本帖最後由 kimmi8k 於 2012-6-26 04:10 PM 編輯
Yeah, it's been some time really. But buddy, distance n time makes no difference d. Sure, got got some light yrs of catching up here hehe! Buddies got the 7th connection...which travels through time with the speed of light in waves lengths to catch the frequency of sound, reaching the headquarters haha!
The WikiLeak video thing, well this kinda stuff occurred throughout man's history. Man fighting for Freedom or Power..they r like soul partners, inseperable. Just like Economic n Politics they run along side, without the other they can't survived. Constantly, running for power n authority against each other like rivals.
Behind the camera, n inside the script room, whatever happened no one knows for sure. One certain thing is the Media is very powerful, and AV1 makes used of it to their own advantage.
If you see, what is happening in China to regular chinese netizens, of what the government did it wld killed many more bugs n virus then all the antivirus online.
At 3 a.m. on June 4, three days after being illegally locked up by the local government, Feng Jianmei, a 7-month pregnant woman in a small town in Northwest China, saw the body of her unborn baby dragged out of her uterus. The 7-month-old fetus appeared to have already taken good shape. Feng’s sister, in outrage and grief, took several pictures of the devastated mother lying in bed with her dead baby boy, and later uploaded to the Internet, which has sparked widespread public criticism over the cruelty of the local government as well as the inhumane One Child Policy.
Deng Jiyuan, husband of Feng, wrote in the hugely popular microblogging platform Sina Weibo that the atrocity was the local government’s response to their family’s failure to pay a 40,000 fine for the extra birth (the second child). While he was still hurrying on his way to the hospital, her wife was pinned down and injected with a poison to kill the unborn baby.
Deng, the husband, said their family is steeped in debt as Deng’s mother is being treated for cancer, and they really cannot afford the 40,000 fine. He showed the reporter a text message (image below) sent to him from a birth control official: “40,000, not a penny less.”
Governments at all levels often get away with forced abortion by suppressing such news and staying mum.
The news and picture came from a web posting in Baidu’s discussion forum: Family planning authorities in Moshan town, administered by Linyi city, Shandong province, forced a 9-month pregnant woman into abortion. According to the post, the baby “even gave a cry when it came out.” The family, on hearing the cry, went over to see the baby, before it stopped crying or breathing. Doctors pronounced its death.
The image shows the 9 month fetus lying dead in a bucket. Because the parents of the baby already have a child, the local government hunted them down and forced abortion, citing the One Child Policy, which is imposed on all urban Han Chinese families. The mother was restrained as doctors injected her with a drug to kill the unborn baby. But after the baby was dragged out of its mother’s body, it was still alive and began to cry, before doctors left it in a bucket and drowned it.
Hu Jie (胡杰), a 25-year-old, lost one kidney in a registered hospital. He was wheedled, menaced and detained by underground kidney dealers, before at the last minute hospital staff in cahoots with dealers seized him, forcibly anesthetized him, slit his abdomen open and took away his kidney.
Actually, Hu Jie did think about selling one kidney for 40,000 yuan (US$6,000) to pay off his debts. The receiving end had to pay 300,000 yuan to the agency/dealers in order to get the kidney, and hundreds of thousands more for searching for the match. However, whenever Hu Jie hesitated and recoiled, dealers blocked his way, took away his bank cards, cellphone, baggage and I.D, and even threatened to kill him, unless he complied.
After Hu Jie woke up from the surgery, he only got 27,000 yuan(US$4,000) wire transferred to his bank account. No paper or consent was signed in advance between Hu Jie or his family and the hospital. The underground dealers vanished. The hospital simply said, it is nurses’ individual action, which has nothing to do with the hospital.
There are many more victims like Hu Jie in China, who are either tricked or forced into underselling their kidneys. Beneath the surface of China’s ban on human organ trade are huge and intricate networks that sprawl across the country and involve illegal agencies, criminal gangs, registered hospitals and medical practitioners.
Who's Mistakes Who's to Blame Who's Fault..???? Why? How? Where? When?What? |