"Outrageous!" In another timeline, Empress Dowager Cixi trembled with rage as she looked at the sky. "These people from later generations are simply outrageous! Behead them! If we catch them, we must behead them!"

"The imperial tombs have been bombed?!" A series of Qing emperors, from Nurhaci to Puyi, were outraged.

But their anger was useless; the sky continued to laugh and mock them.

At this moment, Zhu Zhanji wanted to try sending a bullet comment, and unexpectedly, it went through.

(Ming Dynasty, Zhu Zhanji: I heard that the Tartar emperors' ancestral graves were blown up. Sorry, haha...)

Upon seeing his comment, the barrage of comments suddenly became lively, especially those about the Ming Dynasty emperors.

(Ming Dynasty, Zhu Houzhao: Can you please stop using that money-tail hairpin? It's too ugly!)

(Ming Dynasty, Zhu Youjian: Well done! You look at yourselves, your descendants are all laughing at you, which shows that you are not popular!)

(Ming Dynasty, Zhu Yuanzhang: Even your own ancestors don't protect your descendants. Look how unpopular you are!)

(Qing Dynasty, Aisin-Gioro Hongli: Shut up, shut up, shut up! You former emperors, no matter what you say here, you are still losers!)

(Qin Shi Huang: Did no emperors really emerge in later generations?)

(Puyi, Qing Dynasty: No, and now everyone is living a new life. It's very good here, and I'm very free.)

They hadn't expected Puyi to speak here, and they sensed a sense of peace in his words.

For a moment, everyone felt a sense of shared sorrow.

Especially emperors at the end of a dynasty.

(Tang Dynasty, Li Shimin: The reason why there are no emperors in later generations is also due to the general trend. Just like the Huaxia tribes were just tribes at the beginning, and later gradually became a country, with the change of dynasties, the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors, and the emperor. Everything is the general trend. Just like now, there must be someone to lead the way, to lead all civil and military officials, to care for the people, and to continue everything. In the present, this person can only be the emperor.)

As soon as Li Shimin appeared, this emperor after the Tang Dynasty, the "white moonlight" of the emperor, immediately attracted everyone's attention.

What he said was indeed correct.

An emperor who holds absolute power has nothing to worry about, while an emperor whose power is about to slip away is too weak to worry because he has no power to control.

(Song Dynasty, Zhao Zhen: The emperor is the pillar of all the people.)

For a moment, it seemed as if most of the emperors, scholars, and soldiers had been summoned out to discuss this rather taboo matter.

Zhu Di saw Li Shimin and became a little fanboy!

Li Shimin saw Zhuge Liang and became a little fanboy!

I wonder how many people, upon seeing their idols, want to share more insightful opinions to attract their attention.

In an instant, the barrage of comments on the screen was densely packed, so dense that there wasn't even enough time to read them all, and the people copying them were extremely excited.

Speeches by Emperor Wen of Han, Emperor Guangwu of Han, and so on.

In fact, many people understand that at this time, many ideas of later generations did not have a fertile ground to exist, and the rulers were not indifferent to the hearts of the people. Since ancient times, those who win the hearts of the people win the world.

The pleasant discussion only lasted a short while, since each person could only send one comment, and they didn't know what those points were, how they were calculated, or how many points they had.

Among all these comments, apart from the eye-catching image of Emperor Qianlong from the Qing Dynasty, there seemed to be very few people from the Qing Dynasty speaking.

What's even more surprising is that the Yuan Dynasty had a lower profile than the Qing Dynasty; basically, no one from the Yuan Dynasty posted comments.

The narration of "The Last Emperor" continued to play on the screen, but after the discussion just now, some people couldn't help but feel a little relieved.

Puyi was thus drawn back into the political vortex, powerless to resist. Wanrong could only watch helplessly as he struggled. The pain drove her to hide in a corner during the ball, silently eating flowers.

The Japanese wanted Puyi to sign numerous agreements in order to evade the fact that they were the aggressors, or perhaps to openly plunder profits from this land.

[But Puyi was unwilling, yet Yoshiko Kawashima got Wanrong addicted to opium, and she was pregnant with the driver's child, which the Japanese used as leverage.]

To save face, Puyi signed many documents, unaware that many of them were plans for the disaster of the people on this land. But was he truly completely unaware? The wolfish ambitions of the Japanese were now blatantly obvious.

[Even after giving birth, Wanrong was forcibly taken away, and Puyi could only watch helplessly as she was taken away, while he was once again locked behind a red door.]

When they met again, Japan had already surrendered. By then, Wanrong was emaciated and only knew how to spit at the Japanese. She refused to see Puyi again.

Later, after the founding of the People's Republic of China, Puyi became a war criminal, testifying against the Japanese for their invasion of China, and he was also required to undergo reformation.

[For the first time, he saw the stark white bones of the Nanjing Massacre, and images of the Chinese people ravaged by germ warfare...]

The black-and-white images, somewhat shakily, reveal all of this in a very cruel way.

The elderly, women, children, men... died in all sorts of ways, piling up like mountains.

This is blood, the blood of the Chinese people!

The ancients under the sky thought of the Five Barbarian Invasions, but that was only Zhu Qinggu's story. Now that they have seen the video footage here, many people are so angry that their eyes are red and they are yelling to kill the Japanese pirates!

How dare they humiliate the Chinese people like this! They're seizing our land!

"Where is this Japan?" Liu Che was also somewhat furious. The hatred for the Xiongnu was still remembered for generations, not to mention that this little Japan had massacred 300,000 people in later generations, or even more!

They were Han Chinese too!

Liu Che has decided to kill!

Liu Ju flipped through the map and pointed to a small island nearby. This was a replica of some maps from later times, which could be used to make a rough estimate.

Liu Che looked there and his killing intent flashed, but the priority now was the Xiongnu.

He was unaware that many parts of the island were still undeveloped.

Not only him, but many emperors under the sky were staring intently at that place.

Li Shimin knew this place was a small, insignificant state, initially arrogant but later obsequious, surely harboring ulterior motives. It was better to act sooner rather than later…

……

In the prison, Puyi saw his younger brother Pujie. Pujie would still help him tie his shoelaces and get dressed like a servant. But one day, Pujie angrily cried out, "I'm no longer your slave!" Yet, he would still angrily tie his shoelaces for him.

The warden noticed these changes and separated the prisoners, assigning Puyi to cleaning and other tasks that everyone else could do.

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