Liu Sien said to let everyone know, but when Xiaoxin held her hand when she was criticized by the teacher, she didn't shake it back, and when Xiaoxin kissed her, she struggled to push away.
The stories are interspersed, and I really can't figure out the order. If Xiaoxin sleeps with the teacher first, then Sien's actions later are all excusable; if on the contrary, Sien doesn't respond first, and Xiaoxin sleeps with the teacher. So filial piety is excusable.
It's strange how a teacher can slap a student casually.
It's strange that when the two of them are kissing, what right do other people have to pull away? If a man and a woman are kissing, do they all applaud? But look at the movie's release year in 1999, and it's helpless. Even today, the salesperson of a small supermarket in the UK has stopped it, but the good news is that the boss needs compensation, and the good news is that a group of gay and les came to kiss every corner of the store on the second day. South Korea can't either, really can't. Asia should praise Taiwan.
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