Sunday, March 23, 2008

Video Links



Please pay extra attention to the last one minutes of the video and see how the "peaceful protester" has been destroying innocent business building and KILLING civilians.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSQnK5FcKas

Witness voice interviewed by Sky news, one of the very few REALISTIC reports
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAybQa7FIhE

Austrilian tourist in tibet.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhjCX4KIz4Q


After all those video, i hope you would have some questions for BBC, CBC, and CNN, for what you see, what you hear from them. Please note, they are all national broadcasting companies. if they dont have the ability to get a full aspect of the story, then no one have.
My question is: WHY are they misreporting about China purposely???!!!!!


Now watch what American Cops do to people attacking NO-ONE, NOTHING.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7NUNwq2MGc


Now my next question is why CNN, CBC and BBC is critizing ONLY on Chinese based on their MISLEADING information and MANIPULATED pictures?

Please leave answer to my question in the comment section.

7 comments:

Lodge said...

Hi,
The dog attacks that you see in the north american cities are extremely mild when you compare it to
- the relentless shooting that chinese cops resort to.
- random arrests for the smallest of offence including expressing your grievances.
- blockade of all the media people from Tibet.

The point is that there are huge differences between the tibetan people and Chinese. You are different in culture, philosophy, language, literature, but there are also a lot of common things that binds you both together including the desire for freedom to express yourself, follow the religion of your choice, and move freely without the fear of being persecuted.
Honestly you are in Canada enjoying all these rights then why should not the Tibetans also enjoy the same rights. Isn't it hypocrisy that you want to subjugate the Tibetans but you do not like being subjugated. Just ask yourself if you are being honest to yourself. They are also human beings just like everyone.
Just because China has the biggest stick it can't go around hitting innocent people.
Imagine if a bully in your school hits your kid all the time, will you accept it lying down? China is the bully right now.

Anonymous said...

I'm a Chinese Canadian and the conduct of the Chinese Government disgusts me. I am sure at this "Anti-violence" rally my Chinese bros and sisters will mouth the same tired rhetoric of the Chinese government about how ungrateful Tibetans are for all the riches that China has poured into Tibet. NEWSFLASH! Tibetans don't want any of it. The don't want the railroad, they don't want all the Han Chinese marginalizing them. They don't want to be shot at and tortured anymore.

China has had 6 decades to get it right in Tibet and they've blown it. The Tibetans are not happy and want no part of the motherland

Please, my fellow Chinese don't just mindlessly mimic and follow the PRC government. THINK FOR YOURSELVES! Why do you think the media is so controlled in China...so the Chinese government can do all the thinking for you. No, the West is far from perfect. But at least there is some attempt by the media to report 2 sides to a story. And they certainly criticize thier own government a lot. This DOES NOT happen with any regularity in China.

Anonymous said...

Here is a video of a Chinese man talking about freedom at the Tibet demo. He starts 3 minutes 15 seconds into the video;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L0ywrymldVE

Anonymous said...

There is an irony here.

The Chinese that protested were demonstrating against their host country's media coverage as unrepresentative and bias against them. Essentially, these Chinese are feeling the effects of being a minority in the country they live and that they feel they have no voice........so they protest!!

They protest against demonstrations in their own home country by a minority group who feel marginalised and feel they have no voice.....so they protest!!

Hmm....some comparison to be drawn me thinks.

mike said...

To Lodge:

Dog attacks was based on nothing and shooting was way after they kill others, that is huge difference. that is why you dont see shooting in the camera when those "protestors" were destroying and killing.

I understand that we dont have the sameculture, philosophy, language, literature, however, that was the way it was and we are willing to keep it that way, keep in mind, we do have other 54 other races in china, not only tibet and han. if your statement is true, why dont we, (all european and other immigrants ) leave canada and USA and give the land back to the native since we dont share the sameculture, philosophy, language, literature??

also, there was a huge jump in terms of human right and freedom in china already, we were not great, but we are improving. and tibet was in slavery society before 1951. that is why people in tibet worship chairman mao rather than dailai lama. i am talking about residents, not monks. and MAJORITY in tibet is NOT monks.

To the 1st Anonymous
i am making the statement for myself, i think for myself, not because i am chinese. and i am sure that majority of the chinese think the same way.

To the 2nd Anonymous:
I did watch the whole thing, i saw some chinese have a difference view of our country. however, i guess number talks? that is how we pass the law at least.

To the 3rd Anonymous:
The media here is so one-sided so We need our voice to be heard, that is all. we understand that we are minoriy here, and we have to step up and present our views.

If its in china, we would have done the same thing.

Anonymous said...

"If its in china, we would have done the same thing."
You only would have done it in China if you agreed with the government. If your protest was against the government (for example, like the Tibetans) you would have found yourself in jail for five years or maybe even executed for 'splittist activity'.

Anonymous said...

… For more than a decade, I have frequently entered Tibet and often stayed there for a long time, traveling or working. I have met all kinds of Tibetans, from youngsters on the streets, folk artists, herders on the grasslands, mystic doctors in mountain villages, to ordinary cadres in state agencies, street vendors in Lhasa, monks and cleaners in monasteries, artists and writers…Among those Tibetans I have met, some frankly told me that Tibet was a small country several decades ago, with its own government, religious leader, currency and military; some stay silent, with a sense of helplessness, and avoid talking with me, a Han Chinese, afraid this is an awkward subject. Some think that no matter what happened, it is an historical fact that Chinese and Tibetans had a long history of exchanges with each other, and the relationship must be carefully maintained by both sides. Some were angered by the railway project, and by those roads named “Beijing Road,” “Jiangsu Road,” “Sichuan-Tibet road,” but others accept them happily. Some say that you (Han Chinese) invest millions in Tibet but you also got what you wanted and even more; some say you invest in the development but you also destroy, and what you destroy is exactly what we treasure….. What I want to say here is that no matter how different these people are, they have one thing in common: They have their own view of history, and a profound religious belief.

For anyone who has been to Tibet, he/she should sense such a religious belief among Tibetans. As the matter of fact, many are shocked by it. Such attitude has carried on throughout their history, and is expressed in their daily lives. This is a very different value, especially compared with those Han Chinese who have no beliefs, and now worship the cult of money. This religious belief is what Tibetans care about the most. They project this belief onto the Dalai Lama as a religious persona.
……
For anyone who has been to Tibet, it should not be strange to see the “common Tibetan scene”: Is there any Tibetan who does not worship him (the Dalai Lama)? Is there any Tibetan unwilling to hang up his photo in his own shrine? (These photos are smuggled back in from abroad, secretly copied and enlarged, not like those Mao portraits printed by the government that we Han Chinese once had to hang up.) Is there any Tibetan who wants to verbally disrepect the Dalai Lama? Is there a Tibetan who does not want to see him? Is there any Tibetan who does not want to present Hada [white welcoming scarf] to him?

Other than those voices that the rulers want to hear, have we ever heard the Tibetans’ full, real voices? Those Han Chinese who have been in Tibet, now matter if one is a high official, government cadre, tourist or businessman, have we all heard their real voices, which are silenced, but are still echoing everywhere?

Is this the real reason that all monasteries in Tibet are forbidden from hanging up the Dalai Lama’s picture? Is this the reason that all work units have officials to check in every household and to punish those who hang up his picture? Is this the reason that the government has people to stop those believers on the pilgrimage path on every religious celebration day? Is this the reason for the policy barring government employees from having their children study in Dharamsala; otherwise, they will be fired and their house will be taken away? Is this the reason that at all sensitive times, government officials will hold meetings in monasteries, to force monks to promise to “support the Party’s leadership” and “Have no relations with the Dalai splitist cliques”? Is this the reason we refuse to negotiate, and constantly use dehumanizing language to humiliate him? After all, isn’t this the very reason to reinforce the “common Tibetan scene,” making this symbol of nationality more holy? ……

Why can’t we sit down with the Dalai Lama who has abandoned calls for “independence” and now advocates a “middle way,” and negotiate with him with sincerity, to achieve “stability” and “unity” through him?

Because the power difference of the two sides is too big. We are too many people, too powerful: Other than guns and money, and cultural destruction and spiritual rape, we do not know other ways to achieve “harmony.”

……

This group of people who believe in Buddhism because they believe in cause and effect and transmigration of souls, oppose anger and hatred, developed a philosophy that Han nationalists will never be able to understand. Several Tibetan monk friends, just the “troublemaker monk” type that are in the monasteries explained to me their view on “independence”: “actually, we may well have been ethnic Han in a previous incarnation, and in our next incarnation we might well become ethnic Han. And some ethnic Han in a previous life may well have been Tibetan or may become Tibetan in their next life. Foreigners or Chinese, men or women, lovers aand enemies, the souls of the world transmigrate without end. As the wheel turns, states arise and die, so what need is there for independence?” This kind of religion, this kind of believer, can one ever think that they would be easy to control? Yet there is a paradox here: if one wants them to give up the desire for independence, then one must respect and protect their religion.

……

Not long ago, I read some posts by some radical Tibetans on an online forum about Tibet. These posts were roughly saying: “We do not believe in Buddhism, we do not believe in karma. But we have not forgotten that we are Tibetan. We have not forgotten our homeland. Now we believe the philosophy of you Han Chinese: Power comes out of the barrel of a gun! Why did you Han Chinese come to Tibet? Tibet belongs to Tibetans. Get out of Tibet!”

Of course behind those posts, there are an overwhelming number of posts from Han “ patriots.” Almost without exception, those replies are full of words such as “Kill them!” “Wipe them out!” “Wash them with blood!” “Dalai is a liar!” — those “passions” of the worshippers of violence that we are all so familiar with.

When I read these posts, I feel so sad. So this is karma. ……

In the last week, after I put down the phone which cannot reach anyone on the the other end, when I face the information black hole caused by internet blockage, even I believe what Xinhua has said — strangely I do believe this part: There were Tibetans who set fire to shops and killed those poor innocent Han Chinese who were just there to make a living. And I still feel extremely sad. Since when were such seeds planted? During the gunshots of 1959? During the massive destruction during the Cultural Revolution? During the crackdown in 1989? During the time we put their Panchen Lama under house arrest and replaced him with our own puppet? During those countless political meetings and confessions in the monasteries? Or during the time when a seventeen-year-old nun was shot on the magnificent snowy mountain, just because she wanted to see the Dalai Lama? ……..

Or during numerous moments which seem trivial but which make me ashamed: I was ashamed when I saw Tibetans buy live fish from Han fish sellers on the street and put them back in the Lhasa river; I was ashamed when I saw more and more Han beggars on the streets of Lhasa–even beggars know it is easier to beg in Tibet than in Han areas; I felt ashamed when I saw those ugly scars from mines on the sacred mountains in the morning sunlight; I felt ashamed when I heard the Han Chinese elite complain that the Chinese government has invested so many millions of yuan, that economic policy favors Tibetans, and that the GDP has grown so fast, so, “What else do these Tibetans want?”

Why can’t you understand that people have different values? While you believe in brainwashing, the power of a gun and of money, there is a spiritual belief that has been in their minds for thousands of years and cannot be washed away. When you claim yourselves as “saviors of Tibetans from slavery society,” I am ashamed for your arrogance and your delusions. When military police with their guns pass by me in the streets of Lhasa, and each time I am there I can see row upon row of military bases… yes, I, a Han Chinese, feel ashamed.
……

What makes me feel most ashamed is the “patriotic majority”: You people are the decedents of Qinshi Huangdi who knows only conquering by killing; you are the chauvinists who rule the weak by force; you are those cowards who hide behind guns and call for shooting the victims; you suffer from Stockholm Syndrome; you are the blood-thirsty crazies of an “advanced” culture of Slow slicing and Castration. You are the sick minds waving the “patriotic” flag. I look down on you. If you are Han Chinese, I am ashamed to be one of you.

Lhasa is on fire, and there are gunshots in Tibetan areas in Sichuan and Qinghai. Even I believe this — actually, I do believe this part of the facts. In those “patriotic” posts which shout “Kill them!” “Wipe them out!” “Wash them with blood!” “Dalai is a liar!” I saw the mirror image of those Tibetan radicals. Let me say that you people (“patriotic youth”) are Han chauvinists who destroy thousands of years of friendship between Han and Tibetan people; you are the main contributors to the hatred between ethnic groups. You people do not really “highly support” the authority; rather, you people are in effect “highly supporting” “Tibetan independence.”

Tibet is disappearing. The spirit which makes her beautiful and peaceful is disappearing. She is becoming us, becoming what she does not want to become. What other choice does she have when facing the anxiety of being alienated? To hold onto her tradition and culture, and revive her ancient civilization? Or to commit suicidal acts which will only add to Han nationalists’ bloody, shameful glory?

Yes, I love Tibet. I am a Han Chinese who loves Tibet, regardless of whether she is a nation or a province, as long as she is so voluntarily. Personally, I would like to have them (Tibetans) belong to the same big family with me. I embrace relationships which come self-selected and on equal footing, not controlled or forced, both between peoples and nations. I have no interest in feeling “powerful,” to make others fear you and be forced to obey you, both between people and between nations, because what’s behind such a “feeling” is truly disgusting. I have left her (Tibet) several years ago, and missing her has become part of my daily life. I long to go back to Tibet, as a welcomed Han Chinese, to enjoy a real friendship as equal neighbor or a family member.

2008.3.21

(Tang Danhong moved to Israel from Chengdu in 2005, and is currently teaching Chinese language at Tel Aviv University.)