Following up on my previous post. Yes, the government spies on us, and so does China. One evil does not excuse another evil. Both should be abolished. I lived in China, they are the worst abusers of human rights I’ve ever seen. I’ve never encountered such misery and decay of the human spirit as I saw first hand in China. For anyone who has not lived there, or who has but was cocooned in the sheltered life of a big, semi-Westernized city, you have no conception of the dearth of nobility that the average Chinese is forced to endure on a daily basis. Imagine a mountain of stinking trash, and then imagine people living in that trash, and then imagine them eating that trash, and you’ll have a good idea of what living in China was like.

The abject misery, the poverty, the pollution and noise and chaos and corruption of all things good and decent. Communism is grinding its boot heel into the face of the Chinese peasant–and yes, I mean peasant. I lived in a modest city of 4 million, and most of them were true-blue medieval peasants. The concrete grottoes and warrens you’d traverse through darkened alleys in the city, under grey, smog-choked skies, alleys and streets and doorways piled with refuse and gutters overflowing with sewage that spilled out into the brackish, festering rivers, where sad old men tried to catch diseased and poisonous fish. It was a living nightmare, and it was and is caused entirely by the communist government. Which wants to impose its edicts of torment on the rest of the world.

Dogs and cats in crammed into cages on street corner markets, ready to be eaten–which could also be seen in the grocery stores, red and skinned and dropped casually into buckets, eyes still bulging in their heads, ready to be someone’s next dinner. The cruelty and indifference to suffering was beyond my comprehension. Some say China has outpaced us on every metric, but that is a baseless lie that they push through media to promote the idea that they’re so far ahead of us. The only metric they have surpassed America in is misery, and that by spades. They have no innovation, no insight, no creativity. Everything is done by rote, by copying what was done before, by stealing what others have already done; all their technology is stolen from us. All of it.

Communism, by design, crushes innovation. China has nothing, offers nothing, produces nothing; it is a vacuum of anguish, sucking in everything in sight. China is your enemy, whether you believe it or not. China is the enemy of the human spirit, and until they conquer their communist overlords, they will continue to drag down the rest of the world with them. China has totally entered a proxy war with the United States, through trade embargoes and deficits, through their ubiquitous belts and roads initiatives, through their hostile takeovers of South American and African governments, through their peddling of deadly fentanyl through our southern border, through their invasion of military agents over the border.

Tens of thousands of military aged men from China have been caught in recent months, many disappearing into the interior or found later training with weapons. Blaine Holt, a retired Air Force general in Idaho, reported that Chinese are setting up all over his state and carrying out target practice. These Chinese illegals are coming over in packs of 10-15, all MAMs, or “Military Aged Men,” without any women or children, no families, just what appear to be soldiers from the Communist People’s Liberation Army. The head of the Border Patrol Union, Brandon Judd, says the invasion of Chinese illegals is highly suspicious and there’s a good chance they’re actually spies for Communist China. China has even talked about an invasion just like this, in a book written by two Chinese air force colonels called “Unrestricted Warfare.”

They argued that China can and should do whatever is necessary to defeat the US, and going after our vulnerable infrastructure is a great way to start. In fact, the former head of the FBI just recently warned that China’s cyberattacks against our infrastructure are currently at an “unprecedented scale.” That means attacks right now, as we speak. Aided, in no small part, by having unrestricted access to the phones of 170 million willing Americans. Access to photos, audio files, camera access, location information, access to wifi networks and all the data sent and received through those networks. Yes, China is our enemy, and banning their number one tool for soft power and influence is a good first step.
China is disgusting, brutal, and evil, and the less we can be like China, the better.
Outstanding report!
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well thanks very much!
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I lived in Taiwan, mainland China and Hong Kong 24 years. This review is absolutely correct.
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that’s fascinating! What took you to all those places? When were you in Hong Kong? That’s such an incredible city with a wild history. Too bad communism is ruining all the wonderful, unique places in the world.
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I moved from England, although I am American, to Taiwan to a Monastery outside Kaohsiung City in 1996, then to mainland China in 2000. I was teaching English -subsequently picked up by a British millionaire in his company with an office in Wanchai in 2007-2014, though we had been working together since 1996, on and off. I took care of his translation work from China and was his personal Astrologer. I’m now seeing clients in india while setting up office in Colombo Sri Lanka
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What an incredible journey, you’ve really done it all! You must have some remarkable stories from your time there.
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unfortunately my long time boss died in 2014 as predicted
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I’m in Colombo Sri Lanka though have a short trip to Yucca Valley CA before summer
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I enjoyed your article about disgusting China, but the part about the dogs were a bit much, I am a dog lover and am finding it hard to erase the images from my mind the way you described the dog issue..
You seem to have a knack for describing things very well.
I wish Trump could do something about China eating dogs! maybe impose another tariff until they stop eating dogs. !
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I was in Xiao lao po village (means mistress, seeing abandoned orphans from men who went back to their families in Hong Kong was sad) and part of Shenzhen Futian district. A guy had a dog tied up. I offered to buy the dog to free him. I was refused at the restaurant where he was captive. In another case, I used to pass by on the bus in Shenyang, Manchuria, not so far from where Pu Yi was held ( Fu Shin PSB prison), kept seeing a sign on a restaurant (note taur…taurus) it said “the happy dog” in English with a smiling pekingese. Enough said.
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That sounds similar to experiences I had. Although I don’t speak Mandarin, I was able to convince a lady to give me her cat she had tied up outside, and another time I managed to buy a kitten from a street market after watching the man wrench the kitten away from it’s mother, and cram it violently headfirst into a cage that was smaller than the kitten itself. I was horrified and immediately bought the little guy and took him home. A lot of Chinese are nice. But through staggering ignorance and backwards culture, they treat animals worse than garbage.
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I agree it was too much, I wish I hadn’t seen it. But I did, and I’ll carry that the rest of my life. I rescued two cats from those street markets. I’m sure they would’ve been eaten if I hadn’t. It’s appalling what the Chinese consider normal, and I wish more people understood that not only are all cultures not equal, but some cultures are actually bad. As they say the proof is in the pudding. And trust me, in China, you don’t want to eat the pudding.
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AMEN!
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Much depends upon the family upbringing, though I’ve seen lots of weird things: from goats, to snakes prepared in inhumane (can’t think of another word) ways
A BBC crew entered the back door, camera rolling, of a dog restaurant. After the rescue mission, the government clamped down on foreign film crews.
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Speaking of pudding: I had my 4 year old daughter, who’s now 21 and in S Dakota. She was given blood pudding at school in Sichuan. She put it in the trash, told her teacher “my dad told me not to eat garbage” so teacher pulled her ear. She said ” I’m calling daddy to come from Hong Kong and give you a beating” 打打 da da means beat beat so they put out extra security. I went to immigration to have her removed to Hong Kong. Fortunate that her 2nd cousin is a PRC 2 star General as it cut through bureaucracy
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incredible, makes haggis sound almost palatable.
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Haggis. Gross. Was offered it by a Scots. Almost as bad as their steak and kidney pie. Even with 5 pints of Guinness I couldn’t eat that.
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They won’t stop. They’ll compare it to eating pigs Actually I am Buddhist, converted in Taiwan monastery in 1996 which forbids killing of animals, though I worked with tibetan Buddhists who eat meat. I haven’t been able to rationalize that
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Here’s a good wholesome laugh that is family friendly, I thought I’d share with you. https://youtube.com/shorts/BSz2IqjZ9Oc?si=wB0xdCJaOvOAuvJh
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