“Ulterior motives”的版本间的差异
来自China Digital Space
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<blockquote>''Wengtao2015'' (@翁涛2015): If you yell on the street, "Diaoyu Islands belong to China!" you are a patriot. If you instead yell, "Outer Mongolia and Vladivostok belong to China!" you may be arrested as a mad person or someone who has ulterior motives! Why is that? (February 14, 2015)</blockquote> | <blockquote>''Wengtao2015'' (@翁涛2015): If you yell on the street, "Diaoyu Islands belong to China!" you are a patriot. If you instead yell, "Outer Mongolia and Vladivostok belong to China!" you may be arrested as a mad person or someone who has ulterior motives! Why is that? (February 14, 2015)</blockquote> | ||
− | <blockquote> 如果你站在街上喊:" | + | <blockquote> 如果你站在街上喊:"钓鱼岛是中国的!" 你就是爱国者;你若喊:"外蒙、海参崴是中国的!",你就是有可能被当作疯子或者别有用心抓起来!这是为什么? [[https://freeweibo.com/weibo/%40%E7%BF%81%E6%B6%9B2015 '''Chinese''']]</blockquote> |
[[Category: Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon]] [[Category: Quotable Communist Party]] | [[Category: Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon]] [[Category: Quotable Communist Party]] |
2015年6月9日 (二) 21:37的版本
别有用心 (biéyǒuyòngxīn): ulterior motives
A phrase often used by the official media to blame foreign forces and domestic dissidents for social unrest and criticism towards Chinese government.
Netizens sometimes twist this phrase to mock the government.
Examples:
Wengtao2015 (@翁涛2015): If you yell on the street, "Diaoyu Islands belong to China!" you are a patriot. If you instead yell, "Outer Mongolia and Vladivostok belong to China!" you may be arrested as a mad person or someone who has ulterior motives! Why is that? (February 14, 2015)
如果你站在街上喊:"钓鱼岛是中国的!" 你就是爱国者;你若喊:"外蒙、海参崴是中国的!",你就是有可能被当作疯子或者别有用心抓起来!这是为什么? [Chinese]