Get over it.
Journalism is that bad nowadays.
All they had to do was download a VPN and see if it works.
But no, all they did was report on some tweet, and that was suppose to be important.
How do these people even have jobs?
Get over it.
James Griffiths is in Beijing. But he orders Spaghetti Aglio e Olio, and complains about it. That's all we need to know about this racist dickhead.Current level of garbage racist "journalist" that are in Asia. Completely incompetent or propagandist or both?
Guy orders a italian dish called "spagetti aglio e olio" which translates to plain spagetti with oil+garlic, proceeds to complain on twitter that his dish is plain spagetti
I don't know what I did to make it seem that my tone had softened. I completely maintain that Asians who fail to represent their blood nation but instead a hostile Caucasian nation are a disgrace to every person in their ancestry and a continuous burden on their fellow Asians. Nothing has changed from my original post.Your tone is much softer in this response. That's a great thing. We shouldn't be too harsh to our own people, especially for something this trivial. I also understand your point a bit better. I will respond to your main points below
OK, that's fine and I agree but this conversation is limited to the scope of perception through Olympic achievement. Overall, medals and Olympics don't matter; science and technology do. But on this thread, the Olympics and medals matter.Gold and athleticism are really not the same thing. And most people knows that the Chinese sports system allows China take more gold than its overall level of development supports. That's why I am so proud of Beijing 2022 because China only spend a modest amount to boost its medaling capabilities but a huge amount to popularize snow/ice sport among the population. Wide participation in various sports and quantity and quality of venues are the things that will improve the perception of Chinese athleticism. Both requires huge investment but also gives handsome financial returns. a few medals won't do much. I really think we should chill about medals.
I see many Asians being more athletic than before. When I was in grad school, there were few Chinese at the gym and the ones that were there were there to check out the machines and play badminton. Now, I see a massive amount of Asians and Chinese at the gym, actually working out, maybe in every greater proportion than any other race. I took up Muay thai and Olympic weighlifting so I'm doing my part. I never criticize someone for "poor" athletic performance; just being active puts you ahead of the general population.And if we really care about the 'negative perception of Asian athleticism,' I think the reasonable thing to do is be more athletic ourselves, and help our families and our fellow Chinese to participate in sports. I used to race bikes as an amateur. I am always in the back and never won anything. So am I hurting the Asian image because I never won or improving because I am at least out there riding? I never cared. I just loved riding and had tons of fun.
This only applies to those carving out a nice living for themselves. Never would I have half a kind word for a Chinese person who insults China to please foreigners or one who brings credit to a foreign rival at China's expense. If you don't respect your bloodline, you don't respect yourself; a strong person never forgets who he is or melts away to become someone else from peer pressure. These people forever remain disgraceful in my book.I for one applaud and support oversea Chinese people stay oversea and fight for their success (and rights) in foreign land. I am happy to see there are some modest successes. (to be clear I also applaud those who decide to pursue opportunities in China.) The last thing I want is for oversea Chinese to feel they were never accepted in their resident country, but also spitted on as traitors by people of their ancestral country. I once saw a video on bilibili (tried but couldn't find it) that as a PLAN ship departing a port of visit in the UK, the soldiers shouted "Motherland will always support you" to the oversea Chinese waving goodbye. I thought that was exceptionally enlightened policy.
It's true. A united China is unstoppable; whether it be in tech or sports, no country can rise to the top without using Chinese people. China's worst enemy is traitorous Chinese people, so I can never show kindness to them. Growing up, my father told me that the fate of a traitor is always to be squeezed to death by both sides with neither trusting him and he deserves every bit and more. I'm not sure I understand you; you want to show kindness to falun gong, Hong Kong cockroaches, TW separatists? Is that what you're saying or am I not understanding?My second point might be painful to accept. From the beginning of the opium trade to the end of cultural revolution, it's the Chinese that caused the most suffering to the Chinese people. While we fight for racial justice for Chinese around the world, we must keep that in the back of our mind and forever remind ourselves to treat our own people kindly first and foremost.
That's how the world works; I can't hunt down Chinese traitors across the globe but I'm saying I look down on them worse that any other lifeform or inanimate object in existence.I really don't think I care about, or have any say, about how other people choose to use their talent/money/success or how people should identify themselves. I also won't let others dictate my life. I will do what I think is right and hope my actions might inspire others.
I think that. Does she and her family think that? Not so sure.BTW, by value I don't mean just money. Gu would rightly think being an inspiration to young Chinese is a much greater reward than money.
She's inspirational and I appreciate that but she sure made good bank for herself and she never locked herself to one side. She could easily slip back to the US for the next comp. Opportunist? Predator? We'll see.Gu is an inspirational role model. Not a hero (not sure winning gold itself can quality anyone as a hero). definitely not a predator.
He got totally abused in the comments section.James Griffiths is in Beijing. But he orders Spaghetti Aglio e Olio, and complains about it. That's all we need to know about this racist dickhead.
I doubt he has ever tried any of the local Chinese dishes. Maybe afraid of them, like his other fellow racists. He should go back to McDonald's. That's all he is good for.
It's sad because many Americans are probably like this if it weren't for evil American politicians poisoning the atmosphere for their self-serving interests. And I'll bet the people who are not there think they know more than those that are there. They won't be playing those interviews in the US media.CCP shills caught on camera.
Aaron Blunck, Half-pipe athlete of the US team, made this comment on Feb 13:
His teammate Alex Ferreira:
It's because they constantly have to publish to finish articles to retain their jobs . Right from the editor at the top to the bottom intern are stressed. Look at the talent loss at jalopnik . Then you will understand what I am talking about. That car website was once the gold standard. Now they have employee churn like fucking Deutsch Bank.Journalism is that bad nowadays.
All they had to do was download a VPN and see if it works.
But no, all they did was report on some tweet, and that was suppose to be important.
How do these people even have jobs?
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Hyping up technology . Simple cad and CFD is sufficient. No need to deploy supercomputer.
Part of Ryoyu's dominance is because of supercomputer modelling help
Makoto Tsubokura, a professor at Kobe University specializing in fluid engineering said, “such a dream is only possible with Fugaku. With the supercomputer, it is even possible to simulate a huge pattern at high speed and have AI (Artificial Intelligence) make proposals.”Hyping up technology . Simple cad and CFD is sufficient. No need to deploy supercomputer.