“So what if I’m Taiwanese? Our passports are different!”
A Taiwanese girl visiting Beijing gets aggressively cornered by two middle-aged Little Pinks in the CCP capital. They demand to know if she’s “Chinese,” with wild gestures and hostile tones — classic united front bullying in action.
Her calm reply cuts through their rage:
“So what if I’m Taiwanese? The passports we hold are different.”
This is the “one China” fantasy meeting reality. Even in their own capital, forced identity politics turns into public confrontations.
No wonder the mainland netizens are quietly noticing the contrast in demeanor.