香港那傻玩艺被人肉出来了:拍照眼镜男已经被公司开掉了ZT

Michelle Libra

流金歲月 感恩惜福
Child urinating in public sets off fierce debate on Hong Kong’s attitude toward mainland China

GERRY MULLANY

HONG KONG — The New York Times News Service

Published Saturday, May. 03 2014, 2:42 PM EDT

Last updated Saturday, May. 03 2014, 2:46 PM EDT

A mainland couple’s decision to let their child urinate in public last month set off a video-recorded tussle on a street here, igniting a social media uproar that became a proxy battle for a larger question: Is Hong Kong, a former British colony, now being colonized by mainland China, whose visitors increasingly flood the territory with their money and alien manners as Beijing seeks to impose its political control?

The video started a cross-border debate over Beijing’s dominance of the territory and Hong Kong’s fealty to its political overlord, and came just as China is considering whether to grant Hong Kong more say over choosing its leaders, with protest groups prepared to act if China does not loosen its grip.

In the video, the toddler’s parents confronted a man who used his cellphone to record the urinating child. After the mother was charged with trying to steal the man’s cellphone, mainland Chinese initially accused him of perversion for recording the child, and then veered into a larger indictment of Hong Kong residents as lacking patriotism for being inhospitable to the tens of millions of Chinese whose money fuels the territory’s robust economy.

“I bet most of these ‘proud’ HK-ers with their indignation of China rule would be only too happy to lick the boots of ‘proud HK’ former master, Britain, and kiss Queen’s hand while at it,” wrote one commenter responding to a post about the tensions on The New York Times’ Sinosphere blog.

The argument about the child’s behavior comes as local attitudes toward Beijing appear to be hardening. A poll of Hong Kong residents conducted in December by the Hong Kong Transition Project and released Tuesday showed rising dissatisfaction with Beijing’s handling of the territory’s affairs, particularly among young adults, with four-fifths of respondents ages 21 to 29 saying they were dissatisfied, and a strong majority of them identifying more with Hong Kong than with China.

Underlying local hostilities toward mainland Chinese are the economic pressures brought by a flood of cash into the territory. Not only are wealthy mainland Chinese accused of driving up real estate values, but their free-spending ways - encouraged by the absence of sales taxes in Hong Kong and favorable long-term currency valuations - have been blamed for widespread inflation. The minimum wage here is about $4 an hour, but prices for common household goods approach those found in a New York supermarket.

Rachel Cartland, a former Hong Kong official who once oversaw its social welfare system, said local residents had seen their shops increasingly stock higher-priced items geared toward mainland Chinese buyers.

“People find that the shops they used to go to, the composition has changed,” she said. “They’ve turned into shops dedicated to mainland Chinese.”

She also likened the antagonism Chinese encounter to that found by American tourists during the post-World War II years in Europe, when America swaggered with political and economic clout, much as China does in Asia today.

“America was very dominant politically and economically, and their tourists were often unfairly regarded as ‘ugly Americans,’” she said, known for flashy clothes and boorish manners that ignored local customs.

The recording of the child’s behavior was the latest in a string of videos and pictures that have documented questionable behavior, with Web pages like “Spot the Mainlander” drawing torrents of angry, mocking commentary. With so many Chinese tourists traveling throughout Asia and elsewhere, the government recently issued guidelines on how to behave in foreign countries that included tips like refraining from spitting on the street or from shouting in public areas.

The incident involving the child is 2 weeks old, but the passions surrounding it are not dying down. Last week, a protest against mainlander behavior drew 30 people who mimicked the toddler’s act; social media sites said a counterdemonstration was in the works by people who planned to relieve themselves in the street. Even the prospect of such a protest led to warnings from local officials.

“The law in Hong Kong prohibits anyone from littering or urinating in public,” said Ko Wing-man, the territory’s secretary for food and health. “I am not criticizing any race or nationality. The law and this principle will be implemented fairly.”

On Wednesday, in a reflection of concern in Beijing about the passions in Hong Kong, the state-run media on the mainland chimed in. The Global Times newspaper said in an opinion piece that “skinheads” had organized last week’s protest, and that “in Hong Kong social media, slapstick postings about ‘toddlergate’ are going viral again.”

“This incident, which should have been over and forgotten, was surprisingly reignited by some Hong Kong radicals,” the piece said. “Humiliating mainlanders must be the only aim these protesters were trying to achieve. But it turns out that who they embarrassed and humiliated was nobody but themselves and all of Hong Kong society. Hong Kong’s image was badly tarnished by them.”
 

Michelle Libra

流金歲月 感恩惜福
"allien manner".... hahaha

"...question: Is Hong Kong, a former British colony, now being colonized by mainland China, whose visitors increasingly flood the territory with their money and alien manners as Beijing seeks to impose its political control?"
 
阿凡达仁兄似乎被台北人阴魂附体了. 努力陪养大陆来的假洋人. 好象还没恶劣到咒骂”支那人”的地步, 姑且暂算内部矛盾吧.

恶意诋毁中华民族和中国人的非人, 不管他来自何处, 都应该予以批判.
我以行为判断人,英雄不问出处,狗熊也不问产地。
拍摄未成年人不雅行为,网上发布,是谁做的,都不合适。而你们一伙的,一开始就以深圳河为界划分阵营。这下子好了,搬起石头砸了自己的脚。香港人基本撇清关系,大陆烂仔在香港干的烂事。
 

Michelle Libra

流金歲月 感恩惜福
"With so many Chinese tourists traveling throughout Asia and elsewhere, the government recently issued guidelines on how to behave in foreign countries that included tips like refraining from spitting on the street or from shouting in public areas."
 

Michelle Libra

流金歲月 感恩惜福
Doctor Demento2 minutes ago

"From the article: "Here is the big question: Is Hong Kong, a former British colony, now being colonized by mainland China, whose ultra-wealthy visitors increasingly flood the territory with their suitcases full of mainland Chinese money and alien manners and money-backed demands?"

Um, hello?

It is funny that the enfeebled, chicken-hearted Globe and Mail is able to muster the courage to crisply ask THAT big question on these pages, about mainland Chinese money forging an unchecked colonization-invasion of Hong Kong ...

... but does not have the courage to confront head-on the big question that is actually far more relevant to Canadians, namely mainland Chinese money colonizing-invading Vancouver.

Actually, funny? No, it is pathetic.

And it is a reflection of how freaking crazy our media elites are in Canada, when it comes to political correctness.

You have to turn to the pages of the South China Post to see the Vancouver situation so plainly reported. "
 
Child urinating in public sets off fierce debate on Hong Kong’s attitude toward mainland China

GERRY MULLANY

HONG KONG — The New York Times News Service

Published Saturday, May. 03 2014, 2:42 PM EDT

Last updated Saturday, May. 03 2014, 2:46 PM EDT

A mainland couple’s decision to let their child urinate in public last month set off a video-recorded tussle on a street here, igniting a social media uproar that became a proxy battle for a larger question: Is Hong Kong, a former British colony, now being colonized by mainland China, whose visitors increasingly flood the territory with their money and alien manners as Beijing seeks to impose its political control?

The video started a cross-border debate over Beijing’s dominance of the territory and Hong Kong’s fealty to its political overlord, and came just as China is considering whether to grant Hong Kong more say over choosing its leaders, with protest groups prepared to act if China does not loosen its grip.

In the video, the toddler’s parents confronted a man who used his cellphone to record the urinating child. After the mother was charged with trying to steal the man’s cellphone, mainland Chinese initially accused him of perversion for recording the child, and then veered into a larger indictment of Hong Kong residents as lacking patriotism for being inhospitable to the tens of millions of Chinese whose money fuels the territory’s robust economy.

“I bet most of these ‘proud’ HK-ers with their indignation of China rule would be only too happy to lick the boots of ‘proud HK’ former master, Britain, and kiss Queen’s hand while at it,” wrote one commenter responding to a post about the tensions on The New York Times’ Sinosphere blog.

The argument about the child’s behavior comes as local attitudes toward Beijing appear to be hardening. A poll of Hong Kong residents conducted in December by the Hong Kong Transition Project and released Tuesday showed rising dissatisfaction with Beijing’s handling of the territory’s affairs, particularly among young adults, with four-fifths of respondents ages 21 to 29 saying they were dissatisfied, and a strong majority of them identifying more with Hong Kong than with China.

Underlying local hostilities toward mainland Chinese are the economic pressures brought by a flood of cash into the territory. Not only are wealthy mainland Chinese accused of driving up real estate values, but their free-spending ways - encouraged by the absence of sales taxes in Hong Kong and favorable long-term currency valuations - have been blamed for widespread inflation. The minimum wage here is about $4 an hour, but prices for common household goods approach those found in a New York supermarket.

Rachel Cartland, a former Hong Kong official who once oversaw its social welfare system, said local residents had seen their shops increasingly stock higher-priced items geared toward mainland Chinese buyers.

“People find that the shops they used to go to, the composition has changed,” she said. “They’ve turned into shops dedicated to mainland Chinese.”

She also likened the antagonism Chinese encounter to that found by American tourists during the post-World War II years in Europe, when America swaggered with political and economic clout, much as China does in Asia today.

“America was very dominant politically and economically, and their tourists were often unfairly regarded as ‘ugly Americans,’” she said, known for flashy clothes and boorish manners that ignored local customs.

The recording of the child’s behavior was the latest in a string of videos and pictures that have documented questionable behavior, with Web pages like “Spot the Mainlander” drawing torrents of angry, mocking commentary. With so many Chinese tourists traveling throughout Asia and elsewhere, the government recently issued guidelines on how to behave in foreign countries that included tips like refraining from spitting on the street or from shouting in public areas.

The incident involving the child is 2 weeks old, but the passions surrounding it are not dying down. Last week, a protest against mainlander behavior drew 30 people who mimicked the toddler’s act; social media sites said a counterdemonstration was in the works by people who planned to relieve themselves in the street. Even the prospect of such a protest led to warnings from local officials.

“The law in Hong Kong prohibits anyone from littering or urinating in public,” said Ko Wing-man, the territory’s secretary for food and health. “I am not criticizing any race or nationality. The law and this principle will be implemented fairly.”

On Wednesday, in a reflection of concern in Beijing about the passions in Hong Kong, the state-run media on the mainland chimed in. The Global Times newspaper said in an opinion piece that “skinheads” had organized last week’s protest, and that “in Hong Kong social media, slapstick postings about ‘toddlergate’ are going viral again.”

“This incident, which should have been over and forgotten, was surprisingly reignited by some Hong Kong radicals,” the piece said. “Humiliating mainlanders must be the only aim these protesters were trying to achieve. But it turns out that who they embarrassed and humiliated was nobody but themselves and all of Hong Kong society. Hong Kong’s image was badly tarnished by them.”

作者有强烈的BIAS,开始一句就是大陆夫妇“决定”让孩子在公共场合撒尿。这个“事实”很不清楚呢。
 
我以行为判断人,英雄不问出处,狗熊也不问产地。
拍摄未成年人不雅行为,网上发布,是谁做的,都不合适。而你们一伙的,一开始就以深圳河为界划分阵营。这下子好了,搬起石头砸了自己的脚。香港人基本撇清关系,大陆烂仔在香港干的烂事。

我也是以言行判断你和台北人的. 从来没以河为界. 难道你没看到我批判的猪倌儿和我揭露的撒大师是大陆来的精英吗?
 
最近有个港人在香港地铁被印度人打的视频,港人连个屁都没,阿三扬长而去。
 
最近有个港人在香港地铁被印度人打的视频,港人连个屁都没,阿三扬长而去。

不妨放上来让俺们看看英勇无畏的港英吧.

鲁迅先生说: 凶兽样的羊, 羊样的凶兽…… 遇到凶兽它就是羊; 遇到羊它就成了凶兽. 至今还很有现实意义.
 
我也是以言行判断你和台北人的. 从来没以河为界. 难道你没看到我批判的猪倌儿和我揭露的撒大师是大陆来的精英吗?
你还要顶那个人肉”香港摄影师“的 SB ?现在是那个玩下三滥的“人肉”的 SB 把s和尿都扣在大陆人的头上了。
 
你还要顶那个人肉”香港摄影师“的 SB ?现在是那个玩下三滥的“人肉”的 SB 把s和尿都扣在大陆人的头上了。

大陆本来就有人渣, 没啥奇怪的. 咱们从来不以地域来判定人品.

再说, 人肉那拍小孩撒尿的SB, 看来是出于义愤. 把那个别有用心的摄影师示众没啥不好, 扣不到大陆人头上. 你这样多愁善感的为大陆人着想可真是难为你了啊.
 
最后编辑: 2014-05-03

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