xbiann

5.1K posts

xbiann

xbiann

@xbiann

“Symplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”

Katılım Ağustos 2019
74 Takip Edilen98 Takipçiler
xbiann
xbiann@xbiann·
@gumu_310 @usa_hobby01 Actually, when viewed from another perspective, this is proof that China’s economic success is benefiting its people — the once poor, agrarian, and uneducated generation of old uncles and aunties who couldn’t even feed their families now have the means to travel abroad.
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거무
거무@gumu_310·
@usa_hobby01 그냥 중국인들이 전세계적으로 민폐를 끼치고 다녀서 중국의 이미지가 안좋은것이다. 일단 중국이나 중국인을 생각하면 위생적으로 더럽다 라는 생각이 든다.
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xbiann@xbiann·
@sinaga_doly @MusicMiscreant @PucaNapuki @RnaudBertrand That line you’re countering literally comes from Hugo, not 🇨🇳. What do you mean by ancient 🇨🇳? How far back is ancient? Chinese civilization still stands today not bc of the artefacts, but bc of the ppl, including ethnic barbarian invaders who embraced the Chinese culture.
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Ronin
Ronin@sinaga_doly·
@MusicMiscreant @PucaNapuki @RnaudBertrand CCP is trying to rewrite history, as if they really cared about ancient China and is a direct continuation of it. Cultural Revolution wanted to sever the ties and erased ancient China, replacing it with modern (mostly western-based) cultures.
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Arnaud Bertrand
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand·
I rarely have reasons to be proud of France these days, but this is definitely one. France's parliament just voted - unanimously, 170 votes to 0 - a law that institutionalizes the restitution of cultural artifacts looted during the colonial era (the law covers a massive 157-year period). It's going absolutely viral in Chinese social media because of this speech 👇 by MP @JPatrierLeitus who noted in Parliament that it included items stolen to China during the joint British-French sack of the Summer Palace in 1860. Patrier-Leitus cites Victor Hugo's famous 1861 letter to Captain Butler, the British officer who wrote to him seeking his endorsement of the expedition - and got the exact opposite. Hugo wrote (whole letter here: yuanmingyuan.eu/en/the-looting…): "One day two bandits entered the Summer Palace. One plundered, the other burned. Victory can be a thieving woman, or so it seems. The devastation of the Summer Palace was accomplished by the two victors acting jointly. Mixed up in all this is the name of Elgin, which inevitably calls to mind the Parthenon. What was done to the Parthenon was done to the Summer Palace, more thoroughly and better, so that nothing of it should be left. All the treasures of all our cathedrals put together could not equal this formidable and splendid museum of the Orient. It contained not only masterpieces of art, but masses of jewelry. What a great exploit, what a windfall! One of the two victors filled his pockets; when the other saw this he filled his coffers. And back they came to Europe, arm in arm, laughing away. Such is the story of the two bandits. We Europeans are the civilized ones, and for us the Chinese are the barbarians. This is what civilization has done to barbarism. Before history, one of the two bandits will be called France; the other will be called England. But I protest, and I thank you for giving me the opportunity! the crimes of those who lead are not the fault of those who are led; Governments are sometimes bandits, peoples never. The French empire has pocketed half of this victory, and today with a kind of proprietorial naivety it displays the splendid bric-a-brac of the Summer Palace. I hope that a day will come when France, delivered and cleansed, will return this booty to despoiled China. Meanwhile, there is a theft and two thieves. I take note. This, Sir, is how much approval I give to the China expedition." Hugo's letter is so revered in China that a bronze bust of him stands today at the Summer Palace ruins - I believe the only instance of a Westerner honored in China at the site of his own country's crime. A powerful testament of how much a single act of intellectual honesty can redeem, if not a nation, then at least a name. Hugo was also prescient: as Patrier-Leitus notes, that day "when France, delivered and cleansed, will return this booty to despoiled China" has indeed come (even though the "delivered and cleansed" part is, overall, pretty questionable in the current context). This new law doesn't only concern China and the Summer Palace: it concerns ALL stolen artifacts by France during the period ranging between November 1815 and April 1972 - corresponding to the start of the second French colonial empire to the entry into force of the UNESCO convention on cultural property. It's a massive scope: 157 years, thousands of objects and dozens of nations with potential claims. It's France reckoning with its colonial past in an unprecedented way and the fact ALL of France's MPs voted in favor of the law, without a single exception, is also pretty remarkable. Hopefully this will also serve as a signal to other countries, especially the UK - the other "bandit" in Hugo's letter. There is this Chinese saying from the Zuo Zhuan (左传), one of the foundational Confucian classics: "To err and be able to correct it - there is no greater virtue." ("过而能改,善莫大焉", "guò ér néng gǎi, shàn mò dà yān"). France, with this law, proved its virtue.
Jérémie Patrier-Leitus@JPatrierLeitus

« Un jour viendra où la France, délivrée et nettoyée, renverra ce butin à la Chine pillée. » Ce jour, qu’appelait Victor Hugo de ses vœux en 1861, est venu. 🇫🇷Cette loi vient inscrire dans notre droit un cadre clair, cohérent et précis pour la restitution des biens culturels.

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xbiann
xbiann@xbiann·
@WorstLightskin @EthelflaedAegis @NobleQAli Leaving my response to her here - she blocked me… lol literally that’s how I know people like her lied. China implemented reeducation centres after the terrorist attacks bc they know those ppl are not intrinsically violent in nature - it’s just poverty and lack of education.
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Q. Anthony Ali
Q. Anthony Ali@NobleQAli·
I’m a Canadian who’s been living in China for a year. We Muslims get by perfectly fine, thanks for the concern. I get compliments for wearing my keffiyeh, and no one here ever called me a terrorist for supporting Palestine.
Q. Anthony Ali tweet mediaQ. Anthony Ali tweet mediaQ. Anthony Ali tweet media
Dominic Cardy 🇨🇦 🇺🇦 🇹🇼@DominicCardy

This measure is political theatre by our government. They know Canadians are at risk, going to China. But they have to pretend China is a normal country, to please the Chinese government. So they put us at risk, and devalue the truth they know. Gross on many levels.

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xbiann@xbiann·
@ilaks @SenatorVictorOh @AliFeizi You meant re-education centres? Your media purposefully label them “radicalisation camps” then it’s proof that China torturing them? Use some common sense.
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ilaks
ilaks@ilaks·
The locations of de radicalization camps are well known but are not permitted for visitors. I’m not saying that in hindsight the deradicalization itself didn’t have some justifications, however, pretending they they weren’t there isn’t going to help. Just admit that some Islamist extremists were causing trouble and you needed to deal with the religious zealots and this was the best option. Lying about their existence is what makes it difficult to defend.
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Senator Victor Oh
Senator Victor Oh@SenatorVictorOh·
🌹🇨🇦🇨🇦🌹 Fellow Canadian @AliFeizi’s firsthand account from multiple independent trips to Xinjiang is powerful and overdue. As someone who has long advocated for evidence-based Canada-China engagement, I’m struck by his clear-eyed observations: a region where Uyghur culture is actively preserved — from the restored Old City of Kashgar to thriving bazaars and vibrant traditions — not erased. The so-called “concentration camps” he saw are vocational training centres helping people build skills. Ottawa’s rhetoric must match reality. Accusations this serious demand proof, not politics. Strong, pragmatic Canada-China ties also deliver real benefits for Canadian livelihoods: restored market access for our farmers (canola, peas, seafood, beef) supports thousands of jobs and family incomes across the Prairies and beyond; affordable Chinese EVs and supply chain investments help build a stronger Canadian auto sector and lower costs for families; while diversified trade with China’s massive market drives economic growth, stability, and new opportunities from coast to coast. Canadians deserve foreign policy grounded in facts, dialogue, and mutual respect that puts our prosperity first. Thank you, Pastor Feizi, for speaking truth from the ground. #Xinjiang #CanadaChina x.com/alifeizi/statu…
Ali Feizi 费爱理 Adili@AliFeizi

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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xbiann@xbiann·
@EthelflaedAegis @NobleQAli What facts? Up to now what I have seen is purely propaganda. If you meant re-education centers then you’re spreading propaganda.
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Jennifer
Jennifer@EthelflaedAegis·
Wrong. What an Orwellian statement your made in response to what is a very obvious question. Are you ignorant or just an apologist and therefore ignoring facts that contradict the narrative you tell yourself? 'Since 2014, the Chinese government has subjected Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim minorities to severe human rights abuses, including mass detention, forced labor, cultural erasure, and forced sterilization. Up to one million people have been imprisoned, often for daily religious practices.'
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xbiann
xbiann@xbiann·
@EthelflaedAegis @NobleQAli This is a question meant to sound smart but actually reveals one’s intelligence, integrity and bigotry.
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xbiann@xbiann·
@maxdragoon @FreeSandlewould @XH_Lee23 @bcanary70x1 Just like stealing talent from the world is in an Americans tradition! The only difference is China invests and collaborates with its neighbours, and the US bombs, supports genocides and threatens its neighbours!
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Li Zexin 李泽欣
Li Zexin 李泽欣@XH_Lee23·
Ban Huawei, ban DJI, ban Chinese EV, ban whatever China leads the US. But a ban wouldn’t bring you innovation and advance.
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Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson@sarobertsonca·
PM Carney: "The world's changing. Not gradually, but suddenly. Yes, some are still in denial. Rather than starting on this journey, they're waiting for the past to return. But hope is not a plan and nostalgia is not a strategy."
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Papii🥤
Papii🥤@ammalusty·
I used to have this mental illness where l thought logical arguments would change someone's mind
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ARYA™
ARYA™@elia_mafhh·
A 29-year-old warehouse employee burned down a Kimberly-Clark warehouse and wiped out $500M in goods, declaring, 'All you had to do was pay us enough to live.' So I checked the facts on his wages. The numbers don't look good for the company.
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Mûriëlo
Mûriëlo@LordMurielo·
Un turista se puso a jugar competencia de figuras con toallas con los empleados de un hotel en su vacaciones y lo registró en un video. Espectacular .
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`@lisaawrites·
How lucky we are to experience boring, ordinary, uneventful days. Somewhere in the world, that kind of safety is unimaginable.
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🇱🇧
🇱🇧@lebanesesami·
Today i apologized to my manager for having to take numerous phone calls from Lebanon because of the bombings and she said “omg who’s bombing them?” This is the reality of living in the US. This is the ignorance of the American people
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jhouse678
jhouse678@jhouse678·
@larroumecj Seen VW’s numbers lately? They sell half the number of cars in Europe than they did seven years ago. Make sense of that.
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Joan Larroumec
Joan Larroumec@larroumecj·
The level of cognitive dissonance among some Americans is staggering. They have no trouble understanding that when China extends loans to African countries in exchange for opening their markets, it is a strategy of domination and subjugation. Yet they are sincerely convinced that the Marshall Plan was some kind of entirely selfless philanthropic endeavor, and that the subsequent dominance of American corporations across European markets is purely coincidental, owed to nothing but the inherent superiority of their products. Incredible.
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Gérard Deltell
Gérard Deltell@gerarddeltell·
Pour la première fois de l’histoire, notre langue, la langue française, fut exprimée en chemin vers la Lune. Jamais le français fut parlé d’aussi loin. Et c’est un Canadien qui l’a fait! Bravo Jeremy Hansen, nous sommes tous fiers de vous! Merci de nous rendre si fiers d’être Canadiens et de parler si bien la langue de Champlain.
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shenxiao
shenxiao@Shenxiao123971·
越来越怪了的李宇春,她这是怎么了? 中国第一神秘人物。人不靓,歌不火,自己却硬生生红了几十年,迷!
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Alex Svan
Alex Svan@AlexSvanArt·
This thought just hit me hard… Left photo, my father is somewhere there and I’m not. Right photo - I’m there but he isn’t. Time moves forward slowly and quietly replacing us - temporary passengers on this beautiful spaceship
Andy Saunders - Apollo Remastered@AndySaunders_1

Left - Apollo 17, 1972 Right - Artemis II, 2026 Two photographs taken by one of us, of all of us, over half a century apart. What's changed?

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caio temer
caio temer@canalCCore2·
Dezenas de pescadores acabam perdendo partes do corpo por causa do peixe-lobo. Isso porque muita gente não imagina que, mesmo depois de "morto" e sem corpo, ele ainda é capaz de fazer isso.
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