This is kinda cool! But what is you want to refer to only the Yangtze or only the Pearl?
IeyasuMcBob on
“We have the Star(s) and Stripes at home!”
NullNeptune0 on
Thank god there’s only three rivers in China!
SeaAmbassador5404 on
Do not the river
AymanMarzuqi on
Actually not a bad design
I_love_pillows on
A solid yellow flag for the yellow river floods
imonlyhumanafteral1 on
Is this loss
KeeperOfTheChips on
I get that the Yellow River is supposed to be yellow. But why are the other two also yellow
Lucky_Pterodactyl on
Mao was convinced to abandon the Yellow River design because apparently it symbolised China being divided in two. At the time Soviet foreign policy favoured the CCP forming a coalition government with the KMT and forbidding the PLA from crossing the Yangtze River, establishing a natural border between two potential Chinese states. Stalin believed a divided country would be less of a future threat with “North China” being more easily absorbed into the Soviet sphere of influence (like North Korea was).
13 Comments
Communist China sure likes rivers
Reverse south Vietnam flag
Flag of if North and South Vietnam united into a federation with their original ideology.
Still, the [Chinese Pride flag](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_China_(1912%E2%80%931928).svg#mw-jump-to-license) looks much better
This is kinda cool! But what is you want to refer to only the Yangtze or only the Pearl?
“We have the Star(s) and Stripes at home!”
Thank god there’s only three rivers in China!
Do not the river
Actually not a bad design
A solid yellow flag for the yellow river floods
Is this loss
I get that the Yellow River is supposed to be yellow. But why are the other two also yellow
Mao was convinced to abandon the Yellow River design because apparently it symbolised China being divided in two. At the time Soviet foreign policy favoured the CCP forming a coalition government with the KMT and forbidding the PLA from crossing the Yangtze River, establishing a natural border between two potential Chinese states. Stalin believed a divided country would be less of a future threat with “North China” being more easily absorbed into the Soviet sphere of influence (like North Korea was).