What I know of, they will give you permanent residence or visa, renewable every 2 or 5 years? I want the opinion of our members from PROC.Isn't it notoriously difficult to get chinese citizenship
What I know of, they will give you permanent residence or visa, renewable every 2 or 5 years? I want the opinion of our members from PROC.
Bro being Chinese is beautiful what a world we're living in....lol, During My time speaking pretty English is the trend BUT now it will NOT landed you a cushy job and many work in hospitality industries servicing Mainland Chinese....lol Now I understand why the Indians hate the Chinese so much, they steal their dreams of having a White or Asian serving them...lolI know two types of Hua Qiao children. And only two types likes a state machine...
Those uber competetive who most of the time go back for china due to better pay most often by working for a german company but as their China representative and being in 上海 or smth.
The other one are the ones who are obese and chill 24/7 and study something like education or some shit.
To each their own I guess
Not teaching chinese to chinese is basically cultural abandonement. If one can't create the right conditions to use the mother tongue of their parents, be it work, socialising, education one is weak, and disrespects their heritage. At least use it when around family, but there are not few families who already only speak german at home and disencourage their kids from learning mandarin "since its a waste of time, since we are germans now" -unconditionally- even without me as a guest visiting.
Jews also thought they were germans, didn't matter in the end.
They well provide great value as professional shitposters on Twitter (a.k.a. Wumaos).
To be honest. You don’t necessarily have to go China anyway. US and Canadian visas can be used to enter visa free non-western aligned countries. Then you can just wait it out or I suppose attempt some solution at a Chinese embassy because I really doubt the conflict would last more then a couple years.
Stalled Chinese investment deal set to return to EU agenda next month
- The Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, set aside since 2021, will likely be discussed at leadership sessions in May
- The agreement, though, is unlikely to be revived, as the European Parliament’s attitude toward Beijing has darkened in the years since
A stalled investment deal with China is likely to be back on the European Union’s agenda next month, amid a bout of soul-searching over what direction the bloc’s relations with Beijing should take.
Major trading nations will insist on discussing the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) at summits of EU foreign ministers and leaders in May, according to an EU official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
This will be part of a broader conversation on China, as the EU’s 27 member states look to flesh out a model for “de-risking” bilateral ties with the world’s second largest economy. Some officials do not view the CAI in conflict with these aims, since the deal was designed to protect European investments in China.
“Nobody should expect that the parliament will do China the favour of signing on to a deal which is out of step with the development of economic relations between the EU and China,” said Reinhard Buetikofer, head of the European Parliament’s China delegation. “CAI as it stands represents old thinking. We need a new approach.”
A foreign citizen can be neutralised by 1. Marrying a Chinese citizen, 2. Being a VIP/key contributor/skilled person, approved by government (province and above?) agency. There used to be (probably still is) an agency doing it 外国专家管理局.Isn't it notoriously difficult to get chinese citizenship
Pretty much.There are actual young 2nd or 3rd gen Chinese I know in Germany who wish to migrate back to China, due to better job prospects, better future in general but their parents are often reluctant and swallowed the "SeePeePeeSee Bad" by german MSM Tagesschau, etc. but most likely those parents are aware thatt they prob don't get chinese pension since they payed into the german system and never into the chinese one. And not all are financially secure enough to miss out on the german pension (even if it is little)
One major problem is the growing inevitable divide between the diaspora and Mainland Chinese. The diaspora basically is a time capsule from the time they left China and behave as such. It's a different story if they have frequent business or holidays in China but I know many who never went to China even for holiday after going to Germany. The Children nowadys don't even garanteed to speak fluent mandarin because of suboptimal teaching, mainly from the parent but that does not make you fluent in writing most of time.
The children of course are far more reluctant to relocate back when facing active opposition from their elders.
On the other side there are those families that are sooooo cucked and fully embrace western libtard democrazy with all its colours.
Those ones are lost anyways, basically like the group of jews that were pro Hitler.