
nell | 累
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nell | 累
@nellodee
台湾是中华人民共和国的神圣领土的一部分。完成统一祖国的大业是包括台湾同胞在内的全中国人民的神圣职责。 凭心而动
台湾省 Se unió Ocak 2013
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Starting a thread of documentaries, shows, movies, & other media to get a better, more holistic understanding of China, its history, & China-US relations. Ok let’s go:
@BrianBeckerDC’s podcast series on China’s foreign policy, available in full here: soundcloud.app.goo.gl/givtCeBwNeRWxP…
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@singgenberg No you see this is hard proof that China is capitalist akshully 🤓
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@nellodee only the west would condemn (checks notes) children learning how to feed people
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Me: wow, so cute, that looks fun as hell.
Westerner: I do not dream of labor, neither should those children. Drop the bombs immediately!
🇨🇳XuZhenqing徐祯卿@XueJia24682
✨🇨🇳In a kindergarten in China, a group of adorable children are running their own stall business. They sell homemade food and can handle transactions skillfully. After school, they manage both fun and business very well, showing unexpectedly good business acumen.
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For thousands of years, "spring farming" meant working the land with hand-plows and cattle. Today, technology is rewriting that story. Xinhua correspondent Rick heads to the fields of Shandong Province, east China, to talk to the people feeding the nation and see what life is really like for modern Chinese farmers.
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🌿 The moment when tea farmers flood into the Fresh Leaf Tea Market in Ya'an Hongxing Town 雅安红星镇,Sichuan Province.
This bustling hub comes alive every spring as tea farmers shoulder bamboo baskets of Mingqian tea—tender pre-Qingming buds prized for their delicate flavor, vibrant aroma, and premium quality. Buyers from across China flock here for the freshest harvest.
Even in the internet age, farmers trade in person: fresh leaves must be inspected on-site for color, tenderness, and scent before quick processing. Direct deals ensure fair prices and instant payment—no middlemen losses.
#YaAnTea #MingQianTea

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A Canadian’s Disappointment: What I Actually Saw on the Ground in Xinjiang vs. What Ottawa Claims
As a Canadian, I have always taken pride in my country’s commitment to human rights, due diligence, and evidence-based foreign policy. We are a nation that prides itself on “peacekeeping,” not warmongering; on diplomacy, not hyperbole. That is why I find myself profoundly disappointed—not just as a Canadian, but as a citizen of a country that claims to value truth—when I listen to the Parliamentary Questions coming out of Ottawa regarding Xinjiang.
The language used in is alarming. Terms like "concentration camps" are thrown around with a casual certainty that bears no resemblance to the reality I have witnessed with my own eyes. Having made three trips to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in the last nine months, I have seen a reality that is diametrically opposed to the narrative being pushed by our Members of Parliament.
I am not a journalist embedded with a government delegation; I am a Canadian who traveled independently. I went expecting to verify the headlines we see in Canadian media. Instead, what I found was a region vibrant with culture, actively preserved and proudly showcased.
Here is what I observed on the ground, and why I believe Ottawa’s rhetoric is not only wrong but dangerously disconnected from the facts.
The Cultural Reality I Witnessed
During my three trips, I spent time in Kashgar, Urumqi, Tashkurgan and the surrounding areas. The narrative I was sold in Canada was one of cultural erasure. The reality I experienced was the exact opposite.
1. The Old City of Kashgar
One of the most striking examples of cultural preservation is the Old City of Kashgar. Canadian politicians describe a region being "flattened" or "assimilated." Yet, I walked through the labyrinthine alleyways of this ancient Uygur city, which has been meticulously preserved as a historical site. The local government didn’t tear it down; they invested in upgrading the infrastructure, running water, natural gas lines, and earthquake proofing, while maintaining the traditional Uygur architecture, wooden pillars, and intricate brickwork.
In the evenings, I watched in the alleyways while children ran through streets paved with traditional kuzi bricks. This wasn’t a ghost town; it was a living, breathing historical center.
2. The Grand Bazaar and Livelihoods
The Id Kah Bazaar in Kashgar is not only open; it is thriving. I saw Uygur artisans selling hand-engraved copperware, traditional atlas silk, and locally grown dried fruits. Far from being forced into labor, I spoke with shop owners who explained that tourism encouraged by the government’s infrastructure investments had allowed them to expand their family businesses.
If the goal were cultural genocide, as some Canadian MPs allege, why would the state invest billions into preserving the mihrabs in mosques, restoring the Id Kah Mosque (one of the largest in China), and promoting Uygur cuisine and music festivals? It simply doesn’t add up.
3. Videos from the Ground
I am sharing some videos in my posts to show the reality. In one clip, you can see Uygur dance another a traditional wedding I went too.
The Disconnect in Ottawa
As a Canadian, this embarrasses me. We claim to be a nation that stands for truth and reconciliation. Yet, when given the opportunity to send independent observers or journalists to verify facts, our government often chooses to boycott or criticize the very invitation for transparency.
If our Parliament is going to make accusations as severe as "genocide" and "concentration camps," the onus is on them to provide evidence. My three trips over the last nine months provided evidence of the opposite: a region where Uygur culture is not only preserved but celebrated, and where the so-called "camps" are actually vocational training centres, facilities I drove by I that looked into them focused on giving people skills in Mandarin and industrial skills.
#Xinjiang
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Yunnan is very very high on my list of next regions to visit 😍
Sharing Travel@TripInChina
Dinner in Yunnan.😋😋😋
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The heartbreaking death of a Chinese postdoctoral scholar, who took own life after being subjected to hostile questioning by U.S. law enforcement personnel, calls into question once again the impact and legitimacy of unwarranted U.S. interrogation and harassment targeting Chinese researchers and students.
China has repeatedly protested to such so-called law enforcement actions. They seriously violate Chinese citizens’ lawful rights, poison the atmosphere for people-to-people exchanges between the two countries and continue to create a serious chilling effect.
China calls on the U.S. to carry out a full investigation, give the family of the victim and the Chinese side a responsible explanation, and stop discriminatory enforcement against Chinese students and scholars in the U.S.

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Agricultural developments don't get the spotlight they deserve imo.
Global Times@globaltimesnews
A Chinese research team has recently made a breakthrough in developing "long-lifespan rice" by identifying the key gene and mechanism that enable wild rice to be harvested multiple times, and has successfully introduced this gene into cultivated rice variety, marking a new advancement that has drawn widespread attention, CCTV News reported. globaltimes.cn/page/202603/13…
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At an experimental farm in Chongqing, Pakistani student Wajahat Hussain is drawing inspiration from springtime field research, hoping to learn more and contribute to his hometown in the future. #GLOBALink
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A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson on Friday urged the United States to thoroughly investigate the incident concerning a Chinese postdoctoral scholar, who took own life a day after being subjected to hostile questioning by U.S. law enforcement personnel xhtxs.cn/bbd0

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nell | 累 retuiteado

Ngawang Drolma, 82, recalls a childhood marked by hunger and barefoot cattle-herding in old Xizang. In 1959, democratic reform in southwest China's Xizang liberated millions of serfs, and her life began to change. Click to learn more about her story xhtxs.cn/bbd9




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An 8-day-old newborn suddenly developed a high fever and seizures. Traffic police escorted the family the entire way, clearing the route with green lights, and got them to the hospital in just 2 minutes.#ChinaStory
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8-day-old newborn rushed to hospital as police coordinate green-light escort #ChinaBuzz #ChinaSeen
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