Following the "Yunhao stop farming", Inner Mongolia has become popular again.
Following the "Yunhao stop farming", Inner Mongolia is on fire again, arable land may have nothing to do with you, but tourism into the service area must be related to you.
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Tourists meet "sky-high" cut cakes, and weigh 12,000 yuan by grams.
No, the day before May Day, a man was cut into a cake in the Inner Mongolia service area "pit" is not light, originally negotiated 16 yuan a catty, but was told that it was 16 yuan a gram at the checkout, and the total price was as high as 12,000 yuan, which is really shocking.
Tourist: "Why do I have to work so much?"
This man originally just wanted to add some sweetness to the journey, but he didn't expect to encounter a "sky-high" bill. He said with a look of astonishment: "Why do I have to work so much?" This reminds people of the old saying: "It is better to buy than to sell".
Boss: "16 yuan is not a catty, but an amount of one gram".
The owner of the service station responded calmly: "16 yuan is not a catty, it is an amount of one gram." We all have a clear price. As soon as these words came out, netizens exploded one after another.
Netizen: Why is it not good to sell by grams, but not by milligrams?
Some people joked: "Is this cake made of gold? How is it more expensive than gold?" Some people joked: "Why is it sold by the gram, can't it be sold by the milligram?"
Netizens shouted to Inner Mongolia Cultural Tourism: "In Inner Mongolia, do you have to charge for haircuts by the root?"
This incident quickly appeared on the hot search, and Inner Mongolia Cultural Tourism had a headache. Some netizens shouted to Inner Mongolia Cultural Tourism: "In Inner Mongolia, do you have to charge for haircuts according to the root?"
Netizen: According to the number of grams, the tax will be charged at a rate of 13%.
Some netizens ridiculed: "Call the tax collector and ask him how many grams he has sold in the past few years, and then collect taxes at a rate of 13%." ”
The four "aristocratic" gangs in the rivers and lakes.
Some netizens summed up the four "noble" gangs in the rivers and lakes: cake cutting, hemp flowers, donkey rolling and house leaks. These seemingly ordinary goods or services have been transformed into prohibitive "luxuries" in some places.
"Yunhao stop farming" has not ended, and there is a "sky-high" cake cutting, who would dare to go to Inner Mongolia?
The May Day holiday has begun, and many netizens said: "Inner Mongolia's Yunhao cultivation has not ended, and there is another cake-cutting incident, who would dare to go to Inner Mongolia for this May Day holiday?"
In fact, Inner Mongolia Cultural Tourism should stand up and call on everyone to look at this incident rationally and not overturn a boatload of people with one shot, after all, every place has a good and bad side. I'm thinking, what idiom is good to use for Inner Mongolia's sky-high price cake cutting?