What do you mean, you've been in prison?

Sitting at the prison base originated from legal propaganda slogans played by some rural township cadres, which were put in Yamakaji and worn at the prison base. This kind of threatening words, now it seems not only not scary, but also a little funny. This is an allusion. From He Jingping: I would like to go to prison.

"I would like to sit at the bottom of the prison" is a modern poem. This immortal poem is a household name. It was written by the revolutionary martyr He Jingping in the Zhazidong concentration camp of the Kuomintang Sino-American Cooperation Institute in the summer of 1948. For more than half a century, it has been deeply imprinted in people's hearts. In the poem, the author expresses the lofty aspirations of revolutionary martyrs and their determination to fight the enemy to the end. Poetry is permeated with the revolutionary spirit of single-mindedness, which deeply shocked readers and touched generations. They looked out of the reinforced concrete window, but they were satisfied, because they did not give up hope and resolutely fought against the world and reactionary forces.