losers are always in the wrong
The Chinese idiom, CH é NGW á NGB à IK à u in pinyin, used to mean that in the struggle for political power, those who succeed are legal and call themselves emperors and kings; those who fail are illegal and called bandits; it means that those who succeed are powerful and no one dares to blame, but those who fail are hard to argue. From the war history of Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yazi's poem entitled "the history of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom" says: "when the king succeeds and the enemy defeats, he calls out to each other freely, and he writes straightforwardly who will lead Dong Hu.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used of people. Everyone knows the truth of success and defeat.
losers are always in the wrong
the mire of misery is boundless - kǔ hǎi máng máng
Strong in heart and weak in strength - xīn cháng lì duǎn
to play petty tricks on the sly - shǔ tōu gǒu dào