Comic based reference, author Lau Wankit First copy printed 1988, by CitiComics Cameo, Lau Ying Kit 2013
Heavily biased romantic prophecy deployed by the psychiatric services with subject control at academic institutions based on loosely distinguished characters that are set on counter egos with picturesque delusions. Economic mess need discipline across academic, business, social and family situations.
The comic novels of Hong Kong had little censorship for children and teenagers. Youth literature was influenced by citi and witi comics, chaired with Ae Hong, cross influenced by the popular music industry with his girlfriend, later wife, Vivian Chow, on the front cover of Yes Magazine.
Vivian Chow had long black hair and might have been the spin-off celebrity from the comic's focal, Cherie (勵懲), spun from the confectionery manufactured by the Ferrero brand, now withheld from the Hong Kong market. The magazine contained delusive psychological tests that limited the teenagers' normal sense of friendship and companionship.
The ethical problems risen from the distribution with regards to local and international youth were:
1. The copies were available to purchase by young children not even teenagers despite the adult rated content that ought be outlawed
2. The commercial media and product spin-offs became propaganda to local youths with little choice different from the surround news stations and broadcasts
3. The psychiatric profession had abused policy limiting youths from otherwise knowledgeable attainment
4. The fantasies of the authorised team had unfair advantage commercially secluding trial figures without formal consent to complete the series, linguistically pressurising the plaintiffs to enactment with lateral policy
5. The etymological coining of psychiatric definitions to be contrasted with criminology and sociology
6. Children were raised not with normal regular non-reference and other out of context preoccupations
7. There is a normal aversion from the familiarity of characters that means the philosophy refuted on unethical grounds.
8. The censorship in Hong Kong should discern and discipline the doctrine that the community suffers from across academic, business, social and family situations where seen.