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Hu Jintao's very offensive speech - Chinese "President" makes claim to Australia
Taipei Times ^
| 10-29-03
| Bruce Jacobs
Posted on 10/28/2003 11:21:39 PM PST by tallhappy
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The new "president" of China is clealry insane.
China uses these voyages to claim islands far to the south of Vietnam as Chinese territory
This refers to the Spratley Islands which China claims.
1
posted on
10/28/2003 11:21:40 PM PST
by
tallhappy
To: tallhappy
The good news is the spratly islands have not been found to have any oil reserves.
2
posted on
10/28/2003 11:36:20 PM PST
by
donmeaker
(Bigamy is one wife too many. So is monogamy.)
To: tallhappy; Enemy Of The State
<< The new "president" of "china" is clearly insane. >>
Spot on.
The [Butcher of Llasa] snake at the head of the predatory Peking-based pack of psychopathological, lying, looting, thieving, mass-murdering gangster bastards that so grandiously calls itself "china" is a psychopathological, lying, looting, thieving, mass-murdering gangster bastard.
A deadly-dangerously delusionally-hesperophobic froth and foam-flecked psychotic posing as a "politician," whose self-annointing and self-perpetuating psychotic pack presides -- even while seeking to expand it forever -- over a brutally-enforced imperialistic colonial empire whose three point seven million square miles already includes more than two point five million square miles of other Peoples' invaded, conquered, coloninized and enslaved lands, territories, Nations and Sovereign States.
Clearly insane.
And every-bit-as-clearly deadly dangerous.
3
posted on
10/28/2003 11:46:32 PM PST
by
Brian Allen
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
To: Brian Allen
Spent too much time at the monkey-brain table?
4
posted on
10/28/2003 11:56:48 PM PST
by
185JHP
( Not much quag. Even less mire.)
To: 185JHP
Your point, houzi boy?
5
posted on
10/29/2003 12:01:05 AM PST
by
tallhappy
To: tallhappy
Hu does he think he is?
6
posted on
10/29/2003 12:03:38 AM PST
by
Consort
To: donmeaker
The bad news is the Spratleys still sit smack dab in the middle of major shipping lanes for that area.
Regardless the lack of oil reserves, as a strategic position it is essential, and China cannot have it.
7
posted on
10/29/2003 12:04:02 AM PST
by
Drammach
To: 185JHP; tallhappy; Consort; Drammach; Enemy Of The State
<< Spent too much time at the monkey-brain table? >>
Better that than at the chow lan cheow table you've been sucking on, Sin Seh.
8
posted on
10/29/2003 12:40:56 AM PST
by
Brian Allen
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
To: Brian Allen
Squatting Tiger, Bulemic Dragon....
9
posted on
10/29/2003 12:46:56 AM PST
by
Drammach
To: tallhappy; Cincinatus' Wife; ALOHA RONNIE
Text of the speech for reference and discussion:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1010263/posts Peace with China and China's willingness to join the free world are essential to the future of the human race. It's not clear from this speech that we have real hope of that happening.
Taiwan: non-negotiable.
5,000 year-old culture: of academic interest.
Chinese in Australia before the British? So what.
Security conceps based on mutual trust, mutual benefit? Prove it: disarm the DPRK. Discontinue arms proliferation.
Aagainst terrorism? Stop supporting Maoists all over the world.
China has some further changes to make before we can call it a friend. Meanwhile, REMEMBER the Chosin Reservoir. REMEMBER the Clintons. REMEMBER Wen Ho Lee. REMEMBER the reeducation camps. REMEMBER millions of starved people.
10
posted on
10/29/2003 12:57:05 AM PST
by
risk
To: risk; tallhappy; All
China gains on Japan in age-old rivalry for Asia influence*** At last week's APEC meeting in Bangkok, for example, a vigorous and fresh-faced new Chinese president, Hu Jintao, was busy coordinating responses to a North Korea missile test as the leader of six-party talks, prepping for a show-stealing visit to Australia, where the Chinese leader signed a $17 billion equity share in an Australian liquid-gas development project, and accepting congratulations from heads of state for China's successful manned space launch, the first Asian nation to put a human in orbit. China has been busy buying minerals, food products, and other raw materials in both North and South Asia, and seemingly caring little about tariffs.
Japanese diplomats, by contrast, appeared to spend much time in Bangkok, unsuccessfully lobbying for a resolution against North Korean abductions of Japanese citizens, an issue that plays well in Japan on the eve of next month's elections but which has lost its cachet outside Japan.
Sources says the Japanese also appeared too stringent in their trade policies - eager to push their own agricultural products but less interested in buying the products of others.
"The new Chinese leadership has the capability to send a more refined message. Hu Jintao seems more elegant, and he sells China well," says a Japanese foreign ministry official. "I'm glad China is starting to engage in the world in a greater and better behaved manner. China is catching up. But it is way too early to say they have caught up. China is a huge country, with huge problems, and their growth rates are not sustainable."
Still, the expansion of China's relations in Asia, the ongoing gravitation pull of its cheap labor, and its professed desire to become a mainstream player on the world stage, are all looked at with dismay in Tokyo.
Since the turn of the 20th century, essentially, Japan has tended to hold the chief strategic influence in Asia - first as an aggressive colonial power prior to World War II in Korea and China, and later as America's chief ally in the region and the world's No. 2 economy.
Many Americans may regard World War II as a contest between Japan and the US. Yet some Asian experts describe it as one part of an ancient struggle between the Chinese and Japanese civilizations. The issue is hardly black and white, especially since China and Japan are part of a region that is rapidly integrating economically, and whose elites are quite aware of the need for greater levels of interaction.***
To: Drammach
<< Squatting Tiger, Bulemic Dragon .... >>
Hu might that be?
Not nanren men zai hua sheng tun, by any chance?
12
posted on
10/29/2003 1:29:17 AM PST
by
Brian Allen
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
To: Cincinatus' Wife; risk; tallhappy; Enemy Of The State
<< the first Asian state to put a human in orbit. >>
In its dreams, maybe.
And only if, as is "china's" wont, you don't count the overwhelmingly Asian state, Russia -- or that other overwhelmingly Asian state, the USSR, which have been almost casually putting Asian and European and every other kind of men in orbit since Yuri Gagarin took his April 12 1961 ride into history.
And with the same hardware as "china's," too.
And the same stolen American software.
Only things "china" contributed to last week's orbit or two were the launch pad and its usual truck loads of lies.
13
posted on
10/29/2003 1:41:39 AM PST
by
Brian Allen
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
To: Brian Allen
Only things "china" contributed to last week's orbit or two were the launch pad and its usual truck loads of lies.And the spy satellite it left.
China's man in Space*** The first manned flight is expected to be in space for only 90 minutes. But after separation, the orbital module with its own propulsion system for autonomous flight will stay in space for up to eight months. The orbital modules of Shenzhou 3 and 4 had an ELINT capability that included three antennas aimed at Earth to determine the source of ultra-high frequency emissions, plus other antennas designed to detect and locate radar transmissions. The Soviets used similar transmissions to monitor movements of U.S. Navy ships. ***
To: Cincinatus' Wife
<< And the [Stolen Nineteen-fifties American technology] spy satellite it left. >>
Fear not, Dear Lady, "china" has another billion or so murderously-colonized captives, slaves and serfs to lift out of the middle ages before it lifts much of its own into space.
Meanwhile its fort? sees it "lift" the designs for Wal-Mart towel racks and Toys-R-US bubble pipes from idiot-savant-located prison-labor factories.
15
posted on
10/29/2003 3:59:58 AM PST
by
Brian Allen
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
To: tallhappy
I don't think Hu is crazy. If he is, it's crazy like a fox.
YES! CHINA HAS DESIGNS, EYES, COVETOUS EYES ON AUSTRALIA as more than one well connected source asserted to me voluntarily.
They say something along the lines of . . .
"So much land, so few people. We have so few people. It is our destiny, our right.
Powerful people in government have attitudes precisely as outlined in this article.
Wake up, world!
16
posted on
10/29/2003 5:06:48 AM PST
by
Quix
(DEFEAT the lying, deceptive, satanic, commie, leftist, globalist oligarchy 1 associate at a time)
To: Quix
oooops
Chinese in positions to know expressed this attitude:
"Australia has so few people, so much land. We have so many people, and our land is crowded. It is our destiny, our right to take over Australia. This century, this millenium will be the Chinese Century, the Chinese Millenium. China will lead the world."
17
posted on
10/29/2003 6:10:31 AM PST
by
Quix
(DEFEAT the lying, deceptive, satanic, commie, leftist, globalist oligarchy 1 associate at a time)
To: Brian Allen
"Not nanren men zai hua sheng tun, by any chance?"
Who in Washington are you refering to? Any men there, or is it someone in particular?
18
posted on
10/29/2003 8:05:00 AM PST
by
Eric Paul
(Geography is Important)
To: Eric Paul
"Nanren men zai hua sheng tun" was/is the Jiang Gang's contemptuous reference to Xian Sen Kling Tong.
With the emphasis on contemptuous.
To a man they loathed and detested the evil bastard and every last co-serial-raping lickspittle that slithered and slimed in his trail.
19
posted on
10/29/2003 9:51:44 AM PST
by
Brian Allen
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
To: Brian Allen
If that is the case I think that I do not understand. shenme nan he shenme men? Argh! I wish I could just use characters here. It would simplify things so much.
20
posted on
10/29/2003 10:07:51 AM PST
by
Eric Paul
(Geography is Important)
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