대한민국 경찰이 아닙니다. 중국 공안입니다.
MOU 체결후 엄청난 인원이 중국 공안이
한국 경찰로 둔갑하여 국민들을 걷어차고
폭행을 일삼고 있습니다.
전세계 여러분들이 반드시 알아야합니다
리트윗 재인용 부탁드리며,
널리 알려주시면 감사하겠습니다.
It's not the Republic of Korea police. It's the Chinese police.
After signing the MOU, a huge number of people were sent to the Chinese public
He's turned into a Korean police officer, kicking the people
They are assaulting each other.
You must know this from all over the world
Please re-use the retweet,
I'd appreciate it if you could let me know widely.
Citizens sit on the cold ground, writing messages on their sketchbooks with markers: 'Please share this on social media; the press is not reporting it.' It’s heartbreaking.
https://t.co/WKZjgQ3VE1 via @YouTube
@GhanaianSavage I just want blacks to stop killing each other and killing Asians, so that makes me kissing the ass of other people?
Is being low-IQ something you're born with?
@Alt_Azn@Badhombre@Designsage I'll never get over the fact that these politicians can get honey potted by Chinese 4s...Fang Fang on a good day is a 4. They aren't even sending 6s. At least North Korean women are better looking than that. Such a disgrace
37 years ago today, the Chinese government brutally crushed peaceful protesters in and around Tiananmen Square who were demanding an end to corruption, freedom of speech, and democratic reform. The massacre revealed a truth the world should never forget: the Chinese Communist Party will do whatever it takes to preserve its grip on power. If it did not value the lives of its own citizens, why would it value the lives of others?
For 37 years, over 2,000 images taken by a Chinese state media photographer were hidden in a metal box, surviving brutal purges—until now.
These raw, powerful photos show the courage of the students, the scale of the protests, and the horror of what the Chinese Communist Party did.
Now, The @EpochTimes is making the photos public for the first time. [1/2]