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Tiananmen Protest Museum Says It’s Being Forced Out of Hong Kong Location

But then we'll tell you to do something WE DON'T want you to do, then you'll do the opposite, the thing we REALLY want you to do. Reverse psychology. You've been tricked AGAIN by the Great Satan !!! You'll NEVER learn !!! HAHAHAHAHA !!!!:rofl:
Unfortunately your government isn't as smart as you are. US government has offered too many cases to convince the world about "Don't do what I told you to do" theory.
 
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Unfortunately your government isn't as smart as you are. US government has offered too many cases to convince the world about "Don't do what I told you to do" theory.


Nah !! It'll work on you guys. I know, I'm smart, remember ?
 
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Wikileaks. O.K. chief.:rofl:

Even if the facts are in front of your face you probably still won't see it.

http://www.cjr.org/behind_the_news/the_myth_of_tiananmen.php?page=all


What is lost in this


The hoax was referring to the massacre at the Square itself where the thousands of students were at.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...hed-inside-Tiananmen-Square-cables-claim.html


Quote “In 2009, James Miles, who was the BBC correspondent in Beijing at the time, admitted that he had "conveyed the wrong impression" and that "there was no massacre on Tiananmen Square.”


The point is very clear. Western media sold the story of thousands of unarmed and peaceful young students were gunned down and rolled over as they were sleeping ???

This was the story that was told to people like you who want to believe such a thing happened. For a good 20 years !


This is from the link you provided.


At about 1:00 am, the army finally reached Tiananmen Square and waited for orders from the government. The soldiers had been told not to open fire, but they had also been told that they must clear the square by 6:00 a.m.–-no exceptions. They made a final offer of amnesty if the few thousand remaining students would leave. About 4:00 am, student leaders put the matter to a vote: Leave the square, or stay and face the consequences.[105]

The remaining students, numbering a few hundred, left the square under the military's watch before dawn.


Majority of the death occurred on the roads leading to the square when the PLA had to fight their way through road blocks into the square.


http://www.globalresearch.ca/from-the-tiananmen-massacre-to-the-lhasa-protests/8635


Some sources say that protesters first threw rocks and Molotov cocktails at police and army vehicles and lit many vehicles on fire in the streets leading to the Tiananmen, some with their occupants still inside them. There were reports of soldiers being burned alive in their armoured personnel carriers while others were beaten to death. Therefore, soldiers responded by opening fire on protesters. These protesters were mostly workers and not students. Students were mainly at the square.


Hard to say it was a massacre if PLA had to FIGHT their way through.


Apparently last year, Hou Dejian - a June 4th protest leader, came back to the Mainland from TW to give a surprise performance at the Bird's Nest. This is also the student leader who admitted that he never personally saw any killing/weapons firing/tanks running over people on the Square that day.




http://www.liberationnews.org/tiananmen-the-massacre-that-wasnt/


http://nsnbc.me/2013/04/29/lets-tal...-1989-my-hearsay-is-better-than-your-hearsay/
 
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I was afraid some media would make a biased report about this incident, now it is happened to be the New York Time. HK is ruled by law and our housing policy is strict because most of us live in a building that consisted of average 30 floors and full of people. So every residence building in HK requires to have a contract that would provide a clear guideline on the usage of the apartment, in order to ensure the safety of its residents. For example, the contract prevents the resident to use the apartment for illegal activities such as prostitution and gambling; it also prevents the resident to use the apartment for other purposes, such as restaurant, karaoke and "Museum", due to the different standard of estate fire safety. In this case, this is obviously that the so called "Museum" had violated the building contract and this is nothing about "FORCE OUT" of HK location, since the beginning.
 
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LOL. The people of HK have spoken. TS museum have been losing a lot of money and cannot pay rent so they need to shut down.

Very few HK people go there. No visitors, no money. No money, no honey
Many HK people are awaken due to the yellow umbrella occupation, in which it opens our eyes that how much damages a uncontrolled mobs could do to our society. Moreover, the wiki leak provided many evidences that how many lie the HK media made about 64 event.
 
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Good. Any museum founded on lies should be banned.

The Tiananmen Square Massacre is a Myth, All We’re ‘Remembering’ are British Lies

By Gregory Clark
Global Research, June 07, 2014
International Business Times
Region: Asia

June 4, 2014 will for many mark the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre. What it should actually mark is the anniversary of one of the more spectacular UK black information operations – almost on a par with the mythical Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.

The original story of Chinese troops on the night of 3 and 4 June, 1989 machine-gunning hundreds of innocent student protesters in Beijing’s iconic Tiananmen Square has since been thoroughly discredited by the many witnesses there at the time — among them a Spanish TVE television crew, a Reuters correspondent and protesters themselves, who say that nothing happened other than a military unit entering and asking several hundred of those remaining to leave the Square late that night.

Yet none of this has stopped the massacre from being revived constantly, and believed. All that has happened is that the location has been changed – from the Square itself to the streets leading to the Square.

The original story began with a long article in English, published six days later in Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post, by an alleged protester whose whereabouts have never been ascertained. Anonymously planted stories are a favourite technique of UK black information authorities, but this did not stop it from being front-paged by the New York Times on June 12, together with photos of blazing troop-carrying buses and followed up by Tankman – the photo of a lone student allegedly trying to stop a row of army tanks from entering the Square. The myth of an unprovoked massacre has since taken root.

True, no one denies that large numbers of citizens and students were killed near the Square by soldiers seemingly out of control. But why?

Let’s go back to those photos of the burning buses. The popular view is that they were torched by angry protesters after the shooting began. In fact they were torched before. The evidence? Reports of charred corpses being strung up beneath overpasses (one photographed by Reuters remains unpublished), and photos of badly burned soldiers seeking shelter in nearby houses. Soldiers in that kind of situation tend to go out with guns blazing – just ask the good citizens of Fallujah, Iraq.

Fortunately we also have the hourly reports from the US Embassy in the Beijing, available on the Internet, to tell us what actually happened. They note that originally the Beijing authorities had wanted to send in unarmed troops to clear the Square of remaining students as the protests were beginning to wind down. Blocked by the crowds, armed troops were bused in and this time they were blocked by crowds with petrol bombs, with ugly results. Even so, some units tried to restrain the out-of-control solders. And an embassy report of students killing a soldier trying to enter the Square could explain some of the carnage on its periphery.

As for Tankman, we now know from the cameraman himself that his widely-publicised photo was taken from his hotel window the day AFTER the riots, and the tanks were going away from, not into, the Square.

A detailed report by the authoritative Columbia Journalist Review, ‘The Tiananmen Massacre Myth and the Price of a Passive Press’ has since noted the media preference for blood and gore stories. But none of this seems to have dented the credibility of the Tiananmen massacre story.

True, some of the blame also lies with Beijing. Its campaigns to hunt down student protest leaders and to blame everything on anti-regime plots have not created a good impression. But it may have its reasons. Out of frustration as their long protest began to dissipate, some of the student leaders had called for action by the angry crowds still around the Square. And how did some in those crowds have access to petrol bombs – a weapon not used by Chinese rioters and allegedly responsible for over 400 vehicles being destroyed?

The regime had tolerated the protesters by allowing them to occupy its central square for six weeks. Its party general secretary had tried in vain to negotiate with them. And it later regretted how its lack of crowd control equipment meant it had had to rely on untrained soldiers. But then again, none of this would have happened if the regime itself had not been at fault in the past.

The words of well-known Taiwan-born writer Hou Dejian, who had been on the hunger strike on the Square to show solidarity with the students, says it all: “Some people said that 200 died in the Square and others claimed that as many as 2,000 died. There were also stories of tanks running over students who were trying to leave. I have to say that I did not see any of that. I myself was in the Square until 6:30 in the morning.

“I kept thinking — are we going to use lies to attack an enemy who lies?”


Gregory Clark is a former Australian diplomat, Chinese-speaking correspondent and university president resident in Japan. He can be found at www.gregoryclark.net.



http://www.globalresearch.ca/tianan...all-were-remembering-are-british-lies/5386080
 
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