What's in the News

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Escaped Lunatic

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1605 on: January 27, 2011, 05:28:57 PM »
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/8278315/China-to-create-largest-mega-city-in-the-world-with-42-million-people.html
Is this real??

All I asked for was for my minions to tie the Shenzhen and Guangzhou subways together with the under-construction Donnguan subway, and maybe make the mass transit cards interchangeable and look what happens.

The capitol of the Lunatic Empire will be bigger than I expected. ahahahahah
I'm pro-cloning and we vote!               Why isn't this card colored green?
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AMonk

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1606 on: January 31, 2011, 12:14:10 AM »
Li Qiming is now world (in)famous.  This report from PRC has hit the BBC -- 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12317756
Moderation....in most things...

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1607 on: January 31, 2011, 01:56:45 AM »
China tries to pass Top Gun footage as military drill

China's state broadcaster is facing questions after internet users spotted that footage in a report on air force manoeuvres in a national newscast was taken from the 1980s Hollywood film Top Gun.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/01/30/3125192.htm?section=justin
Sometimes it seems things go by too quickly. We are so busy watching out for what's just ahead of us that we don't take the time to enjoy where we are. (Calvin and Hobbs)

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1608 on: January 31, 2011, 03:13:47 PM »
What's next, when reporting navy activities they'll use Hunt For Red October footage? I've always hated CCTV
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Escaped Lunatic

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1609 on: January 31, 2011, 04:01:23 PM »
What's next, when reporting navy activities they'll use Hunt For Red October footage? I've always hated CCTV

I'm voting for getting CCTV to shift to the classics.  How about some McHale's Navy and Baa Baa Black Sheep for stock footage of military activities? ahahahahah
I'm pro-cloning and we vote!               Why isn't this card colored green?
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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1610 on: January 31, 2011, 04:41:17 PM »
Gilligan's Island on how to run a socialist organisation
For you to insult me, first I must value your opinion

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1611 on: January 31, 2011, 07:30:03 PM »
"Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination." Oscar Wilde.

"It's all oojah cum spiffy". Bertie Wooster.
"The stars are God's daisy chain" Madeleine Bassett.

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1612 on: January 31, 2011, 10:39:27 PM »
‘My father is Li Gang!’ accused gets six years 

http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/930500--my-father-is-li-gang-accused-gets-six-years?bn=1

He was charged with a traffic-related offence  llllllllll So his dad's position still helped
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Escaped Lunatic

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1613 on: January 31, 2011, 11:20:26 PM »
Some people think this is funny.  The claim is that CCTV used footage from Top Gun as part of a piece about one of their new fighter airplanes.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/01/30/3125192.htm?section=justin

No one sees the BIG picture.  The footage wasn't faked.  The Chinese now have a missile that can shoot down an enemy airplane. . .

in 1986!!! aoaoaoaoao
I'm pro-cloning and we vote!               Why isn't this card colored green?
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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1614 on: February 01, 2011, 12:07:08 AM »
EL That is a twist on the story that I don't think the International media reporting this story have picked up on.  Who knows what will be next?
Sometimes it seems things go by too quickly. We are so busy watching out for what's just ahead of us that we don't take the time to enjoy where we are. (Calvin and Hobbs)

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Raoul F. Duke

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1615 on: February 12, 2011, 12:20:18 AM »
Best news I've seen in a while. Of all the horrors I saw in China, child begging was near the worst.

Online campaign rescues abducted Chinese kids
By ELAINE KURTENBACH, Associated Press

SHANGHAI –
An online campaign to gather photos of Chinese kids begging on the streets is pressuring authorities to crack down on gangs that kidnap children for exploitation and is helping reunite them with families.

Many of the children seen begging in Chinese cities, often in the arms of women who are not their mothers, are snatched from their real families by kidnappers and then sold into virtual slavery, forced to beg by gangs that sometimes maim them to elicit greater sympathy.

Several families have been reunited with their abducted offspring since Beijing-based social researcher Yu Jianrong launched a campaign last month urging people to post photos of beggar children on microblogs — websites similar to Twitter.

The effort is winning fresh support for efforts to protect children from such abuses, though some visitors to the microblogs have expressed worries over privacy issues and possible retaliation against kids by their abductors.

Yu would not comment directly when contacted Friday, saying only that he would not speak to foreign media before hanging up. In his blog comments, he has urged media to "cool" their coverage of his campaign — likely out of concern over official sensitivities.

Using children under the age of 14 for begging is illegal in China, but like many other outlawed practices it is often tolerated, even in big showcase cities like Shanghai. Some, barely big enough to walk, stumble through subway trains, hands outstretched. Others sit out in the cold, on grimy sidewalks.

Children are sometimes forced to beg by their own relatives. But others are used by gangs that have kept alive a long tradition of trafficking in children, women and the disabled.

The Public Security Ministry issued a statement Thursday urging citizens to tell the police if they see children or the handicapped being used for begging. But it said the vast majority of cases were not kidnapped but were being used or "rented" by their families for begging.

Yu began encouraging China's increasingly online citizens to post photos of children they saw begging after receiving a request from a follower of his microblog appealing for help with finding his missing son.

The sites on Chinese-language sina.com and qq.com have since posted more than 2,500 photos of children seen begging in cities across China. At least six missing children had been rescued as of Thursday, the state-run newspaper Shanghai Daily reported.

The campaign is part of a growing trend to use the Internet to help track down missing family members.

"Microblog Miracle: Child Lost for Three Years Recovered," said a headline in the usually staid Communist Party newspaper the People's Daily. It showed a picture of Peng Gaofeng holding his 6-year-old son Wenle, who was recovered after Internet users spotted the child begging in a village far from the southern Chinese city where he was abducted.

Internet users had spotted the child after his picture was posted on another microblog last fall.

Wary of the potential, as in Tunisia and Egypt, for social media to be used as a tool for dissent, China generally blocks access to foreign sites like Facebook and Twitter. But domestic versions of such social media are thriving.

Such forums are a promising way to help address such social problems and a reminder of their potential for fostering positive changes, said Yu Hai, a sociologist at Shanghai's prestigious Fudan University.

At the same time, "This is an alert that the government needs to do more for people," Yu wrote. "I'm optimistic about this in the long run, but obviously there is a need for more official support."

Earlier this week, authorities in Taihe, a district in neighboring Anhui province that is known to be home to some organized begging rings, issued a notice ordering people using disabled children for begging to turn themselves in within 10 days or face "harsh penalties," according to a photographed notice posted online by the Shanghai newspaper Oriental Morning Post.

Reports said police in Taihe had so far rescued two disabled children and detained five suspects. "Using disabled children to beg is a criminal act," warned a red banner across a rural road in Taihe, in a photo carried by the newspaper.

Chinese police have set up a DNA and photo database as part of a crackdown on human trafficking that began in the spring of 2009. As of September, 813 children had been returned to their families.

But the problem remains widespread. According to humantrafficking.org, a website set up to monitor the global situation, estimates of the number of children traded or sold each year in China range from 10,000 to 20,000. Often, kidnappers grab boys to be sold to childless couples. In other cases, girls or women are taken to be sold as brides or are tricked or forced into working in the sex industry.

"While the public applaud the far reach of the Internet, the effectiveness of the police and the repeated crackdown campaigns against human trafficking are being questioned," noted a commentary Friday in the newspaper Global Times.
"Vicodin and dumplings...it's a great combination!" (Anthony Bourdain, in Harbin)

"Here in China we aren't just teaching...
we're building the corrupt, incompetent, baijiu-swilling buttheads of tomorrow!" (Raoul F. Duke)

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A-Train

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1616 on: February 12, 2011, 09:49:15 AM »
Mubarak (completely) out!
Freedom in?
"The young do not know enough to be prudent, and therefore attempt the impossible and achieve it, generation after generation.

Pearl S. Buck

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1617 on: February 12, 2011, 11:43:46 AM »
I'd be cautious discussing the Egypt situtation in a forum about China.

AMEN TO THAT, BROTHER.  LET'S SAVE THE SPHINX LAND TALK FOR MORE DISCREET PLACES... - Con
« Last Edit: February 14, 2011, 05:55:33 AM by Con ate dog »

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Paul

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1618 on: February 17, 2011, 04:25:39 AM »
I have a receipt for my wife and I'm not giving her back just because some 'democrat' is uneasy with my morals.
But her leash keeps breaking. Bloody quality control here!
Should I get a harness?

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1619 on: February 17, 2011, 04:40:43 AM »
I have a receipt for my wife and I'm not giving her back just because some 'democrat' is uneasy with my morals.
But her leash keeps breaking. Bloody quality control here!
Should I get a harness?


 mmmmmmmmmm
For you to insult me, first I must value your opinion