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"a lot of them (general Chinese population) still actually have that deep COVID fear that we witnessed around the time when people were fighting for bog rolls"One side of the pole.
Other side is Xi comes out of COVID smelling like roses.
Both possible, but unlikely.
Somewhere in middle ground of above poles is more probable. Not sure what that looks like though.
My sources do mention cases of unrest, but, all the animals would need to rush the cage gate like synchronised swimmers for a full collapse.
It's the method to arrange and enable an event like this to happen which is telling. If it happens, it's military backed. It's the only way it CAN happen.
Covid insanity might just be the tipping point, however,, like they were a necessary life item.
Panic buying has hit parts of Beijing...
They must've done a good job over there on the fear campaign. The CCP is now reaping the rewards... ?If they could just relax a bit and let things play out as has happened elsewhere in the world, I think they'd be fine. Covid numbers would just naturally diminish.
I did hear somewhere that Chinese and Japanese populations have more genes that encode for social anxiety. I believe a Cairns tour bus operator told me and it explains why tourists to that humid rain-soaked mecca tend to stick about in one big mob when they get off the bus..
"a lot of them (general Chinese population) still actually have that deep COVID fear that we witnessed around the time when people were fighting for bog rolls"
This the difference, I believe. Fear creates the feared object/outcome. I know it's not socially acceptable to hold such new age beliefs, but I see it all the time, not just in relation to covid, but everything in life. If you go around thinking there's a bogey man around every corner, your chance of meeting one is many times higher than if you didn't harbout such fears.
If they could just relax a bit and let things play out as has happened elsewhere in the world, I think they'd be fine. Covid numbers would just naturally diminish.
Hey, take it easy on the Victorians! Some of us voted against Dan's recent reinstallment.I did hear somewhere that Chinese and Japanese populations have more genes that encode for social anxiety. I believe a Cairns tour bus operator told me and it explains why tourists to that humid rain-soaked mecca tend to stick about in one big mob when they get off the bus.
This may explain the reactions of the population in Shanghai ( isn't it called something else now? ). It doesn't explain though the behaviour of the DNA diluted Victorians during lockdown, who have a greater distance between themselves and the first human who left Africa for the Middle East and Europe than possibly anywhere else in the world. Their genes appear to only encode for cheating at football contests and driving caravans dangerously through Queensland.
Outwith all that the Shanghaians are revolting.
Protests spread in China as anger mounts over ‘zero-COVID’
Residents and students rally in Beijing, Shanghai and Nanjing, with some even calling on Xi Jinping to step down.www.aljazeera.com
gg
The article says “These protests clearly have dozens, maybe hundreds, of people behind them".
Brazil getting "interesting" also.My contacts in Kazakistan tell me that protests have begun in Almaty against Tokayev's re-election as president.
Also Russian customs are preventing resupplies to Wagner and the Donetsk militias and Wagner ain't happy about it. Somebody may get it in Der Ring des Nibelungen. Talk of Pushillin and Wagner mounting a coup on Putin.
So all the usual suspects seem to be revolting at the same time as those in Shanghai.
What a kerfuffle.
gg
I have really been puzzled by xi handling of covid recently.face saving? Not reallyThe article says “These protests clearly have dozens, maybe hundreds, of people behind them".
Hundreds! That's in contrast to billions of obedient citizens who will stay indoors for as long as Xi Ping Pong tells them to.
It's obvious he's presuring everyone in order to identify the few "trouble makers". Once they and their families are locked up (without trial), he will be able to lift the restrictions. Presumably there's a few more bad apples to weed out yet. You can bet your bottom dollar this is what's behind it. Nothing to do with covid. The regime is terrified of an uprising.
Anyone did not vote for our own version of CCP dictature?Hey, take it easy on the Victorians! Some of us voted against Dan's recent reinstallment.
This is what most midwits don't understand, that fascism (and indeed Nazism) are ideologies of the left, right down to the extreme identitarianism and racism.Anyone did not vote for our own version of CCP dictature?
I once remember the left saying about Jeff Kennet:
That he was a dictator..lol.
.he was a kindergarten bully compared to Andrew...
Fascism was and remains a left extremism and is not dead
Yea but we are the ones driving the caravans!!!!!Hey, take it easy on the Victorians! Some of us voted against Dan's recent reinstallment.
Chinese billionaire Jack Ma jets out of Australia after ‘personal trip’
Elusive Chinese tech billionaire Jack Ma has left Australia after a “personal trip”, the Alibaba founder’s first visit in six years to a country he has credited with changing his life.
Until he became the highest-profile victim of a Chinese tech crackdown launched by President Xi Jinping in 2020, Mr Ma was China’s most celebrated business figure and would regularly travel to meet world leaders.
Now rare sightings of the secretive billionaire light up the Chinese internet. The most recent viral photo showed Mr Ma, 58, drinking a bottle of Coca-cola in a Melbourne hotel foyer.
Elusive Chinese tech billionaire Jack Ma has left Australia after a “personal trip”, the Alibaba founder’s first visit in six years to a country he has credited with changing his life.
Until he became the highest-profile victim of a Chinese tech crackdown launched by President Xi Jinping in 2020, Mr Ma was China’s most celebrated business figure and would regularly travel to meet world leaders.
Now rare sightings of the secretive billionaire light up the Chinese internet. The most recent viral photo showed Mr Ma, 58, drinking a bottle of Coca-cola in a Melbourne hotel foyer.
The Australian has confirmed the photo was legitimate and that Mr Ma has since left Australia.
“It was just a personal trip,” said a person familiar with the internet entrepreneur’s itinerary.
Before the breakdown of Australia and China’s bilateral relationship, Mr Ma spoke of the formative role Australia had played in his remarkable business story, which saw him amass a fortune worth more than $35bn.
In 1980, a 12-year-old Ma met an Australian family from Newcastle, the Morleys, who were visiting his home town of Hangzhou. The family’s patriarch, Ken Morley, an electrical engineer, became a mentor figure to the young Ma, helping him improve his English and flying him to Australia in 1985 on his first overseas trip.
“When I arrived in Australia, I was so shocked and amazed by the wonderful things, the people, the culture, the landscapes, the products,” Mr Ma said in 2016.
“I was … educated in China that China was the best and richest country in the world … when I arrived in Australia I saw the world was so different,” he said, adding the trip “totally changed my future”.
Seeing members of the Morley family was the main reason for last weekend’s trip, The Australian was told by a person familiar with Mr Ma’s schedule.
It was the first time they had met in Australia since Mr Ma visited in 2017 to announce a $29m scholarship at University of Newcastle named in honour of the Morley family.
Melbourne has also been the headquarters of e-commerce giant Alibaba’s Australia and New Zealand operations, and is still the base for an outpost of his philanthropic foundation.
Mr Ma stood down from the board of Alibaba in late 2020. By the end of that year, Mr Xi ordered the cancellation of Ant Group, a spin-off fintech business Mr Ma had founded.
reportedly became furious at Mr Ma over public criticism he had made about Chinese financial regulators. In January, Mr Ma agreed to shrink his voting rights in Ant from more than 50 per cent to 6.2 per cent, formally ending his control of the company. He has been mostly living in Tokyo.
The Xi era has been a dangerous time for Chinese entrepreneurs. Beijing-based investment bank China Renaissance recently made an extraordinary filing to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, admitting it was unable to make contact with its CEO, Bao Fan. The company’s shares has lost 30 per cent of their value on the news.
The investment banker’s disappearance came less than six months after China Renaissance’s president, Cong Lin, was taken away by Chinese authorities.
Desmund Shum, who wrote a book on his personal experience working in China’s elite business circles, said this was a “very, very scary moment” for the Chinese tech investment industry.
“Is (Beijing) going after individuals or going after the tech investment industry? I think that’s the most important question to ask,” said Mr Shum, whose ex-wife remains in prison in China after being investigated for her business activities.
WILL GLASGOW NORTH ASIA CORRESPONDENT
HEIDI HAN REPORTER
Jack Ma in Sydney in 1985. The billionaire says his trip to Australia changed his life.
Jack Ma during his ‘personal trip’ to Melbourne.
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