In this chapter, we learn more about the relationship between jin-ling feng and a commoner. We learn that the commoner is the daughter of the company's founder, and that the company has conducted a "zero point score test" to determine the extent of the relationship's validity. We also learn that in order to be forgiven by the public, the company had to use the "incident with the girl" as an excuse to use him in a scandal. The company has also conducted a public opinion survey, which found that the public does not approve of the affair. The public opinion is so fickle that it is difficult to predict what will happen in the future. . The main problem, according to the company, is that it has not been able to gather enough evidence to prove that the two men have plagiarized the music of famous composers. The only thing that can be done is to sue them under the laws of the country in which they have been living for the past five years. This is the only way for the company to keep its name in the public eye, and it will also give the company a chance to recover some of the money it has spent on the lawsuit. The young man, however, is not satisfied with the results of the survey, and he lashes out at his father, calling him a "bastard" and a "illiterate son." He tells his father that after three years, he
In this chapter, we learn more about the relationship between jin-ling feng and a commoner. We learn that the commoner is the daughter of the company's founder, and that the company has conducted a "zero point score test" to determine the extent of the relationship's validity. We also learn that in order to be forgiven by the public, the company had to use the "incident with the girl" as an excuse to use him in a scandal. The company has also conducted a public opinion survey, which found that the public does not approve of the affair. The public opinion is so fickle that it is difficult to predict what will happen in the future. . The main problem, according to the company, is that it has not been able to gather enough evidence to prove that the two men have plagiarized the music of famous composers. The only thing that can be done is to sue them under the laws of the country in which they have been living for the past five years. This is the only way for the company to keep its name in the public eye, and it will also give the company a chance to recover some of the money it has spent on the lawsuit. The young man, however, is not satisfied with the results of the survey, and he lashes out at his father, calling him a "bastard" and a "illiterate son." He tells his father that after three years, he