[quote]BEIJING (AFP) - Chinese scholar Yuan Hongbing can still vividly recall a scene he says he witnessed more than 30 years ago – a Mongol woman bound at her hands and feet, hung from a tree over a burning cauldron and roasted alive.
She was suspected of being a member of a political party trying to separate the Inner Mongolia region from China.
Yuan, who fled to Sydney in July seeking political asylum, plans to include that account and many others of human rights abuses over the past decades in four books he fled China to publish…[/quote]
Or would exposing that source involve you removing your trousers and shorts?
“It is better to remain silent and be thought ignorant that to speak and remove any doubt.”[/quote]
Dude, get a newspaper archive, a black civil rights in the USA textbook, an encyclopedia, a search engine, or talk to anyone with an education, and you’ll come to the same conclusion as Wolf.
[quote]“It is better to remain silent and be thought ignorant that to speak and remove any doubt.”
[/quote]
Words to live by, Tainan Cowboy. Mark them well.
Stop picking on Mississippi. That kind of shit happens all over the place. Tell me the state you’re from, Wolf, and we can easily google some sort of atrocity like that against some ethnic minority, no matter what part of the world you’re from. It never fails to amaze me the hypocrisy of people who denounce racism by scapegoating those “southern rednecks”.
You guys that are amazed at a Mongolian woman hot-pot should read a few books on the CR or the Great Leap Forward, or even the Japanese war over Manchuria. Makes roasting a woman in a pot look like a girl guide outing. Eighteen Layers of Hell is pretty shocking, and deals with pretty much the present day, not 30 years ago. Chinese history is just one repressive murdering regime after another, why would the CCP be any different ?
Just finished a biography of Jiang Qing. What a monster.