Taiwan’s pro-communist artists kicked out fake food from the mainland during the epidemic group purchase was cheated

Taiwanese pro-communist artist Liu Leyan recently kicked out fake Food from mainland China on her Weibo account. (Screenshot of Liu Leyan’s microblog)

On January 29, she broke the news on Weibo that she bought a pack of lamb slices cheaply on the Internet, but found duck meat mixed with it after receiving the goods, making her exclaim, “Is there such a thing in Taiwan? “

Liu Leyan is a former member of Taiwan’s female F4 group, who went to work in mainland China five years ago. She has since repeatedly made pro-communist and derogatory remarks about Taiwan, saying she doesn’t care about “Taiwanese nationality”, and has been dubbed “female Huang An” by netizens.

The company’s main goal is to provide a comprehensive range of products and services to the public. After she kicked out the black-hearted food, Chinese netizens instead acid her fuss.

Blaming herself for being too naive, Liu Le Yan filmed the process and wrote on Weibo, “I really can’t remember if I’ve ever eaten fake lamb and duck pieces like this before in Taiwan. Is there such a thing in Taiwan?”

She believes that if the manufacturer had written directly at the beginning that the goods were lamb slices with duck meat, that’s why the price was cheaper and consumers would have bought it if they needed it, but the manufacturer did not label it clearly and made it look like a limited Time rush, making her furious: “Humph! Cheat me! I am very simple.” I’m very simple,” and exclaimed that “there is definitely a commercial fraud.

Many Chinese netizens were not surprised, but instead accused Liu Leyan: “In fact, you’ve eaten a lot, you just don’t know it.” “Is this bit of crap worth talking about? Don’t you know you have a special status?” “It’s a bitter Life, how nice to continue to be F4 in Taiwan.” “Normal logic, cheap is not good in China.” “Don’t be greedy for cheap.”