> tell RST where he can find this two snakes. He is a Cantonese.
>
> Chairman, tell RST the story: " the guy from qi(shandong province) has
> one wife and one concubine" and then he will not encourage people to
> be a turtle expert in PRC.
>
> I do believe the Confucianism that CCP is promoting is a poison to
> today's Chinese(Pigs).
>
> Chairman Mao says: wrote:
>>>
>>> Speaking of Hong Kong and American blacks, here's an interesting story
>>> that I posted before. The circumstances surrounding the robbery are
>>> really hilarious. One wonders what a Hong Kong family (Hong Kong is
>>> ranked no. 2 in the world, after Japan, in net worth, by US exchange
>>> rates) is doing in a black neighborhood.
>>>
>>> I guess this case may be considered "biting the hand that feeds".
>>>
>>> * * *
>>> Excerpt:
>>>
>>> "She knew practically no other Asians her age, not even the ones from
>>> other restaurants, but blended into the predominantly black
>>> neighborhood." (?)
>>> :
>>> :
>>> "But she was stunned to learn of his [i.e.guy charged with attempted
>>> murder, assault, menacing and harassment] address, 210 Stuyvesant
>>> Avenue, right around the corner from the restaurant. 'We deliver to
>>> that address,' she said. 'Every single day.' " (??)
>>> * * *
>>>
>>> Reference:
>>>
http://tinyurl.com/yp4279
>>>
>>> January 20, 2007
>>> Bedford-Stuyvesant Journal
>>> An Unthinkable Crime, Until Someone Finally Thought of It
>>> By MICHAEL WILSON
>>>
>>> Three crumpled dollars and two quarters, tugged from the pocket of a
>>> puffy coat on a cold night, brings four hot chicken wings with French
>>> fries or fried rice. The most expensive dish on the restaurant's menu
>>> is No. 71, the lobster meat chow mein, at $8.95 a quart.
>>>
>>> The Happy House Chinese takeout restaurant in Bedford-Stuyvesant does
>>> not feed the rich, or put on airs, and maybe that is why, in the seven
>>> years it has fed its busy and occasionally even violent corner of
>>> Malcolm X Boulevard, it was never robbed. Maybe the thought simply
>>> never occurred to anyone. It would be like holding up one's own
>>> kitchen.
>>>
>>> That all changed, twice, in recent weeks, in two vicious attacks on
>>> the
>>> restaurant's workers, two botched robberies that caused serious
>>> injury and yielded no cash.
>>>
>>> Last month, the son of the owners, Man Seng Wong, 25, was beaten while
>>> delivering $24 worth of food, and spent the night in the hospital, his
>>> sister said. The young boys who hit him took the food, and there have
>>> been no arrests.
>>>
>>> Then, last Saturday, during the generally calm lunch hours just after
>>> 1:30 p.m., a man entered the Happy House and, when the newly hired
>>> cashier - the first stranger the Wong family had ever taken on -
>>> turned her back, he leaped over the counter and drew a pistol, the
>>> police said.
>>>
>>> The woman screamed, and the man shot her in the face. Another shot
>>> struck a relative of the Wongs by marriage, Hoy Wang, 37, piercing the
>>> palm of his hand. The shooter fled without any money and, in a final
>>> touch of carelessness, left behind his cellphone.
>>>
>>> There are four members - the parents, the son and the daughter - of
>>> the Wong family of immigrants from Hong Kong. They live where they
>>> work, in an apartment behind the Happy House. The attacks left them
>>> feeling rattled and vulnerable in a part of the city where Chinese
>>> restaurants - their steaming dishes in tin trays long a staple of
>>> poor and working families - line Malcolm X Boulevard, but where few
>>> Chinese people live.
>>>
>>> "They worry about it, especially my mother," said Gigi Wong, 19, on
>>> Wednesday night, standing in the same spot behind the counter where
>>> the
>>> cashier was shot four days earlier. Closing the store, even for a
>>> week,
>>> was never an option. "They still have to do whatever they were doing
>>> before. They're scared, but they still have to do it."
>>>
>>> Her parents moved to Queens from Hong Kong seven years ago. Ms. Wong
>>> followed in 2001, and started working at Happy House herself a year or
>>> two later, she said. The family spends most nights in the Brooklyn
>>> apartment. She knew practically no other Asians her age, not even the
>>> ones from other restaurants, but blended into the predominantly black
>>> neighborhood.
>>>
>>> "I have a lot of black friends," Ms. Wong said. "From 7th grade
>>> to 12th grade, I only went to black schools. I just switched to a
>>> Chinese school to make some Chinese friends."
>>>
>>> Ms. Wong is quick to smile, remarkably cheerful several hours into a
>>> 12-hour workday this week. "I know a lot of people, and a lot of
>>> people know me, and they've got a lot of love for me," she said.
>>>
>>> Customers tell her they are glad she was not at work last Saturday,
>>> but
>>> she replies: "I wish I was here. It wouldn't have happened."
>>>
>>> A detective called the restaurant on Wednesday to speak to Ms. Wong.
>>> He
>>> needed her to translate something for her relative, shot in the hand.
>>> She is the only member of the Wong family fluent in English.
>>>
>>> There are video cameras watching the counter all the time. The
>>> monitors
>>> are wrapped in clear plastic to keep them clean. Most of the other
>>> Chinese restaurants nearby also have thick plexiglass shields between
>>> the cashier and the customer, like a gas station or a liquor store,
>>> but
>>> not Happy House. Longtime customers, presumably the very people who
>>> would be the most offended by beefed-up security, tell Ms. Wong they
>>> need more.
>>>
>>> "They need, like, a partition here with a window," said a matronly
>>> woman who gave only her first name, Lorna. "People are stupid. They
>>> always kill the ones that help them."
>>>
>>> To Ms. Wong, she said, "If that was you they shot, I would have
>>> cried."
>>>
>>> So new was the cashier that, after the shooting, no one in the Wong
>>> family seemed to know her full name, only her last name, Lin. Before
>>> the shooting, when Gigi Wong had tried to speak to her at work, they
>>> would be constantly interrupted by customers.
>>>
>>> Later, through the police, the Wongs learned the cashier was named
>>> Aizen Lin, 34, and tracked her first to the nearby Woodhull Medical
>>> and
>>> Mental Health Center and then to Bellevue Hospital Center in
>>> Manhattan,
>>> where she was in critical condition.
>>>
>>> Several nights this week, after closing the restaurant at midnight,
>>> the
>>> Wongs piled in their car to visit Ms. Lin. Half of her face is badly
>>> swollen, and while she appears alert, Ms. Wong said, she cannot speak
>>> with the tubes in her throat.
>>>
>>> "We went at 1 o'clock in the morning. My mother, my father and
>>> me," she said on Thursday morning. "She still has the straw, the
>>> plastic thing in her mouth. She saw, and she opened her eye. I said,
>>> 'I came to see you,' that's all. I can't think of anything to
>>> say."
>>>
>>> Ms. Wong's parents held Ms. Lin's hand. They stayed about 15
>>> minutes, then drove back to Brooklyn.
>>>
>>> The police took the gunman's cellphone and managed to contact him,
>>> pretending to be men willing to sell the phone back to him. It worked:
>>> The suspect met officers at an arranged spot, and they arrested him,
>>> the police said.
>>>
>>> The man, Raymond Wiliams, 21, was identified on the security video
>>> tape
>>> as the gunman leaping over the counter, according to a criminal
>>> complaint filed in court. The police are looking for another man who
>>> may have been involved, the complaint says.
>>>
>>> Mr. Williams has been charged with attempted murder, assault, menacing
>>> and harassment, and remained in jail as of yesterday. He admitted he
>>> leaped over the counter and fired two shots, according to the
>>> complaint.
>>>
>>> Ms. Wong did not recognize his name.
>>>
>>> But she was stunned to learn of his address, 210 Stuyvesant Avenue,
>>> right around the corner from the restaurant.
>>>
>>> "We deliver to that address," she said. "Every single day."
>>>
>>>
>>>>>>>> The kidneys fail first. Then the central nervous system begins
>>>>>>>> to
>>>>>>>> misfire. Paralysis spreads, making breathing difficult, then
>>>>>>>> often
>>>>>>>> impossible without assistance. In the end, most victims die.
>>>>>>>> ...
>>>>>>>> Panama is the most recent victim. Last year, government
>>>>>>>> officials
>>>>>>>> there unwittingly mixed diethylene glycol into 260,000 bottles
>>>>>>>> of
>>>>>>>> cold
>>>>>>>> medicine - with devastating results. Families have reported 365
>>>>>>>> deaths
>>>>>>>> from the poison, 100 of which have been confirmed so far. With
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>> onset of the rainy season, investigators are racing to exhume as
>>>>>>>> many
>>>>>>>> potential victims as possible before bodies decompose even more.
>>>>>>> It's actually called 'flight from diversity'..... ironcially
>>>>>>> enough......
>>>>> Here, a pic from the "New Territories" in Hong KOng. These are some
>>>>> of
>>>>> the places where the lower-middle classes to middle classes live
>>>>> because Hong Kong island and the various 'hills' and 'mountains' are
>>>>> too expensive for them.