The most beautiful patriotic girl —— Olympic flame in Nagano, Japan
First of all, I'm sorry for not being able to update it in the past two days. Yesterday I went to the Olympic Torch Relay in Nagano, Japan, to cheer on our Olympic torch. A large number of live photos I have taken are at:
http://cache./publicforum/content/sport/1/124398.shtml
Here's what it looked like at the time:
From the morning before yesterday to last night, I slept for a total of two or three hours. Not much to say, the scene is very warm, there is communication inside, strict discipline, protect yourself from hurting others. The other side provoked and covered the opponent's small flag with a big flag. It's a pity that I went to the same car as a GG behind me, and in the morning the torch transmission point in charge of our car had not yet started, and he was injured by the Japanese hooligan because he left the team alone, and had to go to the police station, and then arranged to come back alone. Our car departed from the Yaesu Exit of Tokyo Station at one o'clock in the morning on the 26th, with about 50 cars and 55 people per car. Originally, the main force was going to leave Shinjuku, which is the starting point of many JR highway buses, but before that, Japanese right-wingers announced a detailed plan for harassment, including harassment by honking our horns all the way after we set off. In view of this situation, we only gave the official departure time and place at noon on the same day, and the main force was changed to Tokyo Yaesu. At about 22:50, my younger brothers and sisters and I took a one-stop walk from the research institute near the Emperor's Palace to Otemachi and walked from the ground to Tokyo Station. On the way, I met two female reporters from Beijing TV station, who diligently helped them carry their things, and they were all photographed by them, but there was no need to release them.
From Tokyo, I couldn't sleep in a state of excitement, and as I approached Nagano around 4 a.m., the sky was already bright. At this time, I saw a number of private cars waving red Chinese flags along the way, and I was even more excited. When I arrived at the meeting point, there was not much to do, and I distributed red flags, armbands, badges, T-shirts and other materials; in order to facilitate the management of the car, it was divided into multiple groups, a group of five, and the team leader was randomly arranged, and I was also fortunate to be the team leader, so I began to give up the T-shirts to other team members when they were insufficient. The whole torch relay is 19 kilometers, and there are 55 torch relay points in the middle, and we are divided into the 37th relay point, and the relay time is 10:29 seconds. We arrived at about half-past five, and there was a long time in between, and unfortunately one of the members left the team and was injured. At 10:00 a.m., when the torch relay was just over, the Chinese students in front of me waved the national flag and shouted the slogan "Beijing - come on!", and I also yelled, and as in the novel cliché, in the fluttering red flag boiling slogan, my "feelings are like a flood that has opened the floodgates", before the hippie smiling face was busy greeting and taking pictures, then suddenly his nose was sore, and his eyes were filled with tears and shouted slogans. Maybe you don't know if you are not there, but that feeling really bursts into the bottom of your heart, this Olympic Games, Beijing, this has never been such a beautiful five-star red flag, representing the personality and existence of a specific Chinese. I was so excited by its dignity that I even burst into tears. At this time, I suddenly understood that Wang Qianyuan's actions could no longer be regarded as compatriots. Some issues of principle may as well be put on the platform, she no longer thinks of herself as Chinese, how delirious, ignorant and hypocritical she is.
When our group had completed their mission, like our compatriots who had just caught up with us, we quickly moved forward, took a shortcut and walked to a relay point, and continued to cheer for the Olympic torch until we reached the finish line in Ruoli Park. When a small number of Tibetan or Japanese right-wingers raised the snow-capped lion flag, we covered them with larger and wider red flags. I don't know if some Japanese right-wingers really just came to join in the fun, but one of his banners was covered by our red flag, and he said, "You guys cover my banners." "It's stupid and naïve. ”
Oh, I don't say much else, in short, I am very moved, and I suddenly feel that I have a more real understanding of the word Chinese!