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July 19, 2009

Uighur Please

Filed under: Politics — Tags: , , , , , , — webadmin @ 2:53 pm


 

FZ: Where is the Muslim Outrage over attacks against Muslims where the west is not involved – like the Uighurs persecution in China? Or Darfur?

me: who bears the most responsibility for the hypocrisy? The people or their governments?

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February 2, 2009

Shoe Betcha

Filed under: Politics — Tags: , , , , — webadmin @ 8:39 am


 

throwing shoes is the new black: Protester throws shoe at China’s premier – CNN.com

LONDON, England (CNN) — A human rights protester was in police custody Monday after allegedly throwing a shoe at Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao during a speech at Cambridge University.

The shoe landed several meters from the premier and the man was quickly apprehended by security and handed over to police for questioning on suspicion of committing a public order offence, according to the UK’s Press Association.

A student who witnessed the incident told CNN that the man had stood up and shouted, “Why are you prostituting yourself? How can you listen to the lies he is telling?”

In footage of the incident, Wen’s speech is interrupted by a whistle followed by shouting. An object can then be heard landing on the stage.

Wen had been asked to address an invited university audience following talks earlier in the day with UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown. Security during the visit has been tight after a protester threw an egg at Wen following his arrival in London over the weekend, PA said.

ha – if they wanna be real brave, try that shit in china. their bones would be in some ancient medicine store within days. And that’s if they refuse to go to a “re-education camp”

Ni Hao, Wen

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December 19, 2008

The Roundup from 2008-12-19



 
  • http://tr.im/2gjm Bash trickery #
  • Chinese Car Maker Begins Selling the F3DM, the World’s First Mass Produced, Plug-in Hybrid Vehicle http://tr.im/2gk5 Take that, GM #
  • Mourinho hid in laundry basket to beat ban | Apr 24, 2007 http://tr.im/2gw5 I never knew about this #

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November 19, 2008

The Roundup from 2008-11-19



 

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August 22, 2008

Gotta Love Them Chinese

Filed under: Olympics — Tags: , , , , , — webadmin @ 1:01 am


 

And the IOC, btw, who are just as complicit. Why wouldn’t anyone think that China, with their disappearing migrant workers, their computer-generated fireworks, and their lipsyncing toddlers, wouldn’t try some nefarious shit with their gymnasts:

Beijing Olympics 2008: IOC Finally Launches Investigation Into Chinese Gymnasts Thanks To “Stryde Hax”

It appears the U.S. women’s gymnastics team may actually get their coveted gold medals if an IOC investigation into the ages of the Chinese gymnastics team proves the little demons weren’t all 16 years of age. After initially dodging all the questions, the findings of one U.S.-based blogger named Stryde Hax, has apparently prompted the IOC to respond, according to the Times of London.

What’s even more amazing is the fact that this possibly medal-altering revelation was initiated by “Stryde Hax” who’s who’s neither super-journalist or super-sports fan, but just a dude named Mike Walker who loves to Google Hack as a hobby.

“There was a conclusion here,” Mr Walker said. “These documents existed, on a state-wide website, and now they don’t exist, and this change has taken place recently. I was interested because these were documents that no-one could find. If there’s information to be found on the internet I’m a citizen journalist – it was a challenge.”

While every other of the 20,000 journalist covering the Beijing Olympics pranced around eating scorpions, it’s a bit ironic that one extremely curious dude with a blogspot account might be the person who exposes one of the biggest scandals in Olympic history. Maybe he should get a medal too?

I actually LOLed at that scorpion line. It’s so true – about the only one on the NBC family of networks that dared to even broach a controversial subject regarding China (and Russia btw) was Bob Costas – and I think he has tenure, or naked pictures of High NBC officials! And you just know all of the other reporters were getting their jollies hanging out with Michael Phelps and the Dream Team and recording video of themselves interacting with the locals (right before they high-tail it back to their hotels for room service). Now if I were China, I wouldn’t try to cheat at Gymnastics – EVERYONE cheats at Gymnastics and Swimming. Why not cheat at Archery or Shot Put or Race Walking – you know – the sports that you will never see except in the medal tally. Had China swept the lesser sports (by means questionable or otherwise) no one would bat an eyelash. Those sports are like the glass of tap water they serve you at a restaurant before you order your real drinks.Allow me to again congratulate the IOC for awarding the games to China.

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August 17, 2008

China’s Obfuscating. Are You Surprised?



 

This is the danger of allowing capitalism into your corrupt country. The real story always gets out. You can only hide and intimidate for so long before people from pissed-off bloggers to The Times reporters start getting the story out:

China’s iron Olympic grip starts to slip

The mystery of the half-filled stands at many events at the 2008 Olympic Games has been solved, according to Chinese internet users, who say it is the result of a policy to prevent the gathering of large and possibly uncontrollable crowds.

They claim ticket sales to the public were secretly restricted. Blocks of tickets went to government departments, Communist party officials or state-owned companies, which have quietly obeyed orders not to hand them out. “People are so angry because they slept all night outside ticket booths and got nothing and now they see this,” said one blogger, Jian Yu.

Official explanations eroded swiftly because internet insurgents have rapidly identified cracks in the perfect facade constructed for the Olympics.

In the nine days since Chinese leaders presided over a grandiose – and, it turns out, partly faked – opening ceremony, one fact after another has eluded the censors and fuelled public indignation at the costs and the charade. Protected, they hope, by online anonymity, some of China’s 1.3 billion people are daring to wonder where it will all end.
At some football matches in the northern city of Shenyang, only a third of the seats were taken. Even some gymnastics finals, usually one of the biggest attractions on the programme, were not sold out.

Nobody seems to have explained it to the International Olympic Committee, which is baffled by the empty seats, or to the sponsors, who are disappointed.

The IOC should have no reason to have something explained. They knew what they were getting into when they awarded China the games. The fact that there are shennangans going on should come as no surprise. It’s like giving Michael Jackson a baby to watch or asking George Bush to speak clearly. The sponsors should have also done their due diligence before agreeing to sponsor an event in China. Um – hello – it’s China! Buyer beware.

Lower-ranking Chinese officials hastily bused in paid “volunteers” to populate the stands in Beijing, appreciating the embarrassment caused by leaving them half-empty, but public relations remain a matter of indifference to most guardians of public order.

Security has been heavy-handed from the start. As the film director Zhang Yimou’s extravaganza kicked off with a boom, I watched on a giant screen in a park, one of the few venues where ordinary Chinese people were allowed to gather.

They cheered as the fireworks exploded, few looking up to find that there were, in fact, none to be seen because the sequence was produced by software, not gunpowder.

They cooed at nine-year-old Lin Miaoke, hardly caring that her lyrics were obviously mimed, and as she sang they went into a patriotic delirium when goose-stepping soldiers raised the national flag. Yet even these loyal citizens could not be trusted. We were surrounded by dozens of police who locked the gates to keep us in and others out.

Chao Chanqing, an exiled journalist widely read on web-sites accessible in China, has accused Zhang, the director, of playing the same role as Leni Riefenstahl, who filmed an epic documentary for Hitler at the Berlin Olympics of 1936.

The director scorns the comparison but he admitted that a Chinese leader ordered him to make changes to the ceremony. “I had no chance to reject his opinion,” he told the Nanfang Weekend newspaper. Analysts said he was referring to vice-president Xi Jinping, heir apparent to the top job.

Government officials swept thousands of migrant workers out of Beijing – the very people who built the stadium, at least 10 of them paying with their lives. Police arrested hundreds of provincial petitioners who sought justice in the capital and sent at least 58 to labour camps for “reeducation”.

The sick were told that routine surgery was cancelled in every hospital and officials shut some psychiatric patients inside their wards.

It’s just China being China, yo.

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August 15, 2008

Racism In Spain Resides In The Brain

Filed under: Basketball, Olympics, Racism, Tennis — Tags: , , , , , , , — webadmin @ 7:16 pm


 

Beijing Olympics: Second Spanish team photographed making ’slit-eyed’ gesture – Telegraph

The photo was discovered on the official website of the Spanish Tennis Federation

The photo was discovered on the official website of the Spanish Tennis Federation

The latest photo to emerge shows Spanish women tennis players pulling the pose, apparently in anticipation of their Federation Cup match against China in April.

This coming after the flack over the Spanish Basketball Team’s similar gesture.

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Some of my best friends are Chinese



 

So what do you do when your ENTIRE national basketball team poses for a picture doing the asian “slant eyes” thing? as a joke? Obviously you fire back with the textbook racist’s response. From the Ball Don’t Lie Yahoo NBA Blog.

Spanish Basketball China Slant EyesVia RaptorBlog, Jose Calderon explains the thinking (if you can call it that) behind Team Spain’s controversial photo: “… one of our sponsors asked us to pose with a “wink” to our participation in Beijing, we made an oriental expression with our eyes. We thought it was something appropriate and that it would always be interpreted as somewhat loving. Never the less some of the European media did not see it this way. From here I would like to declare that we have a huge respect for the East and their people, some of my best friends in Toronto are from China and one of our Spanish National Team sponsors is the Chinese brand Li Ning. Anyone who would like to interpret this differently is absolutely confused.” Oh, wait, you guys were just winking? Well then, that settl— no, I’m still confused.

Spain may be having a banner year in sports, but it seems they’re having a banner decade in race relations. From their soccer coach calling Thierry Henry a “black shit” to Real Zaragoza fans making monkey chants at Samuel Eto’o to F1 driver Lewis Hamilton being taunted in a race in Spain by people in blackface. And let’s not forget the obligatory Confederate flag being flown at every La Liga match I see.

Why? probably because no one has made it a priority to address this kind of behavior. I know that FIFA hasn’t! Oh – they say they have, but they haven’t. The same problems exist all over Europe to varying degrees – primarily because they haven’t had an accute awakening event like we had in the civil rights movement. Even we aren’t completely free of blame:

The USA plays Spain on Saturday at 10:15am ET on NBC – set your Tivos.

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August 13, 2008

Bush: Terrorist Slapper or Ass Slapper?



 

Bush slaps Misty May assA cool article from my foreign affairs mancrush – Fareed Zakaria. He talks about what Bush got right, and surprisingly filled 4 web pages. Probably because he had to start with the littany of things he got wrong to begin a comparison:

Zakaria: What Bush Got Right | Newsweek Politics | Newsweek.com

A broad shift in America’s approach to the world is justified and overdue. Bush’s basic conception of a “global War on Terror,” to take but the most obvious example, has been poorly thought-through, badly implemented, and has produced many unintended costs that will linger for years if not decades. But blanket criticism of Bush misses an important reality. The administration that became the target of so much passion and anger—from Democrats, Republicans, independents, foreigners, Martians, everyone—is not quite the one in place today. The foreign policies that aroused the greatest anger and opposition were mostly pursued in Bush’s first term: the invasion of Iraq, the rejection of treaties, diplomacy and multilateralism. In the past few years, many of these policies have been modified, abandoned or reversed. This has happened without acknowledgment—which is partly what drives critics crazy—and it’s often been done surreptitiously. It doesn’t reflect a change of heart so much as an admission of failure; the old way simply wasn’t working. But for whatever reasons and through whichever path, the foreign policies in place now are more sensible, moderate and mainstream. In many cases the next president should follow rather than reverse them.

Consider as a symbol of this shift Bush’s appointment of the World Bank’s president. His first choice for the job was Paul Wolfowitz, an arch neoconservative with little background in economics. But by the time Wolfowitz was forced to resign and the post opened up again, Bush realized that he needed a less ideological choice, and he picked the highly qualified and respected Robert Zoellick. Where Dick Cheney was once the poster child for the administration, today policy is being run by Condoleezza Rice, Robert Gates, Stephen Hadley and Hank Paulson—all pragmatists. Change has not extended to all areas, and in many places it’s been too little, too late. But that there has been a shift to the center in many crucial areas of foreign policy is simply undeniable.

The most obvious case is Iraq. For many people—a clear majority of those polled—the decision to go to war is now seen as a mistake. But wherever one stands on that issue, it is overwhelmingly clear that the administration made a series of massive blunders in Iraq in 2003 and 2004. It went in with too few troops, dismantled Iraq’s Army, bureaucracy and state-owned factories, arrested tens of thousands of Iraqis, mistreated and tortured some of them, and used overwhelming military force against all perceived threats. The outcome? Chaos; an angry, dispossessed and armed Sunni community; a sullen and restless Shiite population; an insurgency; a jihadist terrorist movement, and spreading sectarian violence. In addition, foreign forces were destabilizing the country because both the invasion and the occupation were undertaken without first gaining support from neighboring Arab states or winning international legitimacy. The result was a perfect storm in international affairs, a failure that kept getting worse.

he goes on to explain how Bush moderated on Iraq by getting rid of Rummy and hiring someone who could think, engaged China, North Korea and Iran and the Israeli/Palestinian conflct in contrast to his earlier hardline stance, and even bettered Clinton by bettering our relationship with India. A good read, especially the part about how it relates to the next administration:

All this is not meant as a defense of George W. Bush. The administration made monumental errors in its first few years, ones that have cost the United States enormously. The shift in impressions about America’s intentions across important sections of the globe, the sense in much of the Islamic world that America is anti-Muslim, the vast and counterproductive apparatus of homeland security—visa restrictions, arrests and interrogations—are lasting legacies of the Bush administration. Its dysfunction and incompetence have left a trail of misery in countries like Iraq and Lebanon, which have been destabilized for decades. The embrace of torture and other extralegal methods has violated America’s noblest traditions and provided little in return.

And then there is the administration’s record outside of foreign policy. Bush 43 has surely been the most fiscally irresponsible president in American history, taking surpluses that equaled 2.5 percent of GDP and turning them into deficits that are 3 percent. This is a $4 trillion hit on the country’s balance sheet. On the central issue of energy policy—the greatest economic challenge and opportunity of our times—Bush has been utterly obstructionist, recycling the self-serving arguments of industry lobbyists. On the whole, Bush’s record remains one of failure and missed opportunities.

So why offer this corrective? Because we cannot go back to 2001. The next president will inherit the world as it is in 2009. He will have to examine the Bush administration’s policies as they stand in January 2009—not as they were in 2001 or 2002 or 2003—and decide how to accept, modify and alter them. There was a U.S. president who came into office convinced that everything his predecessor had done was feckless, stupid, ill-informed and venal. He rejected and tried to reverse everything that he could, almost as an article of faith. Before he had even examined the policies carefully, he knew that they had to be changed. The base of his party was delighted by his clarity and fighting spirit.

That president, of course, was George W. Bush. His decision to blindly repudiate anything associated with Bill Clinton is what got us into this mess in the first place. Let’s hope that the next president, no matter how much he despises Bush, will take a careful look at his administration’s policies, America’s interests, and the world beyond and do the right thing for the country and its future.

Bush Misty Mayespecially important considering that Putin looks like he continues to flex his neo-communist muscles. McCain has jumped all over this like a pig in slop (3am phone call slop), Obama is on vacation, and Bush apparently is a bit late to the party on his Russia strategy – trying to duck interviews from Bob Costas before his talking points were refined. And slapping volleyball players
Bush slaps Misty May ass

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August 10, 2008

Chinese Photoshop

Filed under: Olympics — Tags: , , , , — webadmin @ 10:16 pm


 

Hahaha – AWESOME – I saw in the Yahoo Olympics blog Fourth-Place Medal that apparently some Opening Ceremony fireworks were faked! What?!? Noooo!! The hell you say …

If you watched the Opening Ceremony on Friday night, chances are you said something like, “no way that’s possible” at least once. It turns out you were right.

London’s Telegraph newspaper reports that some of the fireworks which appeared over Beijing during the television broadcast of the Olympic Opening Ceremony were actually computer generated. But — hold on — it’s not necessarily as bad as you think.

The faked fireworks were actually set-off at the stadium, but because of potential dangers in filming the display live from a helicopter, viewers at home were shown a pre-recorded, computer-generated shot. It sounds dishonest, but I’m not sure it’s such a terrible thing.

This is a country that has been planning for 6 years to “fake” it’s image for the world. They don’t want you to think of them as the Darfur supporting, Tibet and Taiwan opressors that President Bush apparently likes to appease. They want you to think “Hey – even though they eat chocolate covered scorpions and shit into holes in the ground, they’re not all that bad.”

Faking will just be par for the course for these 17 Olympic days.

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