The thread for posting in Chinese and discussion about the Chinese-speaking world, culture, life, travel, economics, geopolitics, interracial relationships etc.
>*Interviewing gay guy* >Winston: "Yeah a lot of Chinese guys like feminine" >Gay guy: "Yeah when I came here I thought wow everyone is gay!" >Winston: "You're not the only one"
What did he mean by this?
Wyatt Nelson
S O Y B O Y S (>tfw soyboy myself)
Jacob Jones
But from what I heard, acrual Chinese gay man are unpopular to gays from other countries
3:13 to 3:15 extremely phat K-Feetz for a good succle
Elijah James
...
Brandon Fisher
>that hairline
Robert Parker
Hey friends. I recently arrived in Taiwan. I was looking forward to what I now know is a woefully misinformed vision of the Lunar New Year. I thought it was more like Halloween or Independence Day or something, but it sounds like it's more like Christmas with everything shutting down and everyone going home to their families. Needless to say, I feel pretty silly.
I was wondering if you guys have any suggestions for what I should do during the Spring Festival? For background, I'm a young American, I don't speak Chinese, and I'm here on my own. I'm near Taipei currently, but I'm open to travel anywhere.
Levi King
Have sex with orphans who don’t have any family to visit?
Ryder Morales
...
Jonathan Davis
all gay men are size queens
Aiden Howard
Are chinese bottoms not popular?
Thomas Bailey
give me a quick rundown on all the sino personalities(including the vloggers)
Austin Barnes
Footkraut Peru Georgetown professor Japanese-American aka Cuban-American Genocidal Jap Australia bot
Elijah Gonzalez
>Xi totally will take all the power and ignore the rules! >Xi’s biggest ally, Wang Qishan, then steps down from the Politburo
Georgetown Professor, Cuban, Japanese-American, AMWF spammer, Japanflag psycho - they're all one person. One twisted individual with multiple personas ITT.
Peru - professional LARPER. has a vivid imagination and is currently pretending to be on vacation in Asia.
Deranged Canadian - obsessed with militant Muslim women
ATM scammer - weirdo with ties to Chinese mafia structures
Britanon - couldn't get the tip wet during a two week trip to China
Footbro - eternal expat on the hunt for phat zhongguoren toez
Australian bot - pretends to be human
Cuckmilk - loser who married a monkey
Vivi - the loser's monkey wife with fucked up feet
SerpentZA - autist from south Africa who hacked the Chinese language
Sasha - wife of the autist, sadly won't show her feet
>However, Hu said, Western media reports depicting the walkout as a major setback for independent journalism in China were not true. "We chose to leave because we wanted to continue what we had done, not because we wanted to give up," she said. "We re-gathered and begin a new journey now."
>She said she remains "positive" about the future of journalism in China.
>During Hu’s tenure as editor, Caijing was widely viewed as China’s most outspoken news outlet. The magazine broke critical investigations into economic malfeasance, exposed a government cover-up of the SARS epidemic and reported shoddy building construction after the Sichuan earthquake.
This is the exact same story from 2010. Meanwhile they established Caixin news, a private and independent media outlet, in Xi’s first year. How is this possible if the 2010 reports from Westerners were true?
Western “China analysts” are almost ALWAYS wrong about China. It is literally pathetic.
>When it comes to analyzing China, distance seems to make investors’ views of the world’s second-largest economy grow, shall we say, less fond. Whether it’s George Soros (who’s likened China to the U.S. before the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis) or Kyle Bass (who’s said the Chinese economy is built on sand) or Jim Chanos (who’s said, memorably, that China is on a “treadmill to hell”), there’s no shortage of gloomy outlooks.
>That negativity is a sharp contrast to the majority opinion held closer to Beijing or Shanghai. There, booming consumption, a pickup in global trade, and an increasingly innovative private sector are fueling bets that China’s generation-long economic miracle still has plenty of room to run, albeit at a slower rate than the average gross domestic product growth of almost 10 percent a year since the early 1980s. “I find it scary how many self-proclaimed US based China experts w real influence have barely lived in China, barely speak Chinese and barely have a clue …” tweeted Shaun Rein, Shanghai-based founder and managing director of China Market Research Group and author of The War for China’s Wallet, on Dec. 26. Later he was on Twitter again, wagering that the “same tired group of China’s watchers will predict China’s collapse for the 40th year in a row… and they’ll be wrong for the 40th time but western media will keep quoting them breathlessly as experts.”
>According to Michael Spencer, global head of economics at Deutsche Bank AG in Hong Kong. “Hedge funds in New York have been saying for seven years it’s going to be a crisis, but it clearly hasn’t been the case,” he says. “China is not investing New York hedge fund money. It is investing Chinese home savings.”
Eli Parker
how hot does Hong Kong get in august? Also will it be possible to meet Winston in Shenzhen?
will wearing sandals and socks be acceptable?
Lincoln Campbell
Cuban-American why don't you get a job as a China Analyst or something?
To ensure independent journalism, Caixin has set up a Board of Trustees composed of respected intellectuals and academics that are independent of Caixin’s board of directors and management, and have the final say in setting editorial principles, as well as the appointment or dismissal of the editor-in-chief.
Chairman of Board of Trustees
Wu Jinglian: Research Fellow for the Development Research Center of the State Council
Trustees
Xie Ping: Professor of the PBC School of Finance at Tsinghua University
Qian Yingyi: Dean of the School of Economics and Management at Tsinghua University
Xu Hong: Professor of the School of Journalism and Communication at Peking University
Xiao Meng: Executive Editor of Comparative Studies Magazine
Advisor of Board of Trustees
Lawrence H. Summers: Economist and former U.S. Treasury Secretary
>alright guys here's the plan >we pretend to have an independent news outlet, every once in a while they will "expose" something wrong with the government or crooked politicians so people will get the feeling they're not living under a 120% AI nerve gas mind control police state dictatorship regime
Christopher Ross
Vlogger wife ranking: 1 Korean Englishman’s C-list celebrity wife 2 Macanese hooker Vivi 3 Dr Hu 4 Milf Vivi 5 Poon Ranger’s woman 6 Prozzie’s left hand
Levi Adams
Winston says 你可以吃辣的吗 But I think 你怕辣吗 is more native
Actually I'm not sure if what winston says is even the correct usage of 可以, it's usually used when you want permission to do something. If he wanted to say "Can you eat spicy food" shouldn't he have said 你能吃辣的吗? But like I said 你怕辣吗 is more native.
Jaxon Phillips
I watched a very cute LGBT drama film made in Taiwan recently, it was called 藍色大門.
my bf thought it was really good
Blake Morgan
>implying that’s not the plan
Have you seen mainland Chinese without a strong central authority?
the experience of 6 months teaching us about native tier chinese because seasoned chinese hackers with a combined two decades of experience have no clue
Biggest China news story in months. FT and The Economist and Bloomberg wrote articles about it.
>That is the headline of another Caixin story, connected to the fall of former Chongqing Party boss Sun Zhengcai 孙政才, who was expelled from the Party in September, and accused of political and disciplinary violations and corruption.
>Liu Fengzhou 刘凤州, a government employee turned entrepreneur, art collector, and Buddhist, started a relationship with Sun in the 1990s, and “their ‘special relationship’ evolved quickly,” according to Caixin’s sources.
>Anti-corruption officers from the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) took Liu in for questioning in May. Shortly after that, CCDI began investigating Sun for “serious violations of party discipline,” including allegations that he “exchanged power for sex.”
>Sun awarded infrastructure tenders to Liu’s associates in Chongqing, and she started 17 companies in Beijing, Jilin Province, and Chongqing, all localities where Sun had held office.
Pictures included in case you doubt it.
Tyler Miller
The "attacked" key members because CPC so ordered.
Blake Price
$4.5 billion
The total wealth she hid because he ordered the anti-corruption officials to investigate other people. Helps when you are on the Politburo.
Jordan Robinson
>CPC ordered this corruption since the 1990s
There are pictures of them together many times at hotels and her properties in all the provinces he worked at.
If this was “ordered” why did only Caixin investigate and take these pictures? Why not Xinhua? Why not keep it a secret so foreigners do not see the corruption in the CCP? How does looking corrupt help the CCP? This guy was on the Politburo! He ran four provinces over two decades.
Henry Wood
Because China wants to boost it's image as a country that is fighting corruption and has free media. Xinhua is too close to the government so it wouldn't have been the big news it became had they released it. It had to be "independent" news outlet """investigating""" (aka receiving orders from the CPC) it and ""exposing"" the government.
Nathaniel Fisher
On Xi Jinping’s politburo, as a matter of fact.
This was found in Sun’s house. Pure gold, $150 million in value.
Carson Baker
Whatever
If you cannot accept that there are differing factions in China and not all are communists, then you’d see what is stand right in front of you.
This overt corruption expose hurts China. It does not make China look better. This is a Xi Jinping peer. His fellow member on the Politburo. Not some random official.
Jack Ward
Shock value. Collateral damage. All part of the plan.
Leo Evans
Will the CCP murder me if I start an independent news website in China?
China-Vatican diplomatic deal to recognize the PRC.
Nicholas Brooks
>never read a single article >"You've reached your article limit"
Dylan Scott
this is the ideal Chinese female, you may not like it but this is what peak performance looks like
Hunter Green
it's a drawing
Jace Evans
yesterday I fucked another hooker. she later wrote on her wechat moments. my life, my decisions. why?
Liam Powell
why do you keep on lying?
Elijah Rodriguez
and your brain is controlled by Chinese insectoid foot fungi spores
did your 台湾猴 survive the earthquake footkraut?
John Garcia
Leave my friend alone.
Mason Perry
She doesn't live in Hualien, she is alive and well.
Justin Allen
the footkrautist is SO jealous of peru
Nathaniel White
his imagination is indeed enviable
Easton Perez
peru? PERU!? update is RIGHT NOW peru, what is your current location peru? are you taking your meds peru? the chinks didn't confiscate them and bully you right peru?
Peru, have you thought about Cindy recently peru? I recommend you stay away from high buildings peru, I'm VERY worried you might do something, you'll regret, VERY worried peru, WORRIED
Peru?
Gabriel Bell
still 0 medals so far
Christopher Kelly
Just letting you know, when you accuse people of lying it's the ultimate praise.
Henry Lopez
BRO i SWEAR they will rank 4th this year
Ian Lewis
if you say so
Nathan Ramirez
...
Hudson Rivera
Feet are meh.
Michael Rogers
thoughts on this footpucci?
Adrian Smith
thoughts on this well adjusted young lady?
Elijah Hughes
My eyes only gravitate toward the legs. The only time I thought feet were kinda hot was a webm I saw a long time ago of some Asian girls who were embarrassed by their exposed feet and tried to cover them up.
Dylan Bailey
imagine cupping the heel of her bare foot in your hand and slowly moving it towards your mouth, sticcing the phat toez in your mouth
Jayden Phillips
I don't see any well adjusted young ladies in this photo...