Monday, July 06, 2009

oh, makes sense: uighurs were doing another 'operation baby factory' with a han woman

jul 6th, 2009

and given that han women are scarce (what is it, 30 million 'missing women'?), the hans did not appreciate the mohammedans pawing the han woman.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/China/Violence-erupts-in-Chinas-Xinjiang-region-2-killed/articleshow/4741281.cms

interesting that mohammedans treat their women so badly, but are constantly rioting because a) somebody else looked at said women, b) they want the right to grab other people's women.

the word 'chattel' nicely describes women in mohammedanism as well as christism.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Rajiv and fellow blog readers. Whats your take on the Chinese angle to Sri Lanka?


So you just got back from Sri Lanka. What did you see there? What did you learn?

Kaplan: The biggest takeaway fact about the Sri Lankan war that’s over now is that the Chinese won. And the Chinese won because over the last few years, because of the human rights violations by the Sri Lankan government, the U.S. and other Western countries have cut all military aid. We cut them off just as they were starting to win. The Chinese filled the gaps and kept them flush with weapons and, more importantly, with ammunition, with fire-fighting radar, all kinds of equipment. The assault rifles that Sri Lankan soldiers carry at road blocks throughout Colombo are T-56 Chinese knockoffs of AK-47s. They look like AK-47s, but they’re not.

What are the Chinese getting out of this? They’re building a deep water port and bunkering facility for their warships and merchant fleet in Hambantota, in southern Sri Lanka. And they’re doing all sorts of other building on the island.

Now, why did the Chinese want Sri Lanka? Because Sri Lanka is strategically located. The main sea lines of communication between the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea, and between the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. It’s part of China’s plan to construct a string of pearls – ports that they don’t own, but which they can use for their warships all across the Indian Ocean.

Sri Lanka defeated, more or less completely, a 26 year-long insurgency. They killed the leader and the leader’s son. But there are no takeaway lessons for the West here. The Sri Lankan government did it by silencing the media, which meant capturing the most prominent media critic of the government and killing him painfully. And they made sure all the other journalists knew about it.




Read More Here