"Mountain pigs can't eat fine chaff!" Recently, a Korean blogger came to China to explore a shop. While waiting for a meal, the Korean blogger raised a question: "Why is the water in Chinese restaurants so turbid?" The Chinese girl at the same table immediately said, "This is lemonade, so do you think there is no clean water in China because you didn't drink it?"
A Korean blogger traveled to China, but suddenly made a ridiculous joke.
It happened in a barbecue restaurant. While their group was waiting for a meal, a Korean blogger saw that the water on the table was a little turbid and asked, "Why is the water in Chinese restaurants so turbid?"
When the Chinese girl at the table heard it, she explained to him that it was lemon water, and asked if he felt that China had no clean water.
He laughed, took the cup and drank, and the girl continued to say that this water was his own daily drink, and asked if he felt that something was put in the water, worried that it was bad for the body.
In fact, in exchange for anyone, seeing something unfamiliar, the normal reaction should be to ask "what is this", rather than questioning the purity of the water, this questioning method is indeed easy for people to feel that he has prejudices.
After the matter was reported, netizens talked about it.
Many people say that this is because mountain pigs cannot eat fine bran.
At the same time, more people say that many Koreans will always express some unfriendly views after coming to China.
For example, in January this year, another South Korean blogger came to China to travel, and his prejudice against my country reached the extreme.
Many netizens have discovered that the Korean blogger's trip to China has had some reluctance from the beginning.
He had just completed his trip to Laos, and had it not been for the visa-free policy of China and Korea, he would not have intended to come to China.
Before leaving, he had a lot of inherent ideas about China, felt that Chinese English was not good, and also felt that Chinese cities may not be so modern, with this mentality, he chose Kunming as the first stop on the Chinese journey.
As soon as he arrived in Kunming, the blogger began to pay attention to where it could cause trouble.
There is a cigarette butt on the ground, and he feels that the sanitary condition of Kunming is not good; When I want to buy a subway ticket, I find that I can't pay online, so I can only pay cash, and I complain that the modernization of Chinese cities is not enough.
He thinks that online paying such a basic function shouldn’t be so troublesome.
Walking in the street and seeing the surveillance cameras on the roadside, he remembered the western media's saying that "China monitors society".
Seeing someone riding an electric car without a helmet is also a critical point.
Later in the youth hostel, he met a Korean-speaking staff, which surprised him a bit, because it was different from the idea he had before that “Chinese do not even speak English well.”
But this accident did not last long, and he began to criticize Kunming's appearance, saying that the city known as the "Spring City" looked "ordinary." He even compared it with Vietnam and Kunming, and said that Kunming's development "stayed at the level of South Korea 20 years ago."
This comparison, in any case, seems very unpolite.
During the trip, he also complained about shared bicycles in China, saying that they were "plastic toys." However, not long after, someone photographed him riding a shared bicycle all over the street looking for a shooting angle. His words and deeds were completely inconsistent.
He also complained to people that traveling in China was so difficult that he had to use his hands and feet to communicate even when ordering food. However, he turned around and had to admit that there are many types of food in China and the taste is really good.
There were even South Korean netizens who followed him and said that China hot pot was copied from South Korea and Japan. This statement itself was untenable. Everyone with discerning eyes knew that hot pot was a traditional China delicacy and had a long history.
Even more unilaterally, he bought snacks in the Kunming Youth Hostel in order to find out the salary of the staff.
When he heard that the other party's monthly income was about 3,000 yuan, he immediately concluded that "I am lucky to be born in South Korea, and the life of Chinese young people is particularly difficult".
But he didn't even consider that the income gap between different cities and jobs in China is inherently large, and the living conditions of all young Chinese people can't be judged only by one person's salary. This kind of partial idea is too superficial.
He also makes special use of online blogs to pay attention. On foreign social platforms, he posted three videos in succession, deliberately describing China as a "hell mode" tourist destination, just to attract traffic by creating controversy, and to take the "black and red" path.
After these videos were released, indeed, some foreigners were misled, just like shark smells of blood, carrying these videos everywhere to say China is bad, causing a bad impact on China's image.
But what is interesting is that his controversial comments on Chongqing have made more Koreans know about Chongqing. Recently, the number of Korean tourists who go to Chongqing to punch in has increased by 30%, which is an accident that has played a role in "reverse delivery of goods".
In fact, from the entire journey of this blogger can be seen, many South Korean tourists to China impressions of China still remain in the past stereotype awareness, always with a superior perception and a challenging look at China, but are not willing to really understand China's development changes in these years.
This stereotype not only leads them to miss out on real China, but may also lead to unnecessary misunderstandings because of some unilateral remarks.
No matter which country you are from, you should travel with an open and inclusive mind, observe and feel more, instead of finding faults with preset prejudices. Only in this way can you truly understand the true face of a place.
A Korean blogger traveled to China, but suddenly made a ridiculous joke.
It happened in a barbecue restaurant. While their group was waiting for a meal, a Korean blogger saw that the water on the table was a little turbid and asked, "Why is the water in Chinese restaurants so turbid?"
When the Chinese girl at the table heard it, she explained to him that it was lemon water, and asked if he felt that China had no clean water.
He laughed, took the cup and drank, and the girl continued to say that this water was his own daily drink, and asked if he felt that something was put in the water, worried that it was bad for the body.
In fact, in exchange for anyone, seeing something unfamiliar, the normal reaction should be to ask "what is this", rather than questioning the purity of the water, this questioning method is indeed easy for people to feel that he has prejudices.
After the matter was reported, netizens talked about it.
Many people say that this is because mountain pigs cannot eat fine bran.
At the same time, more people say that many Koreans will always express some unfriendly views after coming to China.
For example, in January this year, another South Korean blogger came to China to travel, and his prejudice against my country reached the extreme.
Many netizens have discovered that the Korean blogger's trip to China has had some reluctance from the beginning.
He had just completed his trip to Laos, and had it not been for the visa-free policy of China and Korea, he would not have intended to come to China.
Before leaving, he had a lot of inherent ideas about China, felt that Chinese English was not good, and also felt that Chinese cities may not be so modern, with this mentality, he chose Kunming as the first stop on the Chinese journey.
As soon as he arrived in Kunming, the blogger began to pay attention to where it could cause trouble.
There is a cigarette butt on the ground, and he feels that the sanitary condition of Kunming is not good; When I want to buy a subway ticket, I find that I can't pay online, so I can only pay cash, and I complain that the modernization of Chinese cities is not enough.
He thinks that online paying such a basic function shouldn’t be so troublesome.
Walking in the street and seeing the surveillance cameras on the roadside, he remembered the western media's saying that "China monitors society".
Seeing someone riding an electric car without a helmet is also a critical point.
Later in the youth hostel, he met a Korean-speaking staff, which surprised him a bit, because it was different from the idea he had before that “Chinese do not even speak English well.”
But this accident did not last long, and he began to criticize Kunming's appearance, saying that the city known as the "Spring City" looked "ordinary." He even compared it with Vietnam and Kunming, and said that Kunming's development "stayed at the level of South Korea 20 years ago."
This comparison, in any case, seems very unpolite.
During the trip, he also complained about shared bicycles in China, saying that they were "plastic toys." However, not long after, someone photographed him riding a shared bicycle all over the street looking for a shooting angle. His words and deeds were completely inconsistent.
He also complained to people that traveling in China was so difficult that he had to use his hands and feet to communicate even when ordering food. However, he turned around and had to admit that there are many types of food in China and the taste is really good.
There were even South Korean netizens who followed him and said that China hot pot was copied from South Korea and Japan. This statement itself was untenable. Everyone with discerning eyes knew that hot pot was a traditional China delicacy and had a long history.
Even more unilaterally, he bought snacks in the Kunming Youth Hostel in order to find out the salary of the staff.
When he heard that the other party's monthly income was about 3,000 yuan, he immediately concluded that "I am lucky to be born in South Korea, and the life of Chinese young people is particularly difficult".
But he didn't even consider that the income gap between different cities and jobs in China is inherently large, and the living conditions of all young Chinese people can't be judged only by one person's salary. This kind of partial idea is too superficial.
He also makes special use of online blogs to pay attention. On foreign social platforms, he posted three videos in succession, deliberately describing China as a "hell mode" tourist destination, just to attract traffic by creating controversy, and to take the "black and red" path.
After these videos were released, indeed, some foreigners were misled, just like shark smells of blood, carrying these videos everywhere to say China is bad, causing a bad impact on China's image.
But what is interesting is that his controversial comments on Chongqing have made more Koreans know about Chongqing. Recently, the number of Korean tourists who go to Chongqing to punch in has increased by 30%, which is an accident that has played a role in "reverse delivery of goods".
In fact, from the entire journey of this blogger can be seen, many South Korean tourists to China impressions of China still remain in the past stereotype awareness, always with a superior perception and a challenging look at China, but are not willing to really understand China's development changes in these years.
This stereotype not only leads them to miss out on real China, but may also lead to unnecessary misunderstandings because of some unilateral remarks.
No matter which country you are from, you should travel with an open and inclusive mind, observe and feel more, instead of finding faults with preset prejudices. Only in this way can you truly understand the true face of a place.