While it may be taught in school nowadays if it wasn't when they were in school then it would be hard to imagine them hearing about it otherwise unless they pay very close attention to the media.
anoriginalthought
That was actually where I heard about this from. I haven't finished the series yet but this event in particular seemed significant to me.
Indeed, how can anyone pay attention to something they're never informed of?
Fucked if I know 😂 I'm studying it on my own from textbooks and online resources, not in a classroom setting taught by scholars much much smarter than me. I assume the reduced complexity of simplified characters makes it more accessible though, which is why I understand the PRC makes Pinyin required on road signs as well.
I've been enjoying studying Mandarin. The tones are a bit weird but the grammar seems surprisingly simple, everything can be written pretty universally in pinyin, and Hanzi characters are great for condensing information.
It sounds like your high school was better than most. That's hope-inducing.
Civic engagement is always good. Some high schools will have some things in the textbooks but class curricula never get that far, preferring to leave off around WWII or the second red scare at latest if they even touch the 1900's.
Most Statesians lose their faith in cops/country in a similar way. There's a reason US high schools don't teach recent history. If it's far enough back like the early 1900's or 1800's then you can rationalize it with platitudes like "it was a different time back then" or "we hadn't evolved as a society yet". Lot harder to rationalize away when it was only 40 years ago.
I didn't invent clinical depression but my god have I innovated it
That’s a debate since authoritarianism to libertarianism is a spectrum so there is no official “normal” and its generally used qualitatively on individual polices
So, essentially, it's subjective?
That's why it's so important to learn these things, at least whenever we have the opportunity to do so.