MeisterEckhart wrote on Mar 29
th, 2022 at 12:49pm:
PZ547 wrote on Mar 29
th, 2022 at 12:43pm:
A year or more ago, when the convid hoax was going full throttle, I saw a video in a Chinese town or city in which a Chinese police officer in uniform was attempting to impose convid-law on citizens
It was a busy looking market area, small shops etc. The officer was behaving fairly mildly, imo
Then up the street came a strong looking Chinese citizen, bare chested and carrying a meat cleaver
he laid into the officer. Only took a couple of whacks with the cleaver to split the officer's skull
then off went the citizen, leaving the officer prone, obviously dead or close-to
the multitude of citizens didn't blink. Went back to their business. Dying frames of the video showed the officer unmoving in the street, surrounded by blood
no officers arrived
seemed like an everyday event
Not to mention articles in the media a month or so ago in which it was reported that tens of thousands of Chinese citizens were flooding to Mongolia in hope of gaining Mongolian entry, citizenship
I do not believe that the Chinese people despise democracy
Many Triad gang leaders have significant influence within the CCP and, as such, can act with murderous impunity at times. This has been demonstrated many times, by leaked videos, in the north of China along the North Korean and Mongolian borders where the CCP and gangs have a deeply corrupt arrangement.
It's also true throughout China as, apparently, the further from Beijing you go, the more murderously corrupt CCP officials become.
Don't know if you saw the vid I mentioned
but the killer looked to me to be a butcher, hence the apron and cleaver
I gained the impression he'd had enough of the BS
cleaved the officer's skull then went back to chopping up animals, was my impression, although I agree corruption exists within a billion-plus citizens
but I've watched videos where ordinary Chinese citizens have expressed negative opinions about their government. And must say, I was surprised by their candour, which was at direct odds with western media's portrayal of China