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嘩,如果佔中噤好pay,噤重有人為左幾舊水反佔中?噤689真係要檢討下係咪出手太低![]()
大紀元同會社有冇關係
無
大紀元唔係法輪功架咩?點會有關係
我就係奇怪佢講d 野 同神仙d 野有d 類似
大紀元同會社有冇關係
無
大紀元唔係法輪功架咩?點會有關係
我就係奇怪佢講d 野 同神仙d 野有d 類似
因為佢地勤力爬文
一睇到佢個樣就燥
賤民日報都無再提, 梁賊仲廢 talk 證明無睇賤民日報
今日喺Office同同事傾閒計,佢話人X日報其實唔係畀普通百姓睇,係畀 (駐港) 官員睇,內文有共產黨嘅暗示、指示。
是真是假? (不過真假我都唔會睇。)
乜返一返學就爆幾頁出黎![]()
仲頒兩份禁制令tim..上下堂已經覺得自己脫節左![]()
我份工朝九晚八,放工返屋企食完飯都九點十點,有時見到喺工作其間咁多人出事、幫香港人頂住,我會內咎點解無Guts辭職去守。
睇緊captain american
d英文口音好難聽![]()
冇錯, 英國音好聽好多
美國音真係要好用心聽先聽得到
(我認我英文差)
我有時都被外國同事笑我九唔答八,因為聽錯其它野。我覺得唔好怕瘀,用多啲就得。
個精華pastebin link冇乜用既![]()
好多都冇講![]()
都係用hologalden睇算
有啲Hidden content我無儲到 (有時可能眼訓Copy埋),免得有心人等濃縮版就唔Login都睇到某啲Messages。
再加上我可能會Copy漏,所以都係請追Post。
有唔方便嘅地方,我唯有講聲唔好意思。
睇到神仙今日的說話
感覺今次運動好大機會失敗,最多只可能改變少少野,而家就好似垂死掙扎咁,睇來我地要爭取真正既民主仲有一段好長的路?
感覺今次運動好大機會失敗,最多只可能改變少少野,而家就好似垂死掙扎咁,睇來我地要爭取真正既民主仲有一段好長的路?
嘩,如果佔中噤好pay,噤重有人為左幾舊水反佔中?噤689真係要檢討下係咪出手太低![]()
哦 我明啦
大陸記者又做左好多手腳幫手
成件事最on9在於吹到2500咁大
大陸人係深圳一個月的平均工資都係4000左右咋
而條友成個樣亦都係大陸人樣
睇到神仙今日的說話
感覺今次運動好大機會失敗,最多只可能改變少少野,而家就好似垂死掙扎咁,睇來我地要爭取真正既民主仲有一段好長的路?
呢個唔使爆料都知,共產黨點會咁順攤滿足哂你個三個願望
睇到神仙今日的說話
感覺今次運動好大機會失敗,最多只可能改變少少野,而家就好似垂死掙扎咁,睇來我地要爭取真正既民主仲有一段好長的路?
呢個唔使爆料都知,共產黨點會咁順攤滿足哂你個三個願望![]()
可能以後行23條咁濟,唔俾鬧政府
睇到神仙今日的說話
感覺今次運動好大機會失敗,最多只可能改變少少野,而家就好似垂死掙扎咁,睇來我地要爭取真正既民主仲有一段好長的路?
呢個唔使爆料都知,共產黨點會咁順攤滿足哂你個三個願望![]()
可能以後行23條咁濟,唔俾鬧政府
留名等睇聽日6點鐘120分鐘各自表述+回帶
[hide]三恥肯定好開心,既瀉左大半隻鑊俾班細路,又可以係隔離VIP房食花生睇轉播[/size=1]/hide]
[hide]三恥肯定好開心,既瀉左大半隻鑊俾班細路,又可以係隔離VIP房食花生睇轉播[/size=1]/hide]
睇到神仙今日的說話
感覺今次運動好大機會失敗,最多只可能改變少少野,而家就好似垂死掙扎咁,睇來我地要爭取真正既民主仲有一段好長的路?
呢個唔使爆料都知,共產黨點會咁順攤滿足哂你個三個願望![]()
其實真係唔好灰
如果共匪真係讓步,但條件係之後要立廿三條,點做抉擇
成堆中国人嚟香港參與佔領
嘩,如果佔中噤好pay,噤重有人為左幾舊水反佔中?噤689真係要檢討下係咪出手太低![]()
哦 我明啦![]()
![]()
![]()
大陸記者又做左好多手腳幫手![]()
![]()
成件事最on9在於吹到2500咁大![]()
![]()
大陸人係深圳一個月的平均工資都係4000左右咋
而條友成個樣亦都係大陸人樣
成堆中国人嚟香港參與佔領
嘩,如果佔中噤好pay,噤重有人為左幾舊水反佔中?噤689真係要檢討下係咪出手太低![]()
哦 我明啦![]()
![]()
![]()
大陸記者又做左好多手腳幫手![]()
![]()
成件事最on9在於吹到2500咁大![]()
![]()
大陸人係深圳一個月的平均工資都係4000左右咋
而條友成個樣亦都係大陸人樣![]()
曲線佔領
成堆中国人嚟香港參與佔領
嘩,如果佔中噤好pay,噤重有人為左幾舊水反佔中?噤689真係要檢討下係咪出手太低![]()
哦 我明啦![]()
![]()
![]()
大陸記者又做左好多手腳幫手![]()
![]()
成件事最on9在於吹到2500咁大![]()
![]()
大陸人係深圳一個月的平均工資都係4000左右咋
而條友成個樣亦都係大陸人樣![]()
曲線佔領![]()
有鄉音都比人趕走 何況普通話?
在此內地竟然上到來膠登,簡直奇蹟…
希望會面有所成果,在內地的我繼續支持大家
希望會面有所成果,在內地的我繼續支持大家
一睇到佢個樣就燥
賤民日報都無再提, 梁賊仲廢 talk 證明無睇賤民日報
今日喺Office同同事傾閒計,佢話人X日報其實唔係畀普通百姓睇,係畀 (駐港) 官員睇,內文有共產黨嘅暗示、指示。
是真是假? (不過真假我都唔會睇。)乜返一返學就爆幾頁出黎![]()
仲頒兩份禁制令tim..上下堂已經覺得自己脫節左![]()
我份工朝九晚八,放工返屋企食完飯都九點十點,有時見到喺工作其間咁多人出事、幫香港人頂住,我會內咎點解無Guts辭職去守。
睇緊captain american
d英文口音好難聽![]()
冇錯, 英國音好聽好多
美國音真係要好用心聽先聽得到
(我認我英文差)
我有時都被外國同事笑我九唔答八,因為聽錯其它野。我覺得唔好怕瘀,用多啲就得。
我反而覺得British Accent好好聽但好易唔明
睇Sherlock、Doctor Who呢類英國劇成日都要靠字幕幫助
美國口音、美國劇反而唔洗字幕都明8成,我覺得我真係好唔英殖遺民
個價值觀好近美帝,好同意美國佬成日串、聽唔明英國人講咩
Hong Kong Leader Reaffirms Unbending Stance on Elections
By KEITH BRADSHER and CHRIS BUCKLEYOCT. 20, 2014
HONG KONG — The Beijing-appointed leader of Hong Kong, Leung Chun-ying, said Monday evening that it was unacceptable to allow his successors to be chosen in open elections, in part because doing so would risk giving poorer residents a dominant voice in politics.
Mr. Leung made the statement during a broad-ranging defense of his administration’s handling of pro-democracy protests that have disrupted the city for more than three weeks.
In an interview with a small group of journalists from American and European news media organizations, his first with foreign media since the city erupted in demonstrations, he acknowledged that many of the protesters are angry over the lack of social mobility and affordable housing in the city. But he argued that containing populist pressures was an important reason for resisting the protesters’ demands for fully open elections.
Continue reading the main story
RELATED COVERAGE
A policeman clashes with pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong on Sunday.Hong Kong Police Accuse Man of Inciting Protests OCT. 19, 2014
Presumed Guilty in China’s War on Corruption, Targets Suffer AbusesOCT. 19, 2014
Instead, he backed Beijing’s position that all candidates to succeed him as chief executive, the top post in the city, must be screened by a “broadly representative” nominating committee appointed by Beijing. That screening, he said, would insulate candidates from popular pressure to create a welfare state, and would allow the city government to follow more business-friendly policies to address economic inequality instead.

Leung Chun-ying, the chief executive of Hong Kong, supports Beijing’s lead role in screening the region’s future leaders. Credit Kin Cheung/Associated Press
Mr. Leung’s blunt remarks reflect a widely held view among the Hong Kong elite that the general public cannot be trusted to govern the city well. His statements appeared likely to draw fresh criticism from the democratic opposition, and to inflame the street struggle over Hong Kong’s political future.
Representatives of his government are scheduled to hold televised talks with student leaders of the protests, who have said that Mr. Leung was defending a political system stacked against ordinary citizens.
Mr. Leung said that if “you look at the meaning of the words ‘broadly representative,’ it’s not numeric representation.”
“You have to take care of all the sectors in Hong Kong as much as you can,” he said, “and if it’s entirely a numbers game and numeric representation, then obviously you would be talking to half of the people in Hong Kong who earn less than $1,800 a month.”
“Then you would end up with that kind of politics and policies,” he continued.
Continue reading the main story
MAP
Areas of Skirmishes and Protests in Hong Kong
The pro-democracy protesters have occupied parts of Hong Kong for more than three weeks.
OPEN MAP
Mr. Leung, who has received repeated backing from the Chinese Communist Party’s leadership, argued that the way to remedy social grievances was to expand the supply of housing and spur economic growth. He stressed the importance of maintaining the confidence of Hong Kong’s corporate elite, saying that was one of the goals of the city’s Basic Law, written a quarter-century ago after Britain handed sovereignty over Hong Kong back to China.
Mr. Leung spoke at Government House, the ornate mansion that served for more than a century as the official residence of British colonial governors and is now the chief executive’s residence. He said it had been remodeled recently so that he and his top aides could work there while protesters were besieging his offices downtown. “We didn’t miss a beat,” he said.
Continue reading the main story
Mr. Leung was appointed in 2012 after being endorsed by a 1,200-member committee of prominent Hong Kong residents. Critics say that committee was packed with Beijing’s supporters, but Mr. Leung said it was also broadly representative, as required in the Basic Law, because it included people in different professions, economic strata, religions and other segments of society.
One group he said he wooed on the committee were the 20 members chosen by sports officials and coaches. “If it was an entirely universal suffrage election,” Mr. Leung said, “then the sports community would not count, they would not feature on my radar screen.”
He also raised again the suspicions of his government and of Beijing that “foreign forces” had played a role in the street protests, although he declined repeatedly to identify those forces or provide any examples. “I didn’t overhear it in a teahouse, and it’s something that concerns us,” he said. “It’s something that we need to deal with.”

Protesters remained in the Admiralty neighborhood of Hong Kong on Monday. Credit Jeon Heon-Kyun/European Pressphoto Agency
A tenacious protest movement has spread beyond its initial student base to embrace discontented middle-class and blue-collar residents. But they face an unyielding Chinese Communist Party leadership, which has said the demonstrators have no chance of securing their demands.
Mr. Leung said he has tried to avoid letting standoffs between the protesters and the police escalate into anything that might echo the Tiananmen Square crackdown in Beijing in 1989. Protesters have accused the Hong Kong police of using excessive force in beating them back with pepper spray and batons. Mr. Leung said that he hoped the “dialogue” scheduled for Tuesday between student leaders and five of his top aides would help ease tensions.
Protesters have continued to call for Mr. Leung’s resignation or ouster, both over the police’s tactics against the demonstrators and over accusations of financial impropriety surrounding a business deal he made with an Australian company before he took office.
Mr. Leung’s opponents say he accepted $6.4 million from the company over the past two years and did not report it. He says the deal was legitimate and that he had no legal obligation to declare the income.
Mr. Leung offered several thinly veiled warnings on Monday that it was risky for the protesters to try the patience of the national authorities.
“So far Beijing has left it to the Hong Kong government to deal with the situation, so I think we should try our very best — and this is myself, the government and the people of Hong Kong — should try our very best to stay that way,” he said.
“Challenging myself,” he continued, “challenging the Hong Kong government, at these difficult times will do no one any service, will do Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy no service.”
哩次運動出盡力分化香港人
By KEITH BRADSHER and CHRIS BUCKLEYOCT. 20, 2014
HONG KONG — The Beijing-appointed leader of Hong Kong, Leung Chun-ying, said Monday evening that it was unacceptable to allow his successors to be chosen in open elections, in part because doing so would risk giving poorer residents a dominant voice in politics.
Mr. Leung made the statement during a broad-ranging defense of his administration’s handling of pro-democracy protests that have disrupted the city for more than three weeks.
In an interview with a small group of journalists from American and European news media organizations, his first with foreign media since the city erupted in demonstrations, he acknowledged that many of the protesters are angry over the lack of social mobility and affordable housing in the city. But he argued that containing populist pressures was an important reason for resisting the protesters’ demands for fully open elections.
Continue reading the main story
RELATED COVERAGE
A policeman clashes with pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong on Sunday.Hong Kong Police Accuse Man of Inciting Protests OCT. 19, 2014
Presumed Guilty in China’s War on Corruption, Targets Suffer AbusesOCT. 19, 2014
Instead, he backed Beijing’s position that all candidates to succeed him as chief executive, the top post in the city, must be screened by a “broadly representative” nominating committee appointed by Beijing. That screening, he said, would insulate candidates from popular pressure to create a welfare state, and would allow the city government to follow more business-friendly policies to address economic inequality instead.

Leung Chun-ying, the chief executive of Hong Kong, supports Beijing’s lead role in screening the region’s future leaders. Credit Kin Cheung/Associated Press
Mr. Leung’s blunt remarks reflect a widely held view among the Hong Kong elite that the general public cannot be trusted to govern the city well. His statements appeared likely to draw fresh criticism from the democratic opposition, and to inflame the street struggle over Hong Kong’s political future.
Representatives of his government are scheduled to hold televised talks with student leaders of the protests, who have said that Mr. Leung was defending a political system stacked against ordinary citizens.
Mr. Leung said that if “you look at the meaning of the words ‘broadly representative,’ it’s not numeric representation.”
“You have to take care of all the sectors in Hong Kong as much as you can,” he said, “and if it’s entirely a numbers game and numeric representation, then obviously you would be talking to half of the people in Hong Kong who earn less than $1,800 a month.”
“Then you would end up with that kind of politics and policies,” he continued.
Continue reading the main story
MAP
Areas of Skirmishes and Protests in Hong Kong
The pro-democracy protesters have occupied parts of Hong Kong for more than three weeks.
OPEN MAP
Mr. Leung, who has received repeated backing from the Chinese Communist Party’s leadership, argued that the way to remedy social grievances was to expand the supply of housing and spur economic growth. He stressed the importance of maintaining the confidence of Hong Kong’s corporate elite, saying that was one of the goals of the city’s Basic Law, written a quarter-century ago after Britain handed sovereignty over Hong Kong back to China.
Mr. Leung spoke at Government House, the ornate mansion that served for more than a century as the official residence of British colonial governors and is now the chief executive’s residence. He said it had been remodeled recently so that he and his top aides could work there while protesters were besieging his offices downtown. “We didn’t miss a beat,” he said.
Continue reading the main story
Mr. Leung was appointed in 2012 after being endorsed by a 1,200-member committee of prominent Hong Kong residents. Critics say that committee was packed with Beijing’s supporters, but Mr. Leung said it was also broadly representative, as required in the Basic Law, because it included people in different professions, economic strata, religions and other segments of society.
One group he said he wooed on the committee were the 20 members chosen by sports officials and coaches. “If it was an entirely universal suffrage election,” Mr. Leung said, “then the sports community would not count, they would not feature on my radar screen.”
He also raised again the suspicions of his government and of Beijing that “foreign forces” had played a role in the street protests, although he declined repeatedly to identify those forces or provide any examples. “I didn’t overhear it in a teahouse, and it’s something that concerns us,” he said. “It’s something that we need to deal with.”

Protesters remained in the Admiralty neighborhood of Hong Kong on Monday. Credit Jeon Heon-Kyun/European Pressphoto Agency
A tenacious protest movement has spread beyond its initial student base to embrace discontented middle-class and blue-collar residents. But they face an unyielding Chinese Communist Party leadership, which has said the demonstrators have no chance of securing their demands.
Mr. Leung said he has tried to avoid letting standoffs between the protesters and the police escalate into anything that might echo the Tiananmen Square crackdown in Beijing in 1989. Protesters have accused the Hong Kong police of using excessive force in beating them back with pepper spray and batons. Mr. Leung said that he hoped the “dialogue” scheduled for Tuesday between student leaders and five of his top aides would help ease tensions.
Protesters have continued to call for Mr. Leung’s resignation or ouster, both over the police’s tactics against the demonstrators and over accusations of financial impropriety surrounding a business deal he made with an Australian company before he took office.
Mr. Leung’s opponents say he accepted $6.4 million from the company over the past two years and did not report it. He says the deal was legitimate and that he had no legal obligation to declare the income.
Mr. Leung offered several thinly veiled warnings on Monday that it was risky for the protesters to try the patience of the national authorities.
“So far Beijing has left it to the Hong Kong government to deal with the situation, so I think we should try our very best — and this is myself, the government and the people of Hong Kong — should try our very best to stay that way,” he said.
“Challenging myself,” he continued, “challenging the Hong Kong government, at these difficult times will do no one any service, will do Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy no service.”
哩次運動出盡力分化香港人
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