Hong-Kong Protests

manqiangrexue

Brigadier
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Beating up foreigners, but I supposed I made this up to mis-inform! Lol

The rioters are so stupid, there really is no need to make anything up!
These riots have been a real eye-opener for me. Never in a million years would I think that I'd live to see the day when I'd be rooting for a Caucasian foreigner to fight back and beat up a bunch of Chinese guys in China. If you told me half a year ago I'd be on his side, I'd assume I contracted rabies causing me to become confused and disoriented...

Made me realize that I'm not nearly as racial as I thought I am... I'm far more fair and ideal-oriented after all! Never knew that about myself...
 

Gatekeeper

Brigadier
Registered Member
These riots have been a real eye-opener for me. Never in a million years would I think that I'd live to see the day when I'd be rooting for a Caucasian foreigner to fight back and beat up a bunch of Chinese guys in China. If you told me half a year ago I'd be on his side, I'd assume I contracted rabies causing me to become confused and disoriented...

Made me realize that I'm not nearly as racial as I thought I am... I'm far more fair and ideal-oriented after all! Never knew that about myself...

Lol. Manqiang, you got me pissing myself! We learn something new about ourselves everyday.

For example, I thought I was a pretty liberal lay-back guy. Accept the world as it is, live and let live. Etc.

BUT this mobs in Hong Kong ruin my place of birth, my ancestry home! Now I just want to beat the shit out of these lot, and lock them up in some golag and throw away the keys.

And after seeing how MSM operated in Hong Kong, I want to rid Hong Kong of all press and journalist that does not swear allegiance to the state! Sound scary, It is, I'm scaring mysel! Lol
 

ZeEa5KPul

Colonel
Registered Member
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So much for revolutionary diehards. Abandon gear left behind by mobs! They were supposed to be walking to the airport, as police have subway lock-down. A stupied move as Hong Kong airport is about 12 miles of road through country side. Only one road in and out once you pass tin mah bridge. They could easily be rounded up on the roadside very easily.
Obviously, nerves got the better of them, or the long march is too long! I don't know which, and frankly I don't care which!
AHAHAHAHAHAHA! They abandoned the field like the Iraqi army did when they ran from ISIS.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
These riots have been a real eye-opener for me. Never in a million years would I think that I'd live to see the day when I'd be rooting for a Caucasian foreigner to fight back and beat up a bunch of Chinese guys in China. If you told me half a year ago I'd be on his side, I'd assume I contracted rabies causing me to become confused and disoriented...

Made me realize that I'm not nearly as racial as I thought I am... I'm far more fair and ideal-oriented after all! Never knew that about myself...

That white Caucasian probably has more respect and love for China then these self-loathing racist rioters ever will.

If HK does not have processes and laws to revoke citizenship, maybe it’s time to implement some. Strip these scum of their Chinese citizenships, deport them to the white nations they love so much and see how much restraint police there shows when they try to cause trouble.
 

manqiangrexue

Brigadier
That white Caucasian probably has more respect and love for China then these self-loathing racist rioters ever will.

If HK does not have processes and laws to revoke citizenship, maybe it’s time to implement some. Strip these scum of their Chinese citizenships, deport them to the white nations they love so much and see how much restraint police there shows when they try to cause trouble.
Deport them to other countries?? Nobody's gonna take them! You can't deport the natural citizen scumbags of your country; that's not how deportation works LOL. The UK doesn't want them. Trump would build a sea-wall to keep them out if he had to! I say trap them at the airport, load them all onto trucks, drive them to a camp in the middle of the desert, and put them to manual labor. Rest time should be spent watching Chinese patriotic education and war-time dramas. Those who show signs of proper re-education and remorse can be re-introduced into Chinese society on a probationary status. The others have all the rest of their lives there to figure it out.

And if any country tries to bring up human rights, just tell them it's an adoption center; come adopt as many as you like from the untrainable pile!
 
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Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Gee this people has no shame They are just like spurned suitor but still keep at it Now if the Britain really like this people they should just grant them citizenship but of course they won't do it for them these no good Hongkie still C#%#k. Really comical singing "God save the queen" does not get them closer to the british passport with right to abode
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HONG KONG (AP) — Anti-government protesters blocked roads near Hong Kong's airport with burning barricades and damaged a train station Sunday after a night of violent clashes with police.

Train and some bus service to the airport on the outlying island of Chek Lap Kok were suspended. Some passengers walked to the airport, one of Asia's busiest, carrying their luggage.

Hong Kong has been the scene of tense anti-government protests for nearly three months. The demonstrations began in response to a proposed extradition law and have expanded to include other grievances and demands for more democracy and the resignation of the semiautonomous Chinese territory's leader.

The protests are an embarrassment to China's ruling Communist Party ahead of Oct. 1 celebrations of its 70th anniversary in power.

The protesters complain Beijing and the government of Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam are eroding the autonomy and civil liberties promised when the former British colony was returned to China in 1997.

On Sunday, the MTR Corp. suspended train service to the airport after several hundred protesters gathered there following calls online to disrupt transportation. They blocked buses arriving at the airport but police in riot helmets kept them out of the terminal.

The government said some protesters threw objects at police. It also said iron poles, bricks and rocks were thrown onto tracks of the airport train.

At least 26 flights from Hong Kong and 17 to the city had been canceled as of 7:55 p.m., the South China Morning Post newspaper reported, citing information from the airport.

After protesters began to stream away from the airport in the late afternoon, some attacked a train station in the adjacent Tung Chung area. They used metal bars to smash lights and broke open a fire hose valve, sending water gushing across the floor.

Protesters set up barricades on two adjacent streets and set fire to some of them. Firefighters arrived a few minutes later to douse the blaze.

Protesters left the area after busloads of riot police in green fatigues with black helmets and riot shields flooded into the train station.

The Post reported that drivers of taxis and private cars on the toll road from the airport were picking up protesters to help them avoid arrest.

Passengers arriving downtown on a ferry from Lantau Island, where Tung Chung is located, were being searched by police and asked for identity cards, the newspaper said.

The protests followed a night of violent clashes between protesters and police.

On Saturday, protesters threw gasoline bombs at government headquarters. Police stormed a subway car and hit passengers with clubs and pepper spray.

A total of 63 people were arrested at the Mong Kok, Yau Ma Tei and Prince Edward subway stations, police announced. The youngest was a 13-year-old boy accused of possessing two gasoline bombs.

The protests erupted in early June in Hong Kong, whose 7.4 million people were promised a "high degree of autonomy" under an agreement between Beijing and London.

Opponents saw the proposed extradition bill as an erosion of that "one country, two systems" framework. It would have allowed crime suspects to be sent to the mainland, where the Communist Party controls the court system.

Lam, the Hong Kong leader, suspended work on the law but protesters want it withdrawn completely. They also have called for Lam's resignation and democratic elections.

Also Sunday, demonstrators outside the British Consulate called on London to grant citizenship to people born before the former colony was returned to China.

About 200 people waved British flags and chanted "Equal rights now!" and "Stand with Hong Kong!"

A saxophonist in dark glasses played "God Save the Queen," the British national anthem.

Many wanted Britain to grant citizenship to people born in Hong Kong before 1997. Instead of citizenship, London gave Hong Kong people "British National Overseas" passports that can be used for travel but not to settle in the United Kingdom.

"I hope the British government can change its nationality law," said a protester, Gary Law.

On Saturday, protesters took to the streets after police refused permission for a march to mark the fifth anniversary of a decision by China against fully democratic elections in Hong Kong.

Two police officers fired warning shots into the air after being surrounded by protesters, the government said. It was the second time police fired warning shots, following an incident the previous weekend.
 
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