Monday, December 02, 2019

Basic Dictatorship, Part Deux

When Justin declared his undying love for the dictatorship that starved millions of its own people to death, that abandoned (and still abandon) girls and the disabled in god-awful orphanages, that forcibly repatriates North Koreans and treats North Korean women like sex slaves, that harvests the organs of political prisoners, that denies anything wrong happened at Tienanmen Square, that oppresses its own citizens and strangles the global economy, no one batted an eyelid.

No one put any thought into Justin's poor attempts to make China, and not the US, Canada's major trading partner.

Where was everyone when Justin was b!#ch-slapped over the two Canadians still in Chinese prisons?

Who funded Justin's campaign? Why, the Chinese did!

If anyone thinks that Justin is going to stand up to his Chinese bosses for "rights", they are more than mistaken.


When Canadians still buy Chinese-made rubbish and ignore that their village idiot (whom they gladly re-elected) crawls on his knees to the paper dragon, just remember that the people of Hong Kong - who have so much to lose - have more intestinal fortitude and dignity than is possible for this country to produce.




This b!#ch would be organ fodder if she was in China. She should think about that as she sits in her mansion and complains about the gross unfairness of Western rule of law:

Meng Wanzhou, the Chinese technology executive facing possible extradition to the U.S., has been reading books, completing oil paintings and noting the kindness of Canadians as she awaits continued court proceedings from Vancouver, according to an open letter.

On the anniversary of her arrest at Vancouver International Airport, Meng reflects on her year in Canada, in a blog post titled "Your warmth is a beacon that lights my way forward" that was published on the official Huawei website. 

The post says Meng never intended to be in Canada as long as she has, and that, at times, it's been a struggle of fear, disappointment and "torment."

The tone of the piece is more positive than negative, but a contrast to the experience of two Canadians jailed in China weeks after her arrest.

"Over the past year, I have also learned to face up to and accept my situation," Meng writes. "I'm no longer afraid of the unknown."

Organ fodder, b!#ch. If the party ever got its hands you, that is exactly what you would be. Not even daddy could save you from that.




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