Shanghai. An old lady is counting her money on the metro.👇😅 Safety is a prerequisite for freedom. Without safety, freedom is meaningless. It's ridiculous that some people who live in countries that cannot even guarantee public security still boast about their free.🤔
@thinking_panda Cus that paper aint worth the ink its printed on.
@thinking_panda Safety came into play when the government started to monitor each citizen with cameras at each corner all over China and assessing them with points of the social credit system. No cameras in toilets thats why toilet paper still gets stolen.
@thinking_panda Freedom from fear, fear of crime, is one of the greatest freedoms of all. To be able to walk on the street or ride the Metro without fear.
@thinking_panda I e seen people count like this . Always gets me
@thinking_panda Ayo her stage-name “Lil Ma” ? 😂👌🏼
@thinking_panda Because the law under the communist party is different than the US.
Mao launched his first anti-corruption campaign in 1950, just six months after taking power, “The masses have sharp eyes,” he said, and encouraged people to report wrongdoing. It was remarkably effective. Corruption fell dramatically despite the fact that Mao insisted on merely shaming corrupt officials. Says Sidney Rittenberg, “Nobody locked their doors. The banks–there was a local bank branch on many, many corners–the door was wide open, the currency was stacked up on the table in plain sight of the door, there were no guards and they never had a bank robbery, ever”. amazon.com/dp/B08Q9PN8SV?…