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Still, it's hardly reasonable to take that hatred out on people who weren't even born at the time, surely?
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# ? Mar 1, 2014 15:16 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:42 |
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simplefish posted:Still, it's hardly reasonable to take that hatred out on people who weren't even born at the time, surely? Kids in China and even more in Korea are taught to hate the gently caress out of the Japanese before they learn any of the reasons why. Reasonable don't enter into it.
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# ? Mar 1, 2014 15:28 |
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VideoTapir posted:Kids in China and even more in Korea are taught to hate the gently caress out of the Japanese before they learn any of the reasons why. Reasonable don't enter into it. During one of my history classes last year we were talking about border conflicts and how governments have often used these kinds of squabbles as smokescreens to make political hay. The students were pretty reasonable about it right up to the point that one kid inevitably asked what I thought of those loving rocks China and Japan are always dick-waving over these days. I told them that the U.S. frankly wishes both involved parties would just shut the hell up, but that the Chinese claim to the islands would be stronger if the government had, you know, cared at all about them prior to about 40 years ago, and that anyway the idea of asserting modern borders based on hazy historical documents and traditions is itself just a smokescreen for expansion ("Tibet is part of China because, uh, we read that some Chinese guys centuries ago had read that it is! Yay!"). Somehow this was interpreted as me resoundingly supporting the Chinese waving dick and I actually got a standing ovation. This semester we'll be tackling manifest destiny and westward expansion in the U.S. leading up to the Civil War. The kids have all been really sympathetic to Native Americans so far. Curious if that will remain constant when some uncomfortable parallels emerge.
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# ? Mar 1, 2014 18:01 |
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blinkyzero posted:This semester we'll be tackling manifest destiny and westward expansion in the U.S. leading up to the Civil War. The kids have all been really sympathetic to Native Americans so far. Curious if that will remain constant when some uncomfortable parallels emerge. They won't "get" it, don't worry.
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# ? Mar 1, 2014 18:20 |
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systran posted:Every time I fly my wife has a suitcase full of fish oil, cigarettes, ginseng, and other voodoo magic that we have to give to Chinese relatives. Also this is the route I had to take: Wtf you are from GAINESVILLE? Where'd you go to school? I was eastside '96. You?
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# ? Mar 1, 2014 19:22 |
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My first coworker in China was also from Gainesville. He used to be a prostitute in Tokyo. What up, Che.
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# ? Mar 1, 2014 19:25 |
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Drunkposting philosophy: please ignore.
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# ? Mar 1, 2014 19:31 |
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I live in Gainesville but I grew up in Jacksonville. I went to UF and got a job here. Gainesville is def. better than Jacksonville
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 00:00 |
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China hating Japan, sounds like sour grapes to me. Meanwhile, Japan loves Chinese people because they spend so much money when they visit. Spring Airlines is increasing it's Shanghai - Takamatsu flights. As much as the governments dickwag, anyone born in Japan after the war doesn't give a poo poo.
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 00:31 |
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peanut posted:Meanwhile, Japan loves Chinese people because they spend so much money when they visit. But what about all the poo poo they leave on the street?
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 00:57 |
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Wonton said tourist visas are decided by hukou (family registration?) so Henan scrubs aren't coming anyway. VVV Tourist visas for Chinese visiting Japan. Rural citizens gotta come on group tours but hukou from major cities can get general tourist visas (they're less likely to overstay and work illegally) peanut fucked around with this message at 12:40 on Mar 2, 2014 |
# ? Mar 2, 2014 10:16 |
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peanut posted:Wonton said tourist visas are decided by hukou (family registration?) so Henan scrubs aren't coming anyway. What about Henan-bound Chinese? What tourist visa are you talking about?
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 12:06 |
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VideoTapir posted:But what about all the poo poo they leave on the street?
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 12:07 |
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Can US citizens apply for a Chinese tourist visa by mail? Or do you need to apply in person? (There is no consulate close to me)
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 20:57 |
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I used mychinesevisa.com You can do it through mail is the short answer, but they will charge you some fees for doing so. Still better than going there yourself!
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 21:18 |
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systran posted:I used mychinesevisa.com Oh that's good, I was thinking I might have to drive down to Houston to get it.
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 23:04 |
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Look up "visa expedite service." I've used A Briggs before. Strict countries require hand delivery of application but don't care if someone does it on your behalf.
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# ? Mar 2, 2014 23:25 |
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GregNorc posted:Can US citizens apply for a Chinese tourist visa by mail? Or do you need to apply in person? (There is no consulate close to me) Check the OP. Short answer is yes. Although by mail will probably end up being fedex.
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# ? Mar 3, 2014 01:29 |
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peanut posted:Look up "visa expedite service." I've used A Briggs before. Strict countries require hand delivery of application but don't care if someone does it on your behalf. We've used A. Briggs before too. They're good and fast.
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# ? Mar 3, 2014 09:29 |
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So I've been living in Xi'an for a couple of years now, on and off. And it basically feels "home-ish". But I'm stuck on my working-visa, tied to a company. If I marry my girlfriend, I can get a spousal visa/family reunion visa, which will give me certainty for a year, maybe 2 at a time. However, that's not a working permit. What I'm asking, is basically, what are a foreigners long term options in China? Another foreigner friend told me that visas are also tied to age, so anybody over 60/61 can be automatically denied. In Hong Kong, you can gain Permanent Residency (PR) after 7 years? But on the mainland, I only hear rumours of a mythical PR status that's been granted to about 1,000 people in the last 20 years. I read one person's account of gaining PR, and it seemed to be a mixture of serious corporate guanxi and donations of hundreds of thousands of dollars to the local city in medical equipment. I'm also getting a bit sick of the "What's your ID number?", "Oh, you don't have one. Well then, we can't sell you an apartment, train tickets for your girlfriend, use online financial services", etc. etc. I realise asking for the right to vote is futile, but the possibility of the right to live here, without worrying about being kicked out on somebody else's whim would make me feel a lot better. Maybe if I owned a Wholly Owned Foreign Entity, I could employ myself + gain work permit. But that's dependant on ten's of thousands of investment, plus ongoing expenses and to be honest, no real certainty that the rules won't change later. I read about foreigners who have stayed here for 10 years, but were caught working illegally, and were kicked out within weeks. I just don't see the situation improving either. Last year's visa changes hinted at 5 year visas for professionals, but nothing came out of it. Instead, the unofficial visa industry has been shutdown, and chatter on websites about obtaining Chinese visas has been reduced to almost nothing compared to two years ago. The GFW continually improves, while it seems the government is decreasingly interested in any sources of outside opinions. At this point, the "we don't want long term foreign immigrants" subtext, isn't really a subtext. I'm left wondering, should I just take the hint, and make plans to gently caress off? Should I be coldly applying a cost/benefit calculation to the length of time I live here, knowing that I can never stay?
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 03:17 |
Trammel posted:At this point, the "we don't want long term foreign immigrants" subtext, isn't really a subtext. I'm left wondering, should I just take the hint, and make plans to gently caress off? Should I be coldly applying a cost/benefit calculation to the length of time I live here, knowing that I can never stay? I think this will change within the next decade or so. Once China sees its GDP start to decrease and social expenditures become a larger and larger part of government spending due to their aging population they are going to scramble to try and fix this, and an easy way to stop some of the bleeding is to relax immigration laws and get some productivity and tax revenue from foreign workers. It would make more sense if they started significantly preparing for the problem now, but well it's China and all. Just look at Japan if you want to see what's going to happen over the next few decades in China. Anyway my fingers are crossed but for now foreigners are hosed in this department.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 03:52 |
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Arakan posted:I think this will change within the next decade or so. Once China sees its GDP start to decrease and social expenditures become a larger and larger part of government spending due to their aging population they are going to scramble to try and fix this, and an easy way to stop some of the bleeding is to relax immigration laws and get some productivity and tax revenue from foreign workers. I dunno. I get what you mean, and for many countries it would make sense, but China is no stranger to its own brand of exceptionalism and I suspect the Party will continue to make it clear that foreigners are not welcome in the PRC for the long haul. That said, who knows what the next few decades will bring? The Party's power and footing isn't absolute or certain. I can say that right now it's a bitch to get any kind of long-term living arrangement in this country. My cousin was of counsel with a firm in Shanghai for many years and he didn't even bother going for the resident D visa when it was created. The pols he talked to about it said he had pretty much zero chance of securing one, despite being married to a Chinese citizen and having a Chinese child. Apparently it is indeed pretty much the letter of the law that you need to have sunk an extraordinary amount of money into the country to pull that off.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 05:10 |
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My coworker has permanent residency. He has been in China for 15 years and has a wife and child. He also owns several properties and is invested in a lot of things, which makes me wonder why he still teaches ESL. He came to China when it was difficult to get teachers and he is on an old salary package. He allegedly makes 40,000+ a month to teach ESL, though I don't have the grapes to ask him.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 06:32 |
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Trammel posted:So I've been living in Xi'an for a couple of years now, on and off. And it basically feels "home-ish". Pro-PRC would tell you to set up a "business" and then be self-employed. Though that may not be doable, or a desire for everyone. Even he is stuck renewing his visa every 2-5 years and could kicked out with little notice. The fact is, at this time China has enough people to deal with and doesn't seem to have the desire to deal with foreigners who want to come in and take their jobs/money/women/opportunities whatever. If you do decide to marry this girl, make sure she's prepared for the possibility of leaving China, whether that be to your home (Aus) or another country altogether. You can always wait it out in hopes that things will change, but it could be a while.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 14:44 |
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My wife was watching this show the other day where the contestants beg ten CEOs to give them jobs. They had a few episodes with all foreigners. It was pretty fun to watch, especially that "John" white guy (one of the CEOs) that speaks loving perfect Mandarin. They had an Egyptian lady that spoke excellent Mandarin, English, and fluent Arabic, and they only offered her a job that started at 5,000 RMB/month. There was a Russian guy whose Mandarin was good but he said a bunch of dumb poo poo. It was pretty fun to watch, but it still played into the like... foreigners as sideshow/gawk at them thing.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 15:03 |
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SB35 posted:If you do decide to marry this girl, make sure she's prepared for the possibility of leaving China, whether that be to your home (Aus) or another country altogether. You can always wait it out in hopes that things will change, but it could be a while. I'm gonna have to side with SB and Blinky on this. You can cross your fingers but dont get your hopes up. Myself and my colleagues are seeing a lot of changes in the Hospitality industry here. Just a few years ago, pretty much all of the General Managers were foreigners because Hospitality was (and still is) a relatively new industry in China. Many high level positions were filled by an experienced foreign person. A local Chinese person simply didn't have the know how to open a 5 star hotel let alone run it properly. Now that China is learning more and becoming more familiar with the industry, there are less foreign GMs and Directors. The ones that are already in place are being set up to be replaced by local Chinese. While a majority of 5 star hotels are still run by foreign GMs, the tide is shifting to local Chinese. It seems like once China gets what it needs from you, you're no longer needed and bye bye!
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 15:20 |
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systran posted:My wife was watching this show the other day where the contestants beg ten CEOs to give them jobs. They had a few episodes with all foreigners. It was pretty fun to watch, especially that "John" white guy (one of the CEOs) that speaks loving perfect Mandarin. This sounds really interesting, do you have a name or links to youtube/youku? \/\/ Awesome, thanks LimburgLimbo fucked around with this message at 15:58 on Mar 6, 2014 |
# ? Mar 6, 2014 15:27 |
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Found it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ASBBIDMS0s I can't get youku to load right now, but here is the title if you want to search it there: 非你莫属 20130430 美国帅哥大秀纹身 混血女生迷惑众人 angel opportunity fucked around with this message at 15:37 on Mar 6, 2014 |
# ? Mar 6, 2014 15:32 |
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Thank You for joining the "being a minority club!"Trammel posted:So I've been living in Xi'an for a couple of years now, on and off. And it basically feels "home-ish". You are correct, a spousal visa is really not a working permit. I know people who got married and just worked on the side with their spousal visa. The situation was kind of weird and it got even more strange when they "divorced". Legally they were still married but theoretically the spouse can just call the cops on you Personally, I rather go legal and be tied to a job instead of being tied to your spouse. But then, a noose is still a nooose regardless of fabric. quote:In Hong Kong, you can gain Permanent Residency (PR) after 7 years? But on the mainland, I only hear rumours of a mythical PR status that's been granted to about 1,000 people in the last 20 years. I read one person's account of gaining PR, and it seemed to be a mixture of serious corporate guanxi and donations of hundreds of thousands of dollars to the local city in medical equipment. Do you have to spend loads of money? Maybe. Going through the obscure bureaucratic process is weird. China being China, there are actually lots of extra legal turned legal means to do things. More of a who you know basis :shrugs: It was in the news the other day that a few government officials end up with 4 hukous. Legally. Yeah in Hong Kong you can PR after 7 years in Hong Kong. That's 7 years, each year spending 10.5 months of time in the city. That's just residency to roam and not get deported in Hong Kong. If you want Chinese Nationality you can renounce your old Nationality and get a Chinese passport and get a "go back to your village card ". Which means you can go to Tibet freely (and use the fast travel gates). If you have common wealth citizenship, most of the countries allow you to get back your citizenship immediately. And get 2 passports. Your reasons can be "yeah, I'm doing this process for Chinese residency wink wink nudge nudge". America? Tough break, NO ONE SAYS NO TO UNCLE SAM I know a Hong Kong goon is going through this process. He's doesn't brag like Pro PRC and he's actually getting residency. Unlike Pro PRC quote:I'm also getting a bit sick of the "What's your ID number?", "Oh, you don't have one. Well then, we can't sell you an apartment, train tickets for your girlfriend, use online financial services", etc. etc. I realise asking for the right to vote is futile, but the possibility of the right to live here, without worrying about being kicked out on somebody else's whim would make me feel a lot better. Guess what? Being Hong Kong Chinese is only slightly better! I can't book train tickets, I can't stay at certain hotels. And North of Guangdong no one really knows what the gently caress to do with my ID card. Granted, I probably can buy an apartment and I won't get deported, so my situation is better. Only slightly. I don't think I'm limited by Oh and I can't join the army/police. Which is ok. But I can't do business with State owned Businesses concerning "sensitive" industries. So Aerospace, Defense, Pharmaceutical, etc... Can't do those trade contracts. But maybe if the money is good enough people will hook me up and do a split partnership with some local party boss. Those fuckers. quote:Maybe if I owned a Wholly Owned Foreign Entity, I could employ myself + gain work permit. But that's dependant on ten's of thousands of investment, plus ongoing expenses and to be honest, no real certainty that the rules won't change later. From my experience, WOFE's are getting rarer and rarer because the system is getting sick of giving all these weird tax breaks and loopholes. So I don't know about going down the WOFE route. quote:I read about foreigners who have stayed here for 10 years, but were caught working illegally, and were kicked out within weeks. That's not just China though. Only America allows illegals to roam freely. Heck most countries here in East Asia just don't have much of an immigration policy period. I applaud you and am happy that you are setting up China as your home but the country is just not set up for immigrants. Countries here are so poor and the statistics so skewed that don't need outsiders. Nor had they any experience dealing with outsiders. And heck, most people can't stand being in China for too long. Locals included. The only places I can think of with a visible plan for immigration are Taiwan (please know our plight), Singapore, Hong Kong. quote:I just don't see the situation improving either. I see it as a transition process. Or that companies and management should be the ones dealing with the bureaucracy and not the individual. If you have the desirable skill sets, then companies and people will do whatever they can to make you happy. quote:At this point, the "we don't want long term foreign immigrants" subtext, isn't really a subtext. I'm left wondering, should I just take the hint, and make plans to gently caress off? Should I be coldly applying a cost/benefit calculation to the length of time I live here, knowing that I can never stay? Even places like Australia and US have the same mentality. We like immigrants as long as they are useful. And allowing in refugees for Humanitarian reasons is just a token gesture for all the problems we made in the loving past. Even America the land of opportunity allows opportunity for a certain demographic. Systemic institutional racism and classism always exists. The odds and cards are stacked against you. You just find out about this time because you are born on the short end of the stick. All immigrants in the world know this rule. And they can feel it. If you don't know the rules of the local game then you just get hosed. Go to the cops? You better get those language skills right or else you will be the suspect. Making local friends? You better know the local culture because if you don't celebrate our holidays you are disrespectful. Thank You for joining the "being a minority club!" Arakan posted:I think this will change within the next decade or so. Once China sees its GDP start to decrease and social expenditures become a larger and larger part of government spending due to their aging population they are going to scramble to try and fix this, and an easy way to stop some of the bleeding is to relax immigration laws and get some productivity and tax revenue from foreign workers. I think that's being too ideal. We have enough poor people in Henan/Hunan/Sichuan to fill the shoes. The country went through even more drastic economic changes and it still didn't rely on immigration. There is still a major wealth gap and infrastructure gap. Plus the pollution kills old people in no time so don't worry too much about medical care quote:It would make more sense if they started significantly preparing for the problem now, but well it's China and all. Just look at Japan if you want to see what's going to happen over the next few decades in China. Anyway my fingers are crossed but for now foreigners are hosed in this department. There are Many Problems in China. With the foresight you mentioned half of Those Problems won't even be there in the first place. Japanese immigration policy is a joke. They moved a whole bunch of brazillian Japanese to the factories but there were major culture clashes because Japan didnt and doesn't know how to deal with integration. "Because they had the blood of yamato they must understand!!!" Nowadays the government is paying people to move back to Brazil
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 15:55 |
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If I want to have my girlfriend come over from china to visit Canada, say, for a month or so, what stands in her way from leaving the country? I'm aware of the Canadian Visa/Tourism/Visiting requirements, but have no idea what a Chinese citizen faces for leaving the country, even temporarily.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 16:25 |
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Ceciltron posted:If I want to have my girlfriend come over from china to visit Canada, say, for a month or so, what stands in her way from leaving the country? I'm aware of the Canadian Visa/Tourism/Visiting requirements, but have no idea what a Chinese citizen faces for leaving the country, even temporarily. Why would China care if she went to Canada for a month? Is she a party official?
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 16:40 |
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Ceciltron posted:If I want to have my girlfriend come over from china to visit Canada, say, for a month or so, what stands in her way from leaving the country? I'm aware of the Canadian Visa/Tourism/Visiting requirements, but have no idea what a Chinese citizen faces for leaving the country, even temporarily. China doesn't care, as long as she already has her passport she's fine. Canada cares because they want to make sure she won't just come and stay illegally. Jump through Canada's hoops and you're good.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 16:48 |
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Ceciltron posted:If I want to have my girlfriend come over from china to visit Canada, say, for a month or so, what stands in her way from leaving the country? I'm aware of the Canadian Visa/Tourism/Visiting requirements, but have no idea what a Chinese citizen faces for leaving the country, even temporarily. You should ask your immigration lawyer If she's not in the army or foreign service then there are no restrictions. It's not the 1970's anymore...
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 16:52 |
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SB35 posted:China doesn't care, as long as she already has her passport she's fine. Canada cares because they want to make sure she won't just come and stay illegally. Jump through Canada's hoops and you're good. caberham posted:If she's not in the army or foreign service then there are no restrictions. It's not the 1970's anymore... And that was my question answered. Thanks guys!
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 17:14 |
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Some of the coolest people I've ever known were Brazilians in Japan. They introduced me to feijoada, which is the greatest gift you can give someone.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 17:31 |
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AfroNinja posted:I'm gonna have to side with SB and Blinky on this. You can cross your fingers but dont get your hopes up. Myself and my colleagues are seeing a lot of changes in the Hospitality industry here. Just a few years ago, pretty much all of the General Managers were foreigners because Hospitality was (and still is) a relatively new industry in China. Many high level positions were filled by an experienced foreign person. A local Chinese person simply didn't have the know how to open a 5 star hotel let alone run it properly. Now that China is learning more and becoming more familiar with the industry, there are less foreign GMs and Directors. The ones that are already in place are being set up to be replaced by local Chinese. While a majority of 5 star hotels are still run by foreign GMs, the tide is shifting to local Chinese. Since last year, almost a quarter of my students have been kids whose parents run or finance big, fancy hotels in the Shanghai metropolitan area and Yuyao/Hangzhou/Ningbo, and these parents have agreed to put the kids through international schooling solely so they can come back and work as management. We had dinner with one of these students and his mother once (owns and operates a new five-star hotel in the north end of the city), and she pretty much told me exactly what you just said: that foreigners used to be essential in her business, but the Chinese are rapidly replacing them, having absorbed all of their knowledge and experience. caberham posted:Even places like Australia and US have the same mentality. We like immigrants as long as they are useful. And allowing in refugees for Humanitarian reasons is just a token gesture for all the problems we made in the loving past. Even America the land of opportunity allows opportunity for a certain demographic. There's a lot of interesting stuff in this post, as there usually is in caberham I really don't know much about immigration history in China during the late Qing or the modern era. Anyone have any good books on this?
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 17:37 |
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Ceciltron posted:If I want to have my girlfriend come over from china to visit Canada, say, for a month or so, what stands in her way from leaving the country? I'm aware of the Canadian Visa/Tourism/Visiting requirements, but have no idea what a Chinese citizen faces for leaving the country, even temporarily. Just to apply for a visa as a tourist . But heads up for you, remind her not let Canadian immigration knows she's gonna visit boyfriend there otherwise her application would probably be rejected. Coz every young Chinese girl who wanna visit western countries, those immigration office will assume they're gonna be prostitutes, getting pregnant or seeking some medical help there first until they prove they're not.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 17:44 |
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This reminds me of a student we had in Beijing who kept getting turned down for his student visa. Three interviews, three fails. His English was fine, but the interviewers kept asking him, "What do you think of the U.S.?" and, eager to please, he'd blurt out "I love America! I want to go there and stay there forever because it is best country!" Panicking, he asked me for advice. I told him to be apathetic or even critical of the U.S. if they asked a question like that. He didn't believe me, but he agreed to try it out of desperation. The fourth interview, they did throw pretty much the same thing at him, and he went with "It has many problems and does not treat foreigners well, also I would like to study there but come back to China very soon." Bam, instant visa.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 17:53 |
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Quick ways for Chinese to get western countries visas especially for UK and USA : 1. Hey, I/my family have many properties in China, I don't give a drat to those so called welfare I would never understand. 2. What the hell is the US of A ?! Not interested. I'm gonna definitely go back to my lovely harmonious communist home country soon after visiting /studying.
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# ? Mar 6, 2014 18:37 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:42 |
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Ceciltron, your girlfriend needs to eat a bag of Old Dutch Ketchup chips kwantingus posted:Just to apply for a visa as a tourist . But heads up for you, remind her not let Canadian immigration knows she's gonna visit boyfriend there otherwise her application would probably be rejected. Coz every young Chinese girl who wanna visit western countries, those immigration office will assume they're gonna be prostitutes, getting pregnant or seeking some medical help there first until they prove they're not. Canada is not as notorious as the US. Yes we have our restrictions but we are a lot more welcoming to normal people. As long as your girlfriend as a job back home in China and a family back home, you should be golden. Don't need to throw a charade in front of some immigration officer at the embassy. Maybe it's true in America But as we like to say "NOT IN CANADA" Yes, you do have to apply for a visa. No, we don't really give a poo poo about "them illegals". People are more angry at mainlanders because they have too much money "loving ehhhhh, those fake communists are driving up our housing prices! Why can't they just take up some good hard work like the Eastern Europeans trying to make an honest living??" Multiculturalism is officially mandated into government policy and drilled into your heads since we are 7. No one throws a stinker if the National Anthem is sung in another language (just don't be off key). Bilingualism French is also drilled into our heads. The country has one of the highest rates of immigration in the world and dare I say, nowadays immigration is celebrated because who the heck wants to live in the prairies. Or Manitoba. Yeah, First Nations relations are still really icy and the country is not a land of frozen roses. We actually have a much better foreign policy. We don't bomb people or use drone strikes. We don't have hungry multinational corporations starting proxy wars and coups. Our Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson created the idea of UN peace keepers. Maybe the Arab world hates us because Israeli spies and other intelligence agencies in the world use Canadian passports. Oh and First Nations rightfully hate us as well because they are still considered as Aliens under the Alien Act of Canada. Well, now they get to periodically sue the government for compensation. I'm the biggest self proclaimed America boo in SomethingAwful East Asia but I'm pretty proud that I grew up in Canada. Out of all the different stains of poo poo I see in the world, Canada is paradise. Vancouver and Montreal are great cities. That's it. Toronto can just play baseball because the Leafs suck. caberham fucked around with this message at 18:52 on Mar 6, 2014 |
# ? Mar 6, 2014 18:44 |