Tomato
42 posts


@li195245857635 @Droplet_Express 你就是个二逼,鉴定完毕,又和上海人有什么关系,老子就想草泥妈,有机会吗?约一个,多少钱?
中文

@aanTIu9Y5fOvt3L @szygls 要不然说你是个小婊砸,那就说对呢,中国多大?你先人多大?这样一比?我特么的笑了🤣你知道沙币咋写吗?不知道,我教你,请私信我
中文

A four year old girl hopes China will win the #WorldCup. After learning about the tournament, she asked her dad a simple and sincere question. Their helpless yet lovely conversation has warmed many hearts. #AmazingKids
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Except for Chinese and Koreans, the world did not know much about Japanese in the past.
People around the world — especially in Western countries — grew up watching Japanese anime, playing with Japanese toys, using Japanese electronics, and driving Japanese cars. In their impression, the Japanese are polite, constantly bowing, apologizing, or expressing admiration for the West. For a long time, people had a favorable impression of Japan. Then, seemingly overnight, they started reading what Japanese users were actually saying on X — and they realized that the Japanese are, in fact, a deeply dark, socially Darwinist, power-worshipping, perverse, evil, and racist people. And they find it utterly disgusting.
I've said it before: Japan has the most isolated internet enviorment in the world. The Japanese-language internet is the largest echo chamber in existence. No one outside Japan could read Japanese — and most Japanese couldn't read any other language. They were like animals in Australia, disconnected from the rest of the world, gradually evolving all sorts of strange shape. Japanese post wildly outrageous comments without restraint, developing all kinds of extreme and distorted theories.
Then Musk introduced automatic translation — and the mask fell off. To everyone's shock, the vast majority of Japanese netizens turned out to be right‑wing extremists, each more radical than the last. They fight with everyone around the world, flinging insults and attacks, lying through their teeth, refusing to acknowledge their own historical crimes, and casually calling for the "elimination" of anyone who disagrees with them. That's when people finally understood: the Chinese and the Koreans were right all along.

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