What's new

Liu Xiaobo wrong man for Nobel Peace Prize, say laureates

Says the Chinaman who speaks English lol

Hey, time to lawn my yard, don't forget to do feed and weed eh, yeah right, Mexican? wonder do you know sh!t about Mexico. "false flag clown":lol:

Stating the simp le truth that China has lagged behind the us in nuclear devolopment isn't trolling. Its the truth. But so be it let your ignorance be your undoing

Thats interesting, does Mexico has "nuke"? some crap comments from a "Jalapeno" lover? :D
 
Hey, time to lawn my yard, don't forget to do feed and weed eh, yeah right, Mexican? wonder do you know sh!t about Mexico. "false flag clown":lol:



Thats interesting, does Mexico has "nuke"? some crap comments from a "Jalapeno" lover? :D

All I heard was "ching chong ching chong slanty eyes ching chong small penis" lol! If only you could see how the entire world hates china but I guess God decided to sew every chinamans eyes shut for a reason!!

Viva Mexico! Viva COSTA RICA!!! Ya basta con los chinos racistos y sus vergas pequenas!!
 
Stating the simp le truth that China has lagged behind the us in nuclear devolopment isn't trolling. Its the truth. But so be it let your ignorance be your undoing

what part of nuclear development is china lagging behind in?
 
:wave: Pancho,it was nice hearing from a Mexican here for a while

Must have been sore about this guy
image3092123g.jpg


and the fact that he made this in Mexico

billetes-decomiso6.jpg
 
On topic I thought it was a good article. It highlights the difference in thinking between bleeding heart journalist types and pragmatic science types. As a sciency guy myself I can well understand their objection. China has improved the life of its citizens in every measurable indicator, and scientists are usually reluctant to quantify the intangible things "how does a undemocratic system stack up against a democratic system"

Given the choice of who better to run a country I'd pick the two guys who won a prize in physics over that journalist/essayist who won the literature prize anyday.
 
Liu has strong hatred for Chinese culture and the Chinese people. This creature does not represent China and awarding the Nobel peace prize to him will only incur the distaste of the Chinese people.

Please read all of the highlighted parts of the article from the British newspaper Guardian. Allow me to give you a preview of Mr. Liu's views:

"If I were to make this I would show just how wimpy, spineless and fucked-up [weisuo, ruanruo, caodan] the Chinese really are".

Do supporters of Nobel winner Liu Xiaobo really know what he stands for? | Barry Sautman and Yan Hairong | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

"Do supporters of Nobel winner Liu Xiaobo really know what he stands for?

The Chinese dissident has praised the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan – and said China should be fully westernised

* Barry Sautman and Yan Hairong
* guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 15 December 2010 11.00 GMT

liuxiaobo.jpg

'If Liu Xiaobo's politics were well-known, most people would not favour him for a prize, because he is a champion of war, not peace.' Photograph: EPA

In recent weeks, Nobel prizewinner Liu Xiaobo's politics have been reduced to a story of a heroic individual who upholds human rights and democracy. His views are largely omitted to avoid a discussion about them, resulting in a one-sided debate. Within three weeks, in Hong Kong, for example, more than 500 articles were published about Liu, of which only 10 were critical of the man or peace prize.

In China, before the award, most people neither knew nor cared about Liu, while, according to Andrew Jacobs, writing in the International Herald Tribune, an "official survey of university students taken since the prize was awarded found that 85% said they knew nothing about Mr Liu and Charter '08." A Norwegian Sinologist has elicited comments from Chinese people and indicated that younger Chinese still do not care about Liu. Older Chinese intellectuals are interested in discussing the award, but many do not think Liu is an appropriate recipient.

Imprisoning Liu was entirely unnecessary. If Liu's politics were well-known, most people would not favour him for a prize, because he is a champion of war, not peace. He has endorsed the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, and he applauded the Vietnam and Korean wars retrospectively in a 2001 essay. All these conflicts have entailed massive violations of human rights. Yet in his article Lessons from the Cold War, Liu argues that "The free world led by the US fought almost all regimes that trampled on human rights … The major wars that the US became involved in are all ethically defensible." During the 2004 US presidential election, Liu warmly praised George Bush for his war effort against Iraq and condemned Democratic party candidate John Kerry for not sufficiently supporting the US's wars:

[T]he outstanding achievement made by Bush in anti-terrorism absolutely cannot be erased by Kerry's slandering … However much risk must be endured in striking down Saddam Hussein, know that no action would lead to a greater risk. This has been proven by the second world war and September 11! No matter what, the war against Saddam Hussein is just! The decision by President Bush is right!

Liu has also one-sidedly praised Israel's stance in the Middle East conflict. He places the blame for the Israel/Palestine conflict on Palestinians, who he regards as "often the provocateurs".

Liu has also advocated the total westernisation of China. In a 1988 interview he stated that "to choose westernisation is to choose to be human". He also faulted a television documentary, He Shang, or River Elegy, for not thoroughly criticising Chinese culture and not advocating westernisation enthusiastically enough: "If I were to make this I would show just how wimpy, spineless and fucked-up [weisuo, ruanruo, caodan] the Chinese really are". Liu considered it most unfortunate that his monolingualism bound him in a dialogue with something "very benighted [yumei] and philistine [yongsu]," the Chinese cultural sphere. Harvard researcher Lin Tongqi noted that an early 1990s book by Liu contains "pungent attacks on the Chinese national character". In a well-known statement of 1988, Liu said:

It took Hong Kong 100 years to become what it is. Given the size of China, certainly it would need 300 years of colonisation for it to become like what Hong Kong is today. I even doubt whether 300 years would be enough.

Affirming this sentiment in Open magazine in 2006, he added that progress in China depends on westernisation and the more westernisation, the more progress. While his supporters excuse Liu's pro-colonialism as a provocation, it logically aligns with his support for total westernisation and US-led regime changing wars.

Liu, in his "Charter '08", called for a Western-style political system in China and privatisation of all enterprises and farm land. Not surprisingly, the organisations he has headed received financial support from the US government's National Endowment for Democracy. Studies show, however, that where transitions to electoral democracy occur in countries with low levels of average wealth, the rule of law does not necessarily follow, but instability and low levels of development do. Neither does electoral democracy deliver good governance, nor even sustain itself under such conditions.

Nowhere in the post-communist or developing world has there been the fair privatisation Liu claims to seek. Privatisation in eastern Europe often led to massive thefts of public property by oligarchs and became deeply unpopular, with strong majorities of people in all post-Communist countries wanting its revision. Privatisation is also disliked in India, Latin America and China itself, while studies of privatisation in many parts of the world show it can have a deleterious effect on development. Land privatisation in China would rapidly create land concentration and landless peasants.

Forty years ago, a Nobel prize committee upheld formerly imprisoned writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn as a symbol of freedom against the Soviet regime. As with Liu, it may have been unaware of or chose to ignore Solzhenitsyn's classically reactionary views: his own version of authoritarianism, an animus toward Jews, denunciation of the US for not pursuing the war in Vietnam more vigorously, condemnation of Amnesty International as too liberal, and support for the Spanish fascist dictator Francisco Franco.

The Nobel peace prize is a prize for politics of certain kind. The Norwegian Nobel Institute director has noted that the Nobel Committee has most often selected "those who had spoken out ... against the Communist dictators in Moscow and the dictators in Beijing." French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre recognized the Nobel prizes' role in the Cold war and refused to accept one in 1964. He stated: "In the present situation, the Nobel Prize stands objectively as a distinction reserved for the writers of the West or the rebels of the East." That role has been continued with Liu's prize."

Note: Thank you to "Bill" for the newslink.
 
Last edited:
Liu has strong hatred for Chinese culture and the Chinese people. This creature does not represent China and awarding the Nobel peace prize to him will only incur the distaste of the Chinese people.

Please read all of the highlighted parts of the article from the British newspaper Guardian. Allow me to give you a preview of Mr. Liu's views:

"If I were to make this I would show just how wimpy, spineless and fucked-up [weisuo, ruanruo, caodan] the Chinese really are".

Do supporters of Nobel winner Liu Xiaobo really know what he stands for? | Barry Sautman and Yan Hairong | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

"Do supporters of Nobel winner Liu Xiaobo really know what he stands for?

The Chinese dissident has praised the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan – and said China should be fully westernised

* Barry Sautman and Yan Hairong
* guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 15 December 2010 11.00 GMT

liuxiaobo.jpg

'If Liu Xiaobo's politics were well-known, most people would not favour him for a prize, because he is a champion of war, not peace.' Photograph: EPA

In recent weeks, Nobel prizewinner Liu Xiaobo's politics have been reduced to a story of a heroic individual who upholds human rights and democracy. His views are largely omitted to avoid a discussion about them, resulting in a one-sided debate. Within three weeks, in Hong Kong, for example, more than 500 articles were published about Liu, of which only 10 were critical of the man or peace prize.

In China, before the award, most people neither knew nor cared about Liu, while, according to Andrew Jacobs, writing in the International Herald Tribune, an "official survey of university students taken since the prize was awarded found that 85% said they knew nothing about Mr Liu and Charter '08." A Norwegian Sinologist has elicited comments from Chinese people and indicated that younger Chinese still do not care about Liu. Older Chinese intellectuals are interested in discussing the award, but many do not think Liu is an appropriate recipient.

Imprisoning Liu was entirely unnecessary. If Liu's politics were well-known, most people would not favour him for a prize, because he is a champion of war, not peace. He has endorsed the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, and he applauded the Vietnam and Korean wars retrospectively in a 2001 essay. All these conflicts have entailed massive violations of human rights. Yet in his article Lessons from the Cold War, Liu argues that "The free world led by the US fought almost all regimes that trampled on human rights … The major wars that the US became involved in are all ethically defensible." During the 2004 US presidential election, Liu warmly praised George Bush for his war effort against Iraq and condemned Democratic party candidate John Kerry for not sufficiently supporting the US's wars:

[T]he outstanding achievement made by Bush in anti-terrorism absolutely cannot be erased by Kerry's slandering … However much risk must be endured in striking down Saddam Hussein, know that no action would lead to a greater risk. This has been proven by the second world war and September 11! No matter what, the war against Saddam Hussein is just! The decision by President Bush is right!

Liu has also one-sidedly praised Israel's stance in the Middle East conflict. He places the blame for the Israel/Palestine conflict on Palestinians, who he regards as "often the provocateurs".

Liu has also advocated the total westernisation of China. In a 1988 interview he stated that "to choose westernisation is to choose to be human". He also faulted a television documentary, He Shang, or River Elegy, for not thoroughly criticising Chinese culture and not advocating westernisation enthusiastically enough: "If I were to make this I would show just how wimpy, spineless and fucked-up [weisuo, ruanruo, caodan] the Chinese really are". Liu considered it most unfortunate that his monolingualism bound him in a dialogue with something "very benighted [yumei] and philistine [yongsu]," the Chinese cultural sphere. Harvard researcher Lin Tongqi noted that an early 1990s book by Liu contains "pungent attacks on the Chinese national character". In a well-known statement of 1988, Liu said:

It took Hong Kong 100 years to become what it is. Given the size of China, certainly it would need 300 years of colonisation for it to become like what Hong Kong is today. I even doubt whether 300 years would be enough.

Affirming this sentiment in Open magazine in 2006, he added that progress in China depends on westernisation and the more westernisation, the more progress. While his supporters excuse Liu's pro-colonialism as a provocation, it logically aligns with his support for total westernisation and US-led regime changing wars.

Liu, in his "Charter '08", called for a Western-style political system in China and privatisation of all enterprises and farm land. Not surprisingly, the organisations he has headed received financial support from the US government's National Endowment for Democracy. Studies show, however, that where transitions to electoral democracy occur in countries with low levels of average wealth, the rule of law does not necessarily follow, but instability and low levels of development do. Neither does electoral democracy deliver good governance, nor even sustain itself under such conditions.

Nowhere in the post-communist or developing world has there been the fair privatisation Liu claims to seek. Privatisation in eastern Europe often led to massive thefts of public property by oligarchs and became deeply unpopular, with strong majorities of people in all post-Communist countries wanting its revision. Privatisation is also disliked in India, Latin America and China itself, while studies of privatisation in many parts of the world show it can have a deleterious effect on development. Land privatisation in China would rapidly create land concentration and landless peasants.

Forty years ago, a Nobel prize committee upheld formerly imprisoned writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn as a symbol of freedom against the Soviet regime. As with Liu, it may have been unaware of or chose to ignore Solzhenitsyn's classically reactionary views: his own version of authoritarianism, an animus toward Jews, denunciation of the US for not pursuing the war in Vietnam more vigorously, condemnation of Amnesty International as too liberal, and support for the Spanish fascist dictator Francisco Franco.

The Nobel peace prize is a prize for politics of certain kind. The Norwegian Nobel Institute director has noted that the Nobel Committee has most often selected "those who had spoken out ... against the Communist dictators in Moscow and the dictators in Beijing." French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre recognized the Nobel prizes' role in the Cold war and refused to accept one in 1964. He stated: "In the present situation, the Nobel Prize stands objectively as a distinction reserved for the writers of the West or the rebels of the East." That role has been continued with Liu's prize."

Note: Thank you to "Bill" for the newslink.

It is sad that many Chinese Americans just praise for Liu, the Western propaganda machine is so powerful to brainwash these people to hate their own motherland. :sniper: :china:
 

LOL. The artical is so full of it. It deliberately misinterpeted he's own view of the world with his politic idea.
It's about the principle of freedom of speech. And it's shouldn't be mix with His own views. The point of "Peace" prize was just that! He should have the right to express them,which he is not allow.

Back to the point:the fact is Imprisoning Liu was entirely unnecessary. He is unknow(the artical has this right), untill CCP made this HUGE deal by kicking him to the prison, which is just stupid! It just made western media's day. "Our hero of freedom of speech!" huraa.... If they didn't arrested him,not that many young people would have know him at all!
 
LOL. The artical is so full of it. It deliberately misinterpeted he's own view of the world with his politic idea.
It's about the principle of freedom of speech. And it's shouldn't be mix with His own views. The point of "Peace" prize was just that! He should have the right to express them,which he is not allow.

Back to the point:the fact is Imprisoning Liu was entirely unnecessary. He is unknow(the artical has this right), untill CCP made this HUGE deal by kicking him to the prison, which is just stupid! It just made western media's day. "Our hero of freedom of speech!" huraa.... If they didn't arrested him,not that many young people would have know him at all!

Where the fvck did you come from?

ps. I think it is hilarious how you accused Huzi of being out of touch with other Chinese people.
 
Where the fvck did you come from?

ps. I think it is hilarious how you accused Huzi of being out of touch with other Chinese people.

"spin666" is a false flag troll. Just ignore him. Cowards, who are afraid to display their real flags and allegiance, deserve no respect for their trollish views.

Best regards,

Martin
 
It is sad that many Chinese Americans just praise for Liu, the Western propaganda machine is so powerful to brainwash these people to hate their own motherland. :sniper: :china:

"Loving motherland" blindly is good? Do not mix Motherland and Government. Even Soldiers should ask if an order is in conflict with his moral. When you been ask to fire on unarm people on the stree, as you can see they can't have any weapon at all,but still your leader tell's you they are "terrorist" and order you to fire,do you do it?

BTW:shooting the flag is also "loving motherland"? How very american's of you.
 
Where the fvck did you come from?

ps. I think it is hilarious how you accused Huzi of being out of touch with other Chinese people.

Unbase comment.


"spin666" is a false flag troll. Just ignore him. Cowards, who are afraid to display their real flags and allegiance, deserve no respect for their trollish views.

Best regards,

Martin

Now that is funny. When you have two american flag's and talk like people's daily. Do you even know what "troll" mean? Or the word Allegiance? Submit fact to base your opinion.
A respect from you is like a respect from a nazi,I hope I never get it's,as I would be like you then.
 
Unbase comment.




Now that is funny. When you have two american flag's and talk like people's daily. Do you even know what "troll" mean? Or the word Allegiance? Submit fact to base your opinion.
A respect from you is like a respect from a nazi,I hope I never get it's,as I would be like you then.

Martian already admitted that he was originally a Chinese from Taiwan.

Now i want to see your true color.
 

Latest posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom