BASSDBKer

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BASSDBKer

BASSDBKer

@DeepADiver2

Pro-World Peace #AntiWar #NoMoreWars #PeaceForTheWorld

Global Citizen Katılım Eylül 2020
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
When we think of China's transformation, we think of the glitz and glamor of cities like Beijing, Shanghai or Shenzhen. Yet another equally significant transformation happened w/o much fanfare - the restoration of China's desert. The Loess Plateau is once again lush and fertile.
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New Order with Afshin Rattansi
🚨Col. Lawrence Wilkerson: ‘China’s plan for trade DOMINANCE is through its VAST railroad network. Anyone talking about China🇨🇳 being hurt by the war on Iran is a FOOL.’ ‘What China has done essentially is build railroads that will take about 60 to 70%…of all the commerce that it generates in Asia with it off the sea and put it on land. If you drop the cost of commerce so dramatically that people come to your overland routes rather than go by sea. You’re also more secure. So they’ve got four or five railroads right now debouching in the heart of Europe. Two of them are stopped mostly by the Ukraine special military operation, but their intent is to go on to Bremerhaven and Le Havre, and other European Atlantic ports. And of course to put all the commerce that China produces into the heart of Europe in 16 hours instead of two and a half days and more costs by sea. So kiss the Bab El-Mandeb goodbye. You won’t need to go through the Strait of Hormuz, you will still be coming out for oil and such, but maybe not even for that. Because look what Saudi Arabia is planning right now. They’ve just shifted all their plans. The sovereign wealth fund is now behind a northern pipeline headed for Turkey and Ceyhan… And look at the pipelines that China is building with Russia, they don’t run east-west, they run north and south. So anybody talking about China being hurt and needing petroleum is a fool. Because all of this is going to come down from Russia in a pinch. It’s going to come from the Caspian Sea. Ultimately there’s 100 years of LNG and petroleum underneath the Caspian Sea waiting to be tapped, and it’s not going to be anybody from this end of the world tapping it. So they are self-sufficient for a long time to come. And they’re mostly pipelines and railroads, much safer and much more controllable.’ -Former Chief of Staff at the State Department Col. Lawrence Wilkerson joins us for the next episode of New Order on Sunday Don’t miss it, follow us on X and follow our Rumble channel 👇
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David Zhang
David Zhang@DavidZhang360·
I've noticed a significantly lower mandarin Chinese posts on here (both CCP/anti-CCP). It worries me that the VPN situation in China is really dire!
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Yuya Chen
Yuya Chen@alreadydawn·
Finished my China trip late last week then went to a wedding in Korea, took a bit of time off and now I got a ton more videos to share from the legs in Henan and Beijing. Did you know that Douyin (the Chinese version of TikTok) can be used as a payment app like Alipay in China? It can also can be used for getting gym discounts and a bunch of other things because it is a super app (which Elon has claimed to want to turn X into). I spent an afternoon at Millennium Park in Kaifeng, the old Northern Song capital in Henan. It's an amusement park that recreates scenes from the Song Dynasty. It was here that I noticed they take payments via Douyin. Will post the full video of Millenium Park tomorrow.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@poland_stan The "LA Taiwanese" are Americans trying to dictate what the people in Taiwan should do. This is why we have endless wars around the world. The US should mind their own business and leave the rest of the world in peace. Furthermore, Taiwan is part of China as per the UN.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@DavidZhang360 You keep using the violators or criminals of China to convince people that these are normal practice in China. It won't work. Only having good people with high moral values that run a government will a society be as strong and as innovative as China today.
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David Zhang
David Zhang@DavidZhang360·
China has no food safety standards
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🇺🇸Guy🇮🇱
🇺🇸Guy🇮🇱@BlueHorizon818·
@Write4Republic This is exactly what I say to everyone and they call me crazy. China has its fingerprints on every significant conflict unfolding across the globe to one extent or another.
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Writing The Republic
Writing The Republic@Write4Republic·
Communist China is behind a lot of the global problems that we see today. Yes, even iran.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@TheChiefNerd When will you guys talk about how to help those disadvantaged? Anyone who start from zero & climb to the top of society should feel a responsibility to extend a hand to help others still climbing. No one succeeds alone. And yet, here folks talk about how to kick the ladder away.
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Chief Nerd
Chief Nerd@TheChiefNerd·
🚨 DAVID SACKS: “Your property is not safe in blue states … because the political class thinks that they can take a chunk of it and wealthy people are going to react to that, and they're going to move their money elsewhere.”
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@mrbcyber The supply chain was moved to China because the greedy Capitalists wanted more profit margin. It was too expensive and dirty (pollution) to make all this stuff in the USA. Stop blaming China. Fix the root of the problem at home, bro.
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Select Committee on China
The CCP is pursuing AI dominance by 2030. And when it cannot compete fairly, it steals. @YusufSMahmood from @A1Policy explains: "We are not prepared to secure our AI systems. If we decided tomorrow that it was a top national security priority to prevent the CCP from stealing our most capable AI software, we would face extraordinary challenges. We're starting from a vulnerable position. The CCP seeks full AI domination by 2030, and it lacks the capital and talent to win fairly, so it steals. These aren't theoretical harms right now. Chinese AI, developed from stolen American technology, is helping Iran target American warfighters."
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Glenn Diesen
Glenn Diesen@Glenn_Diesen·
Pete Hegseth opens with a prayer featuring a fake Bible quote from Pulp Fiction.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@Pseudo_Prophet_ Do you have these people's ID to know that they are Chinese and it's in Malaysia? The girls looks like a young kid of maybe 14-15 years old.
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Pseudo Prophet
Pseudo Prophet@Pseudo_Prophet_·
A Chinese tourist was caught pooping 💩 on the streets in Malaysia. 😮😳
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Ryan Milton
Ryan Milton@1860rm·
I’m on my way to China for this first time this coming week. I’ll be there 12 days: We will be in Shanghai, Beijing,Chongqing, Guangzho. I have some cash but I’m prepared for digital pay. I’m very excited. China, like Russia, is a country that the United States should never have turned away from. The world would be in an absolutely happier state of the United States had shunned imperialism and stuck with the idea of being a republic that cooperates with other nations.
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James Wood 武杰士
James Wood 武杰士@commiepommie·
🇨🇳 China’s Two Most Stubborn Western Myths: Social Credit & Uyghur “Genocide” Living in China, you quickly learn how certain Western narratives become unquestionable truths. Two classics that refuse to die: 1: The mythical nationwide “Social Credit Score” that supposedly rates every citizen’s every move like some dystopian video game. 2: The claim of outright “genocide” against Uyghurs in Xinjiang. Regarding the social credit: There never was and still isn’t a single, unified national score that tracks your WeChat posts, jaywalking, or whether you visit your parents enough. That version was always a Western media exaggeration of fragmented local pilots and blacklist systems. What does exist is far more realistic: heavy monitoring and blacklisting aimed squarely at businesses and officials. Corporate social credit systems track tax dodging, environmental violations, product safety failures and contract breaches. Beijing uses them to enforce compliance in a vast, chaotic market economy where corruption and corner-cutting have real costs. The nightmare of every Chinese citizen carrying an Orwellian lifetime score that decides their job, travel and friends? That’s fiction. The proper story is state capacity meeting economic incentives: keep companies honest, reduce fraud, maintain order in a country of 1.4 billion which is an incredible task. Western governments do versions of this too: credit scores, no-fly lists, regulatory blacklists, they just brand it differently. Now the Uyghurs: The population numbers are straightforward and inconvenient for the genocide narrative. Official census data shows the Uyghur population in Xinjiang grew significantly from 2010 to 2020 (around 16% by some counts), continuing trends of higher birth rates among ethnic minorities compared to Han in earlier decades. Claims of mass extermination do not match the growing headcount. The so-called “camps”? Are in fact dedicated vocational and educational hubs designed to empower local communities. They provide comprehensive training in languages, practical skills like sewing and cooking and manufacturing techniques to help integrate individuals into the modern economy. Since 2017, these programs have expanded significantly as part of a broad strategy focused on stability and poverty alleviation. As objectives were met, many centers transitioned or shifted focus, with most participants successfully graduating to join the workforce or return to their families with government support for employment. Today, the region reflects this progress, showing noticeable improvements in infrastructure, education access and economic opportunities for local communities. The context that matters and which is missed: Xinjiang saw real terrorist violence in the 1990s and 2000s, bus bombings, knife attacks, market strikes linked to groups like the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), with ties to broader jihadist networks. Beijing watched the chaos in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan and decided it would not allow a domestic Islamist insurgency to fester. The response was blunt, state-driven assimilation: language, secular education, economic integration and security grid. Structural incentives were clear, stability in a strategically vital border region with energy resources, Belt and Road routes and ethnic tensions. Compare it to how other countries handle perceived separatist or terrorist threats: re-education programs, mass surveillance, targeted incarceration, cultural pressure. Western nations run deradicalisation schemes, prison programs for extremists and “counter-extremism” initiatives funded by taxpayers. So, let’s not point fingers or generalise; instead, let’s encourage open-mindedness and a nuanced understanding of global governance strategies. The genocide label, legally and demographically, doesn’t hold up. Official census figures show the Uyghur population in Xinjiang rose from roughly 10.07 million in 2010 to 11.62 million in 2020, a clear 16% increase. That’s steady growth, not decline. Policies are in place for poverty alleviation, vocational training and counter-terrorism measures designed to bring stability, jobs and modern skills to the region. There has been no industrial-scale killing, no mass graves, no evidence of any intent to physically destroy the group. On the ground in China, especially after the major training programs wound down, Xinjiang has seen actual results: calmer streets, expanded infrastructure, better employment access and economic development that benefits local communities. Beijing’s priority is straightforward, national unity and long-term stability in a strategically vital border area with energy resources and Belt and Road corridors. That’s how a civilisation-state governs when it faces genuine threats of separatism and extremism. Both issues get turned into simplistic evil-empire stories in the West because real nuance impedes the great-power rivalry manuscript. Living here you see something different, a CPC that looks at threats to stability through its own history of fragmentation, foreign meddling and chaos, then acts decisively to prevent any repeat. Businesses get watched because a huge market economy needs guardrails. Xinjiang gets stabilised because no serious government is going to risk losing a key province to separatism or jihad. Truth-seeking means holding the facts without the dramatic outrage. China isn’t a liberal democracy and doesn’t pretend to be. It governs like a civilisation-state that puts order, development and cohesion first. In Western stories, security problems and governance trade-offs are commonly ignored. The reality on the ground is more complicated and significantly more fascinating.
James Wood 武杰士 tweet mediaJames Wood 武杰士 tweet media
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@MarioNawfal Which Muslim majority country has invaded another country, colonized another country or has carried out a genocide of another in the current century?
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇦🇺 Australia’s Muslim population has grown from about 77,000 in 1981 to over 813,000 by 2021, with estimates now nearing 1 million. That’s in a country of roughly 27 million people; small share, fast growth. Now it’s sparking a bigger conversation: what does this mean for Australia’s cultural identity going forward? Source: @RadioGenoa
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David Zhang
David Zhang@DavidZhang360·
Yes there is free speech in China. You can only practice it once.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@DavidZhang360 Define "free speech". You can't because you don't have it in your country.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@Yasseenkhaled12 @1swolescholar @YusufSMahmood Where are the photos of Uyghurs murders? You know, just like the photos & videos of violence inflicted on the Palestinians. We don't see any migrations of any Uyghurs out of China into neighboring countries. Where are the satellite photos? Your false claim is 10 years old, bro.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@UnderSecE What's his way of life??? Epstein style? No thanks.
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BASSDBKer
BASSDBKer@DeepADiver2·
@KatiePavlich @AmbCabrera Henry Kissinger: To be an enemy of the US is dangerous but to be a friend of the US is fatal? RIP Panama 🪦 Say goodbye to your development.
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