of national pride that brings people together without any barriers.
I’ve been to Shanghai a couple times myself, and I was raised and grownup in Beijing until 17 years old and study in America. Tbh I don’t against Shanghai, that’s a beautiful city indeed. But Shanghai is not Beijing, we live here we feel the vibe here. I remember this summer after watching a show at a theater near Tiananmen Square, I was out of cigarettes so try to find a grocery store buy one. I purchased the cigarettes, and then turned my head, a photo of Mao was hanging on the wall. I was glad, you know, not like in NYC or DC, that’s my home, that’s my people, that’s the vibe I often dream about across the pacific
伟大的理想主义万岁!
up加油。海外国人来顶
It's CPC
@@janeyuin4594 😂😂 you are right
They used CCP before, but after 1949 the party renamed to CPC
B站一些人评论区刷新飞机图片的,完全是没明白你为何而哭,被某些打着红旗而将主席庸俗化、无害化、工具化的群体带偏了叙事。但这又能怪群众吗,唉
哥们,因为是教员的生日呀,首次试飞难道和教员生日在同一天是巧合吗?这怎么就把教员庸俗化了请你讲的明白点说话别只说一半,而且多宣传宣传这种事没坏处真不明白你有什么可抱怨的
@@mikechn3034 不了解是不是巧合。对个人而言话说全了已经。宣传这种事的好处坏处不同人有不同出发点,事物发展过程中二者也是不断起变化的,辩证看待,很难给不同人一个标准答案。没任何抱怨的语气,好好说话
先从宣传开始吧~毕竟走资派罔顾事实的几十年~人民的觉悟也是需要时间的
@@zzzzxx2011 认真看完视频你都不会有这样的想法,毛主席他做的事难道不值得我们尊敬吗?看了教员的历史都能知道当时他是多不容易,到了首都看见他的画像会哭不正常吗?所以你说现在宣传毛主席怎么就庸俗化、无害化、工具化了?而且你最后加的“但这又能怪群众吗,哎”这阴阳怪气的语气还不算抱怨呢,那以你的标准什么算?
@@mikechn3034 你这话跟饭圈迷妹一样,知道我们哥哥有多不容易吗
A short video showing what ppl are thinking in North Korea😂
@@Sgsgsgshccc completely different