shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
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Communists are loud and proud when they attack anyone. They bleed patriotism as it leads to more power for them and their families. Any enemy of theirs must be destroyed, any patriotism abroad must be confronted.
The last thing the Commies wanted to see was American Patriotism as they had in it's past. They want, no, they need division and self destruction of the U.S. They encourage and fund the tearing down of U.S history and chants of racism in the streets, as it helps their cause.
As I said from the beginning when it was clear Trump had the balls to confront the Commies, they desperately needed Trump to lose. He was the firewall to the West. Now they are going to tell us right to our faces how they are going to crush us, and weak, cowardly, Western leaders will allow it, while destroying the most patriotic within (certainly in Canada this has been the case for decades).
The communists will press harder on influencing and controlling foreign nations. I suspect, without much of a response.
ca.news.yahoo.com
Before the text messages threatening to kill his family, Drew Pavlou gathered a small group of students on a busy walkway at the University of Queensland to protest the Chinese government’s repression of Uighur Muslims and crackdown on Hong Kong.
“Hey-hey, ho-ho — Xi Jinping has got to go!”
As he denounced the Communist leader, hundreds of counter-demonstrators massed around a colonnade at the campus in Brisbane, Australia. Some were students from China; others appeared older. They yelled pro-Beijing slogans and played the Chinese national anthem over loudspeakers.
Pavlou, 20, stopped for a moment and smiled, relishing the first protest he’d ever organized.
Things quickly turned violent. A man in the crowd rushed at Pavlou, snatching his megaphone. A second man shoved him. In the ensuing scuffles, one student from Hong Kong was tackled and grabbed by the throat; another had her shirt ripped open.
The next day, Chinese state media named Pavlou as a leader of the protest, and Xu Jie, Beijing’s consul general in Brisbane, praised the “spontaneous patriotic behavior” of those who attacked Pavlou.
It was an unusual statement for a diplomat, especially considering Xu’s other position: an adjunct professor at the university’s School of Languages and Cultures. His dual roles were an example of the increasingly close ties between Australian universities and China, their biggest source of international students.
The last thing the Commies wanted to see was American Patriotism as they had in it's past. They want, no, they need division and self destruction of the U.S. They encourage and fund the tearing down of U.S history and chants of racism in the streets, as it helps their cause.
As I said from the beginning when it was clear Trump had the balls to confront the Commies, they desperately needed Trump to lose. He was the firewall to the West. Now they are going to tell us right to our faces how they are going to crush us, and weak, cowardly, Western leaders will allow it, while destroying the most patriotic within (certainly in Canada this has been the case for decades).
The communists will press harder on influencing and controlling foreign nations. I suspect, without much of a response.
An Australian student denounced his university's ties to China. Then he became a target
Drew Pavlou's battle against the University of Queensland illustrates China's influence over a key U.S. ally.
Before the text messages threatening to kill his family, Drew Pavlou gathered a small group of students on a busy walkway at the University of Queensland to protest the Chinese government’s repression of Uighur Muslims and crackdown on Hong Kong.
“Hey-hey, ho-ho — Xi Jinping has got to go!”
As he denounced the Communist leader, hundreds of counter-demonstrators massed around a colonnade at the campus in Brisbane, Australia. Some were students from China; others appeared older. They yelled pro-Beijing slogans and played the Chinese national anthem over loudspeakers.
Pavlou, 20, stopped for a moment and smiled, relishing the first protest he’d ever organized.
Things quickly turned violent. A man in the crowd rushed at Pavlou, snatching his megaphone. A second man shoved him. In the ensuing scuffles, one student from Hong Kong was tackled and grabbed by the throat; another had her shirt ripped open.
The next day, Chinese state media named Pavlou as a leader of the protest, and Xu Jie, Beijing’s consul general in Brisbane, praised the “spontaneous patriotic behavior” of those who attacked Pavlou.
It was an unusual statement for a diplomat, especially considering Xu’s other position: an adjunct professor at the university’s School of Languages and Cultures. His dual roles were an example of the increasingly close ties between Australian universities and China, their biggest source of international students.