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<HTML>Ten things I like about china
1. The spring in Su1 Zhou1, where every garden shows you a paradise.
2. The fall in Beijing, where leaves fly over your shouder, demonstrate the beauty of maturity.
3. The boys from Dongbei, who treat you like brothers, with no caution or calculation.
4. The girls from Nanjing, where my ex girlfriend is from.
5. The poems from Tang and Song, that can be compared with any masterpiece in other languages (it's hard, if not impossible, to hate Chinese when you read li bai)
6. The novels by Jin Yong. My life would be incomplete without them.
7. The view you get when you stand in Shanghai pudong. The potential of China is there.
8. The readers in Sanlian bookstore at dongdan, Beijing. they sit on the floor and stairs all night long to read the books they can't afford. i love that scene.
9. Some of my teachers, who did shape my view of life. They are traditional chinese intelectuals, who live a poor life, but never forget their principles.
10. Chinese parents, who readily sacrifice their lives for their children. Love, when it is deep, is unselfish.
You can say whatever you want, and i agree with some of your points. But they don't justify the hatred against your motherland. To cite Mrs. Kennedy: don't ask what your country did for you. ask what you did for your country.</HTML>
1. The spring in Su1 Zhou1, where every garden shows you a paradise.
2. The fall in Beijing, where leaves fly over your shouder, demonstrate the beauty of maturity.
3. The boys from Dongbei, who treat you like brothers, with no caution or calculation.
4. The girls from Nanjing, where my ex girlfriend is from.
5. The poems from Tang and Song, that can be compared with any masterpiece in other languages (it's hard, if not impossible, to hate Chinese when you read li bai)
6. The novels by Jin Yong. My life would be incomplete without them.
7. The view you get when you stand in Shanghai pudong. The potential of China is there.
8. The readers in Sanlian bookstore at dongdan, Beijing. they sit on the floor and stairs all night long to read the books they can't afford. i love that scene.
9. Some of my teachers, who did shape my view of life. They are traditional chinese intelectuals, who live a poor life, but never forget their principles.
10. Chinese parents, who readily sacrifice their lives for their children. Love, when it is deep, is unselfish.
You can say whatever you want, and i agree with some of your points. But they don't justify the hatred against your motherland. To cite Mrs. Kennedy: don't ask what your country did for you. ask what you did for your country.</HTML>