Anonymous wrote:Where were her parents???? She was laying in the road for quite some time-- why did her parents leave a 2 year old to wander by herself on a busy street?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I should preface the rest of this by saying that we have a lot of Chinese and Chinese-American friends and that they have been nothing but kind to us.
However, last year I was somewhere where lots of Chinese families congregate regularly (don't want to give any further details). All of a sudden, I heard high pitched howling through the crowd, and looking around, saw people's stares fixed on one specific spot beyond my sight.
I walked through the crowd towards the howling and saw a little boy lying on the ground screaming and holding his head, while another boy sat next to him and was trying to comfort him. None of the adults around had moved to help.
I knelt next to the boy and asked what had happened and his friend told me that they were rough housing and the boy had slipped and hit his head on the ground (hard paved surface). I asked the boy to try to see if he could stand up (he could), and checked him for one of the immediate tell-tale signs of head trauma (I'm not a doctor but my kids have hit their head on the ground on occasion too), asked him where his parents were (they'd dropped him off), and took him to one of the adults responsible for the event and explained what had happened.
Throughout this, not a single other adult around intervened in any way. I have wondered since what would have happened if the kid had had some serious issue and I hadn't happened to be there--I assume someone would have intervened, but how long would it have taken?
three questions: 1) are you certain they're Chinese? 2) are they Chinese immigrants or native-born Chinese American? 3) race of the boy?
Anonymous wrote:Do not watch the video. Do not.
I did. And I'm very sorry that I did.
Anonymous wrote:Do not watch the video. Do not.
I did. And I'm very sorry that I did.
Anonymous wrote:It is a mistake to ignore the cultural implications of a government and society built on the ideas that human life is not intrinsically valuable and the state is God. China currently has about 30 million men with no hope of getting married, and that number grows every day. This has never happened before in human civilization (just as Japan's age imbalance has never happened). Human trafficking, cheap abortions, "sharing" of females--this is all happening at an unimaginable scale already. And it is all taking place BECAUSE human life is not seen as sacred. And these attitudes are being exported (India, for example).
Ideas have consequences. Political theory changes the direction of humanity. What will China do with its millions of "surplus" men, especially as they start to destabilize society?
This article should give several foreboding hints as to how this little girl died such a horrible death--it was written about a year ago:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1265068/China-The-worlds-new-superpower-beginning-century-supremacy-alarming-surplus-males.html
Anonymous wrote:I did not click on the link but this is so very horrible. And was the video shot with a cell phone? If so, who stands there with a cell phone watching a child go through this? Monstrous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not watch the video. Do not.
I did. And I'm very sorry that I did.
+1
I can't get the images out of my head.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not watch the video. Do not.
I did. And I'm very sorry that I did.
+1
I can't get the images out of my head.
adding to this, i think you can say this about many countries, not just china. this includes the US. people just seem to be losing the humanistic touch these days because of technology. we hide behind emails, twitter, facebook, texting, surfing the internet, etc and are not connecting with one another. i am saying this as someone who loves technology any my latest devices. my thoughts are with yue yue and i wish her peace.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is sad what happened. I cannot imagine ever leaving someone to their death without helping.
That said, in reading some of the responses in this post, I hope that this will not translate into discrimination or typecasting of asians (chinese or otherwise).
This has nothing to do with asians, or even Chinese people. It has everything to do with the current societal culture in China. In a country of 1.3 billion people, there are obviously countless kind, giving, empathetic individuals. But overall, it's nasty, brutish, and unforgiving in a way that makes the US look like a bastion of compassion.