Threads about China By China

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
24,691
116
63
Moving

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-05 22:40

BEIJING - China, in a campaign starting from last year end, has dealt a heavy blow to the porn industry, especially the online dissemination of obscene content via Internet and mobile phones, the Supreme People's Court (SPC) said Friday.
Related readings:
China orders 47 websites to remove porn novels or be shut down
S China police release 'porn' author amid uproar
China continues crackdown on electronic porn
China shuts down another 16,000 porn websites

Around 1332 people received punishments for producing, duplicating, publishing, selling and spreading pornographic and vulgar information from December 2009 to October 2010, and among them five were given prison sentences of five years or more, the SPC told Xinhua. The SPC February issued a judicial interpretation on crimes of spreading obscene content via Internet, mobile WAP sites or telephone information service as the country has intensified its crackdown on online porn



(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2010-11-05 12:45



Comments(3)
Print
Mail
Large Medium Small A list of China's top 10 leisure cities was unveiled on Nov 2. Hangzhou, Qingdao, Sanya, Lijiang, Chengdu, Yantai, Huangshan, Guilin, Qinhuangdao and Suzhou are on the list which is based on the results of a survey organized by China Tourism Association, National Technical Committee on Leisure of Standardization Administration and people.com.cn.
Suzhou, Jiangsu province
A traditional and historical garden in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu province, is filled with visitors on Oct 5, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]​

Tiger Hill in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu province, Nov 28, 2009. [Photo/Xinhua]​

Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next Page
Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next Page
Could you not go away. Really - You are just a shill with no character or morals and clearly no concern for your fellow human being. To you their is a superior order, those that order, small number and then the rest are drones.
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
Are you still in the fertilizer industry?
lone wolf
Are you still in the fertilizer industry?

yes I am lone wolf .

lone wolf

yes I am lone wolf .


Gavin Jon Mowat, editor and columnist for People's Daily Online. As a graduate from Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, UK, Gavin came to Beijing 2 years ago to study Chinese. Enjoying the culture and traditions of the orient so much, Gavin has since left his home in Scotland and is now living and working in China. Gavin uses his background in writing to share his experiences of China with you at People’s Daily Online.
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
lone wolf

yes I am lone wolf .




Gavin Jon Mowat, editor and columnist for People's Daily Online. As a graduate from Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, UK, Gavin came to Beijing 2 years ago to study Chinese. Enjoying the culture and traditions of the orient so much, Gavin has since left his home in Scotland and is now living and working in China. Gavin uses his background in writing to share his experiences of China with you at People’s Daily Online.
China becomes scapegoat of American illness in mid-term election

By Han Dongping (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2010-11-04 10:59

The US mid-term election on Tuesday was a very important event in American political life. As most polls indicated, Democrats lost its control of the House of Representatives to the Republicans amid high unemployment and unprecedented government deficit. Just two years ago, voters elected Barack Obama with their anger toward former President George W. Bush's unpopular wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In just two years, voters' anger has turned against Obama and the Democrats because of his administration's inability to improve the unemployment situation in the US and his huge government spending in rescuing banks and big business.
All politics is local, as Dick O'Neil, former US House speaker from Massachusetts once said. Most Americans cast their votes according to their own economic situation and what is happening in their local communities. However, foreign policies always loom large in American politics. This year is no exception. The Obama administration has skirmished a few times with China in the past two years partly because many heavyweight Democrats wanted to accumulate political capital with American voters by taking a tough position on China. Despite all that, many Republican candidates were still using China as a scapegoat in their campaign efforts. One Republican video advertisement shows a Chinese professor and his Chinese students. In the ad, the Chinese professor is saying that Rome fell, and other empires fell, and now the US is falling, all because they made the same mistake of overspending. We are the biggest creditor to the US, and now the Americans have to work for us. The implied message is that the Obama administration is getting the US deeper into debt, and will cause the US to go bankrupt. Therefore, voters should elect Republican candidates to get back control of Congress.
The Democrats were using similar methods to sway voters. I went to a Democratic rally in downtown Asheville, North Carolina, recently, where former President Bill Clinton came to speak to rally support for the Democratic candidate Heath Shuler for reelection to Congress. More than 5,000 people showed up to hear Clinton's speech. Downtown Asheville was filled with political slogans and signs. One slogan said: Stop Secret Corporate Ad Buys. I wondered what it meant. I went up to one woman who held such a sign, and asked her what her message was. She said that countries like China were infiltrating US politics. They provided money to US corporations, and they used the money to buy secret political advertisement to sway voters in the US. She was not very friendly to me when I asked her the question.
Whichever party controls Congress, in the end, will not change American foreign policy significantly, and will not change over American domestic politics very much, either. One prominent American scholar once said that elections do not change much. Social movement does. I think that he is right. The American political system is one of the most conservative systems in the world, and it resists change. Even though around election time, politicians always say how important and crucial the election results will be for their future, after the vote it is often business as usual again.
One thing is certain though. The United States is on a path to decline for the moment, with its unemployment and unprecedented government deficit. It does not matter which party is in control of Congress, it will not be able to change this trend.
At the end of World WarⅡ, the US held 75 percent of the world's gold, and produced 50 percent of the world's GDP. All the major countries were indebted to the US at the time. In a little over 60 years, the US government squandered its huge fortunes over many unpopular wars. The Americans have fought more wars than any other country in the world since then. Many American people used to say that war is good for business. That may be true for business people. There is no doubt that many businesses prospered with American wars. But wars are not necessarily good for the state or ordinary citizens in the long run.
It is time for American politicians to stop blaming others for its problems and illnesses, and face the challenges and problems they generated themselves. American politicians always preach to the world about the virtues of democracy. If a democratic system of government cannot correct itself, and is always fighting more wars, what good is democracy?
 
Last edited:

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
Yep, quoting the fascists.....you love them, don't you?[/QUOTE

NO ,I don't love fascists ;if I did it would mean that I love you also- and I don't .I hate fascists and their guns .Gun is a tool of a coward -and a coward smells awful...
]
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
25,756
295
83
NO ,I don't love fascists ;if I did it would mean that I love you also- and I don't .I hate fascists and their guns .Gun is a tool of a coward -and a coward smells awful...
]


You're posts put a lie to that statement.
 

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
24,691
116
63
Moving
Yep, quoting the fascists.....you love them, don't you?[/QUOTE

NO ,I don't love fascists ;if I did it would mean that I love you also- and I don't .I hate fascists and their guns .Gun is a tool of a coward -and a coward smells awful...
]
Well who the fuk do you think you are depending - let me see - the Prince-lings as they are called - Families and relative of powerfully Party Members run the place.

So i guess it would be a combination of Running yellow dog of Imperialism, Fascism and slave labor, run by the Military, with Camps for those the cannot follow the rules and oh yes the other business - organ sales.

I think we need to shorten that description up -
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
Well who the fuk do you think you are depending - let me see - the Prince-lings as they are called - Families and relative of powerfully Party Members run the place.

So i guess it would be a combination of Running yellow dog of Imperialism, Fascism and slave labor, run by the Military, with Camps for those the cannot follow the rules and oh yes the other business - organ sales.

I think we need to shorten that description up -
Goober

Well who the fuk do you think you are depending

Go back to your trough and take your language with you .
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
China's youth embrace Sinology



Primary school students wear traditional Han Dynasty clothes while studying classic Chinese Sinology in Jiaxing city, East China's Zhejiang province on Nov 5, 2010. Apart from learning classic works like The Three Character Primer, Disciple gauge, students also learn Chinese Sado under the teachers’ guidance.
More Chinese are showing an interest in traditional Chinese philosophies including the younger generation. [Photo/CFP]

Previous Page 1 2 3 4 Next Page
Previous Page 1 2 3 4 Next Page
 

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
24,691
116
63
Moving
Goober



Go back to your trough and take your language with you .

Well language can be cleaned up in an instant as you can tell - Character and morals take longer to build upon.

A quote for you
Attending a party in London, Churchill once again was drunk and intoxicated. An obviously extremely astute woman from Parliament, like Nancy Astor (the first entry), apparently was irritated by Churchill’s mannerisms. When she finally had enough, she came up to him and yelled: “Winston, you’re drunk!” He may have been drunk but that apparently didn’t affect his cognitive functions as he merely replied:
“You’re right Bessie, and you’re ugly. But tomorrow morning, I’ll be sober.”
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
Focus


'It's every citizen's duty to stand up'

(China Daily)
Updated: 2010-10-28 08:05



Comments(0)
Print
Mail
Large Medium Small Almost everyone in Harbin knows Liu Tianxiao, a 60-year-old social crusader whose fans call him the city's "deputy mayor".
The retired teacher hit the headlines in December last year when he threw a half-empty plastic bottle of water at Yang Hui, deputy director of Harbin's bureau of commodity prices, during a government hearing to discuss a proposed water rate hike.
"I had no choice but to throw something, otherwise they wouldn't have let me speak," said Liu, one of 12 "resident representatives" invited to the hearing in the capital of Northeast China's Heilongjiang province.
"I couldn't understand why none of the other (representatives) opposed the price hike, especially as 99 percent of Harbin citizens I had talked to all objected," he said.
He used his speech to protest and accuse Harbin Water Company of providing a poor service (Yang later said Liu was given about 9 minutes to talk instead of the usual 5 minutes). He also accused his fellow representatives of being government workers. However, officials agreed to the price increase.
Liu's principal is based on the belief that authorities should "learn to put people first by accepting, respecting and protecting rights".
In 2006, he tried to take Shi Zhongxin, then-mayor of Harbin, to court for the alleged misconduct of his government. The city's courts refused to file his case.
"I don't really care about the result when I defend people's rights, I just want my voice heard. It's what everyone should do," said Liu.
Most people turn a blind eye to wrongdoing, especially by officials with governments or State-owned enterprises, he complained, adding that people fear it is not possible to take on "powerful giants".
In 2004, Liu discovered Agricultural Bank of China was charging customers 10 yuan ($1.50) a year for using natural gas top-up cards, even though the gas provider was already paying for the service.
"Ten yuan is nothing but Harbin has around 1 million households, which means the bank was getting an extra 10 million yuan every year. It's not right," said Liu.
He began to collect evidence and, just before court proceedings began, Agricultural Bank of China decided to refund the fee and has since scrapped the charge.
"If I didn't stand up against the (rights violation), who knows how long the bank would've charged us," he said. "It's a citizen's obligation."
Many Harbin residents have hailed Liu's efforts - "He speaks for us and truly represents us," one city bus driver told China Daily - while others believe he is simply out to gain publicity.
Liu said China needs more whistleblowers. "Our purpose is to see China become a better country. Authorities should learn to admit mistakes and provide solutions instead of hiding the truth," he said.
Yan Hongqian in Harbin contributed to this story
 

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
24,691
116
63
Moving
Focus


'It's every citizen's duty to stand up'

(China Daily)
Updated: 2010-10-28 08:05


Comments(0)
Print
Mail
Large Medium Small Almost everyone in Harbin knows Liu Tianxiao, a 60-year-old social crusader whose fans call him the city's "deputy mayor".
The retired teacher hit the headlines in December last year when he threw a half-empty plastic bottle of water at Yang Hui, deputy director of Harbin's bureau of commodity prices, during a government hearing to discuss a proposed water rate hike.
"I had no choice but to throw something, otherwise they wouldn't have let me speak," said Liu, one of 12 "resident representatives" invited to the hearing in the capital of Northeast China's Heilongjiang province.
"I couldn't understand why none of the other (representatives) opposed the price hike, especially as 99 percent of Harbin citizens I had talked to all objected," he said.


He used his speech to protest and accuse Harbin Water Company of providing a poor service (Yang later said Liu was given about 9 minutes to talk instead of the usual 5 minutes). He also accused his fellow representatives of being government workers. However, officials agreed to the price increase.
Liu's principal is based on the belief that authorities should "learn to put people first by accepting, respecting and protecting rights".
In 2006, he tried to take Shi Zhongxin, then-mayor of Harbin, to court for the alleged misconduct of his government. The city's courts refused to file his case.
"I don't really care about the result when I defend people's rights, I just want my voice heard. It's what everyone should do," said Liu.
Most people turn a blind eye to wrongdoing, especially by officials with governments or State-owned enterprises, he complained, adding that people fear it is not possible to take on "powerful giants".
In 2004, Liu discovered Agricultural Bank of China was charging customers 10 yuan ($1.50) a year for using natural gas top-up cards, even though the gas provider was already paying for the service.
"Ten yuan is nothing but Harbin has around 1 million households, which means the bank was getting an extra 10 million yuan every year. It's not right," said Liu.
He began to collect evidence and, just before court proceedings began, Agricultural Bank of China decided to refund the fee and has since scrapped the charge.
"If I didn't stand up against the (rights violation), who knows how long the bank would've charged us," he said. "It's a citizen's obligation."
Many Harbin residents have hailed Liu's efforts - "He speaks for us and truly represents us," one city bus driver told China Daily - while others believe he is simply out to gain publicity.
Liu said China needs more whistleblowers. "Our purpose is to see China become a better country. Authorities should learn to admit mistakes and provide solutions instead of hiding the truth," he said.
Yan Hongqian in Harbin contributed to this story


The illusion of China's rise

Recently, Netizens -- the Chinese term for people who are free to act as citizens only anonymously on the Internet --have coined a title for a new special elite called "Naked Officials." These "Naked Officials" move their cash and their dear ones -- wives, children, concubines -- abroad, buying houses for them to settle down in in their new country. Meanwhile, these "Naked Officials" continue to live in China but usually have several passports in hand. They are prepared to escape China at any moment to join their families abroad.



What kind of lives have the Chinese people led in the 60 years under the rule of the single-party state? There is a simple saying from Netizens to sum up the years of the Red Empire of the People's Republic of China, from Mao to today. This saying, which has spread far and wide on the Internet, goes like this:
In the name of revolution, they justified killing.
In the name of the people, they justified nationalization.
In the name of reform, they divided the spoils of the nation.
In the name of harmony, everyone must now shut their mouths.


In China, we have no independent trade unions, farmers' unions, chambers of commerce or industry associations -- only countless silent workers who have no sense of rights and no channels of complaint. In China, we have no independent media or independent academic research -- only television, radio, newspapers, publishing houses, research institutes and universities which are either mouthpieces of the government or subject to the party's control. In China, we have no independent and registered human rights and environmental NGOs, and no independent foundations. Those public interest researchers and lawyers who try to be watchdogs and uphold the Chinese Constitution are watched themselves and suppressed when they try to contribute
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
69
Saint John, N.B.
The truth of China's sick, perverse, twisted society:

Chinese dad whose son was sickened by tainted milk jailed for activism

CHRISTOPHER BODEEN

Beijing— The Associated Press

Published Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2010 8:32AM EST

Last updated Wedne


A father who organized a support group for other parents whose children were sickened in one of China's worst food safety scandals was convicted and sentenced Wednesday to 2 1 / 2years in prison for inciting social disorder, his lawyer said.
Zhao Lianhai had pushed for greater official accountability and compensation for victims and their families after the 2008 scandal that shocked China. His sentence appeared particularly severe because the case related to a public safety incident that the embarrassed leadership had pledged to tackle in a bid to restore consumer confidence.




Chinese dad whose son was sickened by tainted milk jailed for activism - The Globe and Mail
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
Play list


Rare photographs of 1950's China found in New Zealand

By D J Clark (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2010-11-10 09:25



New Zealand photographer Tom Hutchins spent four months in 1956 travelling through China on an exclusive assignment for Life Magazine. Fifty years later, photographic historian John Turner discovered this rare archive and set about piecing together a unique collection.
By D J Clark
Videos by D J Clark
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
73
Ottawa ,Canada
You're a pathetic excuse for a man, China. Have you gotten over your breakup with the China girl of yours?
Give me the direction punk , I'll deliver the answer to your questions personally .

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Western political models impossible to co


Over the years, in the name of offering advice for political restructuring, some Western forces and their supporters have constantly put forward the so-called "constitutional reform" proposals focusing on multi-party systems and the separation of the government into three powers. In doing so, the advocates Western democracy, freedom and human rights mislead the public as well as attack the leadership of the Communist Party of China and the socialist system.

All these things reflect their thoughts that China should copy the Western political system. It is rooted in the wrong and harmful idea that the "party rotation," "separation of powers" and "parliamentary democracy" in Western countries are the best systems and are suited for any country.

The precondition for the formation of Western political models is both shameful and impossible to copy.

First, the development of Western countries was based on horrifying pillage and plunder over a long time. According to data provided by Western scholars, for 500 years, 30 million Native Americans suffered genocide and 50 million black slaves were sold to the Americas as a free labor force.

Second, under the pattern of global production and distribution, Western developed countries grabbed the utmost profits, and their development is based on the exploitation of third-world countries. If the wealth base were removed, the so-called electoral and multi-party systems would be difficult to maintain.

So far, almost all third-world countries that simply copied the democratic systems of Western nations have failed, and one important reason is that they do not have as much wealth as Western countries do. If serious interest conflicts occur in a pluralist society, the election will lose effectiveness, and social interests will definitely be redistributed through violence.

In order to reduce internal interest conflicts, Western countries have to establish expensive welfare systems through high transfer payments, but the basis of the welfare systems is the enormous wealth and resources they have been exacting from other parts of the world.

The Western world’s so-called democratic system and functioning civil society would quickly collapse without this basis. For example, riots broke out in Paris and several other French cities in 2005, mainly because a large number of Arabian immigrants, especially youths, found it difficult to land jobs after they moved to France and gradually became resentful of the society. If we go deep enough, we may discover the underlying cause is wealth. The French welfare system is not able to cover all immigrants after all.

What happened after a hurricane hit the relatively poor New Orleans, Louisiana in the United States in August 2005 is yet another example. Due to many rape allegations and armed robberies in the disaster-stricken areas, the army for hurricane relief had to drive armored vehicles and be fully armed. This will never happen in China.

There have been no more than 20 Western developed countries since the 18th century. This bloc has a total population of up to 1 billion, accounting for one-seventh to one-eighth of the world's total. One billion people is the limit of this "rich man's club" because there is no way to make their extravagant life style universal.

We certainly admit and borrow ideas from all the achievements of human civilization, including some useful practices and experiences of Western countries.

However, there is absolutely no reason for us to copy them. The excellent situation of modern China is a hard-won achievement — especially under the volatile international situation and the growing economic crisis. The superior ability of socialist countries to concentrate strength on major problems is continually reflected.

If we copy Western countries, we will lose the ideological basis of the common struggle and the strong leadership core. As a result, the country will soon become a mess and the great cause of national rejuvenation will never be realized.

The Chinese road is a whole new road of the whole nation with independence, hard work, self-esteem and self-improvement and has been created by the lives and blood of millions of Chinese people. However, certain people want to become a new political force through relying on foreign forces. They use dry, abstract sermons and political terms to cover up their selfishness and these people will eventually be cast aside for the people.
 
Last edited:

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
69
Saint John, N.B.
And in Canada, we want to put some 70 year old woman away for life as a 'dangerous offender' for protesting.
And many on this forum agreed with that idea, didn't they?

A HUGE difference between some idiot prosecutor wanting to put her away, and the Chinese doing it!

And she actually broke a law.

Or three.