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RE: Life in Chinese Lockdown - Part 1: Civilization has fallen

in OCD2 years ago

this user will be punished now for making this post

China needs a violent revolution or look what happens, starvation depopulation.

They all need to come ot of their homes and revolt, and yes they have to be violent and kill every last "Big White" hazmat police as theyre called, kill all chinese authorities police, bribe the military etc

china is weak and can be bribed into revolution

its either this violent answer or they all die in depopulation

do you have any arguments for that in your comfy western castle with plenty of food? OR do you have any solutions?

Its tiem we start running runs and food na dmoney to China through whatever chinas corrupt weak points are , plenty of places you can get stuff in , look at north korea, look at the border in the south , theres a lot of ways to bribe the chinese PLA to funnel weapons to citizens

theyll do it with EOS

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(lol, posted on gf's account by mistake)

Well, there's no need to turn it into a fiction, China can speak for itself without any need for that. So to start; the chances that I'm in trouble, though not zero%, is still very low for three reasons:

1 - I am a foreigner, so I enjoy certain protections simply because they don't want the west paying any attention. We still obviously have to obey the general laws, but we don't get treated like cattle. There are of course extreme, and hugely public rare exceptions for highly political reasons such as the Canadians Vs Meng Wengzhou.

2 - Generally, they are only concerned with things that start to go viral among their population. They will, for example, come around your community with loudspeakers demanding the leader of a group chat on wechat apologize and remove the things they said or face a criminal penalty. That's not to say you can speak freely as long as it doesn't spread, but this is their main focus. The idea of 'going viral' is their primary enemy. The chances of this going viral in the mainstream, and on totally separate, Chinese media, is extremely slim.

3 - Shanghai again, is full of middle-class, well educated folk, and almost all of them are expressing anger, fear and frustration online in this kind of way. Playing with Shanghai is a dangerous game, as everyone has VPN access and most speak pretty good English. That's publicity they can't afford.

As for revolting, well, people in China do revolt every day. There's an estimated 500 protests daily. China spends more money on its police force than it does its military. Controlling its own people is absolute top priority for them. Of those 500 a day, how many do you actually hear about? Perhaps 1 or two in recent news, zero before that? There's a good reason for that.

The entire country has been completely mastered as a police state and I'm sorry to say there is just no getting around that, EOS, corruption or otherwise. I can convince you in detail if needed, but essentially there are millions of workers and the worlds most robust and comprehensive surveillance system ever known to man, all keeping tabs on every individual, from the facial recognition on traffic lights, to the state-controlled mandate of every 'private' company giving total, uninhibited access to people's phones, photos, messages etc. Every single action we take here is tied to our ID, our face, our phones.

Final point, the hazmat-wearing people, for the most part, they're just volunteers. Regular people who feel they need to help out. One of them is my best friend's wife. She receives a lot of abuse from understandably angry people, but they're mostly just local folk in the community. Even though some do turn violent with abuse of power, killing them off is... not something anybody is going to consider.

That does make them bribable, but the entire country is built on a system of bribes, I don't see how this would be any different or make any difference. I'd be interested to see an actual attempt of an action plan, but I could confidently tear it apart, as sad as that is to admit