The illustrations in Wu Yong's poison textbook are not suitable for children.
In fact, before the textbook incident, we can see clues from some early interviews in Wu Yong. In an interview, he talked about himself and his environment. From this passage of Wu Yong, we can see his dissatisfaction and inferiority towards his own civilization. In this interview, he said euphemistically that he sometimes reflected and felt that his genes were all crude and bad.
It implicitly shows his disdain and contempt for China's existing environment, but also highlights his admiration for capitalist countries, believing that there is still a big gap between us and civilized countries, and no amount of money can match these gaps. It can be seen that he looked down on China people from the bottom of his heart, and thought that we were also passing on a "bad gene".
but it is highly respected by foreigners, a typical person who worships foreign things and flatters foreign countries. Therefore, in his cognition, he sneered at the people and things in China, which led to these ugly figures in textbooks. In addition to the deliberately ugly characters, there are some metaphors in the illustrations that even adults can't see.
For example, the number N33K on this fighter plane, who would have thought to delve into the meaning behind this number? This serial number first represents the Japanese squadron, in which N stands for the water and K stands for the production company in western Sichuan, and the purpose of Wu Yong's subtle tricks was mentioned in an earlier interview.
Wu Yong, the "initiator" of the poison textbook, was originally just an ordinary worker of the China Youth Society. However, when he opened up overseas markets in 1998, he immediately got the cooperation order for children's publications of the Royal Ballet of UNICEF. This golden cooperation project instantly made Wu Yong's identity rise, and he jumped from an unknown third-rate painter to a famous painter in China.
Perhaps Wu Yong's works were really loved by westerners, and later he became a consultant to UNICEF, which has been promoting the LGBT movement among young people in China. As we all know, LGBT is a very important card in the western ideological war, which is extremely easy to create division and suppress China from the perspective of human rights.