IN CHINA, IT IS FORBIDDEN TO SAVE A DROWNING PERSON AT THE LEGISLATIVE LEVEL

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IN CHINA, IT IS FORBIDDEN TO SAVE A DROWNING PERSON AT THE LEGISLATIVE LEVEL



3 years ago

~1.9 mins read

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Sometimes the imagination of the legislative bodies is striking in its sophistication and limitlessness so much that you just have to shrug your hands when you get acquainted with the ridiculous and strange laws of some countries. For example, in China it is forbidden to save a drowning person.
 
It sounds, of course, absurd and cruel. But it’s true, in China it’s really forbidden to save a drowning person.

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Why is that? This requires understanding the philosophy of a country like China. It is against the law to save a drowning person, because the Chinese believe in Fate, inexorable and unyielding, with which one must live in peace and harmony.
 
WHAT DOES FATE MEAN FOR THE CHINESE?
 
In China, there is such a saying: “Fate is in the first place, Luck takes the second place, and Feng Shui takes the third, ” which briefly explains the degree of influence of factors on human life.

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For the Chinese, Fate, which comes first, means the path of life determined by the Higher Forces, which is beyond human will.
 
Fate is a combination of man’s innate qualities that have a significant impact on his personal development and life path, which cannot be changed neither by environment, nor by upbringing, nor by education. Personally-cosmic code of a person, a kind of unique passport, is his moment of birth.
 
A person’s fate is a person’s relationship with other people, the place he occupies in a complex society, combined with such important factors as luck and luck. The Chinese have even developed a one-of-a-kind system that allows one to determine and explain fate, in no way interfering in it. That is why in China it is forbidden to save a drowning man, so as not to violate what is destined for him from above.
 
Of course, the Chinese are a little strange people who do not want to come to the aid in difficult times. After all, if it is forbidden in China to save a drowning person, then this means that you should calmly stand and look at this terrible process, and, possibly, take pictures? Can the Chinese be so inhuman to their compatriots? Apparently not.
 
It is true that it is forbidden in China to save a drowning person, as well as the truth that in other countries there are rather eccentric laws that are nevertheless enforced and were inveted in connection with certain events.
 
Not only China surprises with its own laws.
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