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Is Liang Qichao a Hakka? Can anyone tell me...

Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao were slaves of the Qing Dynasty.

Liang Qichao is not a Hakka

Super traitor and Qing slave Kang Youwei!

Some people in recent times admire Kang Youwei, calling him "the ancestor of human rights in China", and some even tout him as "China's Rousseau and Voltaire", which is really funny. Who was Kang Youwei, and what was he doing in his life? In fact, there are only two words: "support the Qing Dynasty". He was more loyal and devoted to the Manchus than any traitor who supported the Manchus at that time.

Compared with other Manchu and Qing officials, Kang Youwei does not seem to be that ignorant. Academically, he first belonged to the Confucian "Xinxue" school. Later, he accepted Western viewpoints ideologically and began to turn to the Ming Dynasty. At the end of the Anti-Qing Dynasty, Gu Yanwu, a scholar of the Qing Dynasty, came up with the idea of ??"managing the world and applying it". The "reform of the system based on ancient times" he advocated was nothing more than plagiarizing Gu Yanwu's "Economics". He used the "new Confucius" who advocated reform to fight against the "old Confucius" who were die-hards among the Manchus. His purpose was to maintain the rule of the Manchus.

When the Reform Movement of 1898 failed, the so-called "Seven Gentlemen" were called domestic slaves by the old demon Cixi and were executed without mercy. Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao fled to Japan. At that time, Sun Wen considered that "that country was also oppressed by the Manchus and might change his mind and join the revolution." He asked the Japanese Miyazaki Tozō to contact him. Kang Youwei was alone overseas at the time, and he also thought that Sun Wen might change his mind and join the revolution. Sun Wen's revolutionary party could use it, but he actually wanted to persuade Sun Wen and his revolutionary party to turn to support the rule of the Qing Dynasty. He once said to his disciples, "With my sharp tongue, I will definitely make them submit." The imperial court will support my lord (pseudo-Guangxu) in his restoration in the future." Such a joke. He sent Liang Qichao to meet with Chen Shaobai, the representative of the Revolutionary Party, at the request of Miyazaki Tozō with the so-called "Belt Edict". During the meeting, Liang said that his teacher wanted Sun Wen and the Revolutionary Party to kneel down to accept the "Belt Edict" before they could talk to him. The plan was because Kang Youwei considered himself Guangxu's "imperial envoy". Chen Shaobai was furious and said, "How can I, a descendant of Yan and Huang, kneel down as a Manchu clown?" He also said to Liang Qichao, "You are also a seven-foot Han man. Why do you want to protect the foreigners from him and bully the Han people, and recognize thieves as your father?" From then on, Kang Youwei treated Liang Qichao. The Revolutionary Party was filled with hatred and called the Revolutionary Party "a mob without fathers and kings." Kang Youwei could not exert his influence in Japan, so he wanted to visit North America, where there were many Chinese people. On the one hand, he could also go there to communicate with the Revolutionary Party. In order to compete for the support of overseas Chinese, he presented himself as Guangxu's overseas imperial envoy in North America, and used deception to win sympathy. The U.S. government could use it because he had "a considerable influence on the future situation in China" and also gave him a lot of financial support. After receiving donations from some unknown overseas Chinese, he claimed that he was going to the UK to lobby British politicians to support his "restoration activities" and defrauded a lot of money, but he gained nothing in the UK.

Then Kang Youwei lived idle in Singapore and India, constantly causing trouble for the Revolutionary Party and Sun Wen. But as time went by, his "royalist party" gradually weakened. Even Liang Qichao left him, and the overseas Chinese saw through his scam and no longer supported his activities. So in order to compete with Sun Wen for supporters, he began to publish articles in Southeast Asian and overseas newspapers, criticizing Sun Wen's revolution and doctrine, saying that "Manchuria is also the ancestor of the Yellow Emperor. Now Manchu and Han have become one, and in the future China will be rich and powerful." Only the Manchus can do it..." It's nonsense to say that China's future prosperity and strength will depend on the Manchu government to implement the New Deal. He also said, "It's strange to be against the Manchus. The feud between the Manchus and the Han has lasted for more than a hundred years, so why bother. The Kuang Qing Dynasty has favored the Han people for generations, and this is especially true today." When the revolution succeeded and the provinces became independent, he published an article saying that "the independent revolution is On the road to national subjugation, each province becomes independent from the imperial court, just like everyone is divided into small families, and the situation becomes even poorer! This is the case with the demise of India. "The irony is that the Qing government issued a wanted order for Kang and Liang only after the revolution was successful. After the war was over, Kang Youwei returned to his country thanks to the revolutionaries he cursed. Kang made a fortune while overseas. He used the fraudulent money to invest in finance and later engaged in antique smuggling, so he could live a very wealthy life after returning home. But he never forgot his master, the "Emperor of the Qing Dynasty". He was the most enthusiastic about Zhang Xun's restoration. Later, when the restoration failed, he fled back to Qingdao to live idle. During this period, they had flirtations with Japan, because Japan at that time wanted to support the Qing Dynasty, and they respected this "great scholar of the previous dynasty" even more.

He also praised Japan as a country that was "better than the forest" among the great powers. The emperor of the Manchu Qing Dynasty could rely on Japan's power to deal with the Republic of China.

Kang Youwei had eight wives in his life, one of whom was a Japanese spy. The old man was still "undiminished" in his seventies and eighties because his Japanese concubine was so beautiful that he stayed up all night to have sex diligently. , finally exhausted and fell ill. Although he was ill, he still did not forget his Manchu master. When Puyi got married, the Manchu people did not forget him as a loyal minister and gave him an invitation. However, he could not go because he was ill, so he knelt on the bed. Kowtow in the direction of the Forbidden City and congratulate the Lord. When he was about to die, he told his family that even if he died, he would still head towards the Qing Tomb. He was willing to go underground to serve his Emperor Guangxu.

Kang Youwei is really a loyal dog of the Manchu people! Moreover, many of his theories are still talked about by later generations of traitors (including modern pseudo-Chinese elements). Therefore, he can be called a super traitor and the ancestor of modern traitor theory.