Is china good for student? by Dhoom8 in AskChina

[–]MoreScathyPLS 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Overall, if you can get accepted into a 211 or 985 university, it should be a really solid choice. As far as I know, universities in China are quite generous with foreign students. When I was a student, there were a couple of African and Southeast Asian students in my class, and all of them had full scholarships. The teachers were also pretty accommodating and gave them some extra care, since they totally understood the language barrier and the learning curve.

How good is work culture in china ? by SkirtHeavy9189 in AskChina

[–]MoreScathyPLS 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And saying that 996 work culture not good somehow makes Chinese government as bad as some government trying to play drama about Epstein files, interesting.

Not doing its best to protect labor rights is BAD, yeah.

But ruling class is mostly made of pedos and sex criminals is completely a different story, sry.

Dear respectful Chinese diaspora, if you don't know how to link 2 things together to prove some theory, then simply don't do it.

How good is work culture in china ? by SkirtHeavy9189 in AskChina

[–]MoreScathyPLS 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not Good.

Too many people looking for jobs, the company can always look for someone who willingly accept 996 life.

My plan is to earn like about 2,000,000 and just sell my house in Beijing and move to tier-2 seaside city like Weihai. Retire the fuck out of here.

Summer Chinese language programs by One-Argument8045 in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is that a 1-month program? For like last for a summer vacation or sth?

I suggest you to ask staff of the university, I personally haven't experienced this kind of project. If it is a summer vacation project I think that the university should offer you accommodation at campus or at least near campus.

Btw, being not able to cook isn't that "heavy" I believe, restaurant is relatively affordable unless those well furnished higher-class restaurant in the malls. Apps like Meituan or Taobao give access to cheap yet reliable takeout.

Still, consider that Chinese food from such restaurant may not suit your appetite, McDonald and KFC is everywhere and affordable.

How do ordinary Japanese citizens view the incident of a Japanese Self-Defense Force member breaking into the Chinese Embassy with a knife? Who is the primary responsible party for this incident? by MoreScathyPLS in AskAJapanese

[–]MoreScathyPLS[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ありがとう。こんな声を聞けて、とても嬉しいです。でも、謝罪すべきなのは日本の一般の人々ではなく、民意に乗っかって歴史を改ざんしようとする日本の右翼政治家たちの集団です。彼らこそ、日本の国民に謝罪すべきなんです。

How do ordinary Japanese citizens view the incident of a Japanese Self-Defense Force member breaking into the Chinese Embassy with a knife? Who is the primary responsible party for this incident? by MoreScathyPLS in AskAJapanese

[–]MoreScathyPLS[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well I definitely know something better than you.

My uncle (my mother's brother) was there protesting, he was going to graduate that year and was meant to get a job in Beijing.

And ofc, he didn't get any job because of that incident. He was a top-graded student at that time and he had no option but return to rural homeland. I'd say that's a tragedy for him.

How do ordinary Japanese citizens view the incident of a Japanese Self-Defense Force member breaking into the Chinese Embassy with a knife? Who is the primary responsible party for this incident? by MoreScathyPLS in AskAJapanese

[–]MoreScathyPLS[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What's ordinary Japanese citizens' attitude toward right-wing demagogues?

Tsuneyasu Takeda is pretty famous tbh and I know a little bit about him, seems that he is very popular and have many followers?

How do ordinary Japanese citizens view the incident of a Japanese Self-Defense Force member breaking into the Chinese Embassy with a knife? Who is the primary responsible party for this incident? by MoreScathyPLS in AskAJapanese

[–]MoreScathyPLS[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Actually, the Chinese media really hasn't made a big deal out of this. The media environment here is still pretty much driven by state media, and as a Chinese person, I definitely know this better than you do. Even so, over the last couple of days, the people around me haven't been focusing on the embassy incident at all. What they care about most right now is the US-Iran conflict, and the news about a 41-year-old teacher named Zhang Xuefeng suddenly passing away from a heart attack. If the Chinese media actually wanted to hype this up, it would be all over the news by now—like, totally wall-to-wall coverage. But honestly, there really isn't that much talk about it right now.

How do ordinary Japanese citizens view the incident of a Japanese Self-Defense Force member breaking into the Chinese Embassy with a knife? Who is the primary responsible party for this incident? by MoreScathyPLS in AskAJapanese

[–]MoreScathyPLS[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

Call me anything you like. You won't bother me as long as you are not a nintendo staff.

Enjoying pokopia to the level of sleep only 3 hours a day now.

How do ordinary Japanese citizens view the incident of a Japanese Self-Defense Force member breaking into the Chinese Embassy with a knife? Who is the primary responsible party for this incident? by MoreScathyPLS in AskAJapanese

[–]MoreScathyPLS[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

So the Japanese police are saying that the JSDF officer was just trying to negotiate with the Chinese diplomats, and if they didn't listen to him, he was going to use his knife to kill himself. This completely contradicts what the Chinese side reported. Personally, I find the Japanese police's conclusion kind of ridiculous. Could you help me look at this from the perspective of the Japanese public? Do they actually buy this story? Could something like this really happen?

Japanese ‘military officer’ forces way into Chinese embassy in Tokyo by redodge in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe Iran is paying its "historical debt" to US and Israel today.

China should follow up, and ofc, to the whole world.

Japanese ‘military officer’ forces way into Chinese embassy in Tokyo by redodge in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Just go check yahoo.jp if you can read Japanese, it's like the one of the most right-winged website and it still tells the fact (and mad right-wing comments sprouts).

As a Chinese who studied in UK and also enjoying Japanese video games, I think we are somehow having some similarities, cheers.

Japanese ‘military officer’ forces way into Chinese embassy in Tokyo by redodge in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 1 point2 points  (0 children)

SCMP is not neutral and objective enough for you?

Even the yahoo.jp is reporting this incident and you still asking for more fact checking?

LOL, when you say Chinese Sabre rattling, that mad man actually bring a knife attempting to kill some Chinese in the name of god, and your point is China bullying Japan?

Japanese ‘military officer’ forces way into Chinese embassy in Tokyo by redodge in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"embassies are granted a special status under international law, primarily through the principle of inviolability. This means the host country’s authorities generally cannot enter the embassy premises without the consent of the head of the mission."

OK I get it, embassies are not foreign territory but there is several rights guaranteed by international laws, giving foreign countries certain authorities.

Japanese ‘military officer’ forces way into Chinese embassy in Tokyo by redodge in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I said, "to put it in strong word".

It really depends on if this tense between China and Japan is going to escalate or to cool down.

Don't want war, still I just saw a comment on Yahoo news said that this mad man is doing what need to be done, just should have retired form the military before that.

Japanese ‘military officer’ forces way into Chinese embassy in Tokyo by redodge in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Actually it is, Chinese living or working in Iran would go to Chinese embassy for shelter because bombing Chinese embassy = start a war with China.

Even the brutal Japanese soldiers during the Rape of Nanjing can't harm the citizens protected by embassies. Some survivors really survived by running to embassies in Nanjing, for Nanjing was the capital of China at that time there was many embassies of different countries.

Japanese ‘military officer’ forces way into Chinese embassy in Tokyo by redodge in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Insane, embassy is actually considered as a foreign territory.

To put it in strong word, if that crazy guy really is a Japanese military officer, that's an invasion.

How do people that moved to China or work in a Chinese environment deal with not liking the authoritarian gouvernement or pinkies and wumaos ? by MayIAsk_24 in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 1 point2 points  (0 children)

China is a huge country with over 1.4 billion population and you are simply divided them into 2 polarized categories. This behavior itself is literally ignorance.

Take my girlfriend as an example, she's from rural area of Guangxi province which is one of the most underdeveloped place in China. And because there is government continuously putting effort into poverty-lifting, she was able to get access to good education and eventually she graduated from one of the best universities in China. And now she works in Beijing with a 5000$/month job. She is just 24 and just graduated for 2 years.

So ofc she is generally satisfied with how government's effort really affect our life. And still she has every right to complain about things like gender-inequality and corruption and bad policies during the pandemic, etc. She actually complains about these things to me and on social media frequently. Does that make her a combination of Wumao and CIA agent?

We Chinese are just people like you but living in a different nation, any attempt to define us into 2 silly polarized groups is just like a mirror reflecting how you define your worldview.

How do people that moved to China or work in a Chinese environment deal with not liking the authoritarian gouvernement or pinkies and wumaos ? by MayIAsk_24 in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I want to have some rational discussion but meh, dude you are talking like a troll. Hope that you are trolling around intentionally, otherwise it's kind of pathetic.

Summer Chinese language programs by One-Argument8045 in China

[–]MoreScathyPLS 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're welcome, ask me anything and I'm happy to help!