Hong-Kong Protests

ansy1968

Brigadier
Registered Member
It’s 2023 and idiots still believe this BS about rights? I’ll tell you something about rights. Money is rights. The more money you have, the more rights you have. Same things everywhere in the world.
This kind of attitude I had experience with some Hongkongers in HK, they are really arrogant ,they think highly of themselves, Its like they're not Chinese, their ancestor didn't teach them the proper etiquette and they were surprise and dumbfounded why most of us in ASEAN didn't support them....lol
 
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KYli

Brigadier
Many Hong Kongers are actually descendants of mainland Chinese that fled China during 50s and 60s. My great grand father and grand father don't speak Cantonese or very little of Cantonese but didn't have much problem in Hong Kong before 50s or 60s as Cantonese was not the dominated language back then. At that time there is no such thing as Hong Kong identity. Hong Kong identity was really formed around 70s when the first generation of Hong Kong born Chinese emerged.

UK as the former colonial superpower was very good at divide and rule. Top officials are appointed by UK or filled by all British, the legal system is dominated by judges and lawyers from UK, best public schools were all Christian that are funded by the Hong Kong government, Chinese elites that behave are given the title of Justice of the Peace which help the UK government to rule and monitor any dissents. For anyone that wants to get promoted in the government government or success in the business world in HK, they all needed to seek approval from the UK or their White masters.

After a generation or two, this Master and servant relationship has fostered a new identity which is a sense of superior complex among people who are considered upper class, elites, that work under or associated with White people. At the same time, these people have developed an inferior complex as they have become house slaves after a few generation working under a superior race and master. From there, these Hong Kongers develop a form of superiority complex to look down other Chinese or inferior race. They consider themselves more civilized, Westernized, modernized, liberal and cosmopolitan.

During 80s and 90s, when Hong Kong emerged as world financial center, Hong Kong identity has become strenghtened. Many Hong Kongers even though middle class and lower class who once were suppressed began to adopt such new Hong Kong identity and superior complex.
 
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FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member
So many Hong Kongers have returned to HK. I bet many of those are BNO Hong Kongers.
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I believe it has been explicitly said that those who exit using BNO passports instead of SAR passports will be regarded to have left using an unrecognized travel document. It is pretty bad news for the BNO holders because that makes returning much more difficult.
 

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member
Many Hong Kongers are actually descendants of mainland Chinese that fled China during 50s and 60s. My great grand father and grand father don't speak Cantonese or very little of Cantonese but didn't have much problem in Hong Kong before 50s or 60s as Cantonese was not the dominated language back then. At that time there is no such thing as Hong Kong identity. Hong Kong identity was really formed around 70s when the first generation of Hong Kong born Chinese emerged.

UK as the former colonial superpower was very good at divide and rule. Top officials are appointed by UK or filled by all British, the legal system is dominated by judges and lawyers from UK, best public schools were all Christian that are funded by the Hong Kong government, Chinese elites that behave are given the title of Justice of the Peace which help the UK government to rule and monitor any dissents. For anyone that wants to get promoted in the government government or success in the business world in HK, they all needed to seek approval from the UK or their White masters.

After a generation or two, this Master and servant relationship has fostered a new identity which is a sense of superior complex among people who are considered upper class, elites, that work under or associated with White people. At the same time, these people have developed an inferior complex as they have become house slaves after a few generation working under a superior race and master. From there, these Hong Kongers develop a form of superiority complex to look down other Chinese or inferior race. They consider themselves more civilized, Westernized, modernized, liberal and cosmopolitan.

During 80s and 90s, when Hong Kong emerged as world financial center, Hong Kong identity has become strenghtened. Many Hong Kongers even though middle class and lower class who once were suppressed began to adopt such new Hong Kong identity and superior complex.
this is the classical tale of domestication. humans are just faster to be domesticated than dogs. you throw them a few treats and they're very well trained. took 11000 years to domesticate dogs, 8000 years to domesticate pigs, but not even 50 years to domesticate 7 million humans. You have to admire the British. They're good at what they do.
 

daifo

Major
Registered Member
I believe it has been explicitly said that those who exit using BNO passports instead of SAR passports will be regarded to have left using an unrecognized travel document. It is pretty bad news for the BNO holders because that makes returning much more difficult.
I
I thought visas are normally attached to the passport page. It might be check on departing side by the airline as precaution so to be clear you can enter the arriving country but its enforced on the side you are entering. Couldn't they just rip out that visa page out?
 

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
this is the classical tale of domestication. humans are just faster to be domesticated than dogs. you throw them a few treats and they're very well trained. took 11000 years to domesticate dogs, 8000 years to domesticate pigs, but not even 50 years to domesticate 7 million humans. You have to admire the British. They're good at what they do.

It's simple. Make the Indians think that hey are superior to the Hong Kong Chinese and vice versa and make both of them think that they are superior to the blacks. Never underestimate the power of the Stephens and Uncle Ruckuses.
 

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member
I
I thought visas are normally attached to the passport page. It might be check on departing side by the airline as precaution so to be clear you can enter the arriving country but its enforced on the side you are entering. Couldn't they just rip out that visa page out?
If they arrive at Hong Kong using the BNO passport, they'll be barred from entering. They won't be allowed to get a SAR passport overseas if they have only a BNO passport to prove their identity. So if they only took the BNO passport and not the SAR passport, they're stuck.
 

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
After a generation or two, this Master and servant relationship has fostered a new identity which is a sense of superior complex among people who are considered upper class, elites, that work under or associated with White people. At the same time, these people have developed an inferior complex as they have become house slaves after a few generation working under a superior race and master. From there, these Hong Kongers develop a form of superiority complex to look down other Chinese or inferior race. They consider themselves more civilized, Westernized, modernized, liberal and cosmopolitan.
My family moved to Canada at the end of 80’s. We experienced plenty of HKers’ superior attitude and their superiority complex.
 
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