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U.S. Adopts New Anti-China Defense Methodology! Achieves Success Via Fast-Food Exports!

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Official UN Poop Inspector

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Jan 1, 2013, 11:23:32 AM1/1/13
to
Uncle Sam says, "Hell, I don't need armaments superiority to defeat
the ChinkaGooks. Thanks to the goons' addiction to our fatty, greasy
"cuisine," the growing Chinese OBESITY RATE is doing the job!"

=============

"In China, obesity bcomes a problem that’s foreign to survivors of its
great famine"

By Debra Bruno
December 31, 2012



OLDER PEOPLE in China remember the Great Famine of 1958-61, when 15
million to 45 million people died of hunger and related causes.

Today, nearly every street corner in Beijing and many other cities
seems to boast a McDonald’s. There are KFC outlets in almost every
Chinese city, 3,700 in all. Meanwhile, newly minted members of the
Chinese middle class have rushed to buy cars, leaving bicycles that
were once a major source of exercise rusting on the street. Pizza Hut
is considered a fancy date-night restaurant, T.G.I. Friday’s has
several branches in Beijing, and cans of Coca-Cola are sold at every
corner stand.

With fast food and rising affluence, a country only a generation
removed from hunger is getting fat. How fat? According to the World
Health Organization, the percentage of adults who are overweight and
obese rose from rose from 25 percent in 2002 to 38.5 percent in 2010
in a population of 1.37 billion. Urban dwellers account for much of
this. WHO projects that 50 to 57 percent of the Chinese population
will be too heavy by 2015. (By comparison, 69 percent of Americans age
20 and older are overweight or obese.)

There’s a standing joke, notes Lyn Wren, a physician with
International SOS Beijing Clinic, that “Chinese waistlines are growing
faster than the GDP.”

Given how impoverished the country was not long ago and how
impoverished parts of it still are, “having a problem where people are
eating too much — it can seem a little churlish to complain about
that,” says Paul French, the Shanghai-based author of “Fat China: How
Expanding Waistlines are Changing a Nation.” French and co-author
Matthew Crabbe found that even as recently as five years ago, obesity
wasn’t recognized as a problem by health professionals in China.

The Chinese Health Ministry has said it encourages healthful eating
programs in schools and the construction of more playgrounds to
promote exercise. And the Chinese Center for Disease Control and
Prevention makes vague references to “health promotion” and providing
“scientific guidance for healthy diets,” but nationwide campaigns
about eating healthfully and exercising are not evident.

In fact, pushing the population to lose weight, exercise and cut back
on unhealthful foods seems to strike a discordant note to some inside
the government, French says. “When I talked to government officials,
their argument was: Right now we’re trying to tell them to do and not
do a lot of things,” such as not spitting on the street, not dropping
trash everywhere and not driving “like complete idiots.”

“They know they can only tell people to do some things... before they
get fed up.”

Parental misperceptions


Although the era of famine is long past, many grandparents and parents
still push their children to eat a lot.

Setsuko Hosoda, a family doctor at Beijing United Family Hospital,
says the parents and grandparents she sees are “always worried that
their child is not eating enough.” A 2012 Penn State study of 176
Chinese children ages 6 to 18 found that 72 percent of mothers of
overweight children thought their children were normal or underweight.

Sissi Zhong, a 26-year-old Beijing secretary, recalls that her
grandparents got angry if she left food on her plate when she was a
child. “They said, ‘Do you know, in my time of food shortages, people
didn’t have food, so how can you waste your food?’ ” Zhong says. So
she cleaned her plate even if she was very full.

When her father came home from business trips with boxes of a Chinese
soft drink called Jianlibao, she started to put on weight. Drinking
four and five cans a day made her weight jump to 143 pounds by the
time she was 18. At 5-foot-3, that would put her barely into the
“overweight” category by U.S. standards, but she was miserable,
getting kicked off her school’s dance team for being too fat and being
teased by boys who liked her skinnier pals. Today, Zhong says she
spends many hours at the gym to stay slim.

Obesity has tended to be an issue that grows along with affluence.
Prosperity means bigger paychecks, which can mean more meat, fast
foods and bigger meals. Meanwhile, long hours at desk or factory jobs
instead of agricultural ones mean less physical activity. The obesity
problem is primarily an urban one in a population that is rapidly
urbanizing.

China also has particular problems, French says, that can promote
obesity. A survey he did found that recent scares about contaminated
milk, fruit and vegetables have made consumers feel more safe buying
and eating packaged foods. “It’s perceived to be less tainted,” he
says. “If it’s packaged and done by Nestle, they’re thinking and
hoping that there is not going to be poison” in the food. Yet, the fat
and sugar content of many packaged foods is often much higher than
that of fresh food.

Contradictory impulses are apparent here, much as in the United
States. Chinese editions of Vogue display models who are bone-thin.
When popular singer A-Mei suddenly seemed to gain weight, online
commentators wondered what had happened, until she gave an interview
attributing her extra pounds to a love of high-calorie green teas made
with tapioca balls, coconut jelly and sugar.

At the same time, China seems oddly fascinated by obesity. Two years
ago, a shopping mall in the city of Shenyang held an obesity
competition to celebrate International Women’s Day. Contestants stood
onstage in frilly white wedding dresses.

Surgical solutions


Chinese are turning to surgical solutions for weight loss. Huiqi Yang,
a general surgeon at Beijing United Family Hospital, has just started
offering an operation in which an adjustable band is surgically tied
around the stomach to constrict it, leading patients to eat less.
Chinese doctors have been doing such bariatric surgeries for 15 years,
but Yang says there is growing interest. She said she performed about
100 gastric-band surgeries in recent years at her previous hospital,
in the city of Tianjin.

Meanwhile, as obesity rises so do the ills associated with it.

A recent World Bank report said diabetes, heart disease and
hypertension are among several noncommunicable diseases threatening
China and other countries. The International Diabetes Federation
estimates that there are 92.3 million diabetics in China. No other
country has as many diabetics — not surprising, given that China is
the most populous country in the world — and even China’s outgoing
president, Hu Jintao, is rumored to have diabetes.

[Bruno is a writer based in China.]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/in-china-obesity-bcomes-a-problem-thats-foreign-to-survivors-of-its-great-famine/2012/12/28/7e746dc4-4872-11e2-820e-17eefac2f939_story.html

Liu Xiao Por is calling for an END to CPC 's ONE PARTY TOTAL MONOPOLY POWER in CHINA , resulting in Liu Xiao Por 's wife now under House Arrest

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Jan 2, 2013, 4:36:14 AM1/2/13
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KFC China was supplied with contaminated Beef from
slaughter houses and meat packers
in SHANGDONG province , China




On Jan 1, 11:23 pm, Official UN Poop Inspector <kink...@yahoo.com>
wrote:
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/in-china-obesit...

rst9

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Jan 2, 2013, 11:53:54 AM1/2/13
to
On Jan 2, 1:36 am, "Liu Xiao Por is calling for an END to CPC
's ONE PARTY TOTAL MONOPOLY POWER in CHINA , resulting in Liu
Xiao Por 's wife now under House Arrest" <voivodv...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> KFC  China  was  supplied  with   contaminated  Beef  from
>  slaughter  houses  and  meat  packers
>  in  SHANGDONG  province  , China

We have a lot of "contaminated beef" used within the U.S., so don't
knock it.

Zang FangZhou , famous Chinese Blogger , Beijing . China

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Jan 2, 2013, 11:25:12 PM1/2/13
to
ja

American are Fat and Obies



because of homornes and contaminations in
US beef .






Chinese are getting poisoned
because
of contaminated chickens and beef
supplied to KFC
and to Mcdonnald
in China .

Xi JINPING , Head of the CPC , Communist Party of CHINA

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Jan 3, 2013, 8:24:28 AM1/3/13
to
some poor Americans are stealing
cattles
in Texas



On Jan 3, 11:25 am, "Zang FangZhou , famous Chinese Blogger ,

rst9

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Jan 3, 2013, 10:38:12 AM1/3/13
to
On Jan 3, 5:24 am, "Xi JINPING , Head of the CPC , Communist
Party of CHINA" <abalwaleedbinta...@gmail.com> wrote:
> some  poor   Americans    are  stealing
> cattles
>  in Texas

Cattle thieves are everywhere, komin.
An big angus calf is worth ten thousand dollars.

the E V I L Prophet Muhammud fucked teenage gril 's cunt , was a DIRTY Human Scum

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Jan 3, 2013, 12:26:30 PM1/3/13
to
ja


some Americans are stealing hundreds and
thousands at a time

Repeatedly Raped and Loving It!

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Jan 3, 2013, 3:25:57 PM1/3/13
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"Fat woman who fly naked upside-down have big crackup."

--- Confucius

=========================

"China's ‘weibo’ accounts shuttered as part of Internet crackdown"

By Keith B. Richburg
January 3, 2013
,

BEIJING – Several influential Chinese bloggers, activists and even a
popular cartoonist have had their online microblogging accounts shut
down in recent days, belying the hopes of many here that the country’s
new Communist Party leaders might begin to relax strict controls over
the Internet and free expression.

Instead, the latest moves against “weibo,” the wildly-popular Twitter-
like microblogging sites, appear to suggest that the party’s new
leaders, led by General Secretary Xi Jinping, may be more intent on
reforming the country’s economy than opening up space in the political
sphere.

Among those whose weibo accounts were disabled in December were
journalists Shi Feike, an investigative reporter, and Cheng Yizhong,
founder and former chief editor of the Southern Metropolis Daily. Also
blocked were Sichuan blogger and activist Ran Yunfei, and Xiao Han, an
associate professor at the China University of Political Science and
Law.

Shi had done in-depth reporting on the corruption and abuse of power
in Chongqing that led to the purge and arrest of former Politburo
member Bo Xilai. Ran, who has frequently run afoul of Chinese
authorities in the past for his outspokenness, said he was chatting
with friends via weibo on Dec. 24, when he discovered his messages
were no longer going through. He said he never received a notice from
the hosting company, Sina Weibo, and still has no explanation as to
why his account was closed.

Ran said he “posted some messages satirizing the so-called new
governance” of Xi Jinping and Prime Minister-designate Li Keqiang, and
the recent Internet crackdown. Having his account shut, Ran said,
“only proves that what I said was right.”

Another microblogger who uses satire to tackle sensitive topics is the
cartoonist Kuang Biao, who said he publishes most of his work online.
Kuang also found his weibo account closed, at 7 p.m. Friday.

“I guess my political cartoons made them unhappy,” Kuang said. “I just
can’t figure out why they are even afraid of cartoons. They lack
confidence and don’t have any sense of humor.” Kuang said his cartoons
mainly satirized official policy pronouncements and the well-
documented misbehavior of some Communist Party officials.

The closures come just days after the government imposed new
regulations requiring weibo users to register with their real names,
which Internet freedom advocates said would lead to a stifling of the
current free-wheeling debate allowed, within limits, on weibo. The
government has said the new requirement was aimed at preventing online
fraud and protecting private information from Internet scammers.

Xinhua, China’s official state news agency, said fears that the
restrictions would stifle the Internet were “an insult to the courage
of today's Chinese Internet users, who are both more aware of free
speech and braver in expressing themselves, whether anonymously or
not.”

In a signed Dec. 28 article, Xinhua said the new rules “are quite
moderate, as they mainly require Internet users to use their real
names when signing web access agreements with service providers.”
Xinhua called the new policy “the first major effort by Chinese
authorities to protect users' personal information online via forceful
legal tools.”

“And it is unlikely to be the last,” the Xinhua article added.

Also in recent weeks, the government censorship apparatus, known as
the Great Firewall, has begun more aggressively blocking the virtual
private networks, or VPNs, that many Chinese and foreign residents
routinely use to access blocked Web sites such as Google, Facebook,
YouTube and Twitter.

The apparent Internet clampdown seems to contradict the expectation
here by many that Xi and the new leadership might be more tolerant of
weibo’s burgeoning free speech forum, as they try to cultivate a more
popular image for a party buffeted by corruption scandals and tales of
power abuses at the highest levels.

“The hope for that kind of openness was less based on any kind of
evidence and more based on hope,” said Bill Bishop, a longtime China
resident who publishes the Sinocism online newsletter on current
political, economic and social news.

Despite the new leaders’ recent remarks about economic reform, Bishop
said, “there’s nothing in there about loosening their restrictions on
the Internet.”

“I do think you’re going to see some pretty aggressive measures on
economic reform,” Bishop said. “You’ve got a party that believes in
pursuing economic reform without comparable political reform.”

[Wang Juan in Shanghai contributed to this report.]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/chinas-weibo-accounts-shuttered-as-part-of-internet-crackdown/2013/01/03/f9fd92c4-559a-11e2-89de-76c1c54b1418_story.html

CPC , Chinese Imperialist Communist Party of CHINA , the New Imperialist Force in ASEAN

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Jan 3, 2013, 7:30:30 PM1/3/13
to
we the CPC only wants to
make sure that
every Chinese thinks in the same way as we the CPC do



we the CPC just wants
to make sure that every Chinese in
China
thinks the way we the CPC tell them to think



What is WRONG with That ?




On Jan 4, 3:25 am, "Repeatedly Raped and Loving It!"
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/chinas-weibo-accounts-shuttered-a...

rst9

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Jan 3, 2013, 9:18:41 PM1/3/13
to
On Jan 3, 4:30 pm, "CPC , Chinese Imperialist Communist Party of
CHINA , the New Imperialist Force in ASEAN"
<communistpartyofchin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> we  the  CPC  only  wants  to
>  make  sure  that
> every  Chinese  thinks   in   the  same  way  as  we the  CPC  do
>
> we  the  CPC   just  wants
> to make  sure  that    every  Chinese in
> China
>   thinks  the  way  we  the  CPC  tell  them  to  think
>
> What is  WRONG  with  That  ?
>

Chinese always think and do the opposite of what's being told.
China's worst enemy is the Chinese people themselves.

ltl...@hotmail.com

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Jan 3, 2013, 9:49:54 PM1/3/13
to
On 1月3日, 下午3時25分, "Repeatedly Raped and Loving It!"
<kink...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> "Fat woman who fly naked upside-down have big crackup."
>
> --- Confucius
>
> =========================
>
> "China's 'weibo' accounts shuttered as part of Internet crackdown"
>
> By Keith B. Richburg
> January 3, 2013
> ,
>
> BEIJING - Several influential Chinese bloggers, activists and even a
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/chinas-weibo-accounts-shuttered-a...

Looks like another effort to make American readers dumb.
1. A simple search will reveal that Ran Yunfei was still publishing
his microblog.
The following is Mr Ran Yunfei's site:
http://t.163.com/ranyunfei

Hence it is not true that he was blocked by the government for what he
had written.

2. He did complained about Sina Weiblog
It seems that Sina Weiblog had start to charge for membership with
enhanced service
since last summer. Many microbloggers refused to pay. Ran's could be
one of them
and hence got his account blocked. In fact, Ran had written in his
Dec-30th
microblog that he would not pay for Sina Weiblog including membership
fee although
he was given a Jan 5th deadline. According to him, Sina had made him a
member
and charging him without his explicit consent.

我从不会给新浪交任何费用包括会员费用,但居然是会员,且是一月五日到期,
不知谁学了雷疯兼韩峰。我想问的是,有没有人交了费,还是被转世,且能打官司
的?要是可以的话,我倒是想交点费,也好与让人转世的机构打点官司。请知情的
朋友指点一二。十分感谢
来自网易微博
(1) 转发(10) 收藏 评论(6)
2012-12-30 08:53 冉云飞

Bo Xilai , ex- memeber of the CPC .

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Jan 4, 2013, 8:27:31 AM1/4/13
to
rst9 is still insisting
that
the CPC gives every Chinese in China
their
TOTAL FREEDOM of EXPRESSION inside CHINA .

rst9

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Jan 4, 2013, 11:18:05 AM1/4/13
to
On Jan 4, 5:27 am, "Bo Xilai , ex- memeber of the CPC ."
<hinduvis...@gmail.com> wrote:
> rst9  is  still  insisting
> that
>  the  CPC    gives   every  Chinese in  China
> their
>  TOTAL  FREEDOM  of  EXPRESSION inside  CHINA  .
>

komin, if you make waves, no matter where you are, where you go,
you'll be crushed, not only in China, in the U.S. too.

You are just too brainwashed, too paranoid to face the truth.

Zang FangZhou , famous Chinese Blogger , Beijing . China

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Jan 4, 2013, 1:38:20 PM1/4/13
to
rst9 is still saying
the CPC gives every Chinese in China
their Total Freedom of Expression

rst0

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Jan 4, 2013, 3:29:23 PM1/4/13
to
On Jan 4, 10:38 am, "Zang FangZhou , famous Chinese Blogger ,
Beijing . China" <verinvanv...@gmail.com> wrote:
> rst9  is  still  saying
>  the  CPC  gives  every Chinese in  China
> their  Total  Freedom  of  Expression
>

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