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I don't like "地方主義" (regionalism) since that is hurts China's interests.

So I stay out of these threads.

What China needs is unity, not regionalism.

Being a patriot means being loyal to your country. And HK is not a country, it never was. HK is a city, and the country is China.

My loyalty is always to China first.

Any Hong Kongers who don't like their country (China) can piss off, and jump in the sea for all I care. Let them get rid of their Chinese citizenship and find another one.
 
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I don't like "地方主義" (regionalism) since that is hurts China's interests.

So I stay out of these threads.

What China needs is unity, not regionalism.

Being a patriot means being loyal to your country. And HK is not a country, it never was. HK is a city, and the country is China.

My loyalty is always to China first.

Any Hong Kongers who don't like their country (China) can piss off, and jump in the sea for all I care. Let them get rid of their Chinese citizenship and find another one.

Next target Macau?
country-balls-a-mighty-imperio.png
 
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......:coffee:.
yup we Shenzhen here has seen too many HKers 'giving up' on HK and moved to mainland instead...what an irony.
FYI my family now has a couple from HK as the new neighbor.

I've always wanted to move to Shanghai or Suzhou myself. :enjoy:

Hong Kong is nice but the weather is way too hot and humid during the summer months.
 
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I don't like "地方主義" (regionalism) since that is hurts China's interests.

So I stay out of these threads.

What China needs is unity, not regionalism.

Being a patriot means being loyal to your country. And HK is not a country, it never was. HK is a city, and the country is China.

My loyalty is always to China first.

Any Hong Kongers who don't like their country (China) can piss off, and jump in the sea for all I care. Let them get rid of their Chinese citizenship and find another one.
I respect you and your opinion.
I really do.
 
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India is the perfect place for these people

images

Wax printing art by ethnic Miao people
苗族蜡印
Good point. India has hot climate that most Hong kongers like and plus they are the world's biggest democracy.

honestly I also hate China for 1962. and trust me it is only reason.
may be its rubbish but i didnt make it. I just posted it.
by the way I also posted one more article please share your views there also.
The Hard-Working Culture(aspects of the world’s most convincing success story)


agree. but we can share our experiences of handling such movements.
Nehru actually did the right thing in 62. It's just that you guys lost because heaven is on our side.

The sellout white worshipers are giving up? Great news!

China is too soft on the sellouts in Hong Kong who reminisce of a time of freedom and democracy that never actually happened under the British. How can Chinese deal with such people?

I suggest giving up on them, removing their citizenship, healthcare and schooling rights. Why throw money after traitors and self hating scum?
Send them to an all inclusive trip to beautiful india.
 
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I gave up Hong Kong a long time ago already and yet you don't see me write this kind of thing.

For me, this article is BullShite, you can't change the fact, then you leave, that's very natural, but why bother writing this kind of stuff? I mean, what good does it do to the overall situation??

These kind of Article, and the stupid occupy movement is the same, while you know damn well, nothing is going to change, then why do you do it anyway? I mean, I get it, you can go occupy anything if that does not bother anything, but in the end, you know for a fact nothing is going to change, and yet you go occupy the street and it will not be Chinese Government whom suffer, in fact they will just be watch on point and laugh. That's the other people in Hong Kong would have suffer.

For the sake of other people these kind of action and article should stop
 
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HSBC, Standard Chartered mulling move to Asia? | Asia Times

It’s the not the first time that HSBC, Europe’s largest bank, has mulled moving it’s headquarters out of London because of what it calls an onerous British tax and regulatory environment. Nor is it the first time the idea of relocating HSBC’s HQ to Asia has been broached. But Douglas Flint, the global bank’s chairman, is renewing the speculation all over again. Another big British bank, Standard Chartered, may be considering a similar move.

“We are beginning to see the final shape of regulation, the final shape of structural reform and as soon as that mist lifts sufficiently we will once again start to look at where the best place for HSBC is,” Flint reportedly said at an informal shareholder meeting in Hong Kong on Monday. Hong Kong is mentioned as a possibility.

HSBC moved its domicile from Hong Kong to London in 1993.

Reuters quoted sources “familiar with the matter” as saying that both “HSBC and Standard Chartered, which is also based in London but makes most of its profits in Asia, are looking at the feasibility of quitting London for a new home in Asia because a big jump in the special tax levied on UK banks makes staying in Britain increasingly painful.”

Several investors reportedly said they want the two banking institutions to do a careful analysis on moving their domiciles out of Britain.

Bloomberg reported Monday that HSBC is facing pressure to leave Britain after the government upped taxes on the bank’s balance sheets for an eighth time this year. HSBC is said to be the local banking institution worst hit by the levy. It reportedly paid 750 million pounds ($1.1 billion) last year. Britain’s Labour and Conservative parties both say they would impose a harsher tax regime on banks as part of their platforms for upcoming national elections.
 
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April 7, 2015

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Mohsin Ali Nathani has resigned as UAE CEO of Standard Chartered.

UAE chief becomes latest departure at Standard Chartered

The troubled lender Standard Chartered lost another member of its senior management team with the departure of Mohsin Nathani, the chief executive of its UAE operations, who has resigned to take a career break and spend more time with his family, the London-based bank said in a statement.

Mr Nathani will stay in his post for six more months to ensure a “smooth transition”. His career at StanChart began in 2010 when he was appointed chief executive for Pakistan before he came to the UAE in February last year.

His departure follows those of the chairman John Peace, chief executive Peter Sands, Asia head Jaspal Bindra and Viswanathan Shankar, head of Europe, Middle East, Africa and Americas.

Last month, Afaq Khan, the chief executive of the its Islamic banking division, Saadiq, also decided to leave to take a career break and Hassan Jarrar, StanChart’s Bahrain head will also leave later this year, it emerged this week.

The bank’s global net profits fell almost 40 per cent last year as it faced a “perfect storm” of weakness in emerging markets, falling commodity prices and regulatory challenges, Mr Sands said last month.

Operating profit for its businesses in the Middle East, North Africa and Pakistan was also down, falling 10 per cent to US$769 million in 2014 from $858m in 2013.

In January, StanChart said it expected to cut 2,000 jobs across its global retail operations this year after having already cut 2,000 jobs in the final quarter of last year.

More than 90 per cent of the bank’s business comes from emerging markets. Growth in these commodity-rich parts of the world has slowed in the past couple of years as the price of everything from oil, steel and palm oil collapses amid low inflation, currencies weakening against the strengthening US dollar, and widening deficits. Loans to businesses that are sensitive to the fluctuation of commodity prices have also not helped.

Not only is StanChart’s core business of giving out loans suffering, the bank has also been battling regulatory woes.

In August, it was fined $300m by the New York department of financial services for suspicious transactions involving clients in Hong Kong and the Middle East.

As a result, StanChart announced in August it would close the majority of its SME accounts in this country, prompted by higher compliance burdens and a squeeze on profitability because of intensifying competition with local banks.

However, the UAE, which is one of the bank’s top five markets in terms of revenues and operating profits, had been regarded as a bright spot in the region.

In February, Mr Nathani told The National that a slowdown in Dubai’s property market represented opportunities for its mortgage business as homes became more affordable for end users.

UAE chief becomes latest departure at Standard Chartered | The National
 
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Both banks already have a significant presence in Asia so it wont affect much apart from face values
Asia contributes a lot to their business portfolios
So UK may have 2 business institutions off the top 500 list as a result of losing the no of major domiciles of top companies and tax revenue therefrom

images

Ancient Chinese Art of Paper Folding
 
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Merchants have no nationality.

LOL ... that's very true.

I suppose Li Ka Shing is still the single largest individual shareholder of HSBC, and a prince from ME is the single largest individual shareholder of Standard Chartered. Anyway both banks are publicly listed and very diversified in their shareholding structure.
 
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Do you think Hong Kong should set up their own military, navy, and airforce as same as Singapore.
I know the size of hong kong is double singapore. Hong kong has their own law, legislation and Justice.
money, flag. etc.. . So, Should Hong Kong set up their own Army, Airforce and navy to act like Singapore.
 
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