Re: China's Latest Window Dressing Before Beiing Olympics -- China Announces Rules to Require Government Disclosures (next year !)
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Re: China's Latest Window Dressing Before Beiing Olympics -- China Announces Rules to Require Government Disclosures (next year !)         

Group: soc.culture.hongkong · Group Profile
Author: Chairman Mao says:
Date: Apr 27, 2007 20:28

You be surprised I can spot those Asian C and D cuppers pretty well.

I can get the blonde ones here especially if I pretend to be a big time drug
dealer driving a Benz or a crooked Lawyer driving a Benz (no difference)

The problem is most are super-sized all over too, too much McDonalds, and
sitting in front of the Jew TV watching Oprah.

When they balloon past 400 lbs , usually they become a Black mans trophy.

"Ira IRa IRA Humperdink MD" hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1177719571.967224.282810@y80g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
> chinkie girls don't have size c cups. ha! so you can't afford
> beautiful blond ones, huh? well, not everyone is as rich as me, I
> know.
>
> "Chairman Mao says:" prc.com> wrote:
>> No, I stay away from those Russian mafia women in Saniltun district.
>>
>> Now an Asian babe with C cups or bigger are more my taste these days.
>>
>>
>> "Ira IRa IRA Humperdink MD" hotmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:1177698748.556324.168970@t38g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
>>> you are obviously very easy to please with simple peasant pleasures.
>>> ever fucked a really beautiful blond hooker ?
>>>
>>> "Chairman Mao says:" prc.com> wrote:
>>>>I like Beijing though,
>>>> I can burp really loud,
>>>> slurp my food really loud in resteraunts,
>>>> fart,
>>>> spit on the ground,
>>>> cut in line,
>>>> yell out loud,
>>>> talk on the cell phone really loud and swear,
>>>> throw trash on the ground,
>>>> get drunk outside and walk around with bottles of YangJing,
>>>> smoke anywhere,
>>>> cross the street not on the cross walks,
>>>> go thru red lights,
>>>> cut people off in traffic,
>>>> cut in line,
>>>> shove people in line,
>>>> stare at foreigners,
>>>> pee on the street,
>>>> throw up on the street after too many Gombei's,
>>>> let my dog shit in the middle of the sidewalks,
>>>> charge higher prices to foreigners,
>>>> yell Laowai really loud at foreigners,
>>>> Drink 55%% White wine,
>>>> Blame the Japanese that someone stole my bicycle again
>>>> gamble on the sidewalks with taxi drivers and not work,
>>>> Wear my DongBei Army Coat around and be in fashion.
>>>> Watch the Falun Gong protesters get beat up again by the police
>>>> Wear red/yellow arm bands that say, "Mao was right."
>>>>
>>>> Beijing is a great place...
>>>>
>>>> Cannot do any of that in the USA...
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Micky Wong" wrote in message
>>>> news:462e697e$1@newsgate.x-privat.org...
>>>>> China's Latest Window Dressing Before Beiing Olympics -- China
>>>>> Announces Rules to Require Government Disclosures (next year !)
>>>>>
>>>>> -- Micky's Comment: With the new announcement, chinese officials have
>>>>> another year to continue their fast way to riches. --
>>>>>
>>>>> China Announces Rules to Require Government Disclosures
>>>>>
>>>>> By Edward Cody
>>>>> Washington Post Foreign Service
>>>>> Tuesday, April 24, 2007; A14
>>>>>
>>>>> BEIJING, April 24 -- China on Tuesday announced far-reaching new rules
>>>>> for disclosure of official information that would require local
>>>>> governments to reveal their accounts and inform farmers about the
>>>>> finances of often controversial land seizures.
>>>>>
>>>>> The decree, which takes effect May 1, 2008, would mark a dramatic
>>>>> change
>>>>> in the way Chinese officials work if it were genuinely applied in
>>>>> Beijing and the hundreds of thousands of villages and towns where
>>>>> governments and Communist Party committees make most of their
>>>>> decisions
>>>>> in secrecy. The official New China News Agency called it a "landmark"
>>>>> decision that makes "the most specific and progressive" changes to
>>>>> China's tradition of official secrecy since Communist rule began in
>>>>> 1949.
>>>>>
>>>>> "Governments at various levels are required to give out information
>>>>> which involves the immediate interests of individuals and groups,
>>>>> which
>>>>> should be known by the masses, and which explains administrative
>>>>> institutions and procedures," the agency quoted the decree as saying.
>>>>>
>>>>> The decree, signed by Premier Wen Jiabao, listed requirements to
>>>>> reveal
>>>>> such subjects as local government plans for handling emergencies, the
>>>>> allocation of government expenses and the results of investigations
>>>>> into
>>>>> environmental threats, public health and tainted medicines. It also
>>>>> specified that local governments must reveal the terms of land
>>>>> seizures
>>>>> and the amount of compensation paid to farmers who lose their fields.
>>>>>
>>>>> This is an explosive issue, as thousands of villages have risen up
>>>>> against local authorities over land seizures in recent years.
>>>>> Typically,
>>>>> the farmers have alleged that officials abused their authority to
>>>>> seize
>>>>> the land for resale to developers, compensating the farmers at a low
>>>>> price and charging the developers much higher prices -- then pocketing
>>>>> the difference. Enforcing a requirement that these transactions be
>>>>> public would help halt such abuses.
>>>>>
>>>>> But China's recent history has been filled with central government
>>>>> decrees that are not fully enforced around the country. In that light,
>>>>> it remained unclear whether Wen's decree would have the power to turn
>>>>> around a half-century of traditional secrecy, particularly where
>>>>> corrupt
>>>>> local officials rely on secrecy to cover collusion with businessmen
>>>>> and
>>>>> embezzlement of public funds.
>>>>>
>>>>> In addition, the decree laid down potential restrictions for public
>>>>> disclosure, saying any information that affects state security, public
>>>>> safety, "normal economic operations" and social stability should not
>>>>> be
>>>>> revealed. If interpreted by local officials with economic interests in
>>>>> illicit activity, those exceptions may create an area where secrecy
>>>>> could still thrive.
>>>>>
>>>>> But the decree said local groups could appeal to higher authorities if
>>>>> they are refused information they believe they are entitled to.
>>>>>
>>>>> Wen and President Hu Jintao recently have urged what they call public
>>>>> supervision of government actions, implying that China's 1.3 billion
>>>>> people have a right to point out malfeasance and lead authorities to
>>>>> prosecute it. The decree issued Tuesday fit in with that theme, saying
>>>>> citizens have a right to know what is going on in their communities.
>>>>>
>>>>> In practice, however, most Chinese are deprived of that right by
>>>>> rigorous party censorship of television stations and newspapers. The
>>>>> decree did not explain how the new rules would fit in with that
>>>>> censorship.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> (c) 2007 The Washington Post Company
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
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