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China and Russia Are Enjoying Occupy Wall Street

Project 627

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The original, New York-based Occupy Wall Streeters must be pretty happy with how their movement has taken off around the globe. In addition to the dozens of protests taking place in U.S. cities, Occupiers have cropped up across Europe and the Americas, as well as in South Africa, Australia, and a spattering of East Asian countries, as shown in this Google Map of the protests below.

But notice that citizens in two heavyweights on the world stage--Russia and mainland China--haven't joined in on the fun just yet. (The closest so far: a roughly 40-person demonstration did happen at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange this weekend, Bloomberg reports.) Today, officials from China and Russia, who've seen their fair share of protests in the past, have a few haughty words on the little brew-ha-ha they've been watching develop in the West. :rofl:

Vladimir Putin, defending his latest spending plan to a crowd of international CEOs, decided to use his speech as an opportunity to comment on the movement and how it differentiates Russia from the U.S., Reuters reports today. In his first public comments on the protests, Putin, who is running for reelection, argued that his budget, with a heavy emphasis on social programs, would mean that no Occupy protests need occur in Russia:

Hundreds of thousands of people -- not just a bunch of outcasts but hundreds of thousands -- are coming out onto the streets to demand what their governments are unable to fulfill ... If this (social spending) does not take place, then we could get to a situation which we see in countries with developed economies.
Meanwhile, China offered its first official word on the protests: they bring up some good points, but let's not do them in China. According to an AP report, the nation's foreign minister said of Occupy Wall Street:

"We feel that there are issues here that are worth pondering," said Liu Weimin, a foreign ministry s
pokesman during a regular briefing in Beijing.

"We have also noticed that in the media there has been a lot of commentary, discussion and reflection. But we think that all of these reflections should be conducive to maintaining the sound and steady development of the world economy," Liu said, without elaborating.
However, there doesn't seem to be much enthusiasm among officials for having protests in China itself. One of China's state-run newspapers, the Global Times, wrote that the Chinese should "calmly observe the protest movement and the global situation, and not be confused by extreme points of view," according to the AP. In a more strongly-worded op-ed published yesterday, a Global Times editor wrote that the movement "points its finger directly at the heart of the problem"--that is, Wall Street, and capitalism in general--but doubts that it will succeed:

Although it seems almost impossible that drastic change will be brought by the Occupy Wall Street movement, the lackadaisical reaction from the top down is alarming. Perhaps because the movement accurately points out the crux of the problem, politicians opt for living in denial.


China and Russia Are Enjoying Occupy Wall Street - Global - The Atlantic Wire
 
I would rather live in a country where protest is prohibited, and no corruption, than a country where the politicians loot most of the money, people live miserable lives, and have full rights to protest, but which does not work.

In short, protests are allowed in the USA, and there is need for protests in the USA. But in China, there is no freedom to protest and also no need to protest anyway.
 
Honestly, do you truly hope the US just collapse right now?

Then the World would just ultimately go back to the pre-WWII era.
 
For your information,protest in mainland china is prohibited

another cluesless indian```there are thousands protests occured in China each year all in civil manna``nothing like those ones in India blow up things. now you understand what ignorance mean
 
I would rather live in a country where protest is prohibited, and no corruption, than a country where the politicians loot most of the money, people live miserable lives, and have full rights to protest, but which does not work.

In short, protests are allowed in the USA, and there is need for protests in the USA. But in China, there is no freedom to protest and also no need to protest anyway.

LOL!!! Are you for real? You think China is less corrupt than US? Serisouly, what hole do you guys live in?


By the way, China should be worried about these protests. It has benefited immensely from corporate greed that these people are protesting about.
 
Meanwhile, China offered its first official word on the protests: they bring up some good points, but let's not do them in China. According to an AP report, the nation's foreign minister said of Occupy Wall Street:

"We feel that there are issues here that are worth pondering," said Liu Weimin, a foreign ministry s
pokesman during a regular briefing in Beijing.

"We have also noticed that in the media there has been a lot of commentary, discussion and reflection. But we think that all of these reflections should be conducive to maintaining the sound and steady development of the world economy," Liu said, without elaborating.

I see another journalist lying for the sake of making a point. Chinese foreign ministry did not "offer" its opinion on the protest. Rather journalists had asked the ministry spokesman to comment on the protest in a regular press conference. Also it was not the foreign minister who made those comments, it was a ministry spokesman.

The disingenuous reporting crept up again when they emphasized Global Times being a state-run newspaper (which by the way is not strictly true. Global Times is owned by the party, not the state), giving the impression it is some kind of official mouthpiece, when that's simply not true.
 
I would rather live in a country where protest is prohibited, and no corruption, than a country where the politicians loot most of the money, people live miserable lives, and have full rights to protest, but which does not work.

In short, protests are allowed in the USA, and there is need for protests in the USA. But in China, there is no freedom to protest and also no need to protest anyway.
Let us know when you find such a paradise.
 
Hume warns Obama on Occupy Wall Street: ‘He is playing with fire’

On Monday’s broadcast of “America Live” on the Fox News Channel, senior political analyst Brit Hume said that the Occupy Wall Street movement could turn off the independent voters, first noting that the similarities between the civil rights movement of the 1960s and this current Occupy Wall Street movement, were a stretch. Occupy Wall Street got was endorsed by President Barack Obama during his remarks at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial dedication in Washington, D.C. on Sunday.

“Well, there are some similarities,” Hume said. “Martin Luther King, Jr. led marches and protest demonstrations … in favor of the cause for civil rights for all, especially more American blacks who had been obviously treated as second-class citizens for a long time. But I’m not sure the parallels extend far enough [Obama] can expect that the kind of almost unanimous support that the civil rights movement [that] ultimately developed will swing behind these demonstrators and their cause and politicians who support it.”

It’s a risky proposition to get behind the Occupy movement for Obama, he added. Especially if he wants to win his re-election next year and is depending on the independent vote.

“I understand a little bit why he’s doing it but I think he is playing with fire because these protests are unfocused,” he said. The “civil rights movement was pretty focused. The tea party movement was pretty focused. These protests are unfocused and they’re susceptible to infiltration and perhaps even being dominated to some extent by some pretty hard-left activists who are not going to have sympathy from … the independent centrist voters that the president needs to win his election.”

Hume warns Obama on Occupy Wall Street:
 

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