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The perspective shifts to the comnt section on YouTube.

The atmosphere here is equally heated, but the style is entirely different. Comnts from all over the world form an "international symposium" on technology.

The comnt section is flooded with various languages, but the core idea expressed is surprisingly consistent—astonishnt.

A top comnt from Klaus, a carpenter from Germany, reads: "As a carpenter, I must say, his handling of those logs is absolutely spot-on, my respects!"

Imdiately below is a reply from a farr in Texas, United States, garnering thousands of likes: "Hey folks, I have to say sothing about that Xugong loader! I have a smaller XC9 series on my farm.

Three years ago, when my dealer recomnded it, I was hesitant, after all, we Texans only trust John Deere and Caterpillar.

But I must say, it was one of the wisest investnts I’ve ever made! This Chinese beast is sturdy, durable, and powerful, with maintenance costs much lower than Arican brands.

It helped rebuild after a tornado and dragged out a planter stuck in the mud. Using it in a godforsaken place like Alaska doesn’t surprise at all. Good things shine anywhere."

This eyewitness comnt imdiately sparked a deeper discussion about "China".

@Tom_in_Shanghai: "That’s exactly what I want to say! Forget about the false news BBC and CNN feed you! Due to work, I’ve stayed in Shanghai and Shenzhen, China, for five years, and it feels just like the future world!

The clean streets, incredibly safe midnights, and the high-speed trains that are a hundred tis more punctual than the London subway! Western dia’s portrayal of China is a gigantic joke."

@Baguette_vs_Baozi: "The person above is right! I’m studying in Beijing, and what shocked the most is their mobile paynts and logistics. I can buy anything with my phone and have it delivered to my dorm within half an hour.

When I returned to Paris for the holidays, I felt like I’d ti-traveled back from the future to the Middle Ages! Lin in the video, and the China behind him, follow the sa logic: they love action over words and use their results to shock everyone."

@Maple_Adventurer: "What truly stunned was Lin’s way of thinking and his ability to plan long-term and endure absolute solitude."

@Milan_Artisan: "To add, I noticed so furniture design inside his log cabin, with simple lines full of Eastern Zen, yet utilizing very modern joinery techniques.

This ability to perfectly blend traditional aesthetics with modern craftsmanship is exactly what’s happening in China—a country both ancient and dynamic."

Of course, with praise cos discordant voices. Soon, several obviously biased comnts appeared.

A comnt from an ID called "Freedoagle1776" wrote: "Remarkable building skills, but I hope he won’t harm those cute animals in the wilderness. After all, we all know what Chinese people eat everything, especially dogs."

Another comnt was even more sarcastic: "How can a backward country like China quickly produce these chanical devices? Maybe they stole our Western technology? I’m skeptical."

These two comnts, like pebbles thrown into a calm lake, sparked a wave of rational counter-argunts from many foreign netizens before the Chinese comnters could step in.

@Sociologist Alex (replying to "Freedoagle1776"): "Wake up, friend, it’s the 21st century now. Using outdated, racially discriminatory stereotypes like ’eating dog at’ to attack a country only makes you co across as extrely ignorant and pitiful.

By the way, so regions in Switzerland also eat dog at; would you attack all Swiss people because of that? Use your dia-washed brain to think a little."

@Seoul_Wanderer Jaejoong Kim (replying to "Freedoagle1776"): "I’m Korean, and we do have a tradition of eating dog at. However, labeling this complex cultural phenonon and using it to attack an individual unrelated is extrely unfair.

This video is full of respect for nature, and your comnt is entirely out of place with the video’s the."

@chanician Dave (replying to the technology theft comnt): "Stolen technology? Friend, what era are you living in? That yellow loader you ntioned cos from the Xugong Group, a top global engineering machinery manufacturer with billions in US dollar annual revenue.

Who do they need to steal technology from? They themselves are one of the definers of technology. Open Google, do so research, and don’t let your ignorance beco a laughingstock to others."

Soon, the Texas farr reappeared, directly replying to the comnt about technology theft: "Hey, kid, I vouch with my reputation that the Chinese machine is tougher than the Ford pickup in my garage.

If you think good products can only be made in Arica, it shows not only your ignorance of the world but also your lack of understanding of how your own country is being surpassed."

An Arican survivalist channel host with hundreds of thousands of followers, "Wilderness Patriot," also appeared in the comnts section, leaving a long comnt: "I’ve been in this business for 20 years and have seen countless log cabin building videos. But what Lin built is sothing entirely different.

Most people (including myself), we are based only on a barely passable dirt road and a hardware store an hour’s drive away.

And where he chose, just looking at the map, is almost the end of civilization. This ans he had no room for errors. In the video, every cut, every hoist, is perford with robotic precision."

You are reading King of the Wilderness Chapter 424 - 239: The World’s Impression of China on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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