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China Hong Kong SAR: News and Images

Here are some pictures showing the friends of that 17 year old effeminate little boy. They're crying like little b*tches because the grownups in Hong Kong got fed up with their anti-China shenanigans and laid the smack down. :cheers:

This is no longer China's century of humiliation. And your average Chinese person hates hanjian race traitors with a passion. That skinny little sellout better enjoy his 15 minutes of fame now. Chinese people know how much damage traitors have done to China in the past. When the cameras are off, he'll have a big target on his back. :china:







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      ASSOCIATED PRESS
      Student protesters are overwhelmed with emotions as they hold onto their tent while being threatened by residents and pro-Beijing supporters in Kowloon's crowded Mong Kok district, Friday, Oct. 3, 2014 in Hong Kong. Clashes broke out Friday as Hong Kong residents and pro-Beijing supporters tried to force pro-democracy activists from the streets they were occupying, reviving the possibility that the weeklong standoff could turn violent despite and attempt by the city's leader to defuse the situation. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

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      ALEX OGLE via Getty Images
      A man is held back by police as he screams at pro-democracy protesters to stop occupying an area of the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on October 3, 2014. Hong Kong has been plunged into the worst political crisis since its 1997 handover as pro-democracy activists take over the streets following China's refusal to grant citizens full universal suffrage. AFP PHOTO / ALEX OGLE (Photo credit should read Alex Ogle/AFP/Getty Images)

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      ASSOCIATED PRESS
      A student protester is overwhelmed with emotions as they are threatened by residents and pro-Beijing supporters in Kowloon's crowded Mong Kok district, Friday, Oct. 3, 2014 in Hong Kong. Clashes broke out Friday as Hong Kong residents and pro-Beijing supporters tried to force pro-democracy activists from the streets they were occupying, reviving the possibility that the weeklong standoff could turn violent despite and attempt by the city's leader to defuse the situation. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

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      ASSOCIATED PRESS
      A student protester is injured after being pulled off and hit by residents and pro-Beijing supporters while local police are escorting him out of the protest area in Kowloon's crowded Mong Kok district, Friday, Oct. 3, 2014 in Hong Kong. Clashes broke out Friday as Hong Kong residents and pro-Beijing supporters tried to force pro-democracy activists from the streets they were occupying, reviving the possibility that the weeklong standoff could turn violent despite and attempt by the city's leader to defuse the situation. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

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      Chris McGrath via Getty Images
      HONG KONG - OCTOBER 03: Local residents and pro-government supporters scream at pro-democracy protesters on October 3, 2014 in Mong Kok, Hong Kong. Fights broke out between local residents and pro government supporters when they attempted to force pro-democracy activists from their protest site. Thousands of pro democracy supporters continue to occupy the streets surrounding Hong Kong's Financial district. Protest leaders have set an October 1st deadline for their demands to be met and are calling for open elections and the resignation of Hong Kong's Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

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      ASSOCIATED PRESS
      A pro-democracy protester is taken away by police offers as an ambulance tries to leave the compound of the chief executive office in Hong Kong, Friday, Oct. 3, 2014. Hong Kong protesters on Friday welcomed an overnight offer by the territory's leader of talks to defuse the crisis over demonstrations seeking democratic reforms, though they continued to demand he resign and maintained barricades around government headquarters, frustrating staff going to work. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

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      ASSOCIATED PRESS
      A pro-democracy student protester, left, is pressed by angry locals trying to remove the barricades blocking streets in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, Friday, Oct. 3, 2014. Hong Kong protest leaders on Friday welcomed an offer by the territory's leader of talks to defuse the crisis over demonstrations seeking democratic reforms, though they continued to demand he resign and maintained barricades around government headquarters, frustrating staff going to work. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

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      Chris McGrath via Getty Images
      HONG KONG - OCTOBER 03: An injured pro-democracy activist is carried back to a tent for medical treatment after clashing with local residents and pro-government supporters on October 3, 2014 in Mong Kok, Hong Kong. Fights broke out between local residents and pro government supporters when they attempted to force pro-democracy activists from their protest site. Thousands of pro democracy supporters continue to occupy the streets surrounding Hong Kong's Financial district. Protest leaders have set an October 1st deadline for their demands to be met and are calling for open elections and the resignation of Hong Kong's Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

    • 02b00fa0488cc1ead26e1d74fd05325a.jpg
      Chris McGrath via Getty Images
      HONG KONG - OCTOBER 03: Local residents and pro-government supporters scream at pro-democracy protesters on October 3, 2014 in Mong Kok, Hong Kong. Fights broke out between local residents and pro government supporters when they attempted to force pro-democracy activists from their protest site. Thousands of pro democracy supporters continue to occupy the streets surrounding Hong Kong's Financial district. Protest leaders have set an October 1st deadline for their demands to be met and are calling for open elections and the resignation of Hong Kong's Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
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      ALEX OGLE via Getty Images
      A group of men in masks beat up a man (R) who tried to stop them from removing barricades from a pro-democracy protest area in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on October 3, 2014. Hong Kong has been plunged into the worst political crisis since its 1997 handover as pro-democracy activists take over the streets following China's refusal to grant citizens full universal suffrage. AFP PHOTO / ALEX OGLE (Photo credit should read Alex Ogle/AFP/Getty Images)
 
I think he means China can support the free-Okinawa movement.

You seem to understand the topic at hand more than my good geo strategist Friend Nihonji san. Yes i indeed meant Free Okinawa movement.;)
 
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A group of men in masks beat up a man (R) who tried to stop them from removing barricades from a pro-democracy protest area in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on October 3, 2014. Hong Kong has been plunged into the worst political crisis since its 1997 handover as pro-democracy activists take over the streets following China's refusal to grant citizens full universal suffrage. AFP PHOTO / ALEX OGLE (Photo credit should read Alex Ogle/AFP/Getty Images)

Why do they need to say residents and pro-government supporters all the time. The residents are obviously angry that these Gucci bag holding demonstrators are obstructing their daily life.

Honestly, I have never met a demonstrator in all my life in Europe going to a demonstration holding a Gucci bag. When I saw that pic, I really had to :lol: very hard.
 
I think this is one of the reasons why our side is silent. We hope the Chinese side would remember this.
It does not matter even if we know Japan doesn't utter a word in regards to the current unrest in HK. China's policy has always been very clear about foreign domestic issue. Japan has more to lose than to gain if it wishes to interfere with China's matters on the other hand China will not suffer even if the government would voice its support for an independent Okinawa (not that we are gonna interfere). So no, China doesn't owe Japan a thing :lol:
 
How protests suddenly erupted in Hongkong.

It's just the US. Britain has no influence in Hong Kong and is irrelevant globally. Nice attempt to ride the US' coattails though. 6/10 for effort.

I had talked to some Hongkongers who were claiming that they were better under British rule than as a part of PRC.
 
How protests suddenly erupted in Hongkong.



I had talked to some Hongkongers who were claiming that they were better under British rule than as a part of PRC.

It's the economy. Under the British, HKers had less freedom than they do now. But China was also less developed and therefore Hong Kong mattered more to the Chinese economy. So no complaints about democracy or lack thereof. Convenient eh? I think someone posted a thread that showed how Hong Kong's economy, relatively speaking, went from being 18% of China's to less than 3% now. Not because the British did anything special - they've always treated non-whites as 2nd class citizens (As an Indian, you probably know about the British and their arrogance) - but because China is richer now.

Hong Kong's usefulness as a financial hub is being eclipsed by mainland Chinese cities, most notably Shanghai. Add to that the fact that most Hong Kongers don't speak mandarin, have a hard time competing, and suddenly see their "poor brothers" on the Mainland getting richer and you end up with a lot of frustration.
 
Why do they need to say residents and pro-government supporters all the time. The residents are obviously angry that these Gucci bag holding demonstrators are obstructing their daily life.

Honestly, I have never met a demonstrator in all my life in Europe going to a demonstration holding a Gucci bag. When I saw that pic, I really had to :lol: very hard.

It's the western media's way of discrediting anything that doesn't jive with their propaganda. Anyone against "democracy" must be paid by commies. Of course that's clearly not the case and the irony of it all is that many of those democracy "protesters" *are actually* funded and led by American operatives. And we have pictorial evidence of that. But hypocrisy has never stopped white journalists from gloating in the past and it won't now.
 
Britain has no influence in Hong kong??:cheesy: Tell you the truth, we do have, even more than the U.S when it comes to Hong Kong.:D Maybe Chinese Dragon can expantiate on this for you.:bounce:

You really don't. And I mean not even a little. :cheers:
 
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