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Fojar38 posted:i did reply Oh, I missed it. Your post is so small. . . like a cigarette lighter.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 00:21 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:15 |
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It's 730am on a Saturday and I'm the group of seven employees who are forced to go outside carrying signs and chanting slogans in unison over a loud speaker because the boss thinks this is a super great way to get more business.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 00:54 |
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Haier posted:It's 730am on a Saturday and I'm the group of seven employees who are forced to go outside carrying signs and chanting slogans in unison over a loud speaker because the boss thinks this is a super great way to get more business. "DIaoyou Islands belong to China" "gently caress Japan" "50% off, today only"
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 01:02 |
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I've noticed that the only two groups of people here passing out flyers (coincidentally the only two groups who also do the signs, banners, and loudspeaker shouting) are real estate and gyms. I've been handed at least 20 flyers in my neighborhood for 20 different gyms. They all say "hallo" and give me one because they know foreigners might also be customers. I have never once seen a gym here, despite being harassed to sign up for one every single day I go outside. It is my opinion that gyms are the new bakeries. The only difference is the suckers who pay for the one year discount won't get their money back when the gym disappears in a month.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 04:27 |
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http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-37452287quote:Two skeletons have been discovered in a London graveyard which could change our view of the history of Europe and Asia. Noooooooooo. Were the Romans really a Chinese dynasty we didn't know about?
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 04:56 |
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The article is incorrect. The isotopes in the teeth indicate East Asia or North Africa. The shape of the bones suggests East Asian rather than African. It is possible to determine East Asian through bones if you have the right ones, but "ethnically Chinese" is bullshit, you can't tell that from the available data. North Africans living in London would be no big deal. It is a very cool find though. We know Romans went to China but this would be the first evidence of any East Asian people making it to the empire. Possibly slaves, resold repeatedly along the trade routes. That'd be the easiest but we are pretty sure Indians lived in the Roman Empire and Roman trade regularly went all the way to China so East Asians could've come too.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 05:06 |
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Haier posted:I have never once seen a gym here, despite being harassed to sign up for one every single day I go outside. It is my opinion that gyms are the new bakeries. The only difference is the suckers who pay for the one year discount won't get their money back when the gym disappears in a month. Huh did you post stories about chinese people not wanting to work up a (unhealthy sweat) at the gym or was that a different goon. Also all I can see all those gym belong to the same dude.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 05:19 |
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I see gyms around. There do seem to be vastly more people in spandex handing out flyers than actual gyms though.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 05:24 |
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max4me posted:Huh did you post stories about chinese people not wanting to work up a (unhealthy sweat) at the gym or was that a different goon. I was actually writing a post about how my boss's TCM guru man is living in the spare office where I was when the forums went down. Whenever I write something long I usually copy/paste just in case my internet dies or some problem happens (a habit I picked up ages ago when pages wouldn't save data if you had to hit the Back button). I am just posting the part where he's tried to explain TCM theory to me: TCM believes that human beings, unlike all other living organisms on this dumb gay Earth, do not have a functioning level of homeostasis to keep the body alive. Because of this we are constantly at war with the elements and temperatures around us and we have absolutely no way to fight back. There must be some sort of balance between all of this, and we are entirely responsible for it. That is why hot water is good for healthy, because the body cannot heat up cool or cold water and it will drastically plummet our core temperature and we'll get sick. This is why when it's 30C outside and the wind is 5C cooler, you will absolutely get influenza or a "cold." Same goes for going in and out of an air conditioned room. This is also why it's really bad for healthy to go out when it's raining. Every possible change in the body's position or temperature or moisture level is an attack that leaves the body open to illness, or causes an illness. It's amazing that people got anything done at all before. Sweating is very bad for healthy. It signifies illness, or at least the fact that you are sweating means you are now very open to illness. Sweating while sick is good because the bad things are removed, but sweating while fine is the health equivalent of giving your credit card to a known criminal and dropping him off at the shopping mall. You will sweat out your health, basically. Cardio is bad for the lungs and heart because some out of shape goon felt the burn and the burn meant BAD. Meanwhile, stuff like cupping and drinking near-boiling temperature herb water is good for circulation because the body freaks out and doesn't know how to respond to obvious injury. Because our bodies have no proper way to maintain homeostatis, it is up to us and the TCM wizards to keep round-the-clock awareness on the state of our health. We can help by acupuncture, cupping, slapping and hitting, getting warmed by moxibustion, and eating foods that fall on some side of the yin and yang charts when someone tells us we are too yin or too yang. Things like accepting that there are individual body types and standards of health is not really important. It goes on, but now I really see how much of this is ingrained so hard into the all of people's regular thoughts on health and activities. It's too bad. Take all of that and multiply it by 1000 when a woman is pregnant. She no longer has a life of her own and is free to do things on her own. She is a glass vessel held together by Scotch tape and and chewing gum and the slightest breaking of TCM rules and regulations means that the baby will die, or she'll die too. Everything from how she eats, to the TV shows she watches (or cannot watch), it's all one heart beat too fast and the baby is dead as poo poo or coming out disabled (don't worry, acupuncture will fix his Down's).
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 05:28 |
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lolling at that article two skeletons that might be from east asia turning up in roman london is really interesting but the article can't help itself "this changes everything about the history of europe and asia!!!!!"
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 05:50 |
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quote:cupping, slapping and hitting, getting warmed by moxibustion To be fair, cupping, slapping and hitting also get me warm when I moxibate and I think it's a good thing.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 06:10 |
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I'm the uncle with the exposed belly and the cigarette in the corner of his mouth, doing 88 reps with a 1 # dumbbell.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 06:20 |
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I'm the grandparent who has decided that right now is the perfect time to let my two year old grandkid very slow walk up (and down) all 50 steps on either side of the foot bridge, clogging the busy pedestrian traffic without fucks given.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 06:47 |
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Fojar38 posted:lolling at that article Here's an article with details that isn't stupid. http://www.caitlingreen.org/2016/09/east-asian-people-roman-london.html
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 07:38 |
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https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/sep/24/where-will-the-out-of-control-chinese-space-station-land-tiangong-1 so does anyone really believe they don't know where the chinese space station is rather than the chinese just aren't telling people?
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 09:03 |
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Jose posted:https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/sep/24/where-will-the-out-of-control-chinese-space-station-land-tiangong-1 According to most projections the majority of it will burn up in the atmosphere regardless and what does return to earth is not a statistically significant threat. Don't let that get in the way of a shittily written popsci article though.
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 09:48 |
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Fojar38 posted:lolling at that article Chinese talking head #1: "London is a historical part of China, we have a history there that dates back to the second century!" Chinese talking head #2: "You don't need to protest, the locals have already given themselves to us on the off chance we actually do something for them. . . . Both: HAHAHHAHAHA
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 13:48 |
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http://www.marketwatch.com/story/vancouvers-new-tax-slows-foreign-property-buying-to-a-trickle-2016-09-22quote:Foreign purchases of homes in Canada’s west-coast city of Vancouver, British Columbia, plunged after a new property tax for foreign buyers took effect at the start of last month, according to new data released Thursday by the province of British Columbia. Where will they go next if they can't afford Van City anymore? Toronto?
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 15:49 |
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Jose posted:https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/sep/24/where-will-the-out-of-control-chinese-space-station-land-tiangong-1
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 16:21 |
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This tcm talk reminds me of that employer who said drinking water is bad and the employee who believed him Jesus Christ how are these people still alive Are western style hospitals something people go to in China? Do people actually get beta blockers or just some tcm root when they have high blood pressure?
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# ? Sep 24, 2016 23:32 |
They go to a normal doctor and get prescribed some beta blockers, and then go to a TCM doctor and get a bunch of random poo poo (half the time with crushed up pills in it, occasionally it's herbal remedies that contain natural compounds that have the same biological effect), and then if they die from an overdose it's the fault of the western medicine and anything else means they're kept alive by the TCM.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 01:41 |
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Haier posted:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/vancouvers-new-tax-slows-foreign-property-buying-to-a-trickle-2016-09-22 Maybe we can convince them Winnipeg is the new hotness. That would be great. Or Calgary. I bet that would work. Modern city, lots of millionaires, fairly mild canadian winters. Alberta could use more international exposure.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 02:11 |
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hailthefish posted:They go to a normal doctor and get prescribed some beta blockers, and then go to a TCM doctor and get a bunch of random poo poo (half the time with crushed up pills in it, occasionally it's herbal remedies that contain natural compounds that have the same biological effect), and then if they die from an overdose it's the fault of the western medicine and anything else means they're kept alive by the TCM. You forgot the part where the doctor in the normal hospital also prescribes a bunch of random poo poo to try and cover his bases so the patient doesn't come back. At least 1/3 of the 800 pills he gives the granny with the high blood pressure have to be antibiotics.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 02:20 |
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Haier posted:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/vancouvers-new-tax-slows-foreign-property-buying-to-a-trickle-2016-09-22 no one mention maine, plz
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 02:50 |
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The Great Autismo! posted:no one mention maine, plz Think of all the great selfies they could get with the fall foliage!
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 02:53 |
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Facebook Aunt posted:Think of all the great selfies they could get with the fall foliage! my wife and i were in freeport in august at the outlets and its usually a bit busy but doable, and we went to Tommy Hilfiger and there were these two kids with their parents that were borderline screaming in mandarin while they were waiting in line in front of me and i told them in chinese "you shoudln't talk so loudly, look around, its a quiet place here" and the cashier thanked me after they left lol
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 03:03 |
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The Great Autismo! posted:my wife and i were in freeport in august at the outlets and its usually a bit busy but doable, and we went to Tommy Hilfiger and there were these two kids with their parents that were borderline screaming in mandarin while they were waiting in line in front of me and i told them in chinese "you shoudln't talk so loudly, look around, its a quiet place here" and the cashier thanked me after they left lol I think Western places that get Chinese tourists should hire white people that speak Mandarin to shame and Face LOSS them into behaving by the local standards. It would rule.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 03:27 |
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The Great Autismo! posted:my wife and i were in freeport in august at the outlets and its usually a bit busy but doable, and we went to Tommy Hilfiger and there were these two kids with their parents that were borderline screaming in mandarin while they were waiting in line in front of me and i told them in chinese "you shoudln't talk so loudly, look around, its a quiet place here" and the cashier thanked me after they left lol I am literally surprised that the kids didn't point at you and say to their parents, "that foreigner is speaking Mandarin". I've had Chinese and Korean tourists do this to me a few times while in Canada. Some day I want to pay 100 elementary school kids to ambush a Korean couple on vacation in Canada throughout the day (one at a time, and at random) and just yell, "안녕" (hello) then run away. Blistex fucked around with this message at 04:09 on Sep 25, 2016 |
# ? Sep 25, 2016 04:06 |
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Haier posted:I think Western places that get Chinese tourists should hire white people that speak Mandarin to shame and Face LOSS them into behaving by the local standards. It would rule.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 04:43 |
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Haier posted:I just imagine a bunch of awful tourists in Paris being idiotic and some tall, blonde French woman comes up and tell them in decent Mandarin to stop being idiotic and that they aren't in Gansu or Xinjiang anymore and the people will lose tons of face among each other and then worry that French people think they are from Xinjiang when they are in fact from Tier 01 megacity and maybe French people think they are the lowest class and maybe one or two will not be so bad despite pack mentality being a thing and they are in a pack. Et ensuite tu vas plonger, non? Grand Prize Winner fucked around with this message at 11:19 on Sep 25, 2016 |
# ? Sep 25, 2016 11:17 |
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 11:39 |
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i've not bothered to read the article but i'm sure the headline will annoy fojar https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/sep/25/obama-failed-asian-pivot-china-ascendant quote:Barack Obama’s ‘Asian pivot’ failed. China is in the ascendancy
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 12:46 |
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What a terrible plan.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 13:27 |
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Review of McDonalds in Hong Kong: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDcmuQXjFF0
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 13:55 |
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Today was a good day in British China. In the morning, we set off by taking the clean, quick and quiet metro from my home near Hong Kong's airport to Hong Kong Island itself. Except for the grandpa yelling into his phone a few doors down in our carriage, the only noise came from station announcements. Including time waiting for the train, it took about twenty minutes to traverse the sixteen kilometres from my residential area to "downtown" Hong Kong. We then used a series of escalators to pass through the station to the shopping malls above, and pedestrian bridges to cross from the station area near the coastline to ... the old coastline. Coastline erodes, right? So if we fill in some of the waterfront, it's like we're claiming back land that was taken over millennia by the sea! We'll call it ... reclamation! This has resulted in the coastline getting further and further away from where it was in the 1800's when the Qing ceded Hong Kong to Britain. One of the main roads, Des Voeux Road Central, is relatively far from the water today but was right next to it in the 1880's. Basically, if you follow the tram route, you're on the original coast. Taking the iconic double-decker electric trams westwards, you'll pass all sorts of dried seafood shops. Literally "Salted Fish Street". A bit out of place today but it made perfect sense when the shops were literally across the street from piers and jetties. The problem nowadays, of course, is that during the weekdays the streets are so crowded with traffic congestion that it's actually faster to walk than drive down the road. So, one green group has taken it upon themselves to campaign for the pedestrianisation of Des Voeux Road Central, and today was the day for their big experiment. I don't know how they managed to swing it, but the group got the road closed to all vehicular traffic except the trams. The road, usually full of bumper-to-bumper traffic of cars going nowhere, was now filled with all kinds of cultural activities. One group had rolled miniputt carpeting onto their section of the road so we could imagine a "greening" of central Hong Kong, which could somewhat alleviate the pollution and the heat island effect. One group was giving demonstrations on what it's like for kids with ADHD or dyslexia to learn in Hong Kong's pressure-cooker education system by clipping those blood pressure finger clips on your fingers and telling you to write, while sitting on a cushion with hard objects inside to make you squirm, while trying to pay attention to the "teacher". Some groups were putting on musical performances. There were lots of families and people just plain enjoying themselves. Hong Kong has a few other pedestrianised streets, such as Sai Yeung Choi Street in the Mong Kok district of Kowloon, and they are huge draws for locals and tourists alike so I hope the scheme goes through for DVRC as well. After enjoying some of the events, it was time to head to Sun Yat-Sen Park. The park itself is built on reclaimed land, and is full of little bits of info on the guy who formulated a lot of his revolutionary ideas while studying and living in Hong Kong. His picture is in most schools in Good China as well as in their legislature, and his portrait very rarely replaces Mao's in Tiananmen Square for some equally rare special events. The park has a central lawn, which is a rarity in Hong Kong, and Dr. Sun's statue is in the middle. His name is written as "Mr. Sun Zhongshan". Ironically, the name he is usually known by in China is based off of the Japanese alias "Nakayama" that he used while studying in Japan in order to avoid being noticed by Qing assassins. Yat-sen is the name he was given in Hong Kong by a local Protestant church leader. So that was my day in British China. EDIT: The pedestrianisation experiment made its way into the news. Turns out it was initially proposed sixteen years ago. https://www.hongkongfp.com/2016/09/25/in-pictures-how-a-car-free-central-became-a-brief-reality-16-years-after-it-was-first-proposed/ Imperialist Dog fucked around with this message at 14:38 on Sep 25, 2016 |
# ? Sep 25, 2016 14:20 |
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British China looks like a nice and clean place. Anyway, earlier I posted an article about Goldman Sachs removing 30 percent of their investment banking division from Asia, with a large portion from Hong Kong. To me, this seems like a huge sign that the economy there is finally being viewed in the west as being not as strong as China would present it.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 14:30 |
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Blacktoll posted:British China looks like a nice and clean place. Anyway, earlier I posted an article about Goldman Sachs removing 30 percent of their investment banking division from Asia, with a large portion from Hong Kong. It could simply be returning to previous levels as investors realise that hot money flowing out of corrupt cadres through Hong Kong carries inherent risk, and with Xi continuing on his merry crackdown that flow is not going to last forever.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 14:39 |
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Imperialist Dog posted:One group had rolled miniputt carpeting onto their section of the road so we could imagine a "greening" of central Hong Kong, which could somewhat alleviate the pollution and the heat island effect. One group was giving demonstrations on what it's like for kids with ADHD or dyslexia to learn in Hong Kong's pressure-cooker education system by clipping those blood pressure finger clips on your fingers and telling you to write, while sitting on a cushion with hard objects inside to make you squirm, while trying to pay attention to the "teacher". Some groups were putting on musical performances. There were lots of families and people just plain enjoying themselves. This was a good post, and thanks for the photos and story. This whole part stood out to me as a big difference between Mainland and Hong Kong. Thinking about the city's problems? Thinking about other people and their problems? Thinking about anything at all? Whaaaaaaaat? I give it another generation or two after all the Mainlanders have flooded HK (and the locals have run off to other countries) to make all those weird things go away.
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 16:45 |
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Jose posted:i've not bothered to read the article but i'm sure the headline will annoy fojar already found and read it before it was posted here
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# ? Sep 25, 2016 17:34 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:15 |
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Imperialist Dog posted:Coastline erodes, right? So if we fill in some of the waterfront, it's like we're claiming back land that was taken over millennia by the sea! We'll call it ... reclamation! So what you're saying is that much of modern HK wasn't part of the Qing lease, and was dredged from the ocean by the British. So either dredging doesn't mean poo poo for sovereignty and China doesn't own the SCS islands, or if it does and they do, Britain still owns HK? Way to cite precedent China...
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# ? Sep 26, 2016 01:29 |