Recent random killings in China and the rise in exit bans on foreigners highlight growing social unrest and concerns over the economy.
1Insect encyclopedia ★.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:01:24.10ID:LjogJTqJ
There has been a series of random killings in China. On the 19th, a car plowed into a group of elementary school students in Hunan Province, and according to local media, 11 people were taken to hospital. Also on the 11th, a car went out of control in Guangdong Province, killing 35 people. Local people also commented, “It’s inhumane. Some have expressed concern that this could be retaliation against society, but the Chinese Foreign Ministry stated that no foreigners were killed or injured and stressed that “China is the safest country in the world.” Meanwhile, another issue is gaining attention online. That is the ban on foreigners leaving the country. The Wall Street Journal reports that there have been many cases of foreign businessmen working in China being banned from leaving the country. The reason behind the ban on foreigners leaving the country is said to be the Anti-Espionage Law. A law aimed at cracking down on activities that endanger national security was amended last year to expand the definition of espionage. Government crackdown is said to be intensifying. In response to this situation, voices are beginning to be raised online saying, “It’s no longer possible to do business in China,” and “Going to China, even for tourism, is a risk in itself.” “Abema Prime” invited a sociologist with expertise in Chinese affairs, as well as a human rights lawyer who had his license revoked in China and fled the country, to discuss the current situation in China. ■Random killings occurring across China… What was the reason for the crimes?
Random killings continue in China. Sociologist and University of Tokyo graduate school professor Tomoko Ako commented on the background of the incident in Hunan Province, “I heard that the perpetrator who crashed his car into the woman was not low-income or anything like that, but was dissatisfied with the divorce proceedings. “While authorities have stated that this is a personal matter, it is possible that he felt the judicial system and trial were unfair.” Regarding the incident in which eight students were stabbed at a vocational school, he said, “The perpetrator had been forced to work 16 hours a day and had not been paid. He had written letters calling for advances in labor law. “It is possible that these crimes were committed indiscriminately by people who had opinions about government laws, policies, systems and the judicial system out of despair.” Li Jinxing, a human rights lawyer who came to Japan after his license was revoked in China, said, “It’s sad. I never thought something like this would happen in our country. As a lawyer who has worked in China for 20 years, this saddens me. This reveals the intensifying contradictions in Chinese society. Problems that could be solved by law are not being solved, and people lack a sense of security both psychologically and economically. It’s a form of people not loving themselves and not loving other people either. “Many contradictions and social disputes can be resolved through the law, but China’s legal system is not structured like Japan’s.” Regarding the implementation of the law within China, Li said, “As China’s GDP grows and the market expands, the demands on the law are increasing. However, the current legal system is incomplete. “There is a lack of a legal system to protect individual property and freedom,” he said, pointing out that the problem is that the law has not kept up with the rapidly developing economy. He added, “Over the past 40 years, China has presented itself to the world in a very positive light, but recently, the economy has suddenly deteriorated and these murders have suddenly increased, causing a great deal of disappointment and anxiety across the country.” ■China’s regulations remain strict: “If four or five people gather, the police show up”
In China, government restrictions on people’s group activities remain strict. Ako said, “Normally, when people with similar concerns gather together, they might form a network, create an organization, or hold a demonstration. But in China, there are severe restrictions on people’s ability to connect. So if four or five people gather together the police will arrive immediately. Even if you go to eat with someone who is under surveillance, such as an intellectual, the police will show up and you won’t be able to go to the restaurant you planned to go to.” “In this environment, it becomes difficult for people to talk to someone about their problems. Instead of allowing people to express themselves to relieve stress or to work constructively towards solving problems, the trend is always towards crackdowns. “Human rights lawyers were there to listen to complaints, provide services and lobby government agencies, but now they too have been arrested and are unable to carry out their role.” Perhaps in defiance of these restrictions, 100,000 university students made a massive bicycle trip in the middle of the night to go eat Xiaolongbao. Li agreed, saying, “Looking at the big picture, we can see a trend of regulations becoming increasingly strict within China.” “The COVID-19 pandemic has led to an increase in the ways in which information about citizens is restricted. In China, you need to show your ID to board a train, subway, or bus, and everyone has gotten used to that.”
Read more in the source (from Abema Prime).
Random killings continue in China. Sociologist and University of Tokyo graduate school professor Tomoko Ako commented on the background of the incident in Hunan Province, “I heard that the perpetrator who crashed his car into the woman was not low-income or anything like that, but was dissatisfied with the divorce proceedings. “While authorities have stated that this is a personal matter, it is possible that he felt the judicial system and trial were unfair.” Regarding the incident in which eight students were stabbed at a vocational school, he said, “The perpetrator had been forced to work 16 hours a day and had not been paid. He had written letters calling for advances in labor law. “It is possible that these crimes were committed indiscriminately by people who had opinions about government laws, policies, systems and the judicial system out of despair.” Li Jinxing, a human rights lawyer who came to Japan after his license was revoked in China, said, “It’s sad. I never thought something like this would happen in our country. As a lawyer who has worked in China for 20 years, this saddens me. This reveals the intensifying contradictions in Chinese society. Problems that could be solved by law are not being solved, and people lack a sense of security both psychologically and economically. It’s a form of people not loving themselves and not loving other people either. “Many contradictions and social disputes can be resolved through the law, but China’s legal system is not structured like Japan’s.” Regarding the implementation of the law within China, Li said, “As China’s GDP grows and the market expands, the demands on the law are increasing. However, the current legal system is incomplete. “There is a lack of a legal system to protect individual property and freedom,” he said, pointing out that the problem is that the law has not kept up with the rapidly developing economy. He added, “Over the past 40 years, China has presented itself to the world in a very positive light, but recently, the economy has suddenly deteriorated and these murders have suddenly increased, causing a great deal of disappointment and anxiety across the country.” ■China’s regulations remain strict: “If four or five people gather, the police show up”
In China, government restrictions on people’s group activities remain strict. Ako said, “Normally, when people with similar concerns gather together, they might form a network, create an organization, or hold a demonstration. But in China, there are severe restrictions on people’s ability to connect. So if four or five people gather together the police will arrive immediately. Even if you go to eat with someone who is under surveillance, such as an intellectual, the police will show up and you won’t be able to go to the restaurant you planned to go to.” “In this environment, it becomes difficult for people to talk to someone about their problems. Instead of allowing people to express themselves to relieve stress or to work constructively towards solving problems, the trend is always towards crackdowns. “Human rights lawyers were there to listen to complaints, provide services and lobby government agencies, but now they too have been arrested and are unable to carry out their role.” Perhaps in defiance of these restrictions, 100,000 university students made a massive bicycle trip in the middle of the night to go eat Xiaolongbao. Li agreed, saying, “Looking at the big picture, we can see a trend of regulations becoming increasingly strict within China.” “The COVID-19 pandemic has led to an increase in the ways in which information about citizens is restricted. In China, you need to show your ID to board a train, subway, or bus, and everyone has gotten used to that.”
Read more in the source (from Abema Prime).
無差別殺傷事件に出国禁止も…中国で何が起きている?「経済が崩壊に近い状態」「知識人同士が食事すると警察が来る」(ABEMA TIMES) - Yahoo!ニュース
中国で無差別殺傷事件が相次いでいる。19日には湖南省で小学生らの列に車が突っ込み、現地メディアによれば11人が搬送された。また11日にも広東省で車が暴走、35人が死亡した。現地の人々も「非人道的だ
66<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 20:11:08.73ID:p4HoIQeD
>>1
>If only 4 or 5 people gather, the police will show up
We can’t even get enough people to play mahjong lol.
>If only 4 or 5 people gather, the police will show up
We can’t even get enough people to play mahjong lol.
88<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 21:24:17.06ID:F2VBDC8m
>>1
In Japan, too, harsher penalties and a surveillance society are on the rise.
The end result of a populist society may be the same.
In Japan, too, harsher penalties and a surveillance society are on the rise.
The end result of a populist society may be the same.
4<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:04:57.45ID:J8DQir3b
China’s crime rate is at the same level as Africa and South America.
5<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:08:04.34ID:ZqTwDfRD
If the people enforcing the law rebel, it’s all over.
6<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:09:31.84ID:BKjXrz47
The tighter you tighten it, the more it rebounds, creating a negative spiral.
8<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:09:55.88ID:dycnBXrG
Apparently the First Emperor of Qin was like this too.
9<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:10:10.94ID:PLmgR9q4
This is everyday life in China🤣.
10<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:15:35.63ID:XcKzhmiT
It’s like the time of Qin Shi Huang. I wonder if Liu Bang or Xiang Yu will show up.
13<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:25:50.19ID:1y04wdRy
>>10
First, Chen Sheng and Wu Guang have to show up.
First, Chen Sheng and Wu Guang have to show up.
11<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:24:12.71ID:xBv5Ejb1
Those who feel oppressed and have no other choice are inspired by someone else’s sudden action and follow suit. Since this is China, perhaps we should call it the Chen Sheng-Wu Guang effect rather than the Werther effect?
12<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:25:05.48ID:7SceF3JL
Is it the Cultural Revolution again?
16<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:30:47.94ID:S867gIca
Finally, Pol Pot.
19<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:37:11.25ID:fuKbEzMW
Communism is no longer important, and the country has become one where only the selfish and ambitious can rise to the top, so there is no one at the top who sees society from the people’s perspective.
20<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:49:23.73ID:dCne1hhU
Wouldn’t it be better if Chinese people just didn’t leave the country?
23<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:56:49.18ID:jTtoWbOJ
The eve of the revolution.
27<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:01:36.06ID:SE/KwVWU
>>23
I wonder what color the Kun tribe will be next…
I wonder what color the Kun tribe will be next…
25<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 17:58:51.50ID:VSYt68Jt
It’s like the end of a long line of dynasties. Is it the An Lushan Rebellion in the local military districts again?
26<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:00:04.31ID:SE/KwVWU
For some reason, I thought the economy was similar to that of South Korea.
28<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:02:26.53ID:5GpwaQiP
If you watch movies from the Pol Pot era, you’ll think it was a living hell, but the Cultural Revolution was hundreds of times bigger. China can’t forget its success, so they’re going to do it again, a digital, fully-surveilled Cultural Revolution 2.0. People are being arrested just for trying to gather.
29<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:10:26.01ID:mt/Ts736
2025 and 2026 are going to be crazy lol.
30<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:10:43.94ID:mt/Ts736
Trump will get you.
31<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:11:56.08ID:5rpLbJqO
It truly is a land of carnage.
32<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:12:27.61ID:fKC8hPnD
The bubble burst and the country has become a completely outdated, declining dictatorship. The people are in hell with wage cuts, unpaid wages and high unemployment.
34<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:14:43.24ID:1o8h91Ae
Is this a return to the Mao era? Or is it a return of Pol Pot?
35<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:21:44.90ID:k1n2znLd
They say it’s okay because they’ve seen Japan’s bubble burst, but it’s not funny that they’re going to collapse in an even more dramatic way.
36<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:24:43.39ID:Y26RwdYI
Don’t let them leave the country.
37<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:25:01.12ID:Gd8NPZvh
Japan’s shitty media will not broadcast it.
38<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:26:30.80ID:y8RBW4f7
Maybe it’s the result of restricting the country to prevent rebellions, but dictatorships end up being scare mongers.
39<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:27:33.24ID:IdiUbNul
Is this a sign of a revolution?
40<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:28:12.90ID:Gd8NPZvh
We will be marching on bicycles in the middle of the night.
43<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 18:30:46.23ID:25vkMOP7
Maybe they’re targeting semiconductor-related engineers and banning them from leaving the country?
49<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 19:03:06.90ID:fjG+2T5k
Fighting amongst its own people is China’s national sport! It has not changed since ancient times.
50<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 19:04:43.43ID:pe2O99xn
What is Ishihara doing relaxing visa restrictions in this situation?
58<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 19:28:32.78ID:fKC8hPnD
The Chinese economy is completely finished and has entered a period of decline, but numbers like GDP will probably continue to rise in vain, lol.
67<丶`∀´>(´・ω・`)(`Ha´ )san.Nov. 24, 2024 (Sun) 20:17:05.55ID:Oi1x4acY
Bring back the glory of the Cultural Revolution!
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