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Soros vs Xi(China)
#51

Soros vs Xi(China)

Quote: (01-29-2019 03:35 PM)CaptainChardonnay Wrote:  






This is a really good video of what was going on before Xi and what he is doing now.

Don't be fooled by Old Westerner propoganda CC. Falun Gong is a cult. They had people starving themselves to death, giving up their life savings (a HUGE no-no in Chinese culture), and the leader was pretty much a text book false prophet with a Messianic complex.

China is all too familiar with these kinds of cults. The Boxer Rebellion was more or less started by a cult leader that claimed to be Jesus Christ's brother.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hong_Xiuquan

South Korea is having these issues in the last 10 years or so as well. Seems to be a reoccurring issue in East Asia in general.

While the CCP's crackdown was harsh by Western standards, it was not like it was 100% without merit.

You can file Falun Gong in the same box with the Dali Lama. He's a fraud too. You don't have to be Chinese to figure out that there is a lot of bullshit and smoke.

Condemning the CCP for taking them out is alot like blaming someone for setting a fake LV bag on fire. The overreaction of them setting it on fire, still does not make the LV bag real all of a sudden.

Dating Guide for Mainland China Datasheet
TravelerKai's Martial Arts Datasheet
1 John 4:20 - If anyone says, I love God, and hates (detests, abominates) his brother [in Christ], he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, Whom he has not seen.
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#52

Soros vs Xi(China)

From what I understand FG was promoted by the CCP at one point however they got too big and uncontrollable.

What is your opinion on the treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang TK? And can you expand on your opinions of the Dali Lama. I know you are well versed in this area and would like to hear your opinions as I haven't heard these views before from credible posters on here.
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#53

Soros vs Xi(China)

Quote: (01-29-2019 05:36 PM)CaptainChardonnay Wrote:  

From what I understand FG was promoted by the CCP at one point however they got too big and uncontrollable.

What is your opinion on the treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang TK? And can you expand on your opinions of the Dali Lama. I know you are well versed in this area and would like to hear your opinions as I haven't heard these views before from credible posters on here.

I am not an expert on any of those things. I have talked to enough Chinese inside and outside China to just have a basic opinion based on the facts that they showed me. Some of the people in that Falun Gong stuff are not wackjobs but the big players were. It's like questioning the character of people in Jim Jones' cult. They likely were okay folks. Jim and his helpers were the pieces of shit.

I don't really care about the treatment of the Muslims there. They are not executing them in mass murders or whatever. In fact, I think it is better than what they were doing before. Before they were sending armed police and military into the streets Iraq style shooting up Muslims and doing door to door shit. Re-education camp, making them eat pork, etc. seems odd, but hey it might work. Better than what the West does which is cuck to Islam. I am not the right person to feel sorry for Muslims at all. Islam is a death cult and demonic. It does not preach peace, love, or salvation. Only violent submission via the sword.

All that said, their food is good as fuck. I eat the grilled lamb ribs and those flat breads at least once a week in Guangzhou. You should taste the beef dumplings, ridiculous good.

The Dalai Lama is an attention whore and a globalist sock puppet. He acts like he is a fucking deity just like the pope. He uses the UN, AI, and any other alphabet liberal globalist homo group you can find (he is buddies with Soros too). I do not know deep details but there are rumors that they are sex grooming boys and stuff like that. There is a thread somewhere around here and some of the conspiracy guys had some stuff on him. He was (maybe still is) a CIA asset. Yes we paid him millions to destabilize China and sow dissent for many years. The fucker wears a 60K Rolex gold watch and eats meat as long as someone else orders it for him. You tell me bro. Fake or not.

Dating Guide for Mainland China Datasheet
TravelerKai's Martial Arts Datasheet
1 John 4:20 - If anyone says, I love God, and hates (detests, abominates) his brother [in Christ], he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, Whom he has not seen.
Reply
#54

Soros vs Xi(China)

Quote: (01-29-2019 05:03 PM)TravelerKai Wrote:  

Quote: (01-29-2019 03:35 PM)CaptainChardonnay Wrote:  






This is a really good video of what was going on before Xi and what he is doing now.

Don't be fooled by Old Westerner propoganda CC. Falun Gong is a cult. They had people starving themselves to death, giving up their life savings (a HUGE no-no in Chinese culture), and the leader was pretty much a text book false prophet with a Messianic complex.

China is all too familiar with these kinds of cults. The Boxer Rebellion was more or less started by a cult leader that claimed to be Jesus Christ's brother.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hong_Xiuquan

South Korea is having these issues in the last 10 years or so as well. Seems to be a reoccurring issue in East Asia in general.

While the CCP's crackdown was harsh by Western standards, it was not like it was 100% without merit.

You can file Falun Gong in the same box with the Dali Lama. He's a fraud too. You don't have to be Chinese to figure out that there is a lot of bullshit and smoke.

Condemning the CCP for taking them out is alot like blaming someone for setting a fake LV bag on fire. The overreaction of them setting it on fire, still does not make the LV bag real all of a sudden.

I am familiar with the teachings of Falun Gong (suicide is banned, as are monetary donations for the group), and it most definitely isn't a cult, nor are its believers crazy unless you want to brand all Christians with the same label. The CCP invested a lot of effort into making Falun Gong look dangerous or subversive when it really wasn't.* The 2001 self-immolation incident at Tiananmen, for instance, was outed as being staged pretty much from the few days after it happened. To say that Falun Gong was maligned is a massive understatement.

Falun Gong is just demonized by by the CCP and ignored/ridiculed by Western scholars because a) it is a new religion and susceptible to being misrepresented by state propaganda and b) because it has inherently conservative teachings that aren't PC among Western liberals. If you look at Falun Gong's publications, they are very pro-Trump and anti-socialist. This was a recent shift, probably after they realized that the white left would never help them.

The persecution of Falun Gong is politically interesting because it directly concerns the Jiang faction. Jiang Zemin started the anti-Falun Gong campaign, likely as a way to gain some easy ideological points for his time in office. It did help him shoehorn his allies into high positions, such that when you look at the "big tigers" being purged by Xi, they generally have a strong background in cracking down on Falun Gong.

*=FLG didn't have political aims until around 2003, when its protests began targeting the CCP as a governing entity and not just the Jiang leadership. Since 2004 it's been irrevocably anti-communist. The specific doctrines of FLG don't allow political organization, however, which has caused some distance between them and the Chinese democracy movement.
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#55

Soros vs Xi(China)

Shit, you guys are worried about how China treats Falun Gong?

Ever heard of Waco? Randy Weaver? Eric Garner?

We got our very own fucking police state over here, ya know.
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#56

Soros vs Xi(China)

Quote: (01-28-2019 07:11 PM)Sherman Wrote:  

China is the only country that can resist the globhomo advance. They are too big to be bullied by the Western degenerate elites. Cultural Marxists can be identified with glorious AI technology and quietly disappeared. Chairman Xi wants you to wait for the green light before you cross the street. If you do, you will get an increment of your social score. The leftists thugs of the West want you to think the right degenerate thoughts 24/7. That is the meaning of totalitarianism. A dictator just cares that you obey the rules. A totalitarian demands you think the right thoughts. Your children will be taught the virtues of LGBT starting in Kindergarten. By the time they reach 13 they will have changed sex at least once and will hate you. They will report you, if you say anything politically incorrect. If I wasn't a white monkey, I would move to China.

The bolded is true in China as well, the only difference is that "politically incorrect" is defined differently there than here.

Don't romanticize the Chinese government. They are a different enemy than the globalists, but they are nonetheless an enemy. They absolutely care about thought crimes among their own people; not as much with foreigners, but that will change as they expand their tentacles globally. They're also showing an increasing adeptness at using globalist language for their own ends--Chinese student associations in western universities report to Beijing, and one of them at a university in San Diego a few years ago attempted to get the Dalai Lama barred from speaking. Whether or not you care about that specifically, what was alarming was that their campaign to do so used SJW type language--claiming the student group inviting him was being culturally insensitive to the Chinese students, etc. The Chinese ambassador to Canada also recently accused the Canadian government of "white supremacy" for arresting Meng Wanzhou (the daughter of the Huawei CEO).

I personally suspect that while many of the scumbags in the western media are SJW true believers, many others are simply on Beijing's payroll. If a bunch of illiterate goat fuckers in the Middle East figured out a decade and a half ago that they can ally themselves with SJWs to drive a wedge into the west, you don't think the CCP (which actually has explicit ties to leftist movements in the west going back to the 50s and 60s) has done the same?

I got my Magnum condoms, I got my wad of hundreds, I'm ready to plow!
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#57

Soros vs Xi(China)

Quote: (01-29-2019 11:20 AM)Fortis Wrote:  

Classic LibertySea [Image: icon_lol.gif] pulling random things I said out of context to try and point out supposed logical inconsistencies.


Nah, bro, I'm here to learn and ask questions, not to pick a fight with you or trying to win an argument or something. It's not like I was misreprenting your positions to someone else. I was discussing directly with you in order to understand your point more clearly.

1. So, by "their traditional conservative system is crumbling", you simply mean that they are becoming materialistic? Or am I misinterpreting you? I do agree that they're very materialistic and pointed that out before. However my position is that, economic materialism is not a turn away from traditional Chinese culture, but simply an extension of it. Traditional Chinese culture has always been materialistic - as compared to other, religious civilizations. The mainstream values that ordinary people worshiped have always been 福禄寿, and 财神 is a major folk god. They go to temples and "bribe the gods" in exchange for wealth, fertility and status, not for spiritual strength. And in new year events they traditionally say to each other 新年发财, banding around artsy 招财进宝 calligraphy and so on, lol.

Saving money is not an expression of spiritualism, but of long-term materialism, as opposed to the short-term materialism of lavishness. They traditionally save money to prepare for old age and emergency, not because they think consumerism corrupts the soul. Frugality and lavishness are two sides of the same materialistic coin, and in their long history have taken turn to dominate, depending on economic and political circumstances. The 西晋 dynasty for example was infamously lavish, and the elies loved to showcase material wealth.

Most Chinese were peasants, and peasants are not idealistic. Peasants, craftsmen, and merchants (农, 工, 商) are traditionally seen as materialistic classes (務利), and rightly so. An old travel journal that Suits recommended - A Journey through the Chinese Empire by Evariste Huc, a Christian missionary in China - show details on this. The merchants boasted about their tricks as points of pride, and Chinese filial piety was in constant need of the stimulus of the bamboo.

On the other hand, the Shi 士 class - the politico-cultural elite - is traditionally seen as the upholder of lofty ideals like dutiful righteousness (義). And this class did in fact produce some very idealistic, principaled individuals. But they were a minority even among their class, while the class as a whole based their existence on the incentives of wealth and worldly status (富贵,
功名). This class came to existence as a separate class distinct from pre-Qin aristocracy after the Emperor Wu of Han established the 察举 system, which used expertise on Confucian classics as a criteria for recruiting officials, and this served as a mean to bypass the military nobilities, thereby increasing the power of the emperor and limiting the power of the hereditary aristocracy. After a period of disruption this evolved into the imperial examination system (科举制) in the Sui and Tang dynasties, against as a mean to bypass the quasi-hereditary aristocracy (士族).

Because expertise on Confucian classics was a path to wealth, fame, and power (宦途) traditional Chinese families have invested in Confucian education as a mean to improve and secure their social status. But when the imperial examination was abandoned as the Qing dynasty crumbled before the force of Western modernization, the Shi class simply extinguished. Even before the communist rule and Cultural Revolution, this class was already dying, although one could say the CR dealt the finishing blow. When expertise on Confucian classics is no longer a path to power and upward social mobility, i.e. when the material basis for it varnished, the Shi class varnished along with it, not only in China but also in other Confucian cultures like Vietnam and Korea -- which terrified its underlying materialistic nature.

2. Certainly one could say that some elements of traditional Chinese social structures have been corroded, but economic materialism is not an expression of it. One of its basic structures, patriarchy, more or less survives. China remains a male-dominated society, and I fully agree with this. But my contention is that, this is not simply a function of the lack of the right to vote, or of government policy (although that played a part too). The early USSR was authoritarian, but it was also anti-traditional, empowered women, demolished the traditional family, promoted free marriage, and legalized gay marriage. The Chinese government was never like that, as they came from a different background. And the male dominance we see in China is not merely a function of top-down policy, but also a continuity of traditional culture, especially in the North with their 大男子主义.

3. Regarding the building backdoor stuff, I am not knowledgeable on this subject. A quick Google search led me to some sources that seek to refute the claims about Chinese backdoors. I don't know how true they are and I will seek the opinion of those who have expertise here:

https://www.quora.com/How-valid-are-the-...rman?ch=10

https://risky.biz/RB517_feature/

Does anyone here have solid evidence that China did build malicious backdoors into our computer systems, and that this is not just globalist infowarfare? I completely believe that the Chicom is not beyond backdoor tactics, and that we should be as cautious as possible against them, but as with everything else I need evidence.

And my suspicion is that the reason why Globalists are waging wars against Chinese tech is because they can't spy on you if you use Chinese tech. Not that I recommend you use Chinese tech, because it's up to you. Nor do I think the Chicom is trustworthy. My point here is that this backdoor allegation is not yet certain enough to base conclusions about the Chicom's ability to play the long game. Which is why in my earlier post I focused on the buying up property thing. The question is: does the move to buy property abroad part of a long-term strategy, and what does it say about the Chicom's ability to play the long game?

4. Anyway, countries spy each others and the US also spies on its allies. Snowden revealed that Obama bugged Merkel phone, and yet US - Germany relationship is where it's at under Obama. Back in the days the US stole the UK's intellectual properties, and Japan stole Western intellectual properties. And now they stay allies. In the long term that doesn't matter much. Countries are bound to each other by mutual interest, when the interests stay mutual they stay allies and maintain diplomatic relations.

Everyone hates China and yet still do business with them. Because there is benefits to be gained from doing so. Certainly China will benefit from building greater international reputation and trust, but as of now it has different priorities. Which is boost its technological capacities and economic productivity. The US stole intellectual property when it still lagged behind Europe, and then champion intellectual property right when it's ahead of everyone else. Great strategy. The West also polluted the environment heavily in the process of industrialization, with burning rivers and uninhabitable zones and heavy smog and all, but now it fixed the environment and champions environmental cause. Also great strategy. Different stage of development require different sets of priorities.

This is not to say that the Chicom is trustworthy or particularly competent and far-sighted. My point is that, when you look from a broad world-historical perspective, you see that its moves so far are compatible with its stage of development, and it can play the long game too. All the more reason to be cautious - a conclusion that I fully agree with Fortis.
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#58

Soros vs Xi(China)

Quote: (01-28-2019 09:36 AM)Kaligula Wrote:  

Marxism is not a monolith, there have been always many factions inside; Stalin, for example, in opposition to Trotsky created the idea of "building socialism in one country".

My understanding of this essay was that the Chinese read Stalin's book more as a kind of communist "The Prince" (of Machiavelli) than a real Marxist text, and even as an improvement on their own ancient Chinese wisdom. So CPC avoids real expectations of a new paradise, expectations that could be shattered and lead to the system demise.

The reason I don't think the PRC is communist is that, as I observed, it's decidedly nationalist, far more nationalist than Stalin's "socialism in one country". Stalin has been more conservative than Lenin and Trotsky, but even under his rule, the ideal of "New Soviet Man" continued to be promoted. The New Soviet man is not Russian or Estonian or Kazakhstani, but a new type of human being that has completely shed off all ethnic identity, and practiced no particularistic culture but only universalistic Soviet culture. It's globalist in essence. The New Soviet Man project of course failed and the minorities demanded separations, which led to the collapse of the USSR.

The Sinification pushed by the post-Mao PRC onto its minorities is nothing like that. It aims for a decidedly Chinese national culture, which is particularistic and not universalistic. Unlike the Year Zero Soviet project, it lays claim to China's 5000 years of civilization, seeks legitimacy as an inheritor of that civilizational heritage, and calls for The Great Rejuvenation of the Chinese Volk (中华民族伟大复兴) with the Chinese dream. It labors to build a nationalist narrative with a glorious national past to be restored, and with a Century of *National* humiliation (百年国耻) to be avenged, which lays the primary blame on a foreign enemy instead of a domestic class enemy. Instead of emphasizing class struggle and the elimination of class enemies like Stalin, the CPC chose to promote national harmony between different classes. This rhetoric is far closer to Hitler's national socialism than to anything in the Soviet bloc.

And in action, it bullies Vietnam - a supposedly communist comrade - and robs Vietnam of her islands in order to advance naked national interest, not any kind of communist projects. For this it employs solely nationalistic justifications, and not any kind of communist-ideological justification like the Sino-Soviet conflict in which each one called the other revisionist and straying from Marxist orthodoxy. Unlike the USSR, it has no sense of the international proletarian brotherhood.

Much of the above preceded Xi Jinping. The PRC is Leninist in bureaucratic and party organisational structures, but national-socialist in spirit. Hence I agree with Steve Bannon's accessment that the current PRC is similar to Nazi Germany. The PRC is best characterized as a mature Fascist party-state. If Germany and Italy didn't go to WWII, they would evolve into something similar the PRC today (except more efficient, in Germany's case). It can be said that the PRC is the first mature fascist state in the world -- which is more bureaucratic than personalistic, more focused on economic strategy than on war, and centered around national civilization rather than race.

Quote:Quote:

I have also heard that they even write Marxism exams in secondary schools.

The students probably are seen as a kind of revisionists, or reformists by CPC. Their arrests actually support the ideas of the article, namely "purging the party", and "ideological purity".

There are also communist exams in Vietnam's high school as well as compulsory communist classes in all tertiary educations. But it's a tedious subject that nobody is interested or excited about. Everyone is sick of it and just wants to go through the motion and pass the exams.

Despite a few cultural Marxists here and there, most of the Marxist students arrested in China do not profess anything other than standard party lines and textbook Marxism taught in Chinese official courses. Their only fault is trying to put it in action.
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#59

Soros vs Xi(China)






Look at that! America isn't the only country meddling in foreign countries.
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#60

Soros vs Xi(China)

http://redefininggod.com/2014/12/meet-ro...s-leaders/

Missing link in NWO control over China?

If it looks like a phoenix, rises like a phoenix, and quacks like a phoenix, it’s an Illuminist
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