... Revolution. Things could get very ugly here if things are not played ... in message news:4818efd4@newsgate.x-privat.org... The Portrait of an ExtraordinarilyUgly and Violently Dangerous "Olympic ...££ Micky's humble opinion : The violent body language the Chinese students displayed...of Chinese are not only very ugly, but also extremely dangerous. -- International ...
... Revolution. Things could get very ugly here if things are not played ... in message news:4818efd4@newsgate.x-privat.org... The Portrait of an ExtraordinarilyUgly and Violently Dangerous "Olympic ...££ Micky's humble opinion : The violent body language the Chinese students displayed...of Chinese are not only very ugly, but also extremely dangerous. -- International ...
... from the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution. Things could get very ugly here if things are not played just right, and the CCP knows this ..."Micky Wong" <mickywon@11thdimension.ca> wrote in message news:4818efd4@newsgate.x-privat.org... The Portrait of an ExtraordinarilyUgly and Violently Dangerous "Olympic Host" -- Chinese students in U.S. fight image of their home
The Portrait of an ExtraordinarilyUgly and Violently Dangerous "Olympic Host" -- Chinese students in U.S. fight image of their home -- Micky's humble opinion : The violent body language the Chinese students displayed in attacking and ... the current generation of Chinese are not only very ugly, but also extremely dangerous. -- International Herald Tribune Chinese students ...
On Thu, 1 May 2008 20:35:03 +0800, Toby wrote (in article <4819b8af$0$248$bb4e3ad8@newscene.com>): Things could get very ugly here if things are not played just right, and the CCP knows this well. Just to be clear, this is not something intrinsic to the "Chinese character", but the result of scars from an unfortunate history. One needs only to look at Taiwan to see the ...
...rough society that has been continually brutalized for centuries both from within and without, and which still bears deep wounds from the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution. Things could get very ugly here if things are not played just right, and the CCP knows this well. Just to be clear, this is not something intrinsic to the "Chinese character", but the result of scars...
On Fri, 2 May 2008 23:28:21 +0800, ÏàÊó@ÍÀÁú¶Œ Micky Wong wrote (in article <481b330c@newsgate.x-privat.org>): If the people in charge were not too corrupt, how come Chinese government, after talking about it for over 10 years, yet still dare not to make public on the personal finances of government officials? Excellent question -- Love, Jim (I often delete parts of the ...
While people often compare today's China to pre-Olympic Japan and South Korea, this comparison often neglect a very important difference: During the time when Tokyo and Seoul playing the Olympic host, neither Japan nor South Korea were colonizing and brutalizing other nations like China is currently bullying Tibet and East Turkestan. 相鼠@屠龙都 Micky Wong wrote: Regarding the ...
Regarding the comment "there are some very smart people in charge--I think that those at the very top are not too corrupt and are really trying to get China on the rails" I wonder: How often do you see people finding a piece of clean cloth from a cesspool? In an environment that the prerequisite of survival is corruption, how can a "not too corrupted" climb to the top? This is yet another...
Your view confirms that it is a gigantic mistake to let the Chinese government hosting the 2008 Olympics . --The fault lies largely with the IOC. There was a verbal "quid pro quo" that if Beijing were given the Games in 2008 China would work on improving their human rights record, but apparently the promises were vague and the IOC, which was supposed to monitor the situation via ...