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China starts "combat ready" patrols in disputed seas

the point is vietnamese, filipino and indian admit that you all disguise as other nationalities like american, australian. that means you dont have balls. dare not show your nationalities. otherwise, we can interpret like this, these countries are too weak to be proud of even by their own people!!

I am very proud of my people and my country and I would rather be a Filipino than to be a citizen of a failed state that is harboring and sponsoring terrorism.
 
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When china split in to pierces,your homeland Manchukuo is even bigger.:meeting:

haha ,you come and try us,you will be back to north and south,so many time in the history your country was part of China,and history sometimes repeat itself.
 
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To all warmongering Chinese forumers

A bunch of blatant BS propaganda.

So we are not allowed defend our own country while people are bashing and spreading lies against it eh? China alone has over 500 million internet users (not including overseas Chinese), that's more than the entire US, India, and Japan COMBINED, our voices WILL be heard. This 50 cent bullshit is only to discredit and silence Chinese opinion over the internet, basically to take away our voices while our country is being framed.

Let's not forget that the same country that is spreading propaganda against China is the same country that attacked and is still currently occupying Iraq and Afghanistan based on false pretenses, in other words LIES, proven lies. The same country which JUST last year help topple Libya with the NATO thugs, another sovereign nation and is now plotting to attack Syria and Iran. Looks like some country is trying to take over the world.

Instead of seeing who the true aggressor and instigator is, people bow down to the aggressor and instigator and believe everything it says, OPEN your damn eyes.

Here in defence.pk, most of the Chinese members I've encountered post with FACTS, facts which can be independently verified and with a hint of opinion which I am sure everyone is entitled to and no one will disagree. Can't argue with superior logic and reason...?DEAL WITH IT.
 
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R2WFQ.jpg


This is a newest photo of Varyag carrier? Very powerful!
 
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haha ,you come and try us,you will be back to north and south,so many time in the history your country was part of China,and history sometimes repeat itself.

He he, we have beating chinese invaders, they ran away from 938 AC.
china was part of Mongolia, Manchuria, and Japan and Britain recently.
You are Manchu guy, you have to study about History of Manchuria, don't run around on PDF to spamming with meaningless threads what you did in last days. PDF member known that you are Manchu, they could laugh on you, poor minded guy.

R2WFQ.jpg


This is a newest photo of Varyag carrier? Very powerful!

It's Photoshop works, copy and past.:P
 
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haha,that's a photoshopped pic which I didnt post,only after an Ausie guy claimed that some pics were photoshopped and later on admitted that he was wrong,I posted this one to show him what is to be photoshopped,do you poor educated Vietnamese can't follow the thread?

go back to the second page and try hard to figure where it is coming from,your slow Vietnamese minds,haha

http://www.defence.pk/forums/chinese-defence/190951-china-starts-combat-ready-patrols-disputed-seas-2.html

China has a habit copy and theft.

Video: CCTV Tries to Pass Off ‘Top Gun’ Clip as Military Drill?

Beijing has lately stepped up its campaign against the country’s “fake news” scourge, with the General Administration of Press and Publications putting pressure on news organizations to dismiss journalists suspected of doctoring their stories. Ironically, the latest example of alleged news fakery comes from China’s own state broadcaster, CCTV.

In a development that could further inflame Hollywood’s frustrations with unauthorized reproduction of its intellectual property in China, Chinese netizens are accusing CCTV of repurposing footage from the movie “Top Gun” for use in a news story about an air force training exercise.

As noted yesterday by the blog Ministry of Tofu, the alleged IPR violation, spotted by Internet user “Liu Yi,” took place during a Jan. 23 evening news broadcast. CCTV has removed the clip in question from its website, but a copy of the broadcast posted on Chinese video sites does reveal some striking similarities:

CCTV typically posts the full evening news broadcast online, along with individual clips of each story, but a check today of the CCTV website for Jan. 23 revealed only the individual clips. The full broadcast is missing and there is no link to the air force training story.

This wouldn’t be the first time Chinese media have been caught appropriating fictional material from the U.S. for use in news. In 2002, the popular Beijing Evening News tabloid translated and published as genuine a satirical news article by The Onion about U.S. Congress threatening to leave Washington D.C. unless the city built them a new building with a retractable roof. Five years later, the state-run Xinhua news agency infamously used an x-ray image of Homer Simpson’s head to illustrate a story about the discovery of a genetic link to multiple sclerosis.

Contacted by China Real Time, a media relations representative in CCTV’s foreign affairs office, Yin Fan, said the broadcaster had no immediate comment on the accusations.

– Josh Chin. Follow him on Twitter @joshchin
 
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ha,you can claim that all your sailors died from fake gun fire ,and you can come to try it again and see what fake may happen next,lol..
 
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A bunch of blatant BS propaganda.

So we are not allowed defend our own country while people are bashing and spreading lies against it eh? China alone has over 500 million internet users (not including overseas Chinese), that's more than the entire US, India, and Japan COMBINED, our voices WILL be heard. .

You're completely blinded by your CCP master's propaganda. So what if you have 500 million internet users. China is a communist country. Government lies, coverups, untruthful news reports are norms in their everyday lives. While we in the democratic/free world have access to pro/anti/neutral news sources that we are able to determine the plain truth. That's what absence of Chinese commie censorhip/editing does. Nobody does filtering/omitting bettter than a Chinese communist state.

Example of news report:

Internet news: Mining accident kills 300+ chinese miners

China's version: the goverment saved 6 people in a mining accident, no mention of casualties.

Example of a Chinese poster here in PDF who tries to mislead:

http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-affairs/190491-surviving-boat-captain-says-boat-not-rammed.html


This 50 cent bullshit is only to discredit and silence Chinese opinion over the internet, basically to take away our voices while our country is being framed.

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Gawain nyo ay 'wag nyong ibintang sa iba!!! How can the Chinese opinion can be silenced when there's thousands and thousands of Chinese 50 center's??? The world needs nothing to do, China is the one who is discrediting herself.

50 Cent Party Crashers

I spend a lot of time reading about China on the Internet. It's my job, but even before it was my job it was a very serious hobby. I also like to look through readers' comments. Articles on China often hit a nerve with readers, Chinese and American (or otherwise) alike, and generate fierce debates, sometimes hundreds of comments even on a relatively brief article. But in the past few years these debates have been hijacked by the 五毛党(wu mao dang), or 50 Cent Party. They are the legion of young Chinese Internet users (some estimate there are 280,000 of them) who are paid 50 mao (roughly 7 cents) to post comments on blogs, news articles, bulletin boards, etc. that are pro-Communist Party, essentially to drown out critical voices. While they are most active on Chinese-language sites, the 50 Cent Party has found its way onto message boards, blogs and other forums in Western media, too, even spearheading the campaign against CNN's Jack Cafferty for calling the leadership in Beijing a bunch of "goons and thugs." David Bandurski wrote a great article in the Far Eastern Economic Review last year about this phenomenon.

I take issue with the 50 Cent Party for many reasons, not the least of which is the fact that it intimidates Chinese netizens into witholding their true opinions (not only do they drown out dissenting voices, the 50 Cent Party report back to their Communist Party bosses on exactly who is making the critical comments). But what is most frustrating for me personally is the way the 50 Cent Party has made genuine debate online about China virtually impossible. First of all, the tactics of the 50 Cent Party are tried and true debate-killers -- "You can't talk, America had slavery" and the like -- trying to shift the focus of the debate away from the issue at hand and questioning anyone's right to even discuss China outside of China. What's worse, I find myself assuming that any pro-government comment is paid for by the Communist Party, thus dismissing what could in fact be genuine comments that deserve a closer look. The world -- and China -- would benefit from honest, rigorous debate about Chinese government policy and its impact beyond its borders. But the 50 Cent Party is rendering this impossible. (Read more)

And, if I haven't depressed you enough, this quote from the aforementioned Bandurski article makes the prospect of genuine debate online even more grim:

"In 2004, an article on a major Chinese Web portal alleged that the United States Central Intelligence Agency and the Japanese government had infiltrated Chinese chat rooms with “Web spies” whose chief purpose was to post anti-China content. The allegations were never substantiated, but they are now a permanent fixture of China’s Internet culture, where Web spies, or wangte, are imagined to be facing off against the Fifty Cent Party."

None of this is to say I will stop reading the online commentary. In fact, despite the 50 Cent Party, despite the Great Firewall, I still see the Internet as an exciting force in Chinese society. I just wish the legions of paid pro-Communist Party commentators would quit crashing the party so the rest of us could have a more serious, productive debate.

50 Cent Party Crashers | Laogai Research Foundation


Here in defence.pk, most of the Chinese members I've encountered post with FACTS,

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Does it mean MANY of the Chinese members you've encountered post with LIES???
Chinese wu mao's that I've encountered in other forums are only good with insults and useless baseless nonfactual comments.
 
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we get every piece of information that you can get on the internet,but we never blindly take them as value,by some years living in the US I Know how biased those reports are against China,we read news from both sides and figure out what's going on,never like you brainwashed Philippinos.many Americans think China is what it was 30 years ago,that's good for them,ha
 
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we get every piece of information that you can get on the internet,but we never blindly take them as value,by some years living in the US I Know how biased those reports are against China,we read news from both sides and figure out what's going on,never like you brainwashed Philippinos.many Americans think China is what it was 30 years ago,that's good for them,ha

Tell that to the MARINES.



Internet Censorship in China

Internet censorship in China is among the most stringent in the world. The government blocks Web sites that discuss the Dalai Lama, the 1989 crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters, Falun Gong, the banned spiritual movement, and other Internet sites.

As revolts began to ricochet through the Middle East and North Africa in 2011, and homegrown efforts to organize protests began to circulate on the Internet, the Chinese government tightened its grip on electronic communications, and appeared to be more determined than ever to police cellphone calls, electronic messages, e-mail and access to the Internet in order to smother any hint of antigovernment sentiment.

The government’s computers intercept incoming data and compare it against an ever-changing list of banned keywords or Web sites, screening out even more information. The motive is often obvious: Since late 2010, the censors have prevented Google searches of the English word “freedom.”

In March 2011, Google accused the Chinese government of disrupting its Gmail service in the country and making it appear as if technical problems at Google — not government intervention — were to blame. At the same time, several popular virtual private-network services, or V.P.N.’s, designed to evade the government’s computerized censors, have been crippled. V.P.N.’s are popular with China’s huge expatriate community and Chinese entrepreneurs, researchers and scholars who expect to use the Internet freely.

Few analysts believe that the government will loosen controls any time soon, with events it considers politically sensitive swamping the calendar, including a turnover in the Communist Party’s top leadership in 2012.

The Censorship Machine

Web sites in China are required to employ people who monitor and delete objectionable content; tens of thousands of others are paid to "guide" bulletin board Web exchanges in the government's favor.

China’s censorship machine has been operating ever more efficiently since mid-2008, and restrictions once viewed as temporary — like bans on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter — are now considered permanent. Government-friendly alternatives have sprung and developed a following.

Oversight increased markedly in December 2008 after Charter 08, a pro-democracy movement led by highly regarded intellectuals, released an online petition calling for an end to the Communist Party's monopoly on power. The group's Web site, bulldog.com, was shut down.

Government censors began a campaign, ostensibly against Internet pornography and other forms of deviance. Soon the government effort had shut down more than 1,900 Web sites and 250 blogs -- not only overtly pornographic sites, but also online discussion forums, instant-message groups and even cellphone text messages in which political and other sensitive issues were broached.

In 2009, the government pushed -- and ultimately backed off from -- a rule that would have required the installation of a new software program called "Green Dam-Youth Escort'' on all new Chinese-made computers. The software would effectively monitor a user's every move. After strong resistance at home and abroad, however, China indefinitely delayed enforcement of the rule.

Despite building one of the most technically sophisticated Internet firewalls, China still has a community of Web users that is among the most dynamic in the world. There are more than 70 million bloggers in China, and in January 2009, officials proudly announced that the number of Internet users had approached 300 million, more than in any other country.

In addition to its massive firewall and intrusive software, the government employs thousands of paid commentators who pose as ordinary Web users to counter criticism of the government. Known derisively as "50 Cent Party" members, these shapers of public opinion are often paid 50 Chinese cents a posting.

The Battle With Google

In January 2010, the government's policy put it squarely at odds with one of the world's most high-profile companies, as Google announced that it would cease operations in China unless its search engine results were no longer filtered. The company also cited a series of cyberattacks aimed at breaching the accounts of human rights advocates on its e-mail service, Gmail. China responded that companies doing business in the country must follow the law.

Google closed its Internet search service in March 2010 and began directing users in China to its uncensored search engine in Hong Kong. While the decision was an attempt by Google to skirt censorship requirements without running afoul of Chinese laws, it appeared to anger officials in China.

In June 2010, ending months of tension, Google announced that the Beijing government had renewed its license to operate a Web site in mainland China. The license renewal was a sign that Google, while uncomfortable with operating in China and censoring its search results on Beijing's behalf, is determined to keep a foot in China, which now has more Internet users than the United States.

http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/ne...ritories/china/internet_censorship/index.html
 
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Tell that to the MARINES.

which piece of information about China that you think you know and we Chinese dont know??

the internet is a place where you can have tons of information and sieve them through try to figure out what to believe and what not,blindly believe what ever your media feed you can only prove that you are an idiot.
 
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