Re: expendable chinese - Lecherdog is a *** Head !



That makes him a real *** Head !


On Jul 31, 10:16 am, Ira IRa IRA Humperdink MD
<markdemer...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
hey, lecher ! now we know why you are so stupid ! you have been
drinking *** contaminated water from those mainland chaans all these
years !
bwahahahaha !!

On Jul 31, 8:48 am, JianZeMin is a Jap *** <moc...@xxxxxxxx>
wrote:



even the formal media of PRC had report the river pollution is very
poor. especially in hongkong, the river-water sold to hongkong is very
dirtyly polluted !!!!!
that bed-maid-*** is lunatic to tell lies very obviously.

bmo...@xxxxxxx wrote:
On Jul 29, 9:27 pm, rst0wxyz <rst0w...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Jul 29, 6:05 pm, bmo...@xxxxxxx wrote:

On Jul 29, 7:37 am, rst0wxyz <rst0w...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Jul 29, 12:41 am, "z...@xxxxxxxxxxx" <zinss...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

for the love of money chinese exploit expendable chinese people.
is a harmonious society is only in hu jintao's perfect twisted dream?

LIANGQIAO, China -- Deep in the Guangdong province of China, I met a
woman I won't soon forget.

Wearing a straw hat and carrying a sickle, Zhu Chuuyun is a farmer,
growing rice like many in her village. She has an easy smile, with
astonishingly perfect teeth and the beautiful face of a model. Both
she and her 9-year-old daughter belong on the cover of magazines. Of
course, she is far away from the world of glamour and fashion. Here in
Liangqiao, Zhu is simply trying to survive. It isn't easy, and every
day she worries about the health of her and her daughter.

She told me it all started when the water in her village turned red.
First the red water claimed her crops, and then it stole away her
husband. He died an awful death, suffering for more than a year before
finally succumbing to cancer. The problem, as she described it to me,
is that the Hengshui River, which provides the only water to her
village, has become so polluted that it is slowly robbing the entire
area of life. The most tragic thing is that she has no choice but to
use this water, even though she believes it is killing people. She
told me this over quiet tears, sobbing and talking about how much she
misses her husband.

Despite the health risks, Zhu says she and her daughter still depend
on the river for their sustenance.
For a couple of days, we have been looking around the area where Zhu
Chuuyun lives. Many refer to this particular place as a cancer
village. In fact, nearly 30 out of the 400 people who call this
village home have died of cancer over the last several years. While it
is hard to say if this red water is the cause, we have learned a few
things. The river is in fact red, allegedly because of the oxidation,
or rusting, of heavy metals that are released during the mining
process at Dabaoshan, a mine through which the river runs 60
kilometers away. That same mining process also results in the
deposition of heavy metals such as lead, arsenic, zinc and cadmium
into the water at staggeringly high levels, and we do know those
chemicals can cause cancer. In fact, according to scientists, Hengshui
River is now a grade five out of five, meaning it is too toxic to
touch, let alone irrigate crops or drink.

Xing Jing, an environmental lawyer, is determined to sue the mining
company. This young Chinese woman, who reminds me of Erin Brockovich,
has been steadily collecting evidence to TRY to make the case on
behalf of this cancer village. But given that the country of China
runs the mining company, her challenge is a formidable one. Still,
Xing Jing wants to do it for people like Zhu Chuuyun, Zhu's daughter
and the husband and father they'll never see again.

-- By Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN Chief Medical Correspondent

Lies, all lies. Anyone who has lived in Guangdong province knows
water come from the well in the village, not the river.

So you know for a fact that not a single village in Guangdong gets its
water from a river?

Besides, the
currents of the rivers are too strong, too turblent to be anything but
good fresh water.

And you know for a fact that not a single river in Guandong is
polluted?

I've seen with my own eyes in 2003 when I returned
to the village when I was born

That's one village. Your argument is not convincing.

When the monsoon season comes in China, it rains for days non-stop.
It would be fool-hardy to build a village by the river as it would be
almost flooded as the monsoon season comes. Villages get their water
by wells. Small town were built by the river because of transporting
goods to the town for sale. I took pictures of the river by the town
we used to shop as I specifically remember going down to the boats to
buy sugar canes loaded up on the boats.

For someone who has never been there, you have no idea what it was
like in rural China.

In fact I have been there, but that's not really the point. You're
asserting that no river in Guangdong is polluted, and that no village
in Guangdong gets its water from a river. You can can believe what you
like but to me that's not at all convincing.

The currents were just too strong and too fast
for the river to get polluted. If I can find those pictures, I'll
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