FUCK CHINA: General - The tide is turning.

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Nuke the chinks. These subhumans cannot be allowed to rule the planet.

They're more likely to nuke themselves by accident using some ripped off obsolete tech they stole from the Russians twenty years ago and were too afraid to fix lest they lose face in front of PLA officer/Xi's cousin's brother's former roommate assigned to oversee them.
 
The correct title should be FUCK CCP, not necessarily China or Chinese people collectively.
China IS the CCP, China is what the CCP asserts to be its borders. Countries have nothing to do with their people.

Having had chinamen neighbors for five years, I can confirm they are stupendously racist and they’re the biggest chain smokers on the planet.

 
Yeah, I too want the source.
~3,500 deaths due to COVID seemed awfully suspicious so people started poking around and found that 21 million cell phones up and vanished during the height of the virus outbreak in China. I'm more inclined to believe this than anything the Communist Chinese are touting. And when you consider how long the crematories in Wuhan were operating at maximum capacity 24 hours a day, it starts to become a bit more clear.


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~3,500 deaths due to COVID seemed awfully suspicious so people started poking around and found that 21 million cell phones up and vanished during the height of the virus outbreak in China. I'm more inclined to believe this than anything the Communist Chinese are touting. And when you consider how long the crematories in Wuhan were operating at maximum capacity 24 hours a day, it starts to become a bit more clear.

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Again, my man, I was there in the start of the Wuhan thread. This is rubbish source. Only a fucking phone pick up video, which could be a million other things. Where are the documents, or original sources on the operations of the Wuhan crematories? Again, I agree that the numbers are bullshit, but without at least some semblance of documentation that's not chinkspeak, we cannot approximate a number. Videos? Statistics? Documents? Something other than suspicions and videos of people picking phones up.
 
Again, my man, I was there in the start of the Wuhan thread. This is rubbish source. Only a fucking phone pick up video, which could be a million other things. Where are the documents, or original sources on the operations of the Wuhan crematories? Again, I agree that the numbers are bullshit, but without at least some semblance of documentation that's not chinkspeak, we cannot approximate a number. Videos? Statistics? Documents? Something other than suspicions and videos of people picking phones up.
I would normally agree with you, but when it comes to an extreme case like China we take what we can get. Considering they're on the other side of the great firewall, you can't trust their news outlets as they're far worse propaganda than in the US. What little we can piece together comes from leaked videos through Chinese twitter and other Chinese social media which is meticulously memory holed by the secret police. I'm sure you're already aware of this though. All we can really do is theorize how bad it may be, but the numbers will never really be concrete.

On some other forum, the rumors circulating there suggested China's high fatality rate was a product of having extremely poor air quality, culture of chain smokers, and terrible sanitation which would explain why other countries weren't hit as hard. I don't think that it was anywhere close to 20 million dead, maybe 1-2 million, but who can say for sure?

Edit: Also, Chinas early response to the outbreak was enormously heavy handed for something that's "just a flu". I doubt they'd build entire hospitals in just under a few weeks time, chain people inside their apartment, or have tens of thousands of workers disinfecting the air if it were. That's not even mentioning some really obscure vids that surfaced a few months back including mass graves and even countless crows flying overhead.
 
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There should be a law in the west that forces officials, politicians and their families to show all financial incomes.
Then we could see just how much bribery the pooh empire is using to buy us out and turn us into their drones.

Payback will come in time. The roundeyes won't stay asleep forever.
 
I would normally agree with you, but when it comes to an extreme case like China we take what we can get. Considering they're on the other side of the great firewall, you can't trust their news outlets as they're far worse propaganda than in the US. What little we can piece together comes from leaked videos through Chinese twitter and other Chinese social media which is meticulously memory holed by the secret police. I'm sure you're already aware of this though. All we can really do is theorize how bad it may be, but the numbers will never really be concrete.

On some other forum, the rumors circulating there suggested China's high fatality rate was a product of having extremely poor air quality, culture of chain smokers, and terrible sanitation which would explain why other countries weren't hit as hard. I don't think that it was anywhere close to 20 million dead, maybe 1-2 million, but who can say for sure?

Edit: Also, Chinas early response to the outbreak was enormously heavy handed for something that's "just a flu". I doubt they'd build entire hospitals in just under a few weeks time, chain people inside their apartment, or have tens of thousands of workers disinfecting the air. That's not even mentioning some really obscure vids that surfaced a few months back including mass graves and even countless crows flying overhead.
At the end of the day, if there's not an international and public investigation with boots on the grounds reporting, then it means they've succesfully managed to hide their numbers without consequence. Not getting high hopes up though.
 
Before Coronavirus ravaged my nation, I used to watch mainland China movies all the time on a local cinema that showed them with English and Chinese subtitles. Most of them were crap, but occasionally I would come across a gem.
 

US-Sanctioned Hong Kong Shipping Lines Linked to Single Shanghai Resident

Four Hong Kong shipping companies sanctioned this week by the U.S. Department of State for doing business with an Iranian state shipping line have been traced to a single name, purportedly belonging to a person based in Shanghai, an RFA investigation has revealed.

The U.S. on Monday named Reach Holding Group (Shanghai), Reach Shipping Lines, Delight Shipping, Gracious Shipping, Noble Shipping, and Supreme Shipping in a list of individuals and companies being sanctioned for "having knowingly sold, supplied, or transferred to Iran significant goods or services used in connection with the shipping sector of Iran."

Reach Holdings' CEO Eric Chen, also known as Chen Guoping and president Daniel Y. He, also known as He Yi, were also placed under individual sanctions.

The State Department said Reach Holdings and its shipping line had arranged berths at Chinese ports for vessels belonging to the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL) state shipping line and its Shanghai-based subsidiary, E-Sail.

The Reach, Delight, Gracious, Noble and Supreme shipping lines had all knowingly sold, supplied, or transferred container vessels to IRISL or its subsidiaries, it said in a statement on its official website.

"Today, we reiterate a warning to stakeholders worldwide: If you do business with IRISL, you risk U.S. sanctions," the statement said.

An investigation by RFA's Cantonese Service has revealed that Delight, Gracious, Noble, and Supreme shipping lines named in the statement all share a single, sole director: Shanghai resident Shen Yong, who has already been implicated in U.S. sanctions back in 2011.

The four shipping lines have the same sole shareholder, the Cyprus-registered Santatos Shipping Co. Ltd. According to the U.S. State Department, they share the same Hong Kong registered address at a commercial building in Sheung Wan district.

However, their Hong Kong company records listing gives an address -- also shared by all four companies -- at an industrial building in Kwun Tong.

A visit to both addresses on Tuesday revealed that the Sheung Wan office is an empty space used by multiple companies needing to provide addresses in Hong Kong. A similar space was found when an RFA reporter visited the Kwun Tong address.

A person who answered the registered company phone number said they were unaware of the U.S. sanctions, as they were merely providing secretarial services on contract.

Asked the whereabouts of Shen Yong, the person replied: "He's in China right now. We are just a secretarial services company hired by him to register [here in Hong Kong]."

'White glove' buffer zones

U.S. political risk management consultant Ross Feingold said it has been common practice for companies to use Hong Kong as a "white glove" buffer zone through which to route their business with Iran or North Korea, thereby avoiding sanctions -- until now.

"If they want normal trade with the U.S. to continue, this method won't be available any more, now that the U.S. has abolished Hong Kong's special trading privileges," Feingold said. "The so-called white gloves won't mean anything."

"The U.S. is treating Hong Kong companies the same way it treats mainland Chinese companies now."

In November 2012, Hong Kong's Marine Department said 19 ships linked to IRISL would no longer be allowed to operate under its flag.

Those ships were owned by King Power Holdings, of which Shen Yong was listed as a director in August 2019.

On a Western blacklist

IRISL has been on a Western blacklist of sanctioned entities for years because of allegations it transports weapons, which it denies.

IRISL's fleet includes dry bulker and container ships, and the shipping line has tried changing flags and setting up front companies to get around sanctions in the past, both the U.S. Treasury and the EU have said.

According to an Aug. 30, 2011 report in The Wall Street Journal, Iran's "shell game" started in 2008, after the U.S. first imposed sanctions on IRISL "for its role in provisioning Iran's rogue missile and nuclear programs."

"IRISL responded by camouflaging much of its fleet, reflagging and renaming scores of its blacklisted ships," the paper reported at the time. "It parceled out some to newly minted affiliates and created shell companies abroad to serve as nominal owners. Behind the scenes, IRISL retained control."

Back in 2011, the sole shareholder of King Power Holdings was initially Nominee Director & Shareholder Ltd, a British Virgin Islands-registered company, but its shares were transferred later that year to Kish Roaring Ocean Shipping Company, an Iranian company, of which it is also a director.

Since August 2019, the sole shareholder of King Power has been Cyprus-registered company, Montenavo Shipping. This information changed at the same time that Shen Yong was named director.

 
Hey fuck you. I'm an American. Chinese people WISH they could steal like blacks do. Look at the San Fran Walgreens videos. They are the kangz of taking shit that doesn't belong to them.

Pshh that's small potatoes dude, niggos might be good at stealing candy bars and chips due to their natural agility, but the chinks are over there stealing business and military technology worth hundreds of billions of dollars. As usual the negroid can only see and think about what's immediately in front of him to fulfill his basal desires.
 
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Japan still reporting imported coronavirus cases from China, despite 'zero' case claims

Japan has reported over a dozen airline passengers infected with the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) arriving from China over the past two months, despite claims by the communist regime that it does not have any local cases of the virus.

On Oct. 21, Washington-based think tank Freedom House included Taiwan among four countries in a graphic debunking the myth that only countries with dictatorships such as China are capable of containing the coronavirus outbreak. Beneath the post, Twitter user shiroihamusan asserted that the number of coronavirus cases being reported by the Chinese government is much lower than the actual number.

He then uploaded a chart showing that four passengers from China had tested positive for the coronavirus upon arrival at Japanese airports from Sept. 16 to Sept. 23. During that same period, 12 passengers from the U.S. tested positive for the virus.
As can be seen in the chart, cases that originated from the U.S. that week outnumber those from China by a ratio of roughly three to one. However, China is only reporting a total of 85,747 cases since the start of the pandemic, compared to 8,498,360 cases reported in the U.S., a figure that is over 9,000 percent higher than the communist country!

Based on daily results of coronavirus tests administered on arriving passengers at Japan's international airports, Japan's Ministry of Health and Welfare reports that there have been 16 passengers arriving from China that have tested positive for the disease between Aug 24 and Oct. 23. The cases were reported by quarantine officers at Narita International Airport, Haneda Airport, and Kansai International Airport.

During this period, many passengers have tested positive from other nearby hotspots in the world, such as the Philippines, India, and Indonesia. Over the same period, 41 passengers from the U.S. tested positive for the virus, only 2.5 times more than the 16 that arrived from China.

Despite the fact that the coronavirus pandemic originated in China, its vast size, and huge population, the communist regime claimed that it had gone 57 days without a single local infection since Aug. 15, before finally acknowledging 12 local cases on Oct. 11. As was the case in previous outbreaks in Xinjiang, Beijing, Yunnan, Wuhan, and Jilin since the original epidemic, China announced that it would be testing millions of Qingdao residents within a few days, with the result a foregone conclusion of "zero" positive cases.

Indeed, by Oct. 16, Chinese health officials claimed that all 10.89 million coronavirus tests administered on Qingdao citizens came back negative. In response, Taiwan's Minister of Health and Welfare and Central Epidemic Command Center head Chen Shih-chung (陳時中) on Oct. 17 said that results were "really great, but how is that possible?"

Chen said that "Everyone knows test kit test reagents have a certain number of false negatives and false positives." Commenting on the alleged outcome of the tests being universally negative, he said, "This is also a great thing, but it is simply an impossible result," reported CNA.
China's statistics on its confirmed coronavirus cases and deaths have been placed under much doubt as they have been suspiciously low for such a populous country, currently in 54th place behind Venezuela and ahead of Bahrain at 85,747 confirmed cases. The speed with which China went from initially announcing human-to-human transmissions on Jan. 20 to declaring "zero" local infections on March 19 also raises many questions about the authenticity of China's reporting.
 
Korea has better gamers
Japan has better porn
Thailand has better food
India has more shit

"The Middle Kingdom" is a great name, because they're mediocre at everything.
Don't forget, that while they all have great food, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan have a better democracy and better quality products (including electronics.


Doesn't Biden arselick for China? I'm a little worried he'll kowtow to them for their every whim.
 

Chinese Authorities Punish Citizens for Using Foreign Social Media

Chinese Communist Party officials appear to be increasing their harassment and punishment of Chinese internet users who publish on foreign social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. China's government firewall blocks access to those sites, but users can use VPNs and other technology to circumvent it.

A growing number of these Chinese "netizens" have been warned against visiting and posting on the social media platforms and have been forced to delete posts unfavorable to the government. Some have also been sentenced to jail terms.

Gao Yu, a veteran independent journalist and dissident, has been harassed by police repeatedly for visiting and posting on Twitter.

During the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre this year, the national security police warned her to not post anything at that politically sensitive time. "I was forced to go on a trip with them," she said. Although she cooperated, she said police in Beijing still had her son fired from his job in June just to punish her. "The law gives the police 19 responsibilities. Which one of them is having someone fired from their job?" she asked. The police also warned her friends not to contact her, saying she "is not a journalist, but an enemy" and threatening them with arrest if they visit her.

China's government communicates through official accounts on Twitter and other social media networks that are blocked within its borders, which some netizens take issue with. "Hua Chunying, the spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, along with some other officials, is on Twitter. Why can't we, the ordinary people?" she said.


Jail time

In severe cases, some dissidents who post on foreign social media ended up with jail time.

A Twitter account collected 418 verdicts over the past year of those who have been sentenced for exercising freedom of speech. These cases are related to online activities dating back to 2013, including retweeting and liking others' posts.
Last year, Chinese authorities arrested Shen Liangqing, a former Anhui provincial prosecutor and human rights activist, mainly for his comments on Twitter and Facebook.

According to the indictment, during his arrest between 2017 and May 2019, Shen used foreign social media platforms, attracting more than 20,000 followers.

The indictment also alleges that some of Shen's posts were "distorting" historical events, socially sensitive topics and other content. Shen was also accused of disseminating "false information" to attack and disrupt the normal social order. The indictment says 42 such messages were posted on Twitter, which accumulated more than 470,000 hits, and 13 on Facebook with 130 likes.

Wu Bin, a well-known netizen and rights activist, was detained in March 2020, a day after he tweeted that he would stop posting for 10 days in order to avoid harassment and losing freedom in "this abnormal country." After he was detained, more than 100,000 entries on his Twitter account were deleted and his account was eventually closed by local police in Hunan. "100,000 followers, 10 years of tweets, all gone," Wu said on his new Twitter account. He turned down VOA's interview request in fear of getting in trouble.


Punished while overseas

Even those who have used the platforms while overseas couldn't go without being punished.

After a Chinese international student in the U.S. supported calling coronavirus "the China virus" on his Twitter with only four followers, his mother was taken to the police station and forced to write a letter of guaranty. He said he does not understand how the Chinese police could locate him as he didn't use his real name on Twitter.

VOA Mandarin reported another incident earlier this year that a Chinese student in Melbourne, Australia, mocked Chinese authorities on Twitter. Police harassed her family and forced her to hand over the password to her Twitter account.

While many Chinese people use VPNs and other technology to circumvent the firewall, doing so is against the law. Since 1997, government regulations have required people who want to access foreign websites to do so through channels provided by the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications' national public telecommunications network. Violators can be issued a warning and fined more than $2,000 (15,000 RMB). The regulations were not enforced until recently when Chinese authorities started to crack down on VPNs.

On May 19, the Public Security Bureau in Shanxi province reportedly issued an administrative warning to a man for using VPNs to access foreign sites and fined him $75 (500 RMB).
 
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