The two sides have different opinions on the ownership of mulberry trees, and they don't give in to each other. They quickly developed from quarreling to scuffling. At this time, Chu's family came to help. A close battle turned into a one-sided quarrel. Wu, who was black and blue, returned to Beiliang and cried his misfortune to the villagers. Seeing that Wu was bullied, Wu's villagers grabbed the guy and went to settle accounts with Chu Min.
Li Zhonghe Zhu Min never liked Wu Min. They gathered people from other places to help them and fought Wu Min who came for revenge. The Chu people were outnumbered, the Wu people were defeated and hundreds of people were killed. Only half of the people fled back to complain about the atrocities to our leader. The chief flew into a rage and sent troops to attack the city. As soon as he heard that there was no chance to clean up, he immediately ordered the army to attack Liao, and it was not in vain.
The son's army was sent to reinforce Beiliang, and Wu's army was unstoppable, occupying Zhongli and living in a small nest. The original simple civil dispute escalated into fierce military action. Because a mulberry tree lost two cities, I'm afraid it was unexpected. Offspring? The troubles of humble beam? This is an allusion to disputes and bloodshed caused by trivial matters. The so-called butterfly effect originated from meteorologist Lorenz America.
An almost absurd theory put forward by a professor at MIT. A butterfly flapping its wings occasionally in the tropical rain forest of the Amazon basin in South America may cause tornadoes in Texas and the United States within two weeks. This sentence seems a bit exaggerated. A South American butterfly is in Texas? How can flapping wings cause a tornado? However, in the history of China and foreign countries, there have been incidents that caused a chain reaction because of a small matter, but the final result was unexpected.