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travelhighlights:

Chinese Valley
Guilin, Guangxi, China
The great outdoors!
Via fuckyeahoutdoors:applearts

travelhighlights:

Chinese Valley

Guilin, Guangxi, China

The great outdoors!

Via fuckyeahoutdoors:applearts

Notes
posted 8 / 31 / 2009
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photophobia:
Great Wall (China set).

photophobia:

Great Wall (China set).
Notes
posted 6 / 12 / 2009
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Video

ajamison:

Beijing Clamps Down on Media
This video is wild…plainclothes Chinese police blocking attempting to block CNN cameras from filming in Tiananmen Square on its 20th anniversary.

This is so pathetic in its childishness, not to mention its futility. The Chinese are laughable—or would be if they weren’t kidnapping and torturing political dissidents and Christians.

Notes
posted 6 / 4 / 2009
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ajamison:

Tiananmen Square massacre was 20 years ago today.

ajamison:

Tiananmen Square massacre was 20 years ago today.
Notes
posted 6 / 4 / 2009
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Link
When Abortion Collides with Totalitarianism
Notes
posted 4 / 17 / 2009
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Ghastly working conditions in a Chinese keyboard factory

(via azspot)

What type of ghastly conditions? Are the shifts too long? Are the mangers trying to control things too harshly? Can’t the workers just press escape? We need to insert some inspectors in there pronto. Or we could just num-lock the place down and investigate. That seems the best option to me, unless someone else has an alternative.

Notes
posted 2 / 12 / 2009
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Video

New car from China

Notes
posted 1 / 5 / 2009
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Link
Disaster: Students Quarantined in University As Epidemic Unfolds

davereed:

(via hilker)(via davereed)

Yet another legacy of China.

Notes
posted 11 / 6 / 2008
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Video

Notes
posted 11 / 6 / 2008
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Quote
Despite numerous controversies ahead of the Games — turmoil over the Olympic torch relay, the bloody suppression of Tibetan riots in March, and so on — the Games went spectacularly smoothly. Senior party cadres can give themselves a pat on the back for a job well done. Not for long, though. It is hard to exaggerate just how important the answers to those fundamental questions will be for China. Chinese society has reached a point where maintaining the status quo is simply not an option. Beijing is barely able to keep a lid on the tremendous social dislocation caused by the country’s pell-mell economic growth over the past 30 years, and the consequent misery suffered by untold millions — the unemployed, the landless, tens of millions of migrant workers laboring under inhuman conditions, the countless victims of widespread corruption. Government officials have acknowledged that up to hundreds of so-called mass incidents occur every day. These often violent eruptions of frustration occasionally threaten to spread into chaos; as the Olympics loomed, they were more tightly controlled, or often simply ignored by the media. Now that the Games are over, it’s a good bet that the turmoil will resurface.
Where China Goes Next - TIME
Notes
posted 8 / 26 / 2008
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