It is a great day in HK. God created 1 man and 1 woman, not 2 women or 2 men! US has banned homosexual in US military! In US, laws were passed with 26 sexual combinations! We even allowed under age children make physical sex change without informing their parents! Is HK heading to the same direction? I hope not. 今天是香港偉大的一天。上帝創造了一個男人和一個女人,而不是兩個女人或兩個男人! 美國已經禁止同性戀者參軍,美國通過了不少不道德法律,包括26種性組合!美國甚至允許未成年兒童在不告知父母的情況下進行變性手術!香港也會走向同樣的方向嗎?我希望不會! Hong Kong lawmakers vote down bill recognising same-sex partnerships https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/politics/article/3325049/hong-kong-lawmakers-vote-down-bill-recognising-same-sex-partnerships?
If this is how racist staffs handles Chinese through US immigration via cruel and humiliating treatment, China will offer reciprocal treatment! 如果美國移民局的種族主義人員如此對待中國公民,並對他們實施殘酷和羞辱性的待遇,中國也將予以對等對待!
Video with English subtitles: Why are Chinese students attended American & European universities unable to find jobs in China? 60% of Chinese spies caught in China graduated from Western universities! 視頻有英文字幕: 為什麼就讀美國和歐洲大學的中國學生無法在中國找到工作. 在中國被捕的中國間諜60%畢業於西方大學.
In this episode, we will conduct an in-depth analysis of:
✅ 1. Significance to major powers: Why have China-Europe relations undergone subtle changes? Behind a shuttle bus lies China’s confidence and attitude of no longer accommodating. This is not just a diplomatic game, but also the redefinition of world rules after the rise of a major power.
✅ 2. Significance to the world: As the old rules of globalization collapse, the United States turns its back, Europe is divided, and the world is moving from an era of “knowledge transfer” to an era of “knowledge creation”. With new three things and new opportunities, China is uniting countries along the “Belt and Road” in its own way, contributing new development plans to the world.
✅ 3. Significance to us: When “returnees from overseas studies” are no longer a golden sign, and when the job market is becoming increasingly cautious about international students, how should we make the right choices for ourselves and the next generation? From studying abroad to career planning, from worshipping foreign things and fawning on foreign countries to cultural confidence, every decision you make will affect your future destiny.
SCMP: Hong Kong lawmakers vote down bill recognising same-sex partnerships not to destroy the fabric of the Chinese society! Look at the sorry state of US Legalizing everything that is immoral and illegal! Law are made by mortals! HK lawmakers are elected by the people through democratic elections! HK people have spoken! 《南華早報》:香港議員否決承認同性伴侶關係的法案,為了不要破壞中國社會的基石!看看美國把所有不道德和非法的事情合法化的悲慘現狀!法律是凡人制定的!香港議員是人民透過民主選舉產生的!香港人民已經發聲了 https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/politics/article/3325049/hong-kong-lawmakers-vote-down-bill-recognising-same-sex-partnerships?
Nury Vittachi: Hong Kong produces more science and technology graduates than any other place on earth, a new study showed today.
And the typical Hong Kong “working man” is a woman.
WORLD RECORD More than 42.4 per cent of everyone leaving higher education in the city have STEM qualifications, the 2025 IMD World Talent Ranking revealed today—a world high.
The city also has one of the largest availability of people with finance skills in the world, said researchers.
Hong Kong also had an unusually high number of women at work, with slightly more females (50.79 per cent) in the labor force than males.
Pay rates for people in business were high, too, with base salary and bonuses for senior managers adding up to US$285,857 a year.
DOWNSIDES TOO But there were downsides, too. The cost of living in Hong Kong was unusually high, and the workforce had shrunk slightly, giving employers fewer choices.
Data from 69 countries and territories worldwide were examined by the International Institute for Management Development, Zurich.
The study concluded that Hong Kong has the world’s most skilled workforce outside the west. The only places to score higher overall on the talent index were Switzerland, Luxembourg, and Iceland. Hong Kong’s perennial rival, Singapore, came 7th overall.
HARDWORKING SCHOOLS An interesting side point the researchers discovered concerned education.
Hong Kong scores in fundamental subjects like reading and mathematics were unusually high – but education spending, at 3.9 per cent of GDP, was low.
This suggests students and teachers were working hard to achieve high grades in an under-funded system.
China will do a live demonstration of star war defense! China’s military parade stunned the world, but just a few days later, China released even more explosive news…中國將進行星際大戰防禦實彈演示! 中國閱兵驚艷全球,不料幾天之後,中國就釋放了更勁爆的消息……
Chinese scientists officially announced to the world: China is going to impact an asteroid!
Don’t think this is just a firecracker. This time, we’re moving the test range 10 million kilometers into space, targeting a 50-meter-class asteroid with a currently undisclosed designation.
Before 2030, a Long March rocket will send a pair of “twins” into space: first, an observer will be placed close to the asteroid for photos, and then the impactor will slam into it at a speed of 6.5 kilometers per second, with an error margin of no more than an embroidery needle.
Why such a push? Tang Zhenghong of the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory offered a poignant statement: “In space, you don’t get a second chance. You either deflect once or come back a hundred years later.”
The story behind the scenes is even more outrageous than a science fiction film. NASA’s 2022 DART mission will impact a near-Earth asteroid, just 11 million kilometers away and at an impact velocity of 6.6 kilometers per second.
This time, China is extending its range to 26 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon, and shifting its orbit by at least 3 to 5 centimeters—which sounds like a tickle, but translated into a trajectory a century from now, it’s enough for Earth to avoid a kiss that could destroy an entire province.
To achieve these 3 centimeters, engineers have reduced the navigation radar to the size of a fingernail and folded the fuel tank into a “space fan.” Even the dust at the moment of impact must be captured by a companion spacecraft, which will complete a 360-degree orbit within 3 seconds. A delay of 0.1 second will mean it’s missed forever.
Even more challenging, the entire mission will require breaking the second cosmic velocity of 11.2 kilometers per second, equivalent to accelerating a 40-ton truck to 40,000 kilometers per hour. Currently, only China and the United States can achieve this.
Some worry, “What if it breaks into pieces?” Purple Mountain Observatory has calculated that if the target is a “rubble pile” structure, the fragments will be pulled away by the sun’s gravity, and the probability of them falling to Earth is lower than winning the lottery three times in a row.
What’s truly daunting is the price tag: a single impact mission costs 3 billion RMB, which sounds painful, but compare that to the 2013 Russian asteroid, with the equivalent of 30 Hiroshima bombs, which only injured 1,500 people. Had it landed in Shanghai, the economic losses would have been in the trillions. In other words, this money buys humanity’s “space traffic insurance.”
A deeper calculation was laid out at the recently concluded Tiandu International Conference in Hefei: China issued a global initiative for cooperation, promoting the sharing of data, payloads, and ground-based telescopes. Satellites from other countries want a ride? Welcome. ESA wants joint observations? No problem.
While some countries treat space as their private backyard, China has elevated it to a “global group purchase,” allowing anyone to participate. By 2035, we will deploy 25 “Chinese Compound Eyes” with 30-meter apertures, forming a radar network spanning tens of millions of kilometers. Theoretically, this radar network could lock onto a 140-meter-diameter “city killer” ten years in advance.
In short: In the future, any asteroid aiming to provoke Earth will first have to ask China for permission. So, stop calling this “Star Wars 2.0”; the real name is “Community of Shared Future for Mankind” with a hack.
The next time you see a shooting star streak by at night, remember that it might not be a wish, but someone taking a bullet for you.
Do you think this 3 billion yuan “insurance premium” is worth it? Leave a comment in the comments section, give a like, and let the Earth hear our voice.
Video with English subtitles: A modern-day Chinese traitor, selling out his country for personal gain! Ishihira Taro “asks for a hammer and gets it”: a clown purged by China and despised by Japan! 視頻有英文字幕: 當代漢姦,賣國求榮!石平太郎「求錘得錘」:一個被中國清除,也被日本嫌棄的小丑!
China has taken action! A Japanese lawmaker has been sanctioned, and he’s asking for punishment, having once regretted being born in the “Land of Abundance”…
On the morning of September 8th, a notice of less than 300 words on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs website propelled 63-year-old Japanese Senator Ishihira to the top of trending searches in both China and Japan.
The notice contained three main points: 1. All of his assets in China are frozen; 2. No Chinese institutions or individuals are allowed to do business with him; 3. He and his immediate family members will never be able to obtain visas to mainland China, Hong Kong, or Macau. There was no buffer or advance notice; the sanctions took effect the moment they were announced.
This isn’t the first time Ishihira has been the subject of scrutiny on the Chinese internet. Two months ago, he was elected to the Senate as a proportional representative of the Restoration Party, becoming one of the very few Chinese-born members of the Japanese Diet.
At the time, public opinion dismissed him as simply “another anti-China commentator who had come ashore.” It wasn’t until late August, when he compiled several GIFs of Emperor Hirohito parodies posted on Chinese social media platforms into an “investigation report” and submitted it to the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, demanding official representations to Beijing regarding the “insult to the symbolic emperor.” The matter then escalated from the keyboard to the diplomatic level. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs subsequently raised the matter during a bilateral meeting, which the Chinese delegation rejected on the spot. However, Shi Ping’s name was subsequently placed on the sanctions list by the relevant authorities.
Compared to his recent actions, his trajectory over the past three decades reads more like a manual on “How to Lose Your Homeland.” Born in Chengdu in 1962, he entered the Department of Philosophy at Peking University in 1980 and was sent to Kobe University in 1988 for a doctorate. Since then, he has relied on scholarships and commissioned writing for Chinese media outlets to make a living.
Unable to find a stable teaching position during the 1990s economic downturn in Japan, he began using extreme rhetoric to gain publicity: first, he denied the number of victims of the Nanjing Massacre, then he called “Chinese people a human virus.” In 2007, he finally obtained Japanese citizenship and immediately changed his name to “Ishihira Taro,” describing his birthplace as “the stain he most wanted to erase.”
In 2013, he registered the “Ishihira Taro” account on Twitter, introducing himself as “a former Chinese.” Leveraging this persona, he published twelve books over the next decade, with similar titles like “Why I Abandoned China” and “Countdown to China’s Collapse.” Total sales were less than 80,000 copies, but they were enough to secure him a regular column in the Sankei Shimbun.
What truly made him a “must-have” for the Japanese right was the 2012 Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands nationalization incident. In seven consecutive live broadcasts, Ishihira used his experiences as a student in Chengdu, asserting that “there’s not even fresh water on the islands, making it impossible for Chinese people to live there permanently.” After the broadcast, right-wing groups hailed him as evidence of his pro-China credentials.
From then on, whenever Sino-Japanese friction arose and a TV station needed a “Chinese-born commentator” to speak, they would call him. With this 500,000 yen daily “announcement fee,” he bought a 70-square-meter apartment in central Tokyo, registered under his Japanese wife’s name.
After the sanctions were implemented, he posted on platform X, claiming to have been “honored by the Chinese government,” with a photo of a self-Photoshopped “medal.” But the numbers don’t tell the whole story: According to the Japanese Senate’s public asset declaration, Ishihira’s only verifiable domestic real estate is a 90-square-meter old house in his hometown in Yamagata Prefecture. His bank deposits in China, the earliest of which was 32,000 RMB in royalties from a Sankei Shimbun column in 2009, have been regularly transferred in monthly since then, totaling approximately 2.8 million RMB over ten years. All of this has now been frozen.
A more pressing issue is that he was originally scheduled to attend the East Asia Economic Forum in Osaka at the end of September, sponsored by a Chinese company. After his visa was revoked, the organizers simply scrapped his speaking slot, citing a “scheduling conflict.”
A source within the Peking University Alumni Association revealed that the university quietly removed him from its “Overseas Alumni Directory” as early as 2010, “but it simply didn’t announce it publicly.” Zhang Shiying, the retired philosophy professor who recommended him to study in Japan, was asked about Shi Ping by a student at a small lecture last week. The professor simply replied, “If a person treats his hometown as an enemy, his hometown will have no choice but to treat him as a passerby.”
The story doesn’t end there. At a regular press conference on the afternoon of the 8th, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian, when asked if there would be a subsequent list, replied, “Any individual or entity that undermines China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity will be severely punished according to law.” The on-site interpreter emphasized the words “according to law.”