Moderator: Community Team
Protesters do that to increase the likelihood of people in other countries paying attention to them and/or sharing photos of the protests internationally.armati wrote:Notice too that alot of those protesters signs are in english, kinda odd being in China. Ya know, cause ;people speak chinese in china.
Who do you think they are talking to?
That's actually incorrect. It's true that the earliest attempts to transliterate Chinese into the Latin alphabet were based on southern dialects. The gold standard however, Wade-Giles, was definitely based on Mandarin. Giles' was extraordinarily thorough. His dictionary had pronunciation notes on 9 dialects of Chinese and 3 other related languages, but he was very explicit that Mandarin was the dominant one and it is always used in his dictionary as the primary.mrswdk wrote:lolwatDukasaur wrote:Pinyin is historical negationism. Shades of 1984.mrswdk wrote:Why do you insist on using the term 'Peking'? Are you actually the ghost of a colonial era slave trader or something?
There have been various different systems used in the past to convert Chinese names into Latin characters. The current one - Pinyin - was developed by Chinese people and is most reflective of the Mandarin pronunciations of Chinese names (Mandarin being the national language). 'Peking' is the spelling used by an old system, devised by Europeans and based off of the pronunciations present in regional dialects in the south of China (where the original colonial concession ports were located).
If your use of 'Peking' is an attempt to convey some sort of value statement then the statement you are conveying is '19th century colonialist'. If what you want to convey is just 'here is how to pronounce Chinese names' then you should be using Pinyin, the system currently used by everyone all over the world who is under the age of 150.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-49330848Flight check-in has been suspended at Hong Kong International Airport for a second consecutive day because of anti-government protests.
Videos on social media showed passengers struggling to get through demonstrators, who were sitting inside and blocking departures.
In an ugly incident, young protesters mobbed a man they suspected was an undercover policeman and zip-tied his hands together. Paramedics struggled to treat the man amid a crowd of angry protesters before he was taken to hospital.
The editor of China's Global Times newspaper said the man was one of his reporters who was merely doing his job.
Short answer: I agree that ALL governments are composed mainly of scumbags. However, being able to influence those governments helps curtail their excesses.armati wrote:Duk
"They spend their time dreaming up ways to squeeze more work out of me for less pay. Precisely the opposite of what they'd do if I elected them."
Bologna
Purchasing power of currency
american 1971-2019 down 98%
2000-2019 80%
all other currencies are similar.............https://www.silverdoctors.com/wp-conten ... 667377.jpg
the average house in the UK cost £4,700 in 1971. Today the price is £230,000 , the average price has gone up almost 50x or 4,800%.
instead of buying a house, the person put £4,500 in the bank earning 4% per annum for 48 years between 1971 and 2019. Today he would have £30,000 in total, including the interest.
money in the bank went up 6x whilst the house went up 50x.
Obviously savings have lost most of their purchasing power.
https://www.silverdoctors.com/gold/gold ... er-higher/............. for the article
I posted that to show that "....squeeze more work out of me for less pay.." is exactly what the people you vote in do to you.
You simply dont see it because they dont teach you economics, they dont want you to know it.
Our government is as much scumbag as anyone elses.
It is sad that Big Brother has given you such a warped view of the world outside your national borders:Dukasaur wrote:Can you imagine the Russian or Chinese government ever paying compensation to someone wrongfully convicted of a crime? In most cases, the government will never admit it was wrong. In very rare instances, such as when Khruschev released a lot of the Stalinist-era prisoners, they will get a grudging apology. Most of the time not even that. Certainly never compensation.
https://www.indiatoday.in/world/story/c ... 2019-01-08China: Man compensated with 670,000 U.S. dollars for wrongful conviction
The man spent 9,217 days in jail for a murder of a woman that he didn't commit. For the wrongful 9,217-day imprisonment, the Intermediate People's Court in the city of Liaoyuan ruled that he should be paid 4.6 million yuan which is around 670,000 US dollars.
I've traveled to many other countries and met people from many different places, thank you very much.mrswdk wrote:Maybe if you travelled to some other countries and met people from different places, it might expand your worldview a little?
The occasional odd exception does not disprove the rule.mrswdk wrote:So you're going to ignore the fact you claimed that in China there would 'certainly never (be) compensation' awarded to people wrongfully convicted of crimes, despite all the evidence that in China wrongfully convicted people are routinely given compensation by the government?
I wonder which page from 1984 you will quote at me next. Hate Week? Room 101? Or perhaps you will instead realise the irony of repeatedly quoting Cold War propaganda while simultaneously accusing foreign governments of manipulating the truth.
Okay, you win. Reds Under The Beds. The Chinese and Russians are all evil. I can't wait until Glorious Trump flies into Beijing Peking, capital of the evil Qing Dynasty, to decapitate Xi Jinping and declare peace and justice to all of China's Nazi China's long-suffering people. May the Hong Kong rioters burn the city to the ground. I love hamburgers.Dukasaur wrote:The occasional odd exception does not disprove the rule.mrswdk wrote:So you're going to ignore the fact you claimed that in China there would 'certainly never (be) compensation' awarded to people wrongfully convicted of crimes, despite all the evidence that in China wrongfully convicted people are routinely given compensation by the government?
I wonder which page from 1984 you will quote at me next. Hate Week? Room 101? Or perhaps you will instead realise the irony of repeatedly quoting Cold War propaganda while simultaneously accusing foreign governments of manipulating the truth.
Taiwan doesn’t think Taiwan is part of China....armati wrote:Interesting to see you guys fight it out over China.
I didnt notice anyone mentioning that HK and Taiwan are part of China.
Notice too that alot of those protesters signs are in english, kinda odd being in China. Ya know, cause ;people speak chinese in china.
Who do you think they are talking to?
Anyone recall what happened in the states when some states decided to succeed over states right?
In contrast China is very peaceful.

Yes it does. The Taipei administration’s policy is that there is one China, which includes Taiwan, and that the Taipei administration is the rightful government of all of it. That’s why other countries either recognise the Beijing government or the Taipei government, but never both.jimboston wrote:Taiwan doesn’t think Taiwan is part of China....armati wrote:Interesting to see you guys fight it out over China.
I didnt notice anyone mentioning that HK and Taiwan are part of China.
Notice too that alot of those protesters signs are in english, kinda odd being in China. Ya know, cause ;people speak chinese in china.
Who do you think they are talking to?
Anyone recall what happened in the states when some states decided to succeed over states right?
In contrast China is very peaceful.
No... the Taipei administration thinks China is part of Taiwan, it doesn’t think Taiwan is part of China.mrswdk wrote:Yes it does. The Taipei administration’s policy is that there is one China, which includes Taiwan, and that the Taipei administration is the rightful government of all of it. That’s why other countries either recognise the Beijing government or the Taipei government, but never both.jimboston wrote:Taiwan doesn’t think Taiwan is part of China....armati wrote:Interesting to see you guys fight it out over China.
I didnt notice anyone mentioning that HK and Taiwan are part of China.
Notice too that alot of those protesters signs are in english, kinda odd being in China. Ya know, cause ;people speak chinese in china.
Who do you think they are talking to?
Anyone recall what happened in the states when some states decided to succeed over states right?
In contrast China is very peaceful.
You're confusing the issue.jimboston wrote:No... the Taipei administration thinks China is part of Taiwan, it doesn’t think Taiwan is part of China.mrswdk wrote:Yes it does. The Taipei administration’s policy is that there is one China, which includes Taiwan, and that the Taipei administration is the rightful government of all of it. That’s why other countries either recognise the Beijing government or the Taipei government, but never both.jimboston wrote:Taiwan doesn’t think Taiwan is part of China....armati wrote:Interesting to see you guys fight it out over China.
I didnt notice anyone mentioning that HK and Taiwan are part of China.
Notice too that alot of those protesters signs are in english, kinda odd being in China. Ya know, cause ;people speak chinese in china.
Who do you think they are talking to?
Anyone recall what happened in the states when some states decided to succeed over states right?
In contrast China is very peaceful.
You can’t have it both ways... if Taiwan truly believes what you state is their position why do they seek recognition as independent from China.
These are mutually exclusive ideas.
Regardless, the point is that Taiwan doesn’t consider the the Mainland Chinese gov’t valid, so they would not consider themselves subject or ‘part of’ that gov’t.
Therefore your comment that HK and Taiwan are ‘part of’ China is not truly valid.
Exactly, armati. Violent riots met by riot police in France? Just a bit of trouble. Riots in London? Just some criminals running amok. Violent riots in Hong Kong? Clearly democracy at work and we should support these people to overthrow their leaders.armati wrote:China is losing patience with the americans in HK.
China denied ports to american warships and XI has begun talking of selling the massive amounts of U.S. treasuries China holds.
Wanna see chaos? The americans need to get their nose outta HK.
The msm was showing a Chinese girls that lost an eye in the protests.
For some reason they dont mention the 24 people that have lost eyes in the French yellow vest protest.
Kinda makes ya wonder just where they want people to focus.
You phrase it like that to make it sound like some kind of a nationalist issue. 'The Chinese and Russians are all evil.'mrswdk wrote:Okay, you win. Reds Under The Beds. The Chinese and Russians are all evil. I can't wait until Glorious Trump flies into Beijing Peking, capital of the evil Qing Dynasty, to decapitate Xi Jinping and declare peace and justice to all of China's Nazi China's long-suffering people. May the Hong Kong rioters burn the city to the ground. I love hamburgers.Dukasaur wrote:The occasional odd exception does not disprove the rule.mrswdk wrote:So you're going to ignore the fact you claimed that in China there would 'certainly never (be) compensation' awarded to people wrongfully convicted of crimes, despite all the evidence that in China wrongfully convicted people are routinely given compensation by the government?
I wonder which page from 1984 you will quote at me next. Hate Week? Room 101? Or perhaps you will instead realise the irony of repeatedly quoting Cold War propaganda while simultaneously accusing foreign governments of manipulating the truth.
George Carlin is my all-time favourite comedian. He is, however, exactly that -- a comedian. He makes valid points, but he makes them by engaging in ridiculous exaggerations. As much as I love the man, I would never think of pretending that most of what he says is literally true. It's hyperbole: creative exaggeration to make a point, not literal truth.armati wrote:Duk
You keep bringing up crap thats the same in the states as it is in China.
No rights?, ever hear of the ndaa?
How about George Carlin?
George Carlin - You have no rights
https://youtu.be/m9-R8T1SuG4