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  1. #871

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?


    daghan kaayo mi silingan ingon ani SO - we need not to worry - hutdon nato ang mga insik bhai for our LAND


  2. #872

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    bakbakan na!

  3. #873
    C.I.A. Baeybe_Bryce's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    Quote Originally Posted by Clifford_2008 View Post
    Wrong, from what Ive seen in the TV, its the chinese embassy


    LOL, you might be talking about the FilAms who had their rally in front of Chinese embassy in the US.. They aren't the leftist I'm referring to.

  4. #874

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    It's like Pluto versus the Sun clash! DMD!

  5. #875

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    1.3billion chinese vs 92million pinoys unsaon nlng haha.

  6. #876
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    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    Quote Originally Posted by tackielarla View Post
    Malaya | National

    China hardliners to teach
    Spratly intruders ‘a lesson’

    BY ELLEN TORDESILLAS
    VERA Files
    Hardliners in the Chinese Military Academy are raring to teach China’s neighbors "a lesson" for intruding into the South China Sea, which they consider part of their national territory, a Chinese Southeast Asian expert said.

    Shen Hong-Fang, professor and senior research fellow at the Center of Southeast Asian studies at Xiamen University, spoke of "a new upsurge" of Chinese nationalism set off by claims made by some Asian countries, including the Philippines, over territory China considers its own.

    "Some suggested that it is the right time to adopt necessary measures to teach some countries a lesson," Shen said, startling participants at the two-day Conference on the South China Sea held in Manila last week.

    She added there are those who think it justifiable "for China to launch a war against the invaders."

    The Philippines, Vietnam and Malaysia have staked claims over some of the 160 islands that constitute the Spratlys in the South China Sea. These countries, along with Indonesia which is a non-claimant, have filed protests before the United Nations Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) over the "nine-dash line map" China submitted to prove its claim.

    That map practically covers the whole of the South China Sea and encroaches over the 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone of some its neighbors, the Philippines included.

    Brunei and Taiwan are also claiming parts of the Spratlys.

    In its note verbale last April 14, China accused the Philippines of having "started to invade and occupy some islands and reefs of China’s Nansha (Spratly) Islands."

    Asked by Paranaque Rep. Roilo Golez about the role of the Chinese Military Academy in the leadership’s decisions, Shen said it is "a very influential group. "

    The Chinese Military Academy, formally known as the Academy of Military Sciences (AMS), is the highest-level research institute and center of military sciences of the People’s Liberation Army which is a major force in the Chinese government.

    A Philippine diplomat who requested anonymity said Shen would not be making such strong statements without the approval of the Chinese government.

    Shen reiterated previous declarations of Chinese officials that the South China Sea is a "core interest," just like Tibet and Taiwan.

    She quoted a published statement by Han Xudong, an army colonel and a professor at the PLA’s National Defense University (NDU), that "China’s comprehensive national strength especially in military capabilities is not yet enough to safeguard all of the core national interests."

    Golez expressed concern over what China would do "if their ‘national strength especially in military capabilities’ would be enough to take care of all core national interests."

    Shen also quoted another NDU professor, Zhang Zhongzhao, as saying that "the best time of solving the territory disputes has already passed" and that "diplomatic negotiations alone cannot solve the problem."

    She described Zhang as "a well-known military theorist," and further quoted him saying that to defend national sovereignty, the Chinese should have the "courage to use the sword if it is really needed."

    Shen said the Chinese government is under public pressure to stand firm on the South China Sea. "If China lost more territory to foreign states, the national honor would be under attack and the people and the army would question the legitimacy of the government," she said.

    "It is of utmost importance that the government is not considered by people or the army as internally or externally weak which in turn could have severe political consequences," she added.

    Included in Shen’s recommendations to ease tension in the South China Sea is joint exploration in disputed areas. The Philippines already took this step during the term of former president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo when it started a Joint Marine Seismic Undertaking (JMSU) with China and Vietnam, which was completed in 2008. At least 70 percent of the coverage of the JMSU is in areas claimed by the Philippines. The constitutionality of the agreement is being questioned in the Supreme Court.

    The Manila SCS conference was organized by the Foreign Service Institute of the Department of Foreign Affairs, the National Defense College of the Philippines and the Development Academy of Vietnam.

    ***
    (VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look at current issues. Vera is Latin for "true.")

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    It just got real folks...
    The military is too strong in China. Just hope for a democratic revolution over there before anything happens.

    This isn't about race by the way to all those people trying to make it a racial issue. Singapore and Taiwan are both ethnic Chinese countries but Singapore is allied with us via ASEAN and Taiwan is a long time enemy of China. Even within China there are many Chinese who don't want to be part of China, these include the muslim Chinese in the western region and the Tibetans who don't even consider themselves Chinese.

    This isn't about race, it's about politics and nationalism. Nationalism is always used in China to keep the government in power.

  7. #877

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    OT:
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  8. #878

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    gara2x naman ni China ron oi. karon na sad na balita noh, gabutang na sad ang china ug floating something. so China na ang gahimog paagi magkagubat ha, dili ang Pinoy. so kung gubat lang, daog ta ani. di tungod sa ekipo kai nabiyaan na ta sa teknolohiya kung dili estratihiya.

  9. #879

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    unsang estrahiyaha bro? hehehehe

  10. #880

    Default Re: Are We Ready for CHINA?

    Pawala sa tension.

    The Chinese Dog vs. the Filipino Dog

    The Chinese and Filipinos realized that, if they continued squabbling over the Spratlys, they would someday end up having military combat. So, they decided to settle their dispute with an ancient practice: A duel of two, like David and Goliath. This duel would be a dog fight.

    The negotiators agreed each side would take 5 years to develop the best fighting dog they could. The dog that won the fight would earn its people the right to rule the disputed areas. The losing side would have to renounce its claim for good.

    The Chinese found the biggest, meanest Dobermans and Rottweilers in the world. They bred them together and then crossed their offspring with the meanest Mongolian wolves.

    They selected only the biggest, strongest puppy of each litter, fed it the best food and killed all the other puppies. They used steroids and trainers in their quest for the perfect killing machine.

    And after the 5 years were up, they had a dog that needed steel prison bars on its cage. Only expert trainers could handle this incredibly nasty and ferocious beast.

    When the day of the big dog-fight finally arrived, the Filipinos showed up with a very strange-

    looking animal, a Dachshund that was 10 feet long!

    Everyone at the dogfight arena felt sorry for the Filipinos. No one there seriously thought this weird, odd-looking animal stood any chance against the growling beast over in the Chinese camp. All the bookies took a look and predicted that the Chinese dog would win in less than a minute.

    As the cages were opened, the Dachshund very slowly waddled towards the center of the ring.


    The Chinese dog leaped from its cage and charged the giant ''wiener-dog''. As he got to within an inch of the Filipinos dog, the Dachshund opened its jaws and swallowed the Chinese beast whole in one bite. There was nothing left but a small puff of fur from the Chinese killer dog's tail floating to the ground.

    The stunned crowd of international observers, bookies and media personnel let out a collective
    gasp of disbelief and surprise.

    The Chinese left in disappointment and disgust.

    An American dog expert approached the Filipinos, shaking his head in disbelief. "I do not understand," he said, "Chinese top scientists and breeders worked for 5 long years with the meanest, biggest Dobermans, Rottweilers and Mongolian wolves, and they developed an incredible killing machine of a dog!"

    The Filipinos replied. "Well, for 5 years, we have had a team of Filipino plastic surgeons from Vicky Bello working to make an alligator look like a Dachshund."

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