A group of over 240 Chinese youth spontaneously gathered at a shopping plaza in Zhuhai in southern Guangdong province of China to dance to the late Michael Jackson's "Beat It".
For more information and Chinese netizen reactions (some very critical), please visit http://www.chinasmack.com/2011/videos/zhuhai-flash-mob-michael-jackson-memori...
20 years from now.. there will be no more chinese women.
d8168055 2 months ago in playlist Uploaded videos
U guys who dink chinese government are dictators are TRULY WRONG!!! I love China even tho im american. American have too much freedom dat ppl bring guns to school. In China, u can hardly heard this kind of story. U need some rules to protect the ppl's safety and keep the country in order. Government dont control everything like wat my history teacher Mr Spinella said. He said everyone has the same car, same color shirt, no freedom at all, but all i can say is a Big "NOOO"
ShinethroughDreams 4 months ago 2
@Hongers1 The U.S. government needs to reevaluate some foreign policy. Because China is considered an enemy of democracy we have sided with a puppet state we instilled in Japan, who are a bunch of fucking racist pigs that committed the most heinous war crimes against the Chinese and Koreans. China does not want the U.S. near its borders because it chose sides against them. It chose to harbor these war criminals in exchange for medical data that they conducted on living prisoners. Its a shame.
eanielsen123 5 months ago
@Hongers1 Do you know why thats the case? Im an American, and as much as I love my country and hold it to the highest standard in the world because of its values like freedom of speech and religion and freedom of the press, its still guilty of its crimes. Following the end of the Sino-Jap and second World War, the U.S. basically spit in the face of the Chinese by offering General Shiro Ishii immunity from prosecution at a war crimes tribunal in exchange for Japans medical data.
eanielsen123 5 months ago
that's crazy :o
ayoubjanhi 7 months ago
@XxKuRoTsUbAsAxX yeah however these rules are on two completely different level, whihc shows are improvement in human right in china since then, i can exactly say that the human rights in china is "good" these days, but it's getting better... slowly, but hey small improvements is better than no improvements. i mean just looks at north korea
Hongers1 8 months ago
@Hongers1 The way I see it, both of these situations from the past and present are similar in the fact that they both demonstrate the Chinese government's authoritarian rule and desire to control their citizens. They persecute dissenters out of fear of change and they persecuted those who immersed themselves in other cultures in the past because of the same reason. This is why I feel that "joke" still applies to this day.
XxKuRoTsUbAsAxX 8 months ago
@XxKuRoTsUbAsAxX yeah that's because he openly criticised the chinese government or something like that, i am well aware that anyone in china will get arrested and jailed for that even these day. i'm talking about back in the old days when people get arrested for listening to any type of pop music or associating themselves with anything from the western world, which was ridiculously considered to be a type of treason. Ahhh Mao, you crazy crazy chin-moled fat man.
Hongers1 8 months ago
@Hongers1 No it's still pretty damn funny and as relevant as ever. Chinese dissenter Liu Xiaobo won his Nobel award in 2010 and the Chinese government immediately started cracking down on dissenters and even placing his wife under house arrest. Start living in the present please.
XxKuRoTsUbAsAxX 8 months ago
@mzrealm that joke is old, it would've been funny if it was the 1970's, quit living in the past man
Hongers1 8 months ago