Miscellaneous News

Fatty

Junior Member
Registered Member
Looks like the alphabet soup organizations are attempting a string of colour revolutions, coups and chaos on the Eurasian continent this year.

However, there are 4 key things WRT the ongoing protests in Mongolia that China should be alert of:

1. The Power of Siberia - The currently under-construction gas pipeline passes, scheduled to be completed in 2024, runs through Mongolia from Russia before ending at gas terminals in China. Any chaos could risk undoing all money and effort poured into the pipeline itself, plus setting back China's effort at acquiring more Russian gas in the coming years.

2. Coal - Mongolia is 4th largest coal exporter to China. Not the largest, but still a considerable amount that plas instrumental role in China's energy sector through those coal power plants. If Mongolia suffers from chaos and destruction, one of China's major source of coal would have a significant impact.

3. Ethnic Mongols - If the current protest situation in Mongolia becomes out of control and the colour revolution is successful (especially if the entire "chaos" is being coordinated by alphabet soup companies), ethnic Mongols living in Inner Mongolia may be affected as well, especially with the neo-N4z1 Tsagaan Khas party in Mongolia.

4. Nuclear deterrence - Being situated right in between the Chinese and Russian interior regions and in the vicinity of China's ICBM silos, if Mongolia suffered a colour revolution and a pro-West fac1st government is installed, the West would have easier time to inflitrate and be stationed in Mongolia, thus allowing them easier time to spy and attempt jeopardizing China's critical nuclear deterrence infrastructures.

China should keep a watchful eye on Mongolia's present situation. Remember that Mongolia as a whole only has a population of 3.3 million, which is smaller than even the Tier 3 Chinese city of Tangshan. In China, 10 thousand protestors/rioters mean nothing in the sea of 1.4 billion. But for Mongolia, the same number of protestor/rioters can have impact.

In fact, China should be prepared with proper contingency plans in case signs of a new Mongolian government that is outright hostile towards Beijing rises to power in Ulanbataar.
Lol don’t worry about ethnic mongols in Inner Mongolia. The Mongols in Outer Mongolia that don’t even use Mongolic script anymore have done a fine job of totally alienating them by blasting them for being fake mongols and hating on them. Same with ethnic Koreans. Many of these people are even more patriotic than the average Han due to this alienation. we need to send South Korea and Outer Mongolia a gift for their help someday
 

Fatty

Junior Member
Registered Member
What a joke, Chinese voters are just too small a minority to even make a meaningful impact upon local election. Beside, local election is irrelevant. South Koreans have become ultra-nationalists and anti-Chinese. It is funny that many of these Chinese are ethnic Koreans to begin with. More over, more immigrants are coming from Southeast Asians nowadays.
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Discrimination against Chinese overseas will only help China. That’s why I say that if you are a good Chinese you should vote against trump but if you are a great Chinese you should vote for trump!
 

coolgod

Colonel
Registered Member
America cannot influence Mongolia, let alone change its government. As a point of curiosity, do you people ever consider the possibility that a group of people might be pissed about something without the CIA being involved? Because I've read about revolutions and riots throughout history long before the CIA existed, so I wonder how that worked.
Mongolian riot is 100% CIA backed. Look at the slogans and news reports, notice something similar? A less pro-US president replaced the old one, and suddenly Mongolian people care about corruption? What about the past 20 years? Mongolian president just visited China and this happens, with many anti-China views in the protest, what a coincidence.

I doubt it. I have some friends living in Mongolia and they are saying that the riots began because some government officials & wealthy businessmen stole $12.9 billion worth of coal that was supposed to be exported to China. Apparently, they collided with some local politicians\businessmen in IM to instead sell this coal privately. It was discovered by the Chinese government which found that the amount of coal that was supposedly exported from Mongolia to China did not match what China actually received and then alerted the Mongolian government which started the investigation. It is an absolutely massive theft for Mongolia which has a nominal GDP of $15.7 billion (!), so who knows how long they have been operating this smuggling ring, and there is no way it could continue undiscovered without collaboration on the highest levels of government.
You mean CIA uses actual grassroot discontent to fan the flames for colour revolution? Just like a week ago where they did the same in China except the chants started with no lockdowns, we want freedom then turned into Xi must resign?
 

xypher

Senior Member
Registered Member
You mean CIA uses actual grassroot discontent to fan the flames for colour revolution? Just like a week ago where they did the same in China except the chants started with no lockdowns, we want freedom then turned into Xi must resign?
The protesters are asking to reveal the names of the ones who were involved in the corruption scandal, I think it is a rather adequate demand for that kind of situation -
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. Translation:
On December 4, people dissatisfied with the actions of the government held a mass demonstration in the capital of Mongolia. The reason for this protest is the scandal around theft of export coal which involved many politicians. Recently, the media reported that the amount of coal taken out of Mongolia was different from the amount received by the Chinese side, the Chinese side executed the officials involved in the theft of this coal and sent the names of the Mongolian politicians involved in this case to the prime minister Oyun-Erden Luvsannamsrai. The protesters demanded that the government and the president name the coal thieves. They demanded to "reveal the corruption of the authorities and name the thieves who stole coal worth 44 trillion tugriks ($12.9 billion)". They announced that the demonstration would continue tomorrow (December 5) and called for a general strike on Monday.
I also don't see the anti-Chinese chants or the typical CIA/NED meaningless drone slogans like "freedom" and other bs. Could you point them out? This is pretty different from the Chinese "protests" where there were like 5 people on average in other cities and 100-200 in Shanghai, with non-local accents and absolutely random chants out of nowhere, plus the discovered Telegram channel where these people organized.

Besides, you could put Gordon Chang as president of Mongolia and nothing would change because 86% of their exports go to China. The only other viable trade partner is Russia that exports exactly the same stuff as Mongolia and does not need Mongolian coal or livestock.
 
Last edited:

xypher

Senior Member
Registered Member
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West, whose face is covered with a mask, begins by boasting that the backlash from his previous interview has been “awesome for a presidential campaign” before blaming Jewish people for Hitler’s “reputation” and comparing abortion to “eugenics,” “genocide,” and the “Holocaust.”
At one point, McInnes gives West a hypothetical question. “So you’re president of the United States,” says McInnes. “It’s day one and someone walks in and they go, ‘So what are we going to do about these Jews?’ What do ya say?” West replies, eliciting giggles from Fuentes and McInnes: “Jews should work for Christians. I’ll hire a Jewish person in a second if I knew they weren’t a spy and I could look through their phone and follow through their house and have a camera all in their living room.”
“Jewish people can’t tell me who I can love and who I can’t love,” he continues. “You can’t say, you can’t force your pain on everyone else. Jewish people, forgive Hitler today.”
 

Bellum_Romanum

Brigadier
Registered Member
Looks like the alphabet soup organizations are attempting a string of colour revolutions, coups and chaos on the Eurasian continent this year.

However, there are 4 key things WRT the ongoing protests in Mongolia that China should be alert of:

1. The Power of Siberia - The currently under-construction gas pipeline passes, scheduled to be completed in 2024, runs through Mongolia from Russia before ending at gas terminals in China. Any chaos could risk undoing all money and effort poured into the pipeline itself, plus setting back China's effort at acquiring more Russian gas in the coming years.

2. Coal - Mongolia is 4th largest coal exporter to China. Not the largest, but still a considerable amount that plas instrumental role in China's energy sector through those coal power plants. If Mongolia suffers from chaos and destruction, one of China's major source of coal would have a significant impact.

3. Ethnic Mongols - If the current protest situation in Mongolia becomes out of control and the colour revolution is successful (especially if the entire "chaos" is being coordinated by alphabet soup companies), ethnic Mongols living in Inner Mongolia may be affected as well, especially with the neo-N4z1 Tsagaan Khas party in Mongolia.

4. Nuclear deterrence - Being situated right in between the Chinese and Russian interior regions and in the vicinity of China's ICBM silos, if Mongolia suffered a colour revolution and a pro-West fac1st government is installed, the West would have easier time to inflitrate and be stationed in Mongolia, thus allowing them easier time to spy and attempt jeopardizing China's critical nuclear deterrence infrastructures.

China should keep a watchful eye on Mongolia's present situation. Remember that Mongolia as a whole only has a population of 3.3 million, which is smaller than even the Tier 3 Chinese city of Tangshan. In China, 10 thousand protestors/rioters mean nothing in the sea of 1.4 billion. But for Mongolia, the same number of protestor/rioters can have impact.

In fact, China should be prepared with proper contingency plans in case signs of a new Mongolian government that is outright hostile towards Beijing rises to power in Ulanbataar.
This eruption of anger from the public in Mongolia has nothing to do with the Alabama group solely responsible for agitating those folks. Those people appears to be simply fed up from the very circus of politicians they themselves chose to elect time and again. That's the product of the very political system the country elected to have back in 1992 with the promise of economic development and improvements to the very lives of Mongolian people. It's been 30 years and the promise of riches have only been felt to the very few and the rest of the people are still waiting for the trickle down benefit.

Their brothers, sisters that are in China's inner Mongolia lives in a much better economic condition; their language has actually been preserved, culture etc...plus a more lucrative government minority policies that those folks in Mongolia can only dream of having or yearning to have.
 
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