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A shaky, trembling dragon

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The entire country of India did not exist before the British created it.

"India is merely a geographical expression. It is no more a single country than the Equator."

- Winston Churchill

dat show where ur belifs stem from.WC was a racist man
 
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dat show where ur belifs stem from.WC was a racist man

It is not their fault - their entire system is geared toward such leaders. Compared to their beloved mass murdering Chairman Mao, Winston Churchill is as blameless as the Dalai Lama.
 
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kool my country has 5 in the top 50

not bad for population of 25 million
 
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we have what is considered as one of the worlds best education systems, and leaders in medical, and medical research etc
 
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actually.. thats one thing india needs to improve on... education

because most the indians who come here, come for study.

im not complaining it puts money in our economy
 
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Hong Kong 1 July marches

The Hong Kong 1 July march (Chinese: 七一遊行) is an annual protest rally originally led by the Civil Human Rights Front since the 1997 handover on the HKSAR establishment day. However, it was not until 2003 that the march drew large public attention by opposing the legislation of Basic Law Article 23. The 2003 protest, with 500,000 marchers, was the largest protest ever seen in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover.[1] , the 1 July marches have been held every year as a channel to demand for democracy, universal suffrage, rights of minorities, protection of freedom of speech and a variety of other political concerns.
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2004 protest

Hong Kongers dressed in white and walked out along Paterson StreetThe headline theme for the 1 July 2004 march was "Striving For Universal Suffrage in ’07 & ’08 for the Chief Executive and Legislature respectively (爭取07, 08普選)." As the National People's Congress Standing Committee attempted to modify the Basic Law on 6 April 2004 to deny direct elections for the Chief Executive in 2007 and the Legislative Council in 2008.[3][4] There was much criticism as to the slogan for the 2004 protest by some Beijing bureaucrats and pro-Beijing political parties. The phrase "Return power to the people" was particularly inflammatory, because it implied that power was taken away from the people, according to pro-Beijing parties. Some pro-democracy political leaders such as Lau Chin-shek had considered changing the phrase, but many criticized this move as it was seen to be satisfying Beijing. The organizers kept the phrase.
220px-Hong_Kong_1_July_marches.jpg

Hong Kong 1 July marches - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Strange, where are those so-called "crushing" moments from the central government as those "frogs in a well" claimed?:oops:
I believe the problem of "ignorance" from those "frogs" is that 90% of them never have a chance to get out of their "well" within a short life-span of around "60":lol:
 
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