Lend me 3000 fighters. Answer me. Ten steps to kill a person, a thousand miles away, is a sentence in that poem.
Lend me 3,000 fighter planes, and I am willing to restore my powerful China. Swing a sword along the banks of the river, immediately rush to Shanxi, bloodbath Xiongnu Village, and shoot down the Turkic flag. Rhine burned bone powder, and no one cried thousands of miles away. Dead leaves with bones, mouse heads piled up into mountains. Dogs are full, chickens crow and horseshoe disease. Killing is forbidden, and enmity can be cleared. Reward the troops with fusang wine and put it in the horse pool. Salt sprinkles the cherry blossom sea, and Jing cultivates the rice field platform. Thirty years north and south, forty years east and west. I dare to rest when the iron ride is old. Those who scream in the sky, even if they are far away, will be punished. This is the ten steps that Chen Tang, a famous minister of the Western Han Dynasty, gave to Emperor Xian of Han Dynasty to kill one person, which is from Li Bai's poem "Chivalrous Man"