So are you, mother****ing asshole !!
On Apr 25, 4:13 pm, Raymond <ni...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Another stupid loser finding out ways to stay in the west. Very good.
> May all losers go to the west. May all patriots go to the east. May
> all real Chinese live long and prosper.
>
> On Fri, 25 Apr 2008 14:32:29 -0700 (PDT), hochim...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> >April 14, 2008
>
> >Chinese Student at Duke U. Hit With Online Attacks for Alleged
> >Sympathy for Tibet
> >A Chinese student at Duke University has come under attack from fellow
> >Chinese students since allegedly taking part in a pro-Tibet
> >demonstration on the campus last week, according to The Chronicle, the
> >campus newspaper at Duke.
>
> >After the protest, the woman began to receive threatening messages
> >from Chinese students who felt she had expressed sup****t for the
> >independence of Tibet, which has been gripped by ethnic clashes in
> >recent weeks. China regards advocates of Tibetan independence as
> >people seeking to split the country.
>
> >In addition, the student=92s personal information, including her name,
> >telephone number, and Chinese national identity card number, were
> >posted on the Web site of the Duke Chinese Scholars and Students
> >Association.
>
> >The campus newspaper also re****ted that her photograph and a video of
> >her at the rally had been posted on several popular Chinese-language
> >Web sites. The student told the newspaper that some messages had
> >called for her to be =93burned alive with oil.=94 The student=92s name
wa=
s
> >not revealed in the news re****t, which quoted her as saying she did
> >not sup****t Tibetan independence.
>
> >She said that she had been informed she was on a Chinese-government
> >blacklist and that she was afraid to return home. =93If I go back, I
> >might end up in jail forever,=94 she said.
> >The rally on the Duke campus took place in the wake of protests in
> >Tibet that began peacefully on March 10, the anniversary of a failed
> >1959 uprising against Chinese rule. The protests became violent four
> >days later, when Tibetans went on a rampage, attacking Chinese shops
> >and people.
>
> >The online attacks on the student are the latest in a series of
> >incidents involving the Tibet issue and Chinese students in the United
> >States. The Chinese Students and Scholars Association of the
> >University of Wa****ngton sent a letter last week to campus officials
> >expressing =93serious concern=94 about a visit to the university by the
> >Dalai Lama this week, saying the exiled Tibetan leader=92s appearance
> >would not =93show respect=94 to China=92s =93own domestic issues.=94
They=
also
> >demanded that the university ensure his visit would raise =93no
> >political agenda.=94
>
> >When a film on Tibet was shown at Cornell University last week,
> >Chinese students made death threats against the organizers. =97Paul
> >Mooney
>
> >Duke Student Targeted for Mediating Tibet Protest
>
> >Mark Ralston
>
> >A neighbor in the Chinese city of Qingdao walks past graffiti saying
> >"Kill everyone in the home" and "Kill traitors" painted outside the
> >family home of Duke undergraduate Grace Wang. AFP/Getty Images
>
> >The Bryant Park Project, April 21, 2008 ? Duke University
> >undergraduate Grace Wang attempted to mediate a heated interchange on
> >campus two weeks ago over the Tibetan independence movement. After
> >fierce denunciations of Wang by ethnic Chinese in the U.S. and in
> >China, her parents in China have been forced into hiding. Wang says
> >she is proud of her actions and is angered by threats her family has
> >received.
>
> >Wang stresses that she doesn't sup****t Tibetan independence; she just
> >wanted to intervene when she saw a crowd of 400 to 500 people =97
mostly
> >Chinese citizens =97 squaring off against 12 pro-Tibet protesters. She
> >even gamely wrote "Free Tibet, Save Tibet" on one student's back in an
> >agreement brokered on the fly to get him to talk to some of the pro-
> >China demonstrators.
>
> >She says the phrase "Free Tibet" can mean a lot of things, but to her,
> >the heart of the Tibetan problem involves access to education for
> >children. "Tibetans don't enjoy the same freedoms that the Han Chinese
> >would enjoy," she says. "Tibetan children don't have the equal amount
> >of op****tunity."
>
> >Within a day of Wang's attempt to referee the protest, word got back
> >to China and Wang became the focus of vicious attacks on the Web. In
> >an image posted the next day on a popular Internet ****tal, Wang
> >appeared with the word "traitor" written on her face. "I was very
> >shocked," she says. "I almost had a heart attack."
>
> >Since the protest began to make headlines, Wang has struggled to stay
> >in touch with her parents, who went into hiding following threats that
> >were painted on the family's apartment in the Chinese city of
> >Qingdao.
>
> >"I try to e-mail them," she says. "Whatever way I use to contact my
> >parents, the Chinese government is going to censor anyways. ... I try
> >to talk about something else while referring to their safety."
>
> >Wang says she has tried to ask her parents if they want political
> >asylum. She says they have responded by stressing that they are
> >Chinese and shouldn't betray their country =97 nor should she, they
say.
> >Wang isn't sure those are really her parents' words, but she is pretty
> >sure of one thing: "I don't think they want to leave," she says. "They
> >love China just as much as I do."
>
> >On the Duke campus, at least, Wang feels safe. "I know what I'm doing
> >is right," she says. "I have more friends than people who are
> >condemning me."


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