The three principles are the same
"Three wills for justice" is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is "s à nzh à Xi à NGG à ng", which means to satirize the incompetent officials of Yong Lu. It comes from the biography of Wang GUI in the history of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Wang Guizhuan in the history of Song Dynasty, "if you present it in the upper hall, you will get the imperial edict; if you receive it or not, you will receive it; if you withdraw the edict, you will get the imperial edict."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to an incompetent official
Chinese PinYin : sān zhǐ xiàng gōng
The three principles are the same
severity in speech and fairness in principle -- as the utterance of an upright person. cí yán yì zhèng
Slander in the stomach and slander in the heart. fù fěi xīn bàng
the weather in autumn is as hot as in summer. qiū xíng xià líng
the public attitude for or against. rén xīn xiàng bèi