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use violence against the people, then get hit back by violence.
let refer to Xinjiang case.

Why don't you look around the world and find me a country that don't use "violence" appropriately to deal with riots?

You goddamn yellow rebels are not even welcome outside the "occupied areas". Last time you losers came out from your nest and tried to publicize your native, stupid, ridiculous statement to gain support from other people around other main HK regions (since more than 70% of HK people don't support their action) , you people got mocked, criticized, cursed and shouted by the locals. You people are obviously NOT WELCOME and you are the goddamn MINORITY.

I will be happy to see our professional policemen wipe you idiots off from our street.
 
Why don't you look around the world and find me a country that don't use "violence" appropriately to deal with riots?

You goddamn yellow rebels are not even welcome outside the "occupied areas". Last time you losers came out from your nest and tried to publicize your native, stupid, ridiculous statement to gain support from other people around other main HK regions (since more than 70% of HK people don't support their action) , you people got mocked, criticized, cursed and shouted by the locals. You people are obviously NOT WELCOME and you are the goddamn MINORITY.

I will be happy to see our professional policemen wipe you idiots off from our street.

even 30% of HKers could have their voice heard.
 
"Leung Kwok-Hung should be investigated for his foreign links. How many trips has he made overseas and at whose expense? Any money received from overseas, scholarships (bribes), foreign bank accounts, particularly in Swiss banks?"
 
even 30% of HKers could have their voice heard.

Well, they had their voices heard. Now, it is time for the police to fulfill the wishes of the other 70%: Clear the roads and throw the remaining violent protesters in jail.

Most Hong Kong People Want Pro-Democracy Protests to End Now - Businessweek

Most Hong Kong People Want Pro-Democracy Protests to End Now
By Vinicy Chan November 19, 2014

Most Hong Kong people have grown weary of pro-democracy protests that have sparked clashes with police and disrupted the city for almost two months, and want the government to take action to end them, a poll showed.

About 68 percent of 513 respondents said the government should clear the protesters immediately, according to a survey conducted by the University of Hong Kong Nov. 17-18.

Public support for the demonstrations, which at their peak saw tens of thousands of people in the streets, is waning after crowds dwindled, attempts to negotiate with the government failed and the movement’s leaders failed to agree on strategy. The protests, the most disruptive since China resumed sovereignty over Hong Kong in 1997, were sparked by Beijing’s decision to screen candidates through a committee for the city’s leadership election in 2017.

Hong Kong police will help clear protest sites in the Mong Kok district as soon as preparations are complete, Police Chief Superintendent Hui Chun-tak said at a press briefing yesterday.

Police will take “resolute action” against anyone interfering with bailiffs, and will not tolerate any violence, Hui said. Mong Kok was the scene of some of the fiercest clashes during the protests for free elections.
Splintering Movement

A small group of protesters smashed through a glass door of the Legislative Council building in the Admiralty district early early yesterday, using metal barricades and concrete blocks. Police used pepper spray to repel other people who charged at them. Protest leaders and pro-democracy lawmakers condemned the break-in.

The clash is another sign the movement is splintering, with pro-democracy lawmakers and student leaders unable to restrain the demonstrators.

“The use of violence is definitely against the umbrella movement’s emphasis as that of using peaceful, non-violent means to fight for full democracy,” Alan Leong, leader of the pro-democracy Civic Party, said yesterday in a briefing with other legislators. “It seriously undermines” the movement.

“Umbrella movement” refers to protesters’ use of umbrellas initially as shields against pepper spray. The demonstrations, in their eighth week, are the biggest upheaval since China resumed its sovereignty over Hong Kong in 1997.

Tam Yiu Chung, Chairman of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, a pro-establishment party, said in a separate briefing the break-in shows the movement is “totally bankrupt” and the “warped thinking” they don’t have to obey the law.

Hong Kong has assured investors the city can withstand the protests, said K.C. Chan, secretary for financial services.

“International investors have voiced some concerns,” Chan said on Bloomberg TV. “We have been explaining to international investors that what’s going on here is definitely an incident that the Hong Kong government has every means to deal with.”
 
if peaceful protest is not working, then something different would start.
 
Hong Kong student leaders arrested as police clear protest site
By Farah Master and James Pomfret

HONG KONG Wed Nov 26, 2014 2:26am EST


(Reuters) - Hong Kong police cleared activists from one of the largest protest sites in the city on Wednesday and arrested Joshua Wong and Lester Shum, two of the student leaders at the heart of the pro-democracy movement that has shaken the Asian financial hub.

Scuffles broke out when riot police moved against hundreds of protesters on Nathan Road, in the gritty Mong Kok district, following clashes overnight, Reuters witnesses said.

"You can't defeat the protesters' hearts!" screamed Liu Yuk-lin, a 52-year-old protester in a hard hat holding a yellow umbrella, the symbol of the movement, as she stood before lines of police in helmets and goggles.

But there was no serious violence, and after about three hours the operation was complete and traffic was flowing through as area where demonstrators had camped out since late September to call for greater democracy in the former British colony.

Hong Kong student leaders arrested as police clear protest site| Reuters
 
The reporting by Business Week is a lot more thorough and balanced unlike Reuters' which is a shoddy piece of work omitting some of the key elements. It should not just quote the opinion of a protester who said:

"You can't defeat the protesters' hearts!" screamed Liu Yuk-lin, a 52-year-old protester in a hard hat holding a yellow umbrella, the symbol of the movement, as she stood before lines of police in helmets and goggles.

They still do not feel any guilt about their horrendous behaviour for holding the majority people hostages for 2 damn months :bad: Reuters has failed to mention about an overwhelming no of people want these criminals to vacate the streets AT ONCE ! This is what "democracy" is all about, isnt it? :dirol:
 
“peaceful” protest by the bunch of "yellow ribbon" crooks::dirol:

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Funded by CiA for global regime change. Unfortunately for them, unlike Ukraine and Syria, China is a superpower 8-)
 

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