# From Myanmar to Guangdong



When he was in northern Myanmar, Bai Yingcang taught his subordinates how to deceive people.

The first rule of the sales pitch: Make the other party believe they can make big money following you. He wore a diamond-encrusted watch and said to the camera, "See this? This is what success looks like."

Those who were deceived lost everything, their families were destroyed, and he called this "optimizing resource allocation."

Later, the camera cuts to him in a Guangdong detention center. The diamond-encrusted watch was removed and replaced with a pair of silver handcuffs—a double set.

Back then, he said once you entered the park, you'd never get out. Now he's gotten out, but it seems like he hasn't completely left.

The most ironic part: When he was deceiving people, he said everyone in China was a "pig"—deserving to be slaughtered. Now he's become a real pig, locked in a cage waiting to be processed.

Back then, he used electric shocks on others' hands. Now those hands are cuffed, unable to even hold chopsticks steadily.

Back then, he locked others in water dungeons. Now every night he dreams of the screams echoing from those water dungeons.

This is probably the cruelest joke fate loves to play:

The lies you used to deceive people become your final verdict.
The watch you used to show off becomes your evidence of crime.
The cage you used to lock others in becomes your home.

From northern Myanmar to Guangdong, from "Boss Bai" to Bai Yingcang—just one return trip away.

Back then he said: "Come here and you'll never leave."
Now he says: "I've left, but I can never return."
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