Showing posts with label beijing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beijing. Show all posts

Friday, August 22, 2008

Beijing Olympics: China's Great Fake Walls




The commentators all breathlessly described how busy China became getting Beijing "ready for the Olympics".

And China's communist leaders sure were busy!

After all, arresting dissidents and potential protesters isn't done in a day, and heaven knows it takes time to shut down factories and restrict residents' driving to clear up the oily smog that obscures Beijing on a normal day.



Today, Ed Morrissey included the pic at the top of the page in "Obama: Know where it’s really great to do business?".

"Unfortunately, most of what the cameras see is just a facade, as Dale Franks points out at Q&O:"

Perhaps, the facades in the top pic were built by the arrested dissidents?

Better not dwell to much on that possibility.

Might get accused of being a conspiracy theorist again.

by Mondoreb
image: top-Hot Air; bottom-RidesAPaleHorse

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Beijing Olympics: China's Language Barrier Pix



Your Ad Here


Pixelaneous #52

China is ready for the Olympics and the resulting influx of English speaking tourists... are you ready for China's readiness?




Which is one step up from just lovely..




But taste like cat




Here, crippie, take my seat.

[We'd be remiss if we didn't mention that these pix came from Engrish.com--where they have 1000s more!




Great with flied lice





A separate entrance for Hos....why didn't I think of that?


MORE PIXELANEOUS:

* 51 John Edwards Scandal: The Many Faces of Contrition
* 50 - Candy Cigarettes: The Most Politically-Incorrect Candy
* 49 - Science Fair Projects: Unlikely Winners
* 48 - Summer Thunderstorm: Before and After Pictures
* 47 - The Crazy World of Egg Stacking
* 46 - Meaning of NASCAR Flags
* 45 - Big Muskie: The Biggest Machine to Ever Walk the Earth


Your Ad Here






Sounds better than canned water doesn't it?




Go over there to die, please. Thank you.




Good to know

Pixelaneous Photo Essays Library




Not nice. Some of my best friends are liquor heads.




Look up and down the aisle twice before proceeding...





Much tastier that the grown up variety..




It would be once you start chewing on it




Starbucks should be very afraid!




I wouldn't tickle this one




Weird, because horsebeans sound delicious.




Where every fashion aficionado in China shops!!!




I knew it!!




What?




If th ere's one thing we don't need help with...

!




'See you after the flight,Uncle Randy!'




Should be in front of half the hotels in town.




So this is where they all end up.



by RidesAPaleHorse

images: Engrish.com

Monday, August 11, 2008

Behind the Chinese Olympics:China's Lucrative Organ-Harvesting Industry

Chilling Chinese "Charity"





Nancy Morgan
RightBias.com
August 9, 2008


China's Dirty Little Secret

The eyes of the world are upon Beijing. Images pour forth daily of new stadiums full of cheering fans, Olympic athletes giving their all and dazzling fireworks in a bustling modern city. The last thing spectators think of as they sit in the new stadiums in Beijing, are the barbaric practises of their hosts. Namely, the lucrative Chinese practise of harvesting and selling the body parts of executed prisoners.

I have images also. The images I have, obtained by Chinese dissident Harry Wu, show a stadium in the countryside, filled to capacity with Chinese citizens. On the stage are a dozen hapless Chinese citizens who have been accused of a crime.

Military officials of the People's Republic of China point out their various crimes and then pronounce sentence. The majority receive a death sentence.

The condemned are led to waiting trucks. A rope is secured around the throats of these prisoners to cut off any last minute statements as they are ferried a short distance to the execution fields. Crowds await, as schools and businesses have closed for the occasion. Attendance is mandatory.

Prisoners are made to kneel. Each prisoner has two guards, one to position the rifle and another standing by. Upon command, a dozen shots ring out and a dozen bodies slump to the ground.

Officials wearing rubber boots stomp on some of the bodies to assure death. Then, all the bodies are collected and taken to the waiting, unmarked white vans. Inside the vans, the kidneys of these prisoners are extracted. Sometimes livers and corneas are harvested also. The vans then travel ten miles to Huaxi University of Medical Sciences in Chengdu, where six patients are prepped and ready to receive these organs into their own bodies.

The Chinese describe this practise as "charity." In Zhenhzou City, a hospital worker who had many times extracted organs at execution sites, said, "A shot in the head, blow away his brain, and the guy is dead. He has no more thinking, ceases to be a human being, just a thing, and we use the waste."

Chinese dissident Harry Wu spent 19 years in a Chinese logai, a prison patterned after the infamous gulags of the former Soviet Union. Upon his release and subsequent settlement in California, Wu traveled back to China several times under an assumed name, carrying a concealed videocam. The images he obtained prove, without a doubt, that China has been engaged in the wholesale trafficking of organs obtained from executed prisoners since, at least 1994.

I produced a film with Harry Wu using this footage. Entitled 'Communist Charity,' it shows an interview with a Chinese doctor making a sales pitch to someone he thought was a prospective organ buyer (Harry Wu). "The quality of our kidneys is better than America," he said, "because we remove the kidneys fast and at the appropriate time. We can guarantee several kidneys in one month. The distance where we remove the kidney and transplant is short. We can do it in, oh, less than 10 hours. In America, it takes more than 20 hours." A sales office in Hong Kong actually provides brochures for those shopping for a new organ.

A Chinese doctor currently residing in Germany was filmed confessing to harvesting the kidney of a patient the night before the execution.

According to Wu, there are 90 hospitals in China capable of performing kidney and cornea transplants. The going price for kidneys in the 1990's was $30,000. Prices have since risen dramatically.

The South China Morning Post reported on Jan. 9, 2000, "Organs from executed prisoners are being offered for up to $300,000 each to Hong Kong liver transplant patients who travel to a mainland hospital." A doctor at Sun Yat Sen University of Medical Sciences in Chengdu told the Post, "The organs are of good quality as they come from executed prisoners."

T. Kumar of Amnesty International testified on this issue at a 1998 hearing before the House Reform and Oversight Committee. "Amnesty International reported on this practise in 1993 and called for China to ban this practise. However the use of organs from this source continues in China, reportedly on a widespread scale." Kumar confirmed that "90% of organs used for transplant in China come from condemned prisoners."

At a conference in Boston, Chinese transplant doctor, Dr. Zhonghue, admitted that Chinese doctors had transplanted 8,102 kidneys, 3,741 livers and 85 hearts in 2005 alone.

Meanwhile, China has broadened the number of offenses punishable by death and, in an amazing coincidence, more and more of the condemned are comprised of 25-year old and younger, healthy non-smokers.

This is one of China's dirty little secrets. Why it remains a secret is the question. Every member of congress and all the major media outlets were provided a copy of 'Communist Charity' years ago. The ensuing silence has been deafening.

Maybe now, with the eyes of the world on China, there will be more interest in making known the ongoing, lucrative and horrific Chinese trade in illicit organs - and the substantial profits which have undoubtedly contributed to the billions of dollars China has spent in an effort to appear civilized before the world during these Summer Olympic Games.

by Nancy Morgan


Nancy Morgan is a colummnist and news editor for RightBias.com
She lives in South Carolina

Article may be reprinted, with attribution

image: dkimages

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Beijing Olympics: Is a Gas Mask a Performance Enhancer?

Click on image to enlarge.

Will wearing a gas mask at the Beijing Olympics disqualify an athlete for using a "performance enhancer"?

Half of Beijing's 3.3 million vehicles will be pulled off the roads and many polluting factories will be shuttered. Chemical plants, power stations and foundries left open have to cut emissions by 30 percent - and dust-spewing construction in the capital will be halted.

In a highly stage-managed Olympics aimed at showing off the rising power of the 21st century, no challenge is greater than producing crystalline air for 10,500 of the world's greatest athletes.

"Pea-soup air at the opening ceremony would be their worst nightmare," said Victor Cha, director of Asian Studies at Georgetown University.


From RidesAPaleHorse:

"Oh....wait...WE are the major polluters! How DARE China try and take that away from us? This means WAR!!!"

How come Al Gore and the Enviro-weenies are silent on this?

Because they probably know the Chinese would give their crackpot theories the proper response they deserve.

by Mondoreb & RidesAPaleHorse
image/idea: RidesAPaleHorse
Source: Beijing begins massive Olympic shutdown

Sunday, February 10, 2008

China Olympics: Gag Order Goes into Effect

Chairman Mao Would be Proud



When China was awarded the bid to host the 2008 Summer Olympics Games, there were concerns over a host of potential problems.

When the European Parliment passed a resolution (one of the only things the Europeans can do effectively), China responded--as usual--with words; more exactly, a new motto.

To quell concerns over this [human rights issues], Beijing chose the motto of "New Beijing, Great Olympics" in order to emphasize the country's movement towards new ideals for the new millennium.

Now a story pops up this weekend in London that British athletes are having to sign a "no criticism" contract in order to compete in the Chinese Olympics.
British Olympic chiefs are to force athletes to sign a contract promising not to speak out about China's appalling human rights record – or face being banned from travelling to Beijing.

The move – which raises the spectre of the order given to the England football team to give a Nazi salute in Berlin in 1938 – immediately provoked a storm of protest.

The controversial clause has been inserted into athletes' contracts for the first time and forbids them from making any political comment about countries staging the Olympic Games. It is contained in a 32-page document that will be presented to all those who reach the qualifying standard and are chosen for the team.

Isn't this exactly the sort of thing that those people concerned about when the the games were first awarded to China?

Does this appalling gag order apply to U.S. athletes also?

What does the U.S. have to say about it?

The "no criticism" rule will affect all the British athletes--including the Queen's granddaughter.

What do the British say about the Queen's granddaughter being gagged?

The British Olympic Association says that any athlete who refuses to sign the agreements will not be allowed to travel to Beijing.
From the moment they sign up, the competitors – likely to include the Queen's granddaughter Zara Phillips and world record holder Paula Radcliffe – will be effectively gagged from commenting on China's politics, human rights abuses or illegal occupation of Tibet.

Prince Charles has already let it be known that he will not be going to China, even if he is invited by Games organisers.

His views on the Communist dictatorship are well known, after this newspaper revealed how he described China's leaders as “appalling old waxworks” in a journal written after he attended the handover of Hong Kong. The Prince is also a long-time supporter of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan leader.

Does the gag order include, upon reaching Beijing and exiting the airplane, bending over and telling the Chinese to kiss your ass?




UPDATE: 1540 - February 10, 2008 Sunday

Concerning the USA Olympics Team: According to a comment on the story at Reason, here's the scoop on the USA Olympic Team:
The BOA took the decision even though other countries – including the United States, Canada, Finland, and Australia – have pledged that their athletes would be free to speak about any issue concerning China.

To date, only New Zealand and Belgium have banned their athletes from giving political opinions while competing at the Games.



by Mondoreb
idea/image: RidesAPaleHorse; simpsons
Sources:
* Britain kow tows to China as Athletes are forced to sign no-criticism contracts
* 2008 summer Olypmics
* Brits Gag Athletes from Bad-mouthing China

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