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Always. :enjoy: I am one of the most dedicated supporters of the pro-Beijing camp, I attend every march that I can.

It's people like me and my family, the ones that vote for the pro-Beijing camp... that allows the pro-Beijing camp to dominate the HK government at all levels, from LegCo, the District councils, all the way up to the Chief Executive.

It's this domination of HK politics that forces the anti-China traitors into such desperate moves. And we will mark down their names, see how their tune changes once the One country two systems farce is over.

Many anti-CPC folks are still in denial, and they keep insist it was only 10k instead of 110k. And the protestors were all CPC-paid bots.

The behavior of those people is just so similar to the KMT supporters.
 
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Many anti-CPC folks are still in denial, and they keep insist it was only 10k instead of 110k.

The behavior of those people is just so similar to the KMT supporters.

We need to purge all the anti-China traitors from HK.

Lucky, we have complete dominance over the HK government, nobody can even become Chief Executive without being loyal to Beijing first. :china:
 
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We need to purge all the anti-China traitors from HK.

Lucky, we have complete dominance over the HK government, nobody can become Chief Executive without being loyal to Beijing first. :china:

Are there any ladies in the protest ? :ashamed:

In case there are - I'm coming ! :smokin:
 
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We need to purge all the anti-China traitors from HK.

Lucky, we have complete dominance over the HK government, nobody can even become Chief Executive without being loyal to Beijing first. :china:

Yep, their anti-CPC (China) movement is at the expense of HK's economic benefit.

Every anti-China groups are pretending that they are not anti-China, but only anti-CPC.

But in reality, their behavior is pretty much anti-China, since anti-CPC is just an excuse to justify their actions.
 
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Are there any ladies in the protest ? :ashamed:

In case there are - I'm coming ! :smokin:

Sorry your favorite Zhao Wei did not attend, she's not from HK. :P

Every anti-China groups are pretending that they are not anti-China, but only anti-CPC.

But in reality, their behavior is pretty much anti-China, since anti-CPC is just an excuse to justify their actions.

It is so obvious though. Everyone who is anti-China is also anti-CPC, no one can believe that is a coincidence.

Because everyone knows that the CPC is our best (and only) chance for China to become powerful again. People who hate China will therefore always hate the CPC too.
 
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The best way to counter foreigner-fed occupy folks is to proactively occupy their proposed places of occupation. :) Dialectic at its best, LOL.
you know when foreign douche bags try to disrupt China, I don't see their media write 'of the 800 000 electronic voters, 80% voted multiple times.' But the douche bags have the nerve to write 'elderly people were provided free transportation to the protest site'.
AFP, Reuters a big 屌你 to you assholes.
 
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you know when foreign douche bags try to disrupt China, I don't see their media write 'of the 800 000 electronic voters, 80% voted multiple times.' But the douche bags have the nerve to write 'elderly people were provided free transportation to the protest site'.
AFP, Reuters a big 屌你 to you assholes.

That's in their nature, I guess :)

What matters is that it has been made known that there is not a majority anti-China bloc in HK. The silent masses are foreign to the ideas of these traitors. What's amazing is that they are now being mobilized.

The problem with the anti-China folks during the protests in Taiwan was not that they enjoyed the overwhelming majority. But the silent majority remained silent and the occupying fools paralyzed Taiwan for more than a month.
 
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A research team at Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) has developed an automated facial recognition system that achieved the highest accuracy rate in the world, according to Hong Kong China News Agency.

The system reached an accuracy rate of 99.15 percent in recognizing faces in the Labeled Faces in the Wild, a database of more than 13,000 photographs designed for studying the problem of unconstrained face recognition.

The accuracy rate also set a record in a computed system being more accurate than human sight.

Professor Wang Xiaogang, one of the team members, said the hardest part for automated recognition was to deflate the variety of one person in different pictures and magnify the tiny differences among people. They have coped with the two detections effectively and enhanced the accuracy, Wang added.

Wang also said the improved system can help law enforcement and security services recognize targets in massive crowds.
 
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Occupy Victoria Park

Tens of thousands of people gathered in Hong Kong's Victoria Park.jpg

Tens of thousands of people gathered in Hong Kong's Victoria Park before the march begins.
Policemen stood guard in front of a store in the Central district.jpg

Policemen stood guard in front of a store in the Central district of Hong Kong during the rally.
Rain poured down upon protesters intermittently throughout the day..jpg

Rain poured down upon protesters intermittently throughout the day.
Demonstrators walked through downtown Hong Kong..jpg

Demonstrators walked through downtown Hong Kong.
Organizers said 510,000 demonstrators marched..jpg

Organizers said 510,000 demonstrators marched, while police counted 98,000 people.
Demonstrators lingered in Central district the night after the march..jpg

Demonstrators lingered in Central district the night after the march.
Policemen began clearing out protesters from the sit-in after midnight..jpg

Policemen began clearing out protesters from the sit-in after midnight.
Demonstrators staged a sit-in on Chater Road in Central district after the march.jpg

Demonstrators staged a sit-in on Chater Road in Central district after the march.
Tens of thousands of demonstrators marched during a pro-democracy rally.jpg

Tens of thousands of demonstrators marched during a pro-democracy rally in Hong Kong on Tuesday, July 1, to express frustration over the influence of Beijing on the city. More than 500 people were arrested during a sit-in after the march.
 
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Will HongKong become the Ukraine or next TaiWan ?

If HongKong local economy get hurt by so many protests, HKers need Authoritarian Bread or Hungry Democracy ???
 
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Tens of thousands of people marched through Hong Kong.jpg

Tens of thousands of people marched through Hong Kong on Sunday, August 17 in support of China and to protest Occupy Central, a pro-democracy movement that says it will plan to stage a civil disobedience sit-in unless the Chinese government allows the Hong Kong public to nominate and vote for its next leader.
A group of pro-China protesters marches in downtown.jpg

A group of pro-China protesters marches in downtown Hong Kong on August 17.
Protesters hold props as they marched on a street.jpg

Protesters hold props as they marched on a street during the annual pro-democracy protest.
As rain begins to come down on the protesters, umbrellas fly open..jpg

As rain begins to come down on the protesters, umbrellas fly open.
During the march, Joshua Wong, 17, the founder of pro-democracy student group.jpg

During the march, Joshua Wong, 17, the founder of pro-democracy student group Scholarism, announced he would stage an illegal sit-in on the night of July 1. "I may get arrested tonight. Will you all support me?" he yelled to the crowd.
A river of protesters, wearing white T-shirts to show their support for democracy,.jpg

A river of protesters, wearing white T-shirts to show their support for democracy, flowed through Hong Kong's Causeway Bay. Police counted more than 98,000 participants.


Pro-Beijing protesters hit back


Thousands in Hong Kong march against Occupy Central - CNN.com
 
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This is not good, both anti Beijing and pro Beijing groups are showing little trust in local government as they are moving out, this will lead to further fragmentation of Hongkong.

I have visited Hongkong last year, it left me the impression of being a mature international metropolis, but I have also noticed a distinctive lack of vitality compared with other chinese coast cities like Shanghai or Shenzhen. This political struggle is distracting the city from its development, if the city doesnt refocus on really important matters soon it will be left behind in the near future.
 
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Both HK tycoon and PRC are afraid of full democracy for HK. Right now, HK is ripe for social revolution, and if a "socialist" type of candidate win the election, there could be a re-distribution of wealth. Meanwhile PRC are afraid that HK may elect a non-aligning chief.

So far, Beijing has used the HK elites to control HK, by bribing them with business deals. But such deals do not benefit the people, and as a result HK stagnate.

The only hope for HK is to get someone who can implement socialism and impede the power of rent seeking elites. By putting brake on HK democratic process, Beijing risk alienate HK people.


Hong Kong braces for protests as China rules out full democracy| Reuters


Pro-democracy activists vowed on Sunday to bring Hong Kong's financial hub to a standstill after China's parliament rejected their demands for the right to freely choose the former British colony's next leader in 2017.

The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC) endorsed a framework to let only two or three candidates run in the 2017 leadership vote. All candidates must first obtain majority backing from a nominating committee likely to be stacked with Beijing loyalists.

The relatively tough decision by the NPC - China's final arbiter on the city's democratic affairs - makes it almost impossible for opposition democrats to get on the ballot.

"This is a legal, fair and reasonable decision. It is a dignified, prudent decision, and its legal effect is beyond doubt," Li Fei, deputy secretary general of the NPC standing committee, told reporters after the decision.

Hundreds of "Occupy Central" activists, who demand Beijing allow a real, free election, prepared to stage a small protest late on Sunday to formally launch a campaign of civil disobedience that will climax with a blockade at some time of the city's important Central business district.

"Today is not only the darkest day in the history of Hong Kong's democratic development, today is also the darkest day of one country, two systems," said Benny Tai, a law professor and one of Occupy Central's main leaders, referring to the formula under which capitalist Hong Kong, with a population of around 7.2 million, was returned to Communist Chinese rule in 1997.

The Occupy movement said in a statement that "all chances of dialogue have been exhausted and the occupation of Central will definitely happen." It gave no timeframe for its action.

A spokesman for Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (0388.HK), which operates the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, said contingency planning was taken very seriously. "We have long had a specialist team that coordinates group response plans for scenarios that put at risk the continuing operation of the exchange or threaten the well-being or safety of our staff."

Hong Kong's current chief executive Leung Chun-ying said Beijing's decision represented a major step forward in Hong Kong's development.

"Universal suffrage for the (chief executive) election through "one person, one vote" by Hong Kong people is not only a big step forward for Hong Kong, but also a historic milestone for our country," he said, adding people should express their opinion through peaceful and legal methods.

Political reform has been a constant source of friction between Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement and the mainland since Britain returned the city to China 17 years ago.

In nearby Macau, another special administrative region, leader and sole candidate Fernando Chui was "re-elected" on Sunday by a select panel of 400 largely pro-China loyalists in the tiny but wealthy former Portuguese colony.

GIRDING FOR ACTION

Scores of police vehicles and hundreds of officers were deployed outside Hong Kong government headquarters as people began to gather late on Sunday, braving heavy rain at times, with some chanting slogans.

Key government buildings, including the Chief Executive's office and a People's Liberation Army barracks nearby, were also ringed by high fences and barricades.

"It (the NPC decision) leaves no room for us to fight for a genuinely democratic system, and we will begin our campaign for peaceful, non-violent struggle," said Joseph Cheng, the convener of the Alliance for True Democracy, a coalition of groups advocating universal suffrage in Hong Kong. "We want to tell the world we haven't given up. We will continue to fight."

The United States responded cautiously. Commenting on the planned protest, a U.S. official who declined to be identified by name said Washington supports Hong Kong’s "traditions and Basic Law protections of internationally recognized freedoms, including the freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression."

The official also said "the legitimacy of the chief executive will be greatly enhanced if "the election provides the people of Hong Kong a genuine choice of candidates representative of the voters’ will."

"We understand that the August 31 announcement is just one step in an ongoing process leading to a final decision on election reform in Hong Kong and will continue to watch as the process unfolds," the official said in Washington.

On the surface, the NPC's decision is a breakthrough that endorses the framework for the first direct vote by a Chinese city to choose its leader. Beijing is already hailing it as a milestone in democratic reform.

However, by tightly curbing nominations for the 2017 leadership poll, some democrats said Beijing was pushing a Chinese-style version of "fake" democracy.

The NPC statement said all nominations would be carried out according to "democratic procedures" and each candidate would need the endorsement of more than half of a nominating committee that will be similar in composition to an existing 1,200-person election committee stacked with Beijing loyalists.

The proposed electoral framework will still needs to be approved by two-thirds of Hong Kong's 70-seat legislature. With pro-democracy lawmakers holding more than a third of the seats, the proposal will likely be shelved.

In that case, the next leader would likely again be chosen by a small election committee. Wang Zhenmin, a prominent legal scholar and adviser to the Chinese government, said recently that: "Less perfect universal suffrage is better than no universal suffrage," adding that this window of opportunity in Hong Kong was an historical crossroads after "2,000 years of (Chinese) feudal history without any democracy."

Senior Chinese officials have repeatedly warned activists against their "illegal" protests, and say they won't back down.

Some key members of the pro-democracy movement, including media magnate Jimmy Lai, have also come under pressure in the run-up to the Chinese parliamentary decision.

China has also repeatedly warned against foreign interference, saying it will not tolerate the use of Hong Kong "as a bridgehead to subvert and infiltrate the mainland."

The Occupy Central movement has not yet won broad support among Hong Kong's middle class, who are concerned about antagonizing China and disruptions to business. Any strong measures by China or the Hong Kong police could change that.
 
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