Huangyangchuan

Huangyangchuan (simplified Chinese: 黄羊川镇; traditional Chinese: 黃羊川鎮; pinyin: Huángyángchuān Zhèn; lit.: 'Town of Yellow Sheep River')[1] is a village situated in Gu Lang Gorgean, an arid, mountainous region of Gansu Province, China. It is home mostly to poor families who rely on agriculture for their income.

Film

Yellow Sheep River is also the name of a film about sheep farmers from the village. The documentary is without dialogue or subtitles, and follows the farmers to provide a picturesque view of rural life.[2][3][4]

gollark: Elections: people are broadly unsatisfied with the results somehowFreedom of citizens: constitution is blatantly ignored half the timeRight to bear arms: kind of decreasing over timeRight to free speech: in practice, probably notRight to assemble: right now, you don't have that, which I feel is justified, but stillRight to privacy: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAAGHASHFHASGFAHsf
gollark: The right to privacy isn't a constitutional thing. I think it's important, though.
gollark: I mean, those things aren't quite as meaningful as one would hope nowadays, but it's more than North Korea.
gollark: Much more freedom of information going in/out, too.
gollark: You can leave the US, you at least... can say bad things about the government a bit, you can... have weapons, you're less likely to be randomly imprisoned, sort of thing.

References

  1. The Atlantic How the west was wired - retrieved 2012-12-23
  2. Joint Entertaintment
  3. New York Times Yellow Sheep River Overview - retrieved 2012-12-23M
  4. San Francisco Chronicle

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