View Full Version : Chinese Militia
peoplesliberationarmy
06-15-2003, 05:24 AM
http://forum.jczs.sina.com.cn/groups/land/upload/1055560473_DSC00456.jpg
http://forum.jczs.sina.com.cn/groups/land/upload/1055560628_DSC00457.jpg
http://forum.jczs.sina.com.cn/groups/land/upload/1055560695_DSC00458.jpg
http://forum.jczs.sina.com.cn/groups/land/upload/1055560723_DSC00459.jpg
http://forum.jczs.sina.com.cn/groups/land/upload/1055560755_DSC00461.jpg
http://forum.jczs.sina.com.cn/groups/land/upload/1055560806_DSC00462.jpg
Pics taken in Kun Ming. South West of China.
Mortimer
06-15-2003, 05:52 AM
lol
how cute in their little helmets :roll:
Seraphim
06-15-2003, 07:31 AM
lol
how cute in their little helmets :roll:
dood
im shaking my head at you...lol
dugdug
06-15-2003, 12:07 PM
:( Never laugh at chinese!
BT_Recon
06-15-2003, 10:57 PM
why not? i bet they laugh at us all the time :roll:
stuntman
06-16-2003, 01:02 AM
I bet they laugh and say stuff like "America and there freedoms! HAHAHAAHAHA" Never laugh at Chinease Americans (or western Chinease)! But these COMYS' look down right silly! Im sorry if it came down to the USA and comunist China in a win all lose all, we would kick these guys asses again! (and any other coat holders)!http://www.army-technology.com/contractor_images/aimpoint/aimpoint5.jpg
peoplesliberationarmy
06-16-2003, 02:39 AM
why not? i bet they laugh at us all the time :roll:
who told you this?
do we laugh tommy all the time? usa is better than jap.... :bash:
Seraphim
06-16-2003, 10:37 AM
Stuntman....what you mean "again"? A war against china is not going to be easy. Neither country will win as easily as you think.
dugdug
06-16-2003, 12:19 PM
................ why are you saying that..............Who told you about his, Chinese laugh at Americans all the time???
Also, I don't think there will be a war between these two
Trigger
06-16-2003, 12:49 PM
TRANSLATOR PLEEEEEEASE!!
stuntman
06-16-2003, 01:49 PM
I agree I think our countries will never fight! In fact China will be our best business partner when the EU is more powerfull! Maybe in 20 30 years! Just my honest opinion!
admar2
06-16-2003, 05:50 PM
JFC!!! think they could mount a few more gadgets on their brain-buckets?
budanski
06-16-2003, 06:00 PM
I agree I think our countries will never fight! In fact China will be our best business partner when the EU is more powerfull! Maybe in 20 30 years! Just my honest opinion!
EU more powerful than who? Their socialist system will never outpace the U.S.
stuntman
06-16-2003, 10:04 PM
No budanski I agree it will never be as powerfull as USA but it will gain more power over the years to come and that will divert money away from the US. So why not team up with China! Trust me they will not be communist long!
peoplesliberationarmy
06-19-2003, 07:17 AM
http://military.china.com/zh_cn/blade/zg/lj/T98/011.jpg
ZTZ99
Mortimer
06-19-2003, 08:49 AM
I agree I think our countries will never fight! In fact China will be our best business partner when the EU is more powerfull! Maybe in 20 30 years! Just my honest opinion!
EU more powerful than who? Their socialist system will never outpace the U.S.
lol
it already is
budanski
06-19-2003, 10:10 AM
I agree I think our countries will never fight! In fact China will be our best business partner when the EU is more powerfull! Maybe in 20 30 years! Just my honest opinion!
EU more powerful than who? Their socialist system will never outpace the U.S.
lol
it already is
WRONG!
Daily Telegraph (http://screenprintlive.telegraph.co.uk/Daily/skins/Telegraph/navigator.asp?AW=1055787273890)
Graham Turner
Part one
"The US isn't a super-power - we're a super-duper power and there hasn't been one before?
An American Odyssey
Why is there such deep distrust between America and the rest of the world? To find out, I spent five weeks travelling across the country, talking to members of the administration, presidents of great universities, military commanders, chief executive officers of giant corporations and banks - and a host of ordinary citizens.
'Is America fit to be an imperial power?" I asked the former head of the CIA, Admiral Stansfield Turner. I knew I was pushing my luck and the admiral, who was Director of Central Intelligence during the Carter years, was clearly irritated. "If anyone says that the United States is not fit to be an imperial power," he retorted, "the burden is on them to say why.
***"I believe we're fit for three reasons. One, we won the Cold War resoundingly. Two: we're both the most democratic country in the world and the best example of free enterprise - and that's the way the whole world is moving. Those who don't go that way will simply be trampled under foot.
***"Number three: the world needs a leader, and no one else can do it. The EU didn't stand up on Bosnia. We did. The EU couldn't stand up on Kosovo. We did. So it doesn't make much difference whether we're fit or not. We're there, and no one else is."
***But, I ventured, did America know much about the world they were intending to lead? "No, we don't,"conceded the admiral, "but we do believe ours is the right way. And why has all this criticism of the US come up now? Is it because you feel you don't need us as much as you did when the threat of communism was still around? Is that why people didn't show this jealousy before?"
***Admiral Turner, who was born in (of all unlikely places) Ramsbottom in Lancashire, speaks in understandably truculent but decidedly imperial tones. Raymond Seitz, a former US ambassador in London and the most Anglophile of Americans, sounds a wryer, more ironic note - but his message is much the same.
***"It's very hard," he said, "to think of anything international in nature which can be successfully launched if it doesn't have the backing of the United States. If we pull out of the Kyoto Protocol, it's a dead letter. If we're not part of the International Criminal Court, it's a sham court. If we're not participating vigorously in something, it's not going to work very effectively.
***"A lot of national leaders recognise that the security of their countries depends on a good relationship with the US, so they value the opportunity to be received in the White House - the palace where all decisions are made. When America votes for the person who rules here, it has a huge effect around the globe. If you're in a bazaar in Cairo or pushing a cart in Shanghai, that choice will have a large effect on your personal security and prosperity.
***"It is therefore important for their leaders to be able to go into the Throne Room. If they're lucky when they get there, they'll be given a bigger quota for their apples or, pehaps, American backing for the dam they want to build because we'll vote for the loan in the World Bank. It sounds arrogant, but it's true.
***"Our power is so great, and so unlikely to be challenged for many, many years, that you have to go back to Rome for any kind of parallel. It's a misnomer to speak of the United States as being merely a super-power. We're a super-duper power, and I don't know that the world has seen one of those before."
***When it comes to "old" Europe, there are echoes of Donald Rumsfeld everywhere in Washington and New York. "I spend a lot of time in Europe in political and intellectual circles," said George Weigel, biographer of the Pope and senior fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, "and I find them frankly boring. There is so much more going on here. It's we who frame the debate about the great global issues."
***"There is a strong feeling here," said Father Richard Neuhaus, a leading Catholic theologian with many friends in the White House, "that Western Europe is literally a dying continent, demographically and spiritually; whereas in America, people are energetic, vibrant, filled with technical expertise, whistles and bells.
***"Foreigners say our newspapers give little foreign news, which proves that we are insular - but that is nonsense. The reason that there is little foreign news is that so much happens in America and around the world because of America. America is the story! If you live in Belgium or Denmark, you're simply not making half an hour of news each night."
***Even retired military men are contemptuous of what we have to offer intellectually. "I used to go to Europe with an inferiority complex," said Lieut Gen William Odom, a former director of the National Security Agency who now works for the Hudson Institute, "but now I can't find a decent debate over there. They don't think strategically, but then they don't have to because they're not in charge - and, in any case, they don't have any money."
***He made the nations of Western Europe sound like a dull, insignificant province of the United States. "When an event happens in the world," he went on, "nobody calls those people, whereas they're calling our President all the time. When the intelligence community in this country hears about something which might cause the President to make a decision, they have 10 minutes to get it to the White House. [It evidently took rather longer in the days before 9/11].
***"Does that give you a sense of empire? Which other capital can you go to where that is the case? Washington is full of foreign lobbies wanting something from America. Why would you want to lobby Chirac - to change the kind of cheese or something?"
***I heard the same vainglorious imperial echoes again and again as I travelled around the United States talking with members of the administration, the presidents of great universities, celebrated columnists, the chief executive officers of giant corporations and banks, as well as a host of ordinary citizens.
***I had first gone to America as a student at Stanford University 50 years ago. This time, I went not so much to enjoy myself as to try to understand that remarkable and, in many ways, mysterious country.
***My conclusion, at the end of five weeks and 20,000 miles, is that although the war in Iraq may have provided a dramatic demonstration of Americans' overwhelming might, we ain't seen nothing yet.
***In military terms, the United States is simply a generation or more ahead of the rest of the world. Its hi-tech capabilities make everyone else look Neanderthal; and even in the most mundane items of military hardware, such as transport aircraft, it dwarfs the rest of us. They have 87 C17s: Western Europe has four. Within a decade, the Americans expect to have supersonic weapons operating at Mach 25 - 19,000 miles an hour. "We are not even trying to keep up," said Andrew Brooks of the International Institute of Strategic Studies in London.
***Military dominance, moreover, is but one aspect of America's overwhelming power. The United States produces more than 30 per cent of the world's goods and services. New York accounts for at least half of the world's capital market. And 70 per cent of the world's visual media comes out of America, and, in a large part, reflects an American view of things.
EXCERPT (http://screenprintlive.telegraph.co.uk/Default/Skins/Telegraph/Client.asp?Enter=true&AW=1055787273890&skin=Telegraph&Daily=TheDailyTel)
Mortimer
06-19-2003, 10:55 AM
I agree I think our countries will never fight! In fact China will be our best business partner when the EU is more powerfull! Maybe in 20 30 years! Just my honest opinion!
EU more powerful than who? Their socialist system will never outpace the U.S.
lol
it already is
WRONG!
Daily Telegraph (http://screenprintlive.telegraph.co.uk/Daily/skins/Telegraph/navigator.asp?AW=1055787273890)
Graham Turner
Part one
"The US isn't a super-power - we're a super-duper power and there hasn't been one before?
An American Odyssey
Why is there such deep distrust between America and the rest of the world? To find out, I spent five weeks travelling across the country, talking to members of the administration, presidents of great universities, military commanders, chief executive officers of giant corporations and banks - and a host of ordinary citizens.
'Is America fit to be an imperial power?" I asked the former head of the CIA, Admiral Stansfield Turner. I knew I was pushing my luck and the admiral, who was Director of Central Intelligence during the Carter years, was clearly irritated. "If anyone says that the United States is not fit to be an imperial power," he retorted, "the burden is on them to say why.
***"I believe we're fit for three reasons. One, we won the Cold War resoundingly. Two: we're both the most democratic country in the world and the best example of free enterprise - and that's the way the whole world is moving. Those who don't go that way will simply be trampled under foot.
***"Number three: the world needs a leader, and no one else can do it. The EU didn't stand up on Bosnia. We did. The EU couldn't stand up on Kosovo. We did. So it doesn't make much difference whether we're fit or not. We're there, and no one else is."
***But, I ventured, did America know much about the world they were intending to lead? "No, we don't,"conceded the admiral, "but we do believe ours is the right way. And why has all this criticism of the US come up now? Is it because you feel you don't need us as much as you did when the threat of communism was still around? Is that why people didn't show this jealousy before?"
***Admiral Turner, who was born in (of all unlikely places) Ramsbottom in Lancashire, speaks in understandably truculent but decidedly imperial tones. Raymond Seitz, a former US ambassador in London and the most Anglophile of Americans, sounds a wryer, more ironic note - but his message is much the same.
***"It's very hard," he said, "to think of anything international in nature which can be successfully launched if it doesn't have the backing of the United States. If we pull out of the Kyoto Protocol, it's a dead letter. If we're not part of the International Criminal Court, it's a sham court. If we're not participating vigorously in something, it's not going to work very effectively.
***"A lot of national leaders recognise that the security of their countries depends on a good relationship with the US, so they value the opportunity to be received in the White House - the palace where all decisions are made. When America votes for the person who rules here, it has a huge effect around the globe. If you're in a bazaar in Cairo or pushing a cart in Shanghai, that choice will have a large effect on your personal security and prosperity.
***"It is therefore important for their leaders to be able to go into the Throne Room. If they're lucky when they get there, they'll be given a bigger quota for their apples or, pehaps, American backing for the dam they want to build because we'll vote for the loan in the World Bank. It sounds arrogant, but it's true.
***"Our power is so great, and so unlikely to be challenged for many, many years, that you have to go back to Rome for any kind of parallel. It's a misnomer to speak of the United States as being merely a super-power. We're a super-duper power, and I don't know that the world has seen one of those before."
***When it comes to "old" Europe, there are echoes of Donald Rumsfeld everywhere in Washington and New York. "I spend a lot of time in Europe in political and intellectual circles," said George Weigel, biographer of the Pope and senior fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, "and I find them frankly boring. There is so much more going on here. It's we who frame the debate about the great global issues."
***"There is a strong feeling here," said Father Richard Neuhaus, a leading Catholic theologian with many friends in the White House, "that Western Europe is literally a dying continent, demographically and spiritually; whereas in America, people are energetic, vibrant, filled with technical expertise, whistles and bells.
***"Foreigners say our newspapers give little foreign news, which proves that we are insular - but that is nonsense. The reason that there is little foreign news is that so much happens in America and around the world because of America. America is the story! If you live in Belgium or Denmark, you're simply not making half an hour of news each night."
***Even retired military men are contemptuous of what we have to offer intellectually. "I used to go to Europe with an inferiority complex," said Lieut Gen William Odom, a former director of the National Security Agency who now works for the Hudson Institute, "but now I can't find a decent debate over there. They don't think strategically, but then they don't have to because they're not in charge - and, in any case, they don't have any money."
***He made the nations of Western Europe sound like a dull, insignificant province of the United States. "When an event happens in the world," he went on, "nobody calls those people, whereas they're calling our President all the time. When the intelligence community in this country hears about something which might cause the President to make a decision, they have 10 minutes to get it to the White House. [It evidently took rather longer in the days before 9/11].
***"Does that give you a sense of empire? Which other capital can you go to where that is the case? Washington is full of foreign lobbies wanting something from America. Why would you want to lobby Chirac - to change the kind of cheese or something?"
***I heard the same vainglorious imperial echoes again and again as I travelled around the United States talking with members of the administration, the presidents of great universities, celebrated columnists, the chief executive officers of giant corporations and banks, as well as a host of ordinary citizens.
***I had first gone to America as a student at Stanford University 50 years ago. This time, I went not so much to enjoy myself as to try to understand that remarkable and, in many ways, mysterious country.
***My conclusion, at the end of five weeks and 20,000 miles, is that although the war in Iraq may have provided a dramatic demonstration of Americans' overwhelming might, we ain't seen nothing yet.
***In military terms, the United States is simply a generation or more ahead of the rest of the world. Its hi-tech capabilities make everyone else look Neanderthal; and even in the most mundane items of military hardware, such as transport aircraft, it dwarfs the rest of us. They have 87 C17s: Western Europe has four. Within a decade, the Americans expect to have supersonic weapons operating at Mach 25 - 19,000 miles an hour. "We are not even trying to keep up," said Andrew Brooks of the International Institute of Strategic Studies in London.
***Military dominance, moreover, is but one aspect of America's overwhelming power. The United States produces more than 30 per cent of the world's goods and services. New York accounts for at least half of the world's capital market. And 70 per cent of the world's visual media comes out of America, and, in a large part, reflects an American view of things.
EXCERPT (http://screenprintlive.telegraph.co.uk/Default/Skins/Telegraph/Client.asp?Enter=true&AW=1055787273890&skin=Telegraph&Daily=TheDailyTel)
lol again
btw me and stuntman were talkign ecnomically here
but anyway thats just a perfect example of the US media controling what the US people think and the people being so manipulatable and arrogant.
I'll give you ONE exmaple ( i can think of heaps but i am tooo tired)
the US dollar is hugely overvalued, and they have to start wars to keep it going other wise they go into recession. the Euro and pound are a lot steader then the USD, reflecting their economies, which arn't perfect but better then the US which has been all over the place.
also the US is yet to finish a war it has started recently, GW1, GW2 afghanistan, no matter what your government says those wars are not over by a long shot. you may have the might but a think a bit of logical thinking is lacking.
i feel like a bit of string tonight, hows that?
budanski
06-19-2003, 11:23 AM
Check the source again. Last i checked, the Telegraph was british owned.
I too can give examples:
European economy 'very weak' (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2983802.stm)
The tallest dwarf (http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20030521-094750-5937r.htm)
The biggest of the big: Why US is world's No. 1 economy (http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0612/p20s04-nbgn.html)
Hows that?
btw, I seem to have noticed your liberal use of the word 'arrogance' here and other threads. The U.S. wields only a fraction of its power on the world stage to apply its foreign policy (every country with this power would do the same and much more) The U.S. has become a reluctant superpower with great restraint, yet you have countries like the delusional French who lives in the 'past' throwing around tantrums and dictating how the U.S. should act. I find that more arrogant. If you don't like how the U.S. acts, I'd like to see someone else to come up to the plate and lead the world. All superpowers have their critics. During the 19th century, the British had theirs.
Red China is by far our biggest threat. Since Deng's "black or white cat" or free market policies took hold in the early 80's, China has yet to establish similar policies in their political institutions. In 1989 at Tinanamen Square, China hammered its our people who were calling political freedoms. Thus, China is a "house divided", one on end you have a small minority who all have the economic clout and political/military strength, and at the other end you have the masses who have neither. And like the US, China must "fall either way"--all corrupt/communism or all free/democracy.
China's is THE asian tiger and their political success or failure has world wide effects particularly as one of the largest standing military force and as one of the US's largest trading partners.
EvanL
06-19-2003, 07:07 PM
And who is the US's largest trading partner? Good Ole Canada.
Mortimer
06-19-2003, 09:48 PM
Check the source again. Last i checked, the Telegraph was british owned.
I too can give examples:
European economy 'very weak' (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2983802.stm)
The tallest dwarf (http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20030521-094750-5937r.htm)
The biggest of the big: Why US is world's No. 1 economy (http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0612/p20s04-nbgn.html)
Hows that?
Same **** different smell, they need to spread consumer confidence, they won't get that confidence by telling everyone they are in recession.
btw, I seem to have noticed your liberal use of the word 'arrogance' here and other threads. The U.S. wields only a fraction of its power on the world stage to apply its foreign policy (every country with this power would do the same and much more) The U.S. has become a reluctant superpower with great restraint, yet you have countries like the delusional French who lives in the 'past' throwing around tantrums and dictating how the U.S. should act. I find that more arrogant. If you don't like how the U.S. acts, I'd like to see someone else to come up to the plate and lead the world. All superpowers have their critics. During the 19th century, the British had theirs.
Yet again a typical american attitude, for staters you had to put me into a group, "liberal" wtf? secondly you are so sure that the US is the savior of the world and have taken the same attitude as your government and suggested that anyone who thinks otherwise is, to put it bluntly, a terrorist.
There was a program on TV here last night called, "What the world thinks of America". They sourced about 11,000 people across all continents not including the US. ALL americans sould find that documentarty and watch it as it provides some information that they need to get through their heads.
I don't really have a problem with the US i think they are a fine country, i just find it sometimes hard to believe their apathetic nature and narrow minded views.
budanski
06-19-2003, 10:18 PM
Please enlighten us with your wisdom because it is only you that is immune to being brainwashed. pulease...
Assuming you do understand english, the word liberal in that context has nothing to do with me calling you a liberal. "freudian slip" ? Maybe i should have been more 'politically correct" and stated: I seem to have noticed your casual use of the word 'arrogance' here and other threads.
There was a program on TV here last night called, "What the world thinks of America". They sourced about 11,000 people across all continents not including the US. ALL americans sould find that documentarty and watch it as it provides some information that they need to get through their heads.
Seeing that its coming from the BBC, I'm wondering if theres a slant to the story. (*sarcasm)
The world debating our place is laughable within itself. Someday, once Al Qaeda is vanquished, the American people may decide to go tell the world to pound sand and bring our troops home. Then watch the bitching and moaning begin.
In the meantime, heres what US ARROGANT AMERICANS think of the world.
http://www.obnoxiousfumes.com/try_and_stop_us.jpg
stuntman
06-20-2003, 04:42 AM
I agree with budanski 100% but i also feel that we as Americans forget that there are other nations who live with us! I also felt that our nation (USA) can do no wrong by willing to send our men and women over to foreign land to die in the name of freedom and America! I also see and understand where Mortimer is coming from. Its our bugers, hollywood movies, clothing and just plain ol American culture that the world is flooded with thats makes them hate us! I beleive I also seen that show Mortimer, I cought some of it on a satalite channel I was flipping thru and they were talking about how American culture is a infection and i think they even mention a book to. It was titled "Why Do people hate America" by Noam Chomsky and although I am a independent who lean towards the right I also like and try to understand a opposing opinion on my countries popular view, it's what makes democracy greate. We are not that bad, we are just people and very human. We just have the power and I hope it always stays like that. Although I will be hated for my beliefs I rather be on top then on the bottom. For the people on the bottom are mostly uneducated and ignorant (Arrogance I guess) and I'm afraid of a world with out stability.And if a President talks like a cowboy in order to keep order then so be it! Lets not forget Freedom isn't free, and The eurodollar will never be powerful with out the UK joining it. After that we can talk!
peoplesliberationarmy
06-20-2003, 08:17 AM
well..if you have freetime. try this website...
www.sonicbbs.com
budanski
06-20-2003, 10:12 AM
More brainwashing tripe.... :roll:
Americans not ruffled by world's contempt
By Jennifer Harper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES 6/20/03
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20030620-120850-2509r.htm
The rest of the world often entertains itself being annoyed with the United States. The opinion polls often show it.
But that's nothing like American opinion of the global village. The inevitable experts say American scorn for foreign contempt is rooted in a fierce but amenable independence and an inner mettle. "What we think of ourselves does not depend on the opinions of others," says Matthew Spalding, director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies at the Heritage Foundation. "And that is what it means to be self-governing, as our founders originally intended. It gives us great confidence."
****
"We don't ignore world opinion, but we don't allow it to determine our fate. At our core, we have intellectual and moral independence in the very largest sense." Poll numbers support that, too.
***
Almost six out of 10 Americans, according to a recent ABC News poll, are not particularly concerned that the relationships with France, Germany and Russia were bruised during the war against Iraq.
****
Two-thirds of Americans are happy with their country's role in the world, according to a Gallup poll, and 64 percent think that our way of life must be protected "against foreign influence," according to a Pew Research poll.
****
Though there was hubbub recently over an American boycott of French products ? "freedom fries" and all that ? one poll offers a reality check: In a Gallup/CNN/USA Today survey of 1,001 persons in late April, 67 percent said they don't even buy French products in the first place.
****
There also appears to be some irony: U.S. foreign policy, pop culture and attitude irk the world. But the world still waits at the door.
****
Indeed, a Carnegie poll in November of more than 1,000 foreign-born immigrants found that 80 percent of them, given the chance to "do it again," would come to the United States; 96 percent said they were happy; and 80 percent called this nation "a unique country that stands for something special in the world."
****
U.S. relations with the world are rife with complexities, though. People worldwide "actually like Americans, and they continually think of us, yet we barely recognize they exist," notes Mark Hertsgaard, author of "The Eagle's Shadow: Why America Fascinates and Infuriates the World."
****
The attitude has changed a little after September 11, "but there's still a self-centeredness. We see everything through the prism of our own experience. We've been self-contained for a long time. But we're not the only country to do that. I can't think of a more self-centered nation than China."
****
Mr. Hertsgaard says the "if they don't like it, they can lump it" mind-set held by so many Americans could imperil the war on terrorism, as well as the global economy and other challenges, insisting that "we can't do it alone."
****But he concedes that the U.S.-centered attitude has a positive side. It stokes the conviction that "we can change things, that we can do better, that life can be different."
****Magnified by the war on Iraq, U.S. ire with waffling allies and rogue governments was particularly sharp earlier this year, prompting the New York Times, among others, to examine the "anti-Europeanism" phenomenon in the country.
****"The current stereotype of Europeans in easily summarized," wrote Timothy Garton Ash in February. "Europeans are wimps. They are weak, petulant, hypocritical, disunited, sometimes anti-Semitic and often anti-American appeasers ... their values and their spines have dissolved in a lukewarm bath of multilateral, transnational, secular and postmodern fudge."
****
But Americans can't seem to nurture such a grudge for long. A Fox News poll of 900 voters released June 6 found that 61 percent were ready to "restore a friendly relationship" with France.
****
Things are still pretty acrimonious elsewhere, however.
****
This week, it was the British Broadcasting Corp.'s turn to poke at America. A BBC poll of 11,000 persons in 11 countries released Tuesday said 65 percent of those surveyed thought Americans were "arrogant," and 85 percent said Americans were not "humble."
****
But 73 percent also described America as "free."
****
"Open your eyes, you naysayers, and look at the American dream as I did," one Briton-turned-American told the BBC in protest on Tuesday. "Yes, it works for a quarter billion people."
l glocks up l
08-12-2004, 09:51 PM
how do you say "bite me commy" in chinese?
GrimmyRX
08-12-2004, 10:09 PM
how do you say "bite me commy" in chinese?
Hmm, that's not really translatable. Chances are, they'd just say, in english "Bite me Commie"
SUREFIRE
08-12-2004, 10:24 PM
how do you say "bite me commy" in chinese?one way to get on their nerve is by saying "we the United States do not allow reunification of China and Taiwan." works every time. :P
Bayonet
08-12-2004, 10:34 PM
I'm a chinese .
Chinese people do not like war and we dont want to fight with our business partners such as USA , EU , and Russia,etc
BUT I want to tell you all that JAPAN is the only one country we want to fight with...
Maybe USA is not good enough and always makes a lot of trouble but it isn't our real enemy....Japan is our enemy forever.
This is a common thought hold by many chinese people.
SUREFIRE
08-12-2004, 10:38 PM
I'm a chinese .
Chinese people do not like war and we dont want to fight with our business partners such as USA , EU , and Russia,etc
BUT I want to tell you all that JAPAN is the only one country we want to fight with...
Maybe USA is not good enough and always makes a lot of trouble but it isn't our real enemy....Japan is our enemy forever.
This is a common thought hold by many chinese people.
Sorry bud, but as historical events have proven, the Japanese are WAY BETTER THAN you. and China is totally UNWORTHY of JAPAN.
the Japanese kick your ass left and right. and all the pretty CHINESE girls love to be banged by the JAPANESE. :lol:
Bayonet
08-12-2004, 10:44 PM
I'm a chinese .
Chinese people do not like war and we dont want to fight with our business partners such as USA , EU , and Russia,etc
BUT I want to tell you all that JAPAN is the only one country we want to fight with...
Maybe USA is not good enough and always makes a lot of trouble but it isn't our real enemy....Japan is our enemy forever.
This is a common thought hold by many chinese people.
Sorry bud, but as historical events have proven, the Japanese are WAY BETTER THAN you. and China is totally UNWORTHY of JAPAN.
the Japanese kick your ass left and right. and all the pretty CHINESE girls love to be banged by the JAPANESE. :lol:
Remember Your BULL**** today!!!!
Your mom must be F*U*C*KED by japanese . :bash:
And you miss your japanese dad day by day ,night by night
He219
08-12-2004, 10:47 PM
SUREFIRE, pipe down. You've been warned. You too, Bayonet.
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