grzegorz wrote:When I was in the PRC in 2005 street vendors operating without a permit was illegal in Hangzhou.
I remember a lady running with a cart of fruit and some of it falling to the ground and another lady grabbed it. The vendor asked for her fruit after hiding her cart and the other lady losing face shouted she would turn the lady in.
That's when I knew it was time to leave China.
the POP and PORI both faced what Chung described as “smearing campaigns.” He said he was often the target of these attacks, with pro-Beijing groups labelling him a “secret agent” or alleging the institute was funded with foreign money.
vadaga wrote:Afa PORI
https://hongkongfp.com/2020/08/23/pollster-robert-chung-says-hell-keep-giving-hongkongers-their-say-despite-police-raid-and-national-security-law/the POP and PORI both faced what Chung described as “smearing campaigns.” He said he was often the target of these attacks, with pro-Beijing groups labelling him a “secret agent” or alleging the institute was funded with foreign money.
Also here is an SCMP article talking about the dispute going on at the WTO as to whether 'Made in Hong Kong' will be a thing in future https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3098203/hong-kongs-wto-threat-against-us-made-china-ruling-puts-city
that it will end was decided when it was implimented....1997vadaga wrote:An analysis here says that the end of one country two systems in HK was largely decided by the CCP back in 2017
vadaga wrote:Thanks for the comment- perhaps I was not clear enough. The accelerated end of one country two systems before 2047 as was decided in 2017 as detailed in the report.
Bao wrote:vadaga wrote:Thanks for the comment- perhaps I was not clear enough. The accelerated end of one country two systems before 2047 as was decided in 2017 as detailed in the report.
Have no ideas why people believe that. It doesn't speed up any process. The new laws, forced solely by the US interference, is only something that every other country already has. A normalization that the West hates because they won't be as successful when they try to stir up problems. But it doesn't affect common HK citizes.
"The (old) education system has worked very well," said the scholar, who grew up in Inner Mongolia and attended Mongolian-language schools in the countryside.
"The children don't have any problem speaking Mandarin ...They're already bilingual."
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 74 guests