Chinas negatives now outweigh the positives!!

Seriously, let's talk about the things that drew me to China in the first place, 5 things I love / loved about Mainland China...
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Пікірлер: 4 300

  • @enopio_O
    @enopio_O4 жыл бұрын

    What you said is so true. I am Chinese and I don't know how to explain our culture and history.

  • @GVS
    @GVS4 жыл бұрын

    As someone who has lived in Shenzhen for 8.5 years, your content resonates with me a shit ton.

  • @polarbear6597
    @polarbear65974 жыл бұрын

    I'm an overseas chinese who live in Indonesia and being ethnic chinese doesn't mean that you have to agree with the current government of China a.k.a CCP

  • @Skittlesplat

    @Skittlesplat

    4 жыл бұрын

    It does if you're in China. Never met one outside that liked the CCP

  • @KazH129

    @KazH129

    4 жыл бұрын

    Polar Bear You may not agree with the government but when you look at WeChat news (which is controlled by...) and can be manipulated by the government, you’re no better.

  • @polarbear6597

    @polarbear6597

    4 жыл бұрын

    ​@@KazH129 I agree with you, it's not only in China, the government that interferes with media is happening everywhere, even in the western world. For example in my country, the media also heavily controlled by both opposition and government, so I can read any media from different perspectives and you can shape your own thoughts and mindset. meanwhile, in China, all media bow to the CCP single rule so your thought is likely shaped by CCP and anyone who criticizes the government will be suppressed, in the end, you will see anything only from one perspective.

  • @NamaDoodoo

    @NamaDoodoo

    4 жыл бұрын

    What is life like as a Chinese person in Indonesia? Do you have good relations with Muslims?

  • @markdignam3525

    @markdignam3525

    4 жыл бұрын

    Polar Bear Yes it DOES if you actually live there. My wife is Chinese and I've lived in Asia for 10 years. Even outside of China, Chinese born people are mostly too scared to say anything critical of China as they grew up with the cultural revolution whereby anyone not in total compliance with the CCP was likely to be arrested, gulaged, imprisoned or just beaten to death at a struggle session. The younger people did not grow up with that, yet are now finding that with mass surveillance, the "social credit" system and new anti-western, anti-Japanese and other various conspiracies, they are starting to learn fast. If a Chinese born person is living outside of China, and there are millions of them, most won't risk having the local officials pay their family a visit or receive threats by the CCP that if they get out of line OS, their family will be targeted. That is the authoritarian scum that is the CCP. Also try asking the Uyghurs, Tibetans or Falun Gong members. You may not be obliged to agree with the CCP, but if you have family back in mainland China, you better make sure that the CCP does not find anything you say or do. You know exactly what I mean.

  • @captainunderpants9738
    @captainunderpants97384 жыл бұрын

    I worked in China 20 years ago & experienced the good points you mention, my Son was there recently for his second trip & was not impressed, he currently lives in Tokyo.

  • @kempyx533
    @kempyx5334 жыл бұрын

    The best thing about China is Chairman Xi, he is so cute with his yellow fur and little red t-shirt

  • @cannonball666

    @cannonball666

    4 жыл бұрын

    Two years ago I went to China and wore a polo shirt embroidered with Winnie the Pooh waving a Taiwan flag. I got stares from people but only one person said something to me, and that was my Chinese father-in-law who said it was a bad thing to wear in China. As if I didn't know that and that's exactly why I wore it to demonstrate I'm an American who stands for free expression.

  • @brucebelvin2058

    @brucebelvin2058

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@sdcheung You must be a CCP internet troll.

  • @williamswenson5315

    @williamswenson5315

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@brucebelvin2058 And 50 cents richer.

  • @williamswenson5315

    @williamswenson5315

    4 жыл бұрын

    Then, there's his death grip on the honeypot.

  • @williamswenson5315

    @williamswenson5315

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@yarhacijin9463 Help Chinese speak English?

  • @catalystzerova
    @catalystzerova4 жыл бұрын

    Omg did he say “follow me” and pretend to walk into the green screen? GOOD SHITTTTT

  • @three60five98

    @three60five98

    4 жыл бұрын

    Please use a little imagination

  • @Nungasak

    @Nungasak

    4 жыл бұрын

    Quality video

  • @TheAustralianHealthShow

    @TheAustralianHealthShow

    4 жыл бұрын

    he has done the hard yards in China already ;)

  • @luislptigres

    @luislptigres

    4 жыл бұрын

    He is living in 3034

  • @McDoodle44

    @McDoodle44

    4 жыл бұрын

    Timestamp?

  • @cornelisverhoef9282
    @cornelisverhoef92824 жыл бұрын

    I've noticed here in Thailand where I live, Chinese tourists have two standards by which they judge another country: 1) nowhere near as good as China 2) almost as good as China

  • @WokOverEasy

    @WokOverEasy

    4 жыл бұрын

    That’s because you live in Thailand. Most East Asians look down on SEA. I’m sure they don’t feel that when visiting South Korea or Japan.

  • @debbychan2454

    @debbychan2454

    4 жыл бұрын

    wokovereasy ur say really makes me laugh. I don’t think we look down on sea and I don’t think we look up at Japan and Korea. I agree with his two standards but can u stop imagining?🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @deejay7339

    @deejay7339

    4 жыл бұрын

    Chinese tourists are extremely rude here

  • @j.w.matney8390

    @j.w.matney8390

    4 жыл бұрын

    Chinese tourists do things like climb cherry trees during the Cherry Blossom festival in Japan, wash their feet in public fountains, smoke while standing next to a "no smoking sign", ignore lines for services and push people out of the way and the list of rude things they do is endless. The civilised world despises Chinese tourists.

  • @GewalfofWivia

    @GewalfofWivia

    4 жыл бұрын

    Well yeah, name something that cannot be described by these two criteria.

  • @donchristianmarkham7312
    @donchristianmarkham73124 жыл бұрын

    I'm so glad I found your channel. I think I'm you in an alternate universe. I lived in China and did a lot of traveling back in the 90s. My Taiwanese wife and I watched the Hong Kong handover on TV in a hotel room in China during our Honeymoon in 1997. Everything you mention here in this video is so spot on. All five positives are exactly the things I loved about living and traveling in China back in the 90s. So very sorry to hear that they are all disappearing so fast now. However, having lived in Taiwan up until mid-2019, most of those great positives still exist and make life wonderful in Taiwan. Back around 2015, one of my expat English teacher friends in Taiwan got a fantastic offer in China, so he went for it. It was in a transitioning-rural area in the north. Once he got there, he knew he had to get out of there as fast as he could and get back to Taiwan -- China's government was going through a very strong phase of anti-America sentiment (can't remember why off the top of my head), and the extreme ignorance of the people, who immediately gulp down all government propaganda, drove them to extremely intense hostility towards any foreigners. The further away from big city areas, the more intense. My friend is 6 feet 4 inches tall, very strong and fit, and even he felt dangerously unsafe. The hatred was palpable. He spent nearly every yuan he had saved just getting the hell out of there and back to Taiwan -- and he was practically kissing the ground once he landed. So, yes, you are in no way exaggerating anything you discuss in this video. It's heartbreaking to see the whole nation becoming like this. Thank you so much for the time, effort, and passion you give into making your videos!!

  • @TheDynastyWarrior13
    @TheDynastyWarrior134 жыл бұрын

    I've studied and lived in China on numerous occasions and can verify and agree with every point Wintston made. I agree that the one that hurts the most is the decrease in curiosity and friendliness of Chinese people. I remember the first time I was in China everyone wanted to talk to me to figure out why I was in China and where I was from and would all wave etc. The most recent time I was there, from January to August of this year, I not only experienced none of that friendliness or curiosity, but actually had multiple experiences where people would make it very clear or even just outright say they didn't want anything to do with foreigners. It just gets frustrating when all you want is to be given a fair shake and what you get in return is either being ignored or insulted.

  • @mm34nn_tta39

    @mm34nn_tta39

    4 жыл бұрын

    It ’s normal to be less enthusiastic who is just a stranger. Other countries' people will be thought as equal as their own people.

  • @mangonut

    @mangonut

    Жыл бұрын

    Feels like being Asian in western countries sometimes

  • @Professor__S

    @Professor__S

    Жыл бұрын

    The lockdowns over the past 3 years broke the spirit of the Chinese people. Seems the government does this every 30 or so years to ensure obedience and instilling fear. The great famin, the butchering in Tienama square and the covid lockdowns, all around 30 years apart. They are psychologically breaking every generation.

  • @tomtemple69

    @tomtemple69

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mangonut asians are treated much better in western countries than vice versa

  • @mangonut

    @mangonut

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomtemple69 totally depends

  • @angelachouinard4581
    @angelachouinard45812 жыл бұрын

    Winston, what you said about the older neighborhoods being bulldozed and replaced with high rises made me think of a discussion I had years ago at university. Someone was using the same rationale you said the Chinese government was using about how they were old and dirty and an embarrassment. I said they were diverse and social and individual and those high rise projects were about making people identical and physically and socially isolated. Council estates in England, housing projects in the US, and old Soviet apartment blocks, they all turned out very grim. They were never about modernization or affordable housing, they were about containment and control.

  • @akersjon278
    @akersjon2784 жыл бұрын

    Regarding the segment in the beginning about "modernizing" city centers and getting rid of "old, dirty and cramped neighborhoods". The politicians in Sweden (where I live) did the same exact thing over here in the sixties and seventies. They went in to the citycenters all over Sweden with wrecking balls and bulldozers and just leveled whole neighborhoods (often consisting of narrow streets with wooden buildings, that housed working class people and small business) that didn't live up to their idea of a new and modern Sweden. In it's stead they erected great big concrete office buildings and shopping malls. Now they had a point about the living standards in those neighborhoods being subpar sometimes, but instead of encouraging gentle urban renewal and helping the locals clean up the more run down and dirty parts, they just wiped them of the city map. Today there are few things that the wast majority of the Swedish people hate more about what that generation of politicians did back in the day, then precisely what the politicians in China are doing to their citys centers right now... Isn't that funny? Not ha, ha funny, but you know what I mean. Those "modern" city centers are completely dead during non business hours, and completely void of any charm. No one that does not have a direct reason for going there ever visits those parts of town any more. They are urban deserts if you will... So I guess it's just more of the same old story, but instead of it being Swedish socialist politicians, it's Chinese communist politicians... Like I said, it's funny how the world keeps spinning and nothing changes.

  • @theforgot3n1

    @theforgot3n1

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ofta. Vart är detta? Har aldrig hört om det tidigare.

  • @RositsaPetrovarjp7

    @RositsaPetrovarjp7

    3 жыл бұрын

    Same thing in Belgium. the old city of Brussels was completely destroyed in the 1970s. they wanted to build a highway straight through the center of Brussels and get rid of the people there. Finally, the highway was not built but the center became an ugly, soulless place with horrible buildings. they are only rebuilding it now.

  • @leonarddobens6070

    @leonarddobens6070

    3 жыл бұрын

    West End, Boston MA politicians cleared it out in 1970s, built these concrete towers, now everyone goes/lives in North End

  • @akersjon278

    @akersjon278

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@leonarddobens6070 Nothing new under the sun then, the "modernizing wrecking balls" have a long reach, they did damage on both sides of the pond, so sad... We Swedes have a little inside joke about this era in Swedish politics. (Since Sweden was neutral during WW2, our city centers weren't destroyed by bombing.) The joke is a variant of the old "the pen is mightier then the sword" adage (and I'm paraphrasing from Swedish here). "The Social Democrats managed to do more damage to the city centers of Sweden with one single pen stroke, then what the whole of the Luftwaffe could have ever done with thousands of bombs". (Might not be a very funny joke, but it sums the whole mess up kinda neatly I think...)

  • @alundavies8402

    @alundavies8402

    2 жыл бұрын

    They did that in London too

  • @60-second-HACKS
    @60-second-HACKS4 жыл бұрын

    This young man is very moderate and measured in his views. Well done.

  • @burlhorse61

    @burlhorse61

    4 жыл бұрын

    i think its called self censorship

  • @nargarex2390

    @nargarex2390

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@burlhorse61 He's just not one-sided in views about China. His videos are about China, not just entirely about the positives/ negatives. Something good about China? He'll appreciate it. China has it's stink? He'll be sad. He's just being honest.

  • @JAXi9321

    @JAXi9321

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@nargarex2390Z😊 De Zoe ZZöZÖZÖZzZöözZZZZZZZZözöZzzzzööözzööÖözöZöZöözzözözzZzzzözzz0ZzözZZöÖÖzöAzööözzözzzzözözözözzöÖZözzözZ😊😊ö😊p😊å😊ää😊äääåäåäåä äääälskar 0ääå😊 är äääälskar 😊ä😊😊😊åå😊😊0å0ä😊😊äåöä0ååöäå0öåå0åöä0å0åååöåö0öåå0ä0äöåäöpppöåå0åöå0åäååöååpåååå0å9ä

  • @MickyELee
    @MickyELee4 жыл бұрын

    I live in San Francisco. For almost 30 years, I loved a shop in Chinatown called The Wok Shop. I became enamored with clay cookware. I read an article about how the clay is a beneficial amendment to what we cook in it. I went there about a year ago to check out their inventory of clay pots. When I asked about them, The proprietress got very angry with me, accusing me of putting down the Chinese. She said they build smartphones and super trains, not clay pots. I assured her I was fully aware of all of that. I didn't say anything about the brilliant simplicity and enduring design of clay cookery. I left and will not return.

  • 4 жыл бұрын

    She was putting down her own wares? Good way to go broke.

  • @amurika2018

    @amurika2018

    4 жыл бұрын

    Insecurity, and this national propaganda of conflating government and economy with the people, because the goal is stability and support of a monopoly power. Part of this propaganda program includes a sense of reversal from “decades of humiliation” which manifests as irritation, anger, defensive misinterpretation, xenophobia, and arrogance. Yes- the culture is not a monolithic homogenous culture. There is diversity; however, this overlay push for fervent state-conflated, defensive, nationalism is by design.

  • @nobs724

    @nobs724

    4 жыл бұрын

    really, for no reason, u r accused?

  • @MickyELee

    @MickyELee

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@nobs724 I had bought a clay pot from them years ago. I had returned to see if they had any other clay cookware. I simply asked about clay pots. Apparently they had discontinued clay pots. When I asked, she just went off on me. I have been told some Asian cultures consider it impolite to say NO, e.g. "we have these nice things over here". But she was really angry, reminding me of their electronics industry, the super trains (at first I thought she was reminding me they built our railroads. I was wrong.) That is all I said: "Do you still carry clay pots?". She was having a very bad day.

  • @JeepCherokeeful

    @JeepCherokeeful

    4 жыл бұрын

    Build and design/engineer, I’d love to see her face if she ever realizes they only build that stuff there. Drunk on the kool-aid.

  • @nielscarp
    @nielscarp4 жыл бұрын

    Having lived in Suzhou (Jiangsu), it hurts me too see this and realize that I share the exact same feelings about China nowadays..

  • @Jianju69
    @Jianju694 жыл бұрын

    The most positive thing about traveling in China is how THRILLED you are when you get back home!

  • @gilbertmcglurk2591

    @gilbertmcglurk2591

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Barrack Obama Vlogs, thought that is boring come on down in an American small town..

  • @quietcorner293

    @quietcorner293

    4 жыл бұрын

    That's why I rather travel Japan.

  • @anthonygeorge9932

    @anthonygeorge9932

    4 жыл бұрын

    LOL 100%

  • @carvercapitalequitypartner122

    @carvercapitalequitypartner122

    4 жыл бұрын

    IF you make it back home with all your organs intact.

  • @adrianatgaming8640

    @adrianatgaming8640

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@carvercapitalequitypartner122 you will, what they're doing is political persecution, though that has backfired a bit.

  • @IcarusXFnord
    @IcarusXFnord4 жыл бұрын

    Positive things I experienced in China: my 15 rmb noodle man Negative things I experienced in China: everything else

  • @MrLeviathoth
    @MrLeviathoth4 жыл бұрын

    "Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell

  • @user-wd2rv2cw1r

    @user-wd2rv2cw1r

    4 жыл бұрын

    This is the current situation in our country.

  • @gerardu9389

    @gerardu9389

    4 жыл бұрын

    NWO

  • @user-wd2rv2cw1r

    @user-wd2rv2cw1r

    4 жыл бұрын

    @ It means you can tamper with history. China's 150 years of history are fake.

  • @blijblanketlee7732

    @blijblanketlee7732

    4 жыл бұрын

    MrLeviathoth It is just a cheap excuse for being a coward and not admitting their wrongdoing. Chinese society encourages the worst of human nature. The sad truth is that it is a zombie land now and anyone with a soul has to flee the country to keep it. --From an ex-mainlander

  • @cpcheats2003

    @cpcheats2003

    4 жыл бұрын

    It's unsettling how relevant that book is today.

  • @davisburbank926
    @davisburbank9264 жыл бұрын

    I can totally relate to your report on changing China. My Japanese wife and I were teaching there many years ago. Sadly, neither one of us would wish to return.

  • @fs5775

    @fs5775

    Жыл бұрын

    Taught there for 2 years. Leaving there felt fantastic. I learned to appreciate the U.S. more than I ever have before. China? Never again.

  • @majorpayne8373
    @majorpayne83734 жыл бұрын

    From LA - "So how far is it to China?" "I can't say exactly, but I reckon it's not nearly far enough!"

  • @studiobencivengamarcusbenc5272

    @studiobencivengamarcusbenc5272

    4 жыл бұрын

    Tim Fuller 😂👏🏼👍

  • @davidmachemer1015
    @davidmachemer10154 жыл бұрын

    You pretty much hit on the things I loved about China. But also, working as I did in a professional service company (British-owned construction project management), I was privileged to work with some of China's brightest minds and biggest hearted people. Although my wife had a very different experience working for Siemens in China (with lot of hangers-on playing poisonous political games), the people I worked with were top-notch: smart, competent, diligent, courteous and a delight to be around every day. We had to have good people like that to make it as a service industry, because our only asset was our ideas and our competence in advising our clients (other western investors in China).

  • @mrofftopic2802
    @mrofftopic28024 жыл бұрын

    The destruction of historical buildings to replace with "better" versions made me shiver. Similar to Saudi Arabia's destruction of early Islamic heritage sites. I have little respect for a culture that do not respect its past. But, hey, I'm a weird guy I still have my grandfather's old typewriter and 200 year law books from my great-grandfather.

  • @mrofftopic2802

    @mrofftopic2802

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Michael Morris Thanks.

  • @jsjiang6120

    @jsjiang6120

    4 жыл бұрын

    They call it modern or advanced.

  • @waterheaterservices

    @waterheaterservices

    4 жыл бұрын

    Islam is the deadliest organization in the history of humanity, killing over 270 million since Mohammed. The Qur'an and Sunni Hadith mandate by the narrations of Mohammed that Muslims fight, kill, enslave, humiliate, subdue humanity, to the murderous enslaving rape cult of Pedophile Mohammed. Qur'an Sura 9. Reference Acts 17 Apologetics, Usama Dakdok, Bill Warner PhD on YT.

  • @kylehankins5988

    @kylehankins5988

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@waterheaterservices Its not about whether or not you "agree" with the history its about keeping history for the sake of history. Christianity has a bloody history also but we should destroy historic Christian landmarks, even if they were associated with the crusades. Such things should be preserved for the sake of understanding the past.

  • @wauliepalnuts6134

    @wauliepalnuts6134

    4 жыл бұрын

    *_PERVERT_*

  • @danubilo
    @danubilo4 жыл бұрын

    This should be titles " things that i used to love about china, but now no longer exist" So sad.

  • @cannonball666

    @cannonball666

    4 жыл бұрын

    You beat me to it. Just when you thought he was had positive examples there were none.

  • @MrJust2times

    @MrJust2times

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ok so no need to watch the Video :D Kind of Clickbaity :P

  • @danubilo

    @danubilo

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MrJust2times it is a cool video thou, watch it

  • @danubilo

    @danubilo

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@cannonball666 it hurts me how he used to love china but he had to leave because of politics, his videos are great thou

  • @MrJust2times

    @MrJust2times

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@danubilo I oped for some positiv stuff :D Maybe i do ^^

  • @vsksf
    @vsksf4 жыл бұрын

    The most positive experience of China for me is... that I've never been to China..!

  • @fs5775

    @fs5775

    Жыл бұрын

    you are not missing much. go to Japan, Thailand or Vietnam instead - much better experiences

  • @amarug
    @amarug3 жыл бұрын

    im swiss, for me any restaurant outside of switzerland is "omg this is half for free" ...

  • @lifeinzed7360
    @lifeinzed73604 жыл бұрын

    Hey random dude scrolling down the comments section, Stay Awesome.

  • @kuibeiguahua

    @kuibeiguahua

    4 жыл бұрын

    !you at back tRigh !it knowknoa you yeahAwesome

  • @ItsameAlex

    @ItsameAlex

    4 жыл бұрын

    thank you, I appreciate it

  • @yoohimi

    @yoohimi

    4 жыл бұрын

    right back at yeah!

  • @ericmanget4280

    @ericmanget4280

    4 жыл бұрын

    Don't tell me what to do

  • @Knightonagreyhorse

    @Knightonagreyhorse

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'm fine with being mediocre.

  • @mrtaoroo
    @mrtaoroo4 жыл бұрын

    Winston you looked a bit sad at the end of that video,.It kind of tells me from the heart that you really loved China .

  • @ShawNshawN

    @ShawNshawN

    4 жыл бұрын

    I saw the same thing in Poland. I was there in 89 and then came back for vacation in 93. They had wiped out the local fast food for a Taco Bell, KFC and Burger King crap. so sad.

  • @freeman10000

    @freeman10000

    4 жыл бұрын

    A lot of non Chinese (my self included) absolutely loved living in China as well as the Chinese people and their culture. However in the last few years China has changed and for foreigners anyway is becoming a more difficult and unpleasant place to live.

  • @woni9834
    @woni98344 жыл бұрын

    You are experiencing exactly the same thing that my friends told me about how foreigners living in China feel. First stage. Amazed at China and hated their country’s media. When they arrived, they saw this huge big fancy cities and were amazed and upset on how their own media described China. Second stage. Enjoy the special treatments they get. People welcome them warmly, take them to bars and restaurants, have fun everyday if they want. Last stage, Disappointed. they see all the restrictions people endure in this country, and find out the reason all these pretty girls hanging out with them is they want to either learn English or getting married and get out of China.

  • @fs5775

    @fs5775

    Жыл бұрын

    nailed it. it takes awhile to see the man behind the curtain.. once you see him, you want outta there for good

  • @artificefount9930

    @artificefount9930

    Жыл бұрын

    😅😅

  • @user-tz7je5sz9j

    @user-tz7je5sz9j

    Жыл бұрын

    genetics, genetics, genetics.

  • @catgir5x
    @catgir5x4 жыл бұрын

    I live in Canada ..and I have really enjoyed watching your videos, you are an empathic soul, an observer of life

  • @Tommy_taipei
    @Tommy_taipei4 жыл бұрын

    The cost has skyrocketed but quality have not caught up.

  • @BoaConstrictor126

    @BoaConstrictor126

    4 жыл бұрын

    sounds like America. but I don't disagree.

  • @Fullmetal1890P
    @Fullmetal1890P4 жыл бұрын

    It should be called "What I used to love about China"

  • @trumpzilla7095
    @trumpzilla70954 жыл бұрын

    When I was in China with my beautiful Chinese wife, I told her I was hungry, she brought me to a back alley, dirty place and found a hole in the wall restaurant. Inside the restaurant it had a couple of chairs and tables and spider webs on the walls. I was very concerned but she told me this is good food here. So she ordered food and I will tell you it was the best Chinese food I ever had. It was so good that after eating in such a place I told my wife lets find another hole in the wall restaurant please. She laughed, she always found one in a dingy alley somewhere no matter what city we were in. It was way better than the Chinese version of KFC which I was not impressed with at all. The chicken is too dry.

  • @theinsufferablebutthole8923

    @theinsufferablebutthole8923

    4 жыл бұрын

    Trump Zilla “the chicken was too dry”. Sounds like the American version of kfc. Popeyes for the win!!!

  • @trumpzilla7095

    @trumpzilla7095

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@theinsufferablebutthole8923 NO no no no....The KFC here in the States is moist and greasy. Nothing like the chicken at KFC China.

  • @theinsufferablebutthole8923

    @theinsufferablebutthole8923

    4 жыл бұрын

    Trump Zilla meh. I haven’t had it in years. The last time I did it was dry. I’ve been a Popeyes concert since then.

  • @helenadvorakova7172

    @helenadvorakova7172

    4 жыл бұрын

    Haha same. Best food in China I had in the dirtiest restaurant i ever seen.

  • @freeman10000

    @freeman10000

    4 жыл бұрын

    Those little eateries are fantastic but they do seem to be disappearing being replaced by overpriced, dull chain restaurants and eateries.

  • @peters2261
    @peters22613 жыл бұрын

    I loved China, went to Shanghai mostly, but also the capital Beijing and the old southern capital of Nanjing, all on business trips in the mid 2000. After what I hear and see from you and your friend driving around on MCs, China is a no and certainly not a place to bring my family as I planned for a holiday. Thank you for both of yours videos! Peter

  • @youxkio
    @youxkio4 жыл бұрын

    Don't worry. Taiwan will preserve that precious culture, and much more.

  • @ruicosta6474

    @ruicosta6474

    4 жыл бұрын

    Them and HK. Outta curiosity, why the Português playlist?

  • @sudiptkashyap7299

    @sudiptkashyap7299

    4 жыл бұрын

    Even Macao should go the Hong Kong way. Long live Taiwan.

  • @youxkio

    @youxkio

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ruicosta6474 Porque sou professor de Português e Inglês em Taiwan.

  • @youxkio

    @youxkio

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Kazuhira Miller CCP policies messing up with demographics, soon them either. CCP is following the same steps the KMT walked to democratization. The authenticity of their government is already been questioned among their citizens. Why Chinese people need VPN? Does the CCP anything to hide? CCP's integrity is gradually being reduced with their standpoint on provocation and intimidation against Taiwan and Hong Kong, that during the '50s to the '80s did so much to help China. CCP is spitting on the soup they ate for so long. Ungrateful CCP.

  • @ruicosta6474

    @ruicosta6474

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@youxkio que foda, cara. Nunca imaginei que teria mercado para isso em Taiwan!

  • @lukewilmot3864
    @lukewilmot38644 жыл бұрын

    'Of course. My partner- Cmilk...' All these years. The truth is out.

  • @gasaholic47

    @gasaholic47

    4 жыл бұрын

    Luke Wilmot A true bromance...😎😏

  • @Demiglitch

    @Demiglitch

    4 жыл бұрын

    Release the XXX tapes of the motorbike tours you cowards!

  • @sebanderson

    @sebanderson

    4 жыл бұрын

    CMilk is obviously a power bottom.

  • @TheManinBlack9054

    @TheManinBlack9054

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@sebanderson SerpentZA is a service top then

  • @freebird7339

    @freebird7339

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Baron Von Grijffenbourg funny!

  • @dsbond8048
    @dsbond80484 жыл бұрын

    Maybe you are just growing up and beginning to see reality.

  • @jebatman756

    @jebatman756

    4 жыл бұрын

    No...things have in fact changed for the worse...

  • @memphis3106

    @memphis3106

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@jebatman756 I partially blame Trump. He poked the bear over and over and over... But I mostly blame Mao.

  • @HeinRichKocHPretoria

    @HeinRichKocHPretoria

    4 жыл бұрын

    There is no paradise anywhere on earth. You have to learn to make do with what you have. This why I am still in South Africa.

  • @anthonygeorge9932

    @anthonygeorge9932

    4 жыл бұрын

    YES! From the moment I landed in China I knew it was a complete shit-hole.

  • @karibordi2082

    @karibordi2082

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@HeinRichKocHPretoria well even South America isn't the same as almost 2 decades ago.

  • @zizzyzozo807
    @zizzyzozo8074 жыл бұрын

    As a foreigner with a Chinese background I was ready to defend China's position, but now after recently visiting I have to agree with everything you have said. It was a huge hassle for me to get around without a Chinese ID.

  • @davidding7433
    @davidding74334 жыл бұрын

    I am Chinese, thank you .you speak truth .you are a good man.

  • @col5010

    @col5010

    3 жыл бұрын

    ROFLMAO WTF is he smoking putting OBNOXIOUS RET_RDED insane background SFX in vid thats hilar ROFLMAO TF :D

  • @nobody_8_1
    @nobody_8_14 жыл бұрын

    I also loved what I call 'real' China. The uniqueness associated with buying cheap street food from the portable stalls and the slip ally restaurants. The cost of living was nice and it permitted me to also enjoy a lifestyle that is currently inaccessible to me in Australia. Some of the local Chinese were very warm, welcoming and lovely; while others were not (I got mixed feeling). I stayed in some second and third tier cities, not just Shanghai or other first tier cities. I rode on the bullet train and the slow trains as well as the maglev. Something Australia lacks (bullet trains and maglev). Work life balance was reasonable but not as good as others received while in China. I think this was due to the start of the changes occurring. But, sadly, China has changed. They only seem to be purely interested and motivated by new technology and money; nothing else. This became apparent to me via their visa prioritization restructuring, and a discussion with a local Chinese woman who was desperately trying to sell the idea of commercial real estate albeit for production in one prominent second tier city. Also, I noticed as a 'lao wai', I was being faced with increasing hostility, including when the Chinese perceived they were wronged, they charged me more or made normal routine processes more difficult. My father and I had to depart from China due to increasing hostilities as well. My father spent ten years in China and I spend two. I like you and Laowhy86's videos very much and I can relate with a lot of topics you both discuss. Thanks.

  • @mike4ty4

    @mike4ty4

    4 жыл бұрын

    .However, keep in mind that lower prices for goods mean workers getting paid less and having to work more dangerously or in impoverished conditions. Of course, maybe the proceeds are actually going to corrupt official instead, which would not be good. But the other hand that still wouldn't change that if it _were_ to go to the people, you'd _still_ have to tolerate the significantly increased prices to avoid exploit labor. So your concern should be more about where that money goes than about everything not being so "cheap" anymore.

  • @russianbotfarm3036

    @russianbotfarm3036

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@mike4ty4 > lower prices means people are being exploited No, because the cost of living is lower for the workers, too.

  • @georgeowell4450

    @georgeowell4450

    4 жыл бұрын

    Mate, this is messed up, and such a blatant display of your colonialism mentality. Why should China stay in the past to please you when they want to move on to a better living? Ask the street vendor, if he were able to, would he rather sell "cheap street food from the portable stalls" to or have more financial stability by working hard by pursuing "new technology and money"?

  • @russianbotfarm3036

    @russianbotfarm3036

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@georgeowell4450 Serpentza's good times are gone, and he doesn't have a clear future. He couldn't have predicted that China would change, or else you could blame him for not planning ahead. As it is, he's in a slightly tough spot; you can understand his being bummed out and taking it out on China. I'm no fan of China btw, there's plenty to bash, but I get the sense that Serpentza lost more than eg Laowhy, who is in his native country and seems more comfortable with the whole thing.

  • @Explorshon123

    @Explorshon123

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@georgeowell4450 China wants to move onto a better future.. yes for the elites at the top, they don't care who they step on to stay there. Just ask the Uhyghers or the HongKongese or practitioners of Falon Gong, or the Canadian who is being executed purely as revenge, or all the English teachers who have been ripped off and mistreated in China etc etc etc. You need to check your own mentality because you are clearly deceived.

  • @AskTorin
    @AskTorin4 жыл бұрын

    In a way, as a Foreigner, you did really experience a golden age of hospitality and development in China. I am very happy to hear your perspective. I have watched your videos for years and I think your perspective is becoming more and more important. Much love to you!

  • @30803080308030803081
    @308030803080308030814 жыл бұрын

    Winston lived in Shenzhen, a first-tier city. Outside of the tier-one cities, the cost of living is still low.

  • @joninosaka
    @joninosaka4 жыл бұрын

    Everything you liked about China n the beginning you can find in Vietnam -- and they are much friendlier, their's much less food contamination an its much cheaper.

  • @EmmaNguyen-mg5xq

    @EmmaNguyen-mg5xq

    4 жыл бұрын

    Much less food contamination? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👎👎👎👎I am VIETNAMESE.WINSTON IS A COMPLAINER AND LOSER .AS HE IS NOTHING BUT A PATHETIC PERSON WHO WAS REJECTED IN CHINA,NOW HE TRIES TO FIND "SYMPATHY" IN VN.AND GRADUALLY HE WILL TRY TO DIG UP NEGATIVE THINGS IN VN ,HE STARTS BADMOUTHING VIETNAM.DON'T BELIEVE WHAT HE TELLS

  • @aoe4_kachow

    @aoe4_kachow

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@EmmaNguyen-mg5xq you sound like a southerner

  • @carvercapitalequitypartner122

    @carvercapitalequitypartner122

    4 жыл бұрын

    Very cool. Learn the lesson from China on the things not to do. Maintain your cultural heritage.

  • @dreadpiraterobertsii4420

    @dreadpiraterobertsii4420

    4 жыл бұрын

    huong nguyen blink twice if you were made to comment that against your will by Winnie the Pooh your leader?

  • @anonymouscoward7559

    @anonymouscoward7559

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@EmmaNguyen-mg5xq Well done you are very convincing, NO i really mean it. LOL so childish

  • @colinstu
    @colinstu4 жыл бұрын

    I'm having memories of when I first found your channel. Driving those little scooters around strange little roads / sidewalks and seeing where they went. Grabbing street foods and eating them (specifically remembering some kind of hard boiled eggs in a bag you'd keep on your scooter handle). I think I originally found your channel because I discovered that China had knock-off lookalike cars, and then I stumbled into some reviews you were doing of your own car. Man this feels like a long time ago now.

  • @russianbotfarm3036

    @russianbotfarm3036

    4 жыл бұрын

    You both have to let go :/

  • @colinstu

    @colinstu

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@russianbotfarm3036 Let go of memories of Winston having fun? lol

  • @JakeWang-lt2fg

    @JakeWang-lt2fg

    4 жыл бұрын

    he is so arrogant that chinese people dont like him. he dare not let his vlog seen by local Chinese since few chinese know english. china, china, china, bad, bad, bad. all his vlogs.

  • @elsonicsanto
    @elsonicsanto4 жыл бұрын

    This video shows the change in peoples attitude that seems to me to be a very realistic assesment. I even find my key business associates in PRC having a drastically different attitude, from their earlier strong criticism of the CCP. Their anger against the lifestyle of senior party functionaries living it up at their cost seems to have vanished and they only rant against foreigners including the idiotic Indian leaders who have grabbed their land that is part of Tibet while emphasising that Tibet is part of China because China owns it since 1959!

  • @philgreen815
    @philgreen81511 ай бұрын

    I have experienced exactly the same effect in Java. I married my Indonesian girlfriend, and we spent a lot of time exploring a beautiful country. We met 13 years ago, but continue to look at beautiful and remote places. And even now some areas think a Bule (white man) is a novelty and ask for a photo. A land of extremes, modern western technology and buildings, when you can also find remote villages, bamboo houses, barefoot kids, and living happily without satellite tv? I despair to see the modernisation sweeping over such a beautiful country. Maybe I will retire to a small island in the Java sea? Or disappear in Sulawesi? Yet to be decided? As wife wants to live in Solo, a very nice, bud sadly modern place. Love your stuff, can relate very easily.

  • @MrMontyFontaine
    @MrMontyFontaine4 жыл бұрын

    Positive thing about China.. it's near Taiwan, Vietnam, Russia and Korea.

  • @laharl2k

    @laharl2k

    4 жыл бұрын

    MrMontyFontaine Korea is shit

  • @Wickedtingzz

    @Wickedtingzz

    4 жыл бұрын

    Laharl Krichevskoy south korea is actually very beautiful. and I dont like that word allegedly

  • @RockDavid

    @RockDavid

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@laharl2k How is Korea shit? have you been there? South Korea is honestly Amazing, the food is dope..the views are killer... Or you assuming all south koreans follow north's life and views?

  • @syntaxerror8955

    @syntaxerror8955

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@laharl2k Seoul is quite charming with its many cafés, happy young couples, and enjoyable and interesting with the occasional real saunas (like Scandinavian hot saunas), sleeping pod hotels, interesting shops, and it provides a civilized relief from the strangeness and frustrations of China. Cars stop for pedestrians, there's no spitting, etc. You are back in the first world, yet now with an east Asian twist. Quite nice! The few Koreans I've met in the west have been unusually odd people (not in a good way -- probably just bad luck), so it was a positive surprise to feel at home in Seoul. Been there a bunch of times to renew my Chinese visa.

  • @RasputiaInYourMom

    @RasputiaInYourMom

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@laharl2k you're shit

  • @exporterjmkc2392
    @exporterjmkc23924 жыл бұрын

    My girlfriend lives in Shanghai and I spend extended time there by usually renting an Airb&b. We’ve been together around 4 1/2 years. I agree with you...old China markets and communities in Shanghai are my favorite places to “hang out” in. However, in the last 2 years...whole areas have been wiped out and replaced with generic store fronts or huge apartment high rises. It’s really sad and it’s turning into a cookie cutter appearance. One other thing I totally agree with is the price of things. I live in the U.S. and it’s cheaper to grab a coffee and a nice lunch here than over there. Food service products in Shanghai are pretty damn expensive.

  • @arthurjohnson119

    @arthurjohnson119

    4 жыл бұрын

    Then again, it is Shanghai. Everything is outrageously expensive in Shanghai.

  • @snackezzs2098
    @snackezzs20982 жыл бұрын

    A few years ago, I adopted my 3 year old child from China. Since I missed out on the baby years, the best gift that China had given me was baby pictures of my child. China raised and loved this baby during those difficult years, while doing endless of paperwork. I will be forever grateful for China in taking such good care of my child. Can you imagine missing your child's first 3 years of his/her life! Do you have any adoption stories, while you were in China? Glad that you're out of China. Being cynical is not good for your mental health.

  • @TheCo11ection
    @TheCo11ection4 жыл бұрын

    China is beyond any scifi movie, the dystopian society thats seeming to emerge form there moment to moement is fascinating. Love your videos

  • @atomicboy8972
    @atomicboy89724 жыл бұрын

    When asked about destroying the old villages, I remember a Chinese said very confidently "we'll make it older"!

  • @Celinestu333

    @Celinestu333

    4 жыл бұрын

    Lmaoo underrated comment

  • @didiprangsak1757

    @didiprangsak1757

    4 жыл бұрын

    Atomic Boy what does it mean?

  • @atomicboy8972

    @atomicboy8972

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@didiprangsak1757 He meant when they will rebuild they will make it more historical, of course its impossible.

  • @leezhieng

    @leezhieng

    4 жыл бұрын

    because these old villages aren't really that old in the first place.

  • @zedz4397

    @zedz4397

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@atomicboy8972 Well certainly they are destroying old bungalows instead of ancient temples, and their purpose is to make them residential areas. I don't quite understand WHY would they make them more HISTORICAL, let alone the fact that they are not historical to start with.

  • @stuharris9993
    @stuharris99934 жыл бұрын

    A typical thing I hear today: "I went to China, and there was no China there."

  • @xianglu1505

    @xianglu1505

    4 жыл бұрын

    oh, a really poor china is what you wanna. you feel like you are superior when u come to some poor place and get satisfied. I will tell u wake up. china will be as rich as you people are.

  • @OlaConnysOrkester

    @OlaConnysOrkester

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@xianglu1505 stfu

  • @shree711

    @shree711

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@xianglu1505 It's not about a poor China. Go to Taiwan and you will also see a China that embraces its tradition and modernity. And the average Taiwanese is richer than the average Mainlander.

  • @andrealoko_

    @andrealoko_

    4 жыл бұрын

    xiang lu there’s millionaires with chinese parents here in california but they aren’t allowed to help the chinese economy because they’re american citizens? that’s pretty unfair. restricting travel is not how you become the world’s superpower

  • @the_gilded_age_phoenix8717

    @the_gilded_age_phoenix8717

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@xianglu1505 It'll be another enslaved shithole like the Western countries. Many Westerners travel to East Asia to experience the relative economic freedom you have had, compared to the West. You'll see in a few years, when most Chinese people can't afford to do anything but work 24/7...as they do in the West today. You won't believe me now, but you'll find out later.

  • @juanantoniocruz2937
    @juanantoniocruz29374 жыл бұрын

    You might want to consider moving to the Philippines. People here are generally happy to see foreigners like yourself. People are very hospitable, everything is relatively cheap, great tropical weather all year round, and good food (even better if you know where to look). Everyone here is very kind to foreigners, they even look up to them to a certain degre, especially if youre white, so you shouldnt have to worry about being on the receiving end of discrimination. Really, the only hitch about living here is bad traffic especially in the bigger cities.

  • @Jonathan-je9uh
    @Jonathan-je9uh4 жыл бұрын

    I myself have lived in China for the last 12 years, I can relate to everything you say, however! I live in rural Sichuan province, yes over the last decade infrastructure has sure improved dramatically compared to when I first came and for the better. Street touts are now banned that used to block the pathways and road sides, it has been cleaned up a great deal. But cost of living has almost doubled, and 12 years ago the exchange rate was great, like 14 rmb to the UK pound. With the RMB getting stronger, it now costs much more to live like a decade ago... I am sure the police in the rural areas are much friendlier than the big cities, here they take you out to eat, offer you a cigarette lol... and they pop round to my home every 2 weeks instead of me having to go to the station for the fortnightly pictures of me... Downside now, foreigners have to do a pee test for drugs, and yes it's a nightmare getting a new bank account opened now. For me in the Rural side, only good things have been done to make life better, and yes I am a village type and not a city dweller. But China is now my life and my home, and I'll go with the flow.

  • @loveislove2359

    @loveislove2359

    4 жыл бұрын

    I've heard you need to have Chinese Id to buy a local sim card now, is it true? How does a tourist get one?

  • @archer9322

    @archer9322

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@loveislove2359 Not necessarily true. There are tourist SIM cards with unblocked internet access. Though if you would want to apply for a genuine "local" SIM, it has indeed become harder as that typically require you to have a local Chinese resident to act as sponsor. But, in the off chance, you might get lucky with certain Telco and can make a purchase with your passport alone. More importantly, I am genuinely puzzled why this tighter regulation is perceived as a "step backward". Singapore has this SIM purchase restriction for foreigners long before China does out of immigration control/social security purposes. Stay positive :D.

  • @steven1898

    @steven1898

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hi Jonathan, if you have the time, please check out a KZreadr by the name of Daniel Dumbrill. He's a great KZreadr based in Shenzhen.

  • @izdatsumcp

    @izdatsumcp

    4 жыл бұрын

    Why would the RMB getting stronger mean the cost of living is going up? If a currency gets stronger, that means it can buy more stuff. This would mean cost of living going down. I don't understand.

  • @praetoriancorps
    @praetoriancorps4 жыл бұрын

    CCP: we claim this whole ocean because of a map from 1000 years ago. Also the CCP lets destroy our own culture and history because we want to build highrises and dams.

  • @Wickedtingzz

    @Wickedtingzz

    4 жыл бұрын

    *empty high rises Haha

  • @robspunk

    @robspunk

    4 жыл бұрын

    Isn't the map only from the late 1800's? Apparently is was only first recognised by China in 1947. But the Portuguese founded Macau in 1577. They mapped their routes to Asia as well. So China, and everywhere from India to Beijing actually belongs to the Portuguese. They should make 200 dash line from Lisbon to Japan...

  • @zhanpengwang3036

    @zhanpengwang3036

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@robspunk I don't think they are first to map that route nor the first travel the world, if you compare the biggest ship in Portugal 1557 and the song dynasty expedition force back 972 (also has air tight compartments at the bottom of the ship to prevent sinking), you will find the song dynasty 1000 ton ship is 3 times bigger in size at least, and map the entire South China sea and beyond,. So in this case your sattire example makes no sense and is pretty bad.

  • @wageslave5760

    @wageslave5760

    4 жыл бұрын

    Most Elites destroy everything.. But Chinese need to stop buying the Traditional medicine, come on, Tiger penis, Rhino horn, Pangolin scales, people buying and supplying these types of products need to be gone ASAP. The Elites that don't go with the flow will end up face down in the Kim Kim river.

  • @zhanpengwang3036

    @zhanpengwang3036

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Throw Cum Cubes At Alpha Centauri I don't know why you become really defensive, i only just said his example were pretty bad and made no sense. I don't support the 9 dash line, and it is true many island belongs to japan since they control most of the parcific waters. Personal attack just shows you are a giant baby rather than full grown adult.

  • @cardiagshopcardiagshop5638
    @cardiagshopcardiagshop56384 жыл бұрын

    I was live at Shenzhen 6 years, 99% agree with You. +++++

  • @yunanan39

    @yunanan39

    4 жыл бұрын

    But you also don't want to move, lol....

  • @cardiagshopcardiagshop5638

    @cardiagshopcardiagshop5638

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@yunanan39 I already left Shenzhen for forever, because what i loved there doesn't exist anymore.

  • @yunanan39

    @yunanan39

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@cardiagshopcardiagshop5638 Good for you and good for China.

  • @zeromailss

    @zeromailss

    4 жыл бұрын

    such a shame, I can see this happening more and more not only to china but also other countries in SEA But then again progress is inevitable, I just wish they did it better

  • @alngsi
    @alngsi4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks. That was a sincere and good analysis of the effects of the recent changes in China. Give me more food for thought on whether I should do my move eventually! Greetings from (what it is left of) Hong Kong! Cheers ;)

  • @aliceshull1334
    @aliceshull13344 жыл бұрын

    I have always been interested in other cultures, and I would LIKE to say something positive about the country.......I'm trying hard, but I am coming up with only one thing........I'm glad that someone is exposing the CCP, and the Chinese people who are being abused by their own government......that is the only true positive. So very sad for the good people of China 💔 (I'm sure there are many)

  • @GradyGillis
    @GradyGillis4 жыл бұрын

    No more "Grand Guilin Adventure" series type of travelogues... That's sad. The loss of the urban villages is absolutely tragic. It shatters the culture. But turning the areas into drone-in-a-box poorly built apartment blocks does kill off the individuality that is anathema to party control. Wiping out those villages also kills any kind of "hometown" loyalty and leaves only the state to be the common binding entity. It begs the question: Is China heading towards becoming North Korea writ large?

  • @dennishassler605

    @dennishassler605

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think communism gives those few "party members" the high ground and de-humanizes the people. I have to ask "Why are Chinese incapable of self-determination and personal freedom?" given that so few of them live in a free society. China is a cheap place to live, but I wouldn't want to give up freedom. The situation Hong Kong faces is tragic - it will not work out well taking away everyone's freedom.

  • @russianbotfarm3036

    @russianbotfarm3036

    4 жыл бұрын

    Laowhy (the other guy) argued that a couple of months ago.

  • @kevinbyrne4538

    @kevinbyrne4538

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes, China is becoming North Korea. China always was North Korea -- the Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution, ... The people are merely ants. The Party killed tens of millions of them without any scruples. There are always plenty more ants, regardless of how many the Party kills.

  • @Kurtlane

    @Kurtlane

    4 жыл бұрын

    China is becoming what Japan and Germany were in 1930s-40s. Very scary. That extremist virulent nationalism (usually called "racism") that is the bugaboo of Western countries today is a very real thing in China. The Party is very stupid when it destroys urban villages and makes all people the same. They think people will always follow them. They are wrong. Just wait till this whole mass of humanity turns against them.

  • @russianbotfarm3036

    @russianbotfarm3036

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Kurtlane Meh. Germany didn't destroy its own stuff.

  • @hollyh1969
    @hollyh19694 жыл бұрын

    I found that when Chinese people like you, they are so very kind. I love how Chinese people share food together.

  • @osalinasable
    @osalinasable4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing!

  • @maximerobinson319
    @maximerobinson3194 жыл бұрын

    You really embody the illusion of living at a cheap rate and not realizing the suffering you are encouraging by participating in the economy. I'm glad you finally realized what the party is capable of.

  • @fionax9741
    @fionax97414 жыл бұрын

    You know China so much!! that’s all the false of CCP! Thanks for speaking for the Chinese people. I love China but China should have been ruled by a party that truly cherish real Chinese culture and Value .

  • @cate9963

    @cate9963

    4 жыл бұрын

    Exactly, CCP shouldn't and doesn't represent China, but unfortunately, CCP is in power now. Sadly, it may take some time until CCP is driven out of China.

  • @kryts27

    @kryts27

    4 жыл бұрын

    The Chinese people must want democracy, instead of dictatorship, to ensure a better future and to be prepared to wade through a river of blood to get at the same few that withhold that power from them now. It will be (it is) a very bloody revolution, but if the leaders of this revolution are responsible caring human beings with a clear vision for the prosperity and power of a future democratic China then the gravitas, economic prosperity, inventiveness, soft power AND global leadership China can achieve will be enormous.

  • @pancakeninja445

    @pancakeninja445

    4 жыл бұрын

    Winston Smith utter rubbish

  • @Xaiando

    @Xaiando

    4 жыл бұрын

    About that. I know tons of people are upset with the ccp. What percentage you think is the disapproval of the ccp and want reform? I noticed especially the regular workers and students mostly would complain about the government to me.

  • @Xaiando

    @Xaiando

    4 жыл бұрын

    @jshowa o yeah I agree. I think any form of government in China is accepted as long as they care for culture and freedom.

  • @hydrazine19
    @hydrazine194 жыл бұрын

    Single-model development in a vast nation (bound to be a disaster w/ an epidemic or down economy), and state-driven thought-monogamy even among the educated youth, were really the reasons that drove me out. There is also a change in attitude and values too now that they have means to push others around, from national to individual level. If I’m to speak of a positive, it’d be that their infrastructure is new, if it doesn’t collapse. An understanding that all things get old would’ve taught them a thing or two about humility.

  • @bluesea421
    @bluesea4214 жыл бұрын

    Got food poisoning 3 times within 5 business trips, I will never go back again.

  • @fs5775

    @fs5775

    Жыл бұрын

    my shit came out GRAY once ....and purple.... went to the Chinese doctor and he said it was MY body's fault for not adjusting to their food. China? never again.

  • @teacherverina
    @teacherverina3 жыл бұрын

    I live in a small city in the northeast - there are still small communities here and open markets, restaurants that set up tables on the sidewalk. The cost of living is still incredibly low, and the people are genuinely nice; they'll make an effort to help you even with the language barrier. The ancient temples have been cared for by buddhist monks, no efforts to tear them down or replace them with new buildings (and they are so beautiful) have been made.

  • @timurermolenko2013
    @timurermolenko20134 жыл бұрын

    Imagine an American restaurant charging Chinese more than others. There would be lots of CCTV aka CGTN aka SCMP videos talking about it.

  • @kempyx533

    @kempyx533

    4 жыл бұрын

    Also plenty of leftists protesting outside, calling for boycotts, smashing windows etc.

  • @robspunk

    @robspunk

    4 жыл бұрын

    Woke

  • @MMABeijing

    @MMABeijing

    4 жыл бұрын

    17 years in china, was never overcharged in a restaurant. he is spinning things for views

  • @timurermolenko2013

    @timurermolenko2013

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MMABeijing he did not say that every single restaurant charges foreigners more. I didn't have that problem in the mainland either. but even a single fact of that shows how things are.

  • @MMABeijing

    @MMABeijing

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@timurermolenko2013 well everybody having travelled to china can testify that foreigners get the same prices as locals. also if you were a saudi prince visiting the USA you would find examples of being abused, especially if u did not speak or read chinese.

  • @roberthardy5171
    @roberthardy51714 жыл бұрын

    You don’t even have to go to a very rural area to get refused at a hotel because they don’t accept foreigners. I’ve been refused several times in SHANGHAI for this reason.

  • @waterheaterservices

    @waterheaterservices

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the warning. Going to China next week. I will minimize my visit.

  • @VeryProPlayerYesSir1122

    @VeryProPlayerYesSir1122

    4 жыл бұрын

    What is the point of having a hotel if that doesn't accept foreigners ?

  • @muajin

    @muajin

    4 жыл бұрын

    They have to have a permit to host foreigners. If they don’t have this, you’ll get refused.

  • @Stanveljkovic69

    @Stanveljkovic69

    4 жыл бұрын

    Which hotel? I’ve stayed in easily over 100 and have never had a single issue and that’s including Chinese owned hotels.

  • @WG-xi1ux

    @WG-xi1ux

    4 жыл бұрын

    Robert Hardy China is in the process of another "Big Leap Backward" into Mao's era.

  • @glennwalker5036
    @glennwalker50364 жыл бұрын

    My jaw literally dropped when that man blew the contents of his nose onto the street.

  • @60-second-HACKS

    @60-second-HACKS

    4 жыл бұрын

    Get used to it ... and step aside.

  • @greyfox3015

    @greyfox3015

    4 жыл бұрын

    To give you an idea of the contrast between Hong Kong and mainland China, blowing your nose like that or spitting on the street in Hong King is actually illegal.

  • @nigelalderman9178

    @nigelalderman9178

    4 жыл бұрын

    I have a Chinese guy who works with me sometimes. He does this every morning and often wipes it on adjacent shop windows. He's still a nice guy to work with

  • @kipling1957

    @kipling1957

    4 жыл бұрын

    It was called a sailor’s blow back in the day in working class England.

  • @andresvillanueva5421

    @andresvillanueva5421

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@nigelalderman9178 Fucking gross.

  • @chuanist
    @chuanist4 жыл бұрын

    So-called 'urban redevelopment' is a world-wide phenomenon, with the same devitalizing and de-humanizing effects everywhere. I have heard a Spanish woman (Ph.D. from U.C. Berkeley) complain that the plazas in small towns in Spain-where everyone would go to eat, see and be seen-are being replaced by shopping malls. American cities too are being remade to the pleasure of bankers and developers, but not citizens, who find the sterility and lack of diversity alienating and numbing. I am sorry to see China undergoing its version of this plague. Especially as I have been a student of native Chinese health and medical practices, which are waning in the face of urban growth and materialism.

  • @e2environnement840
    @e2environnement8404 жыл бұрын

    Hello, I was in China in the 80's and from what I see the old China is gone.

  • @illuminocalypse5210

    @illuminocalypse5210

    4 жыл бұрын

    What was China like in the 80s versus now? How did it contrast?

  • @vvvkk

    @vvvkk

    4 жыл бұрын

    ​@@illuminocalypse5210 I am Chinese, borned in early 90s. I lived in the US for 7 years. Things did change a lot in China in both good and bad ways. The gov tightened policies a lot in many areas now(movies internet social media censored, Foreign Exchange Control etc). I mean you can't say for sure if those are good or bad because group of people actually support those policy but I just personaly hate it. Of course air pollution was a huge problem but it's getting better now. Antibiotic and uneatable chemicals used in food especially seafood in order to keep them alive or better looking by some dealers. It's better now because of the heavy punishment but food safty is still a problem for sure. Of course there's inflation here. On the other side, people are getting higher quality of life. Salary income increased a lot. My mom earned about 30 dollers a month back in the 80s and that's above the average. From 2004 the program of extending power supplied in villages many people saw electric light for the first time. Younger generations are well educated. Medical level improved. Those are the biggest changes pop up to my head. I am sure there are people miss the 80s(hard life with good memories) but I doubt that people wants to live back in the 80s again. I can understand why some foreigners claimed China changed. In the old days, Chinese are more or less worship of foreigners because they are rich and high educated and good looking I guess. Can you imagine the whole city's police going out to the steet to search just a missing wallet for a foreigner and they find it within 12 hours. I lost my phone and I called the police, they asked me to wait and I waited for 10 years it still missing. However that's the old story

  • @WorstCommenter2008
    @WorstCommenter20084 жыл бұрын

    That old guy spitting snot out of his nose on the frikking side walk, I thought smokers coughing up their glumps of crap and spitting it on the road was bad but that's even more disgusting...

  • @mommachupacabra

    @mommachupacabra

    3 жыл бұрын

    To compare - back when people carried cloth handkerchiefs, they thought blowing your snot into a rag and stuffing it back into your purse or pocket was just as disgusting (read that in, I think, the book on India "My Heart Has 17 Rooms" written back in the... 1950's? American woman goes expat with her husband and kids to India where he was an engineer on new dam construction, and she volunteers in a small local hospital just to avoid being what was then the typical American Housewife Overseas.)

  • @fs5775

    @fs5775

    Жыл бұрын

    I lived in China two years. I have seen that snot scene sooooo many times but also from young women, old women, etc. They truly are filthy. God I don't miss it.

  • @flawlessultimate
    @flawlessultimate2 жыл бұрын

    As a young kid, my grandparents and parents spoke shanghainese, my school would condemn me speaking this language but I didn't care. I lived in one of these villages near nanjing road. We were evicted by the government and everyone were told to move out. Miss my friends and the friendly communities. Now I live in NZ and have been for the last 9 years

  • @route573
    @route5734 жыл бұрын

    When I was in Shanghai, I called the police for a situation, not only did they have an English speaking service, they asked if I needed them to come pick me up at my hotel. Which they did within 20 minutes, they took me to a local police station, took my report and then drove me back to my hotel. Not sure if anyone else has had dealings with local law enforcement in Shanghai, but mine was good.

  • @Bunjamin27
    @Bunjamin274 жыл бұрын

    Just when there's nothing to watch.. >Glasses swoosh

  • @cannonball666

    @cannonball666

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think the "swoosh" sound byte came from a kung fu movie.

  • @dannyalvarez4982
    @dannyalvarez49824 жыл бұрын

    I love your videos I’ve been watching your content for years

  • @comradeh3956
    @comradeh39564 жыл бұрын

    I went to China with my parents, having just turned 18. I loved how safe I felt walking the streets of cities like Xi’an and Shanghai on my own.

  • @georgemiller151
    @georgemiller1513 жыл бұрын

    The urban renewal that destroys old, street life-friendly neighborhoods occurred in America in the 1950’s-70’s and did a huge amount of social and cultural damage. I live in downtown Philadelphia which is one of only 3 or 4 American cities that retains a lively, pedestrian-oriented downtown. The same thinking predominantly: “Old= poverty. Bad. New = affluence and the future. Good.” You colleague Laowhy’s wife commented on how disappointed she was in New York City because so many buildings are old. I grew up in New York and am sadden because so many buildings there are new. What China’s doing to their old livable neighborhoods is a phase all developing societies go through. They will regret it and don’t recognize the cultural damage they’re causing: social isolation, a loss of public space, etc. Read Jane Jacob’s “The Death and Life of Great American Cities”.

  • @kenredington4988
    @kenredington49884 жыл бұрын

    At about the 13 min mark "gullible" was not the word you were looking for, it was "Programmed"

  • @jantschierschky3461
    @jantschierschky34614 жыл бұрын

    Well I do agree with you, use to have great time in China, people were friendly and curious. Now it comes across as hostile, even those I know are guarded. Especially when in Shanghai there use to be a charm, warms.

  • @dennishassler605

    @dennishassler605

    4 жыл бұрын

    People live in fear of the CCP?

  • @jantschierschky3461

    @jantschierschky3461

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@dennishassler605 is the propaganda, is all very negative towards the west. Also I feel because China has become powerful, people start having a superior complex

  • @ED_667

    @ED_667

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@tobyxi9921 well till the west stops ignoring the truth and halt all the trade with China, it still gonna live sadly

  • @the_gilded_age_phoenix8717

    @the_gilded_age_phoenix8717

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ED_667 The West is run by Big Business psychos that have no national loyalty. They only care about cheap labor and profits...they will happily enrich China and destroy the Western nations for these things. It's also the prime reason the Western countries are the only ones with open immigration policies...trying to immigrate in as many foreign workers as possible to lower salaries.

  • @zenscape663

    @zenscape663

    4 жыл бұрын

    what a surprise...racist white guy marries his submissive asian doll to satisfy his perverted fetishes yet hates her country of origin.

  • @HeadlessChickenTO
    @HeadlessChickenTO4 жыл бұрын

    One of my uncles married a China woman back in the mid 90s. And has since done many visits to China from then even up to now, though he has slowed down tremendously. He was absolutely in love with China, so much so that its his exclusive vacation spot and will literally not go anywhere else in the world. His kids have never seen Disney, they've never experienced a cruise, hit a nice beach with the Atlantic or Pacific Ocean crashing against them...none of that. So much was his love for China that he even wants to "buy" property there and basically retire there one day because him as a tourist sees life there as easy and cheap, and that the people there has life made for them. And its easy to view things that way when you don't live there; a tourist in Iraq can have the same experience doesn't mean life there is all that great. No one, not even his kids, can change his mind on this matter. Even they have gotten tired of going back now as young adults...they've skipped the past several trips.

  • @deejay7339
    @deejay73394 жыл бұрын

    19:58 that lady was really aggressive eating that meal, haha..

  • @BarneyLeith
    @BarneyLeith4 жыл бұрын

    Had three goes to find a hotel that had a license to accommodate foreigners when visiting (in 2017) a rural area with my family and my granddaughter's best friend and the best friend's mum, who was Chinese. The owner of the first hotel we tried was very helpful. Gave us a great lunch at no charge and went down the road to find us a hotel where we could stay. Even so, once we'd checked into the second hotel, 12 policemen arrived (2 cops for each of us) to check us out. They didn't give us any trouble though and we had a great time in this scenic area where we were the only foreigners. The best friend's mum was invaluable: she could fix things for us and negotiate (hard) with the locals because she was Chinese. Have had two month-long trips to China (the second one was in March & April 2019) and enjoyed both trips greatly. My wife and I are independent travellers and were not on package tours either time. We stayed in a mixture of hotels and in our family's apartment in Tianjin. Should add that none of our family is Chinese. We generally found people (other than taxi drivers) helpful and friendly.

  • @radioclash84
    @radioclash844 жыл бұрын

    Welcome to London. It isn’t just China it is everywhere around the world.

  • @willybigp

    @willybigp

    4 жыл бұрын

    At least it's not the government doing it

  • @didiprangsak1757

    @didiprangsak1757

    4 жыл бұрын

    Dario Guilherme What's the difference?

  • @willybigp

    @willybigp

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@didiprangsak1757 the government uses taxes to do it, you are basically being asked to leave your house with your money

  • @0Kyron0

    @0Kyron0

    4 жыл бұрын

    Fuck off lol ive spent tonnes of time in london dont compare that to china

  • @radioclash84

    @radioclash84

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@0Kyron0 you fool you spent lots of time in London I live here. All I'm saying is it isn't just happening in China. Maybe not to that degree but it is happening.

  • @reeffeeder
    @reeffeeder4 жыл бұрын

    This is saddening. I've watched your videos for a long time and always loved your positive view on China. Sad to hear things are changing for the worst.

  • @kiwi6444
    @kiwi64443 жыл бұрын

    I have been spending 5 months each year for the last 5 years in China flying Firebombers and Cropdusting aircraft. Most of the time up in the NE in a town called Jiagedaqi/Jagdaqi. The Chinese would organize everything required for the contract, all paperwork etc. They would organize literally everything, transport food accommodation, wipe your bottom the entire way and pay you well for minimal work. That was the good part, but as the years went on things were noticeably deteriorating. Pay was becoming late and the more you questioned why the worse it became. I remember requesting a pay rise after 3 years as the Chinese pilots got one every year but the foreign pilots did not. Boy oh did things head south after that, Its like I had disrespected them. In the West the longer you spend with a company and show loyalty etc, the better the company treats you. I felt the complete opposite up in China. But if there is one thing about everything in China I have learned, it is all opposite, down to the last little detail. Made some great Chinese friends but 5 years was enough for me.

  • @bryanlint9327
    @bryanlint93274 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed the people in China. They were the best students I ever had.

  • @TheColonelKlink
    @TheColonelKlink4 жыл бұрын

    Amazing fantastic people. Horrifying government.

  • @roberthardy5171

    @roberthardy5171

    4 жыл бұрын

    TheColonelKlink I mean I wouldn’t go too overboard. Of course there are some great people in China, but actually to be honest most of them have been totally brainwashed by the party, they cant thinks critically about anything and they’re super nationalist. Makes it hard to make real and genuine connections.

  • @michaelwalter9907

    @michaelwalter9907

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@roberthardy5171 I've made a lot of Chinese friends. I'll agree with TheColonelKlink and say China has fantastic people. I've been into some disagreements with some Chinese friends who are pretty nationalist. We were able to put our differences aside and still be friends. It's not too different from political partisanship in the US. In the US, I have friends on the other side of the aisle that I disagree with, but we still can shoot the shit and drink a beer together.

  • @tver3407

    @tver3407

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelwalter9907 oh please, there are great people all over the world, its nothing special, how they behave in public is, do they call the ambulance when you get hit by a car, do they protect children that are not their own? NO. this has nothing to do with the government, in fact as Winston pointed out in another video...the government is trying to fix this behavior with a few posters( good luck with that ), but reality is that its just normal not to care for anybody(unless its your direct family), not even your fellow Chinese.

  • @Chris-gl2dk
    @Chris-gl2dk4 жыл бұрын

    Serpentza. I have you on this one. I'm an American. I lived in Palm Beach, Florida. And also in differenent places of the US. Non of the places excited me. Even though I had a Decent life finacialy. everywhere I went I just wasn't happy on the inside and very bored and unsatisfied. So, I desided to go to belize. 3rd world. poverty stricken. I lived on one of the Cayes there. The people were nice and it was a break away from anywhere else I tried. Lived there for six years. It has a corrupt government. Police where bad. Everything happened just as you discribed in your video. Maybe it took me experienceing this to finally make me realize how important my home was in the US. I'm moveing back home to the US in January. It cost me the same amount of money to live in a third world country that's a worse standard of living as it does to live in The US in a better more developed and higher standard of living. Go home Mate! live a life you deserve. Do while you got some life still left in ya... Don't beat yourself up for leaving those behind ya. Sometimes you got to do what's right for you... ( please excuse my typing, vacabulary, spell. ext. I've been drinking a bit). I watched almost all you're videos. Even the one when you met your wife. ( I hope that wasn't bringing up anything bad.) You're good! You're a smart intellegent guy. Get out of there while the getting is good! You're seeing all the signs of that society. It's just like here, It isn't going to get any better I promise you. Use some good old fashion common sence and leave! Good luck to ya Serpentza! I wish you the best! God Bless Mate!

  • @bassemb
    @bassemb4 жыл бұрын

    0:50 nice green screen shot there with the focus pull and everything :D

  • @MrKikip1992
    @MrKikip19924 жыл бұрын

    Dancing grannies. I love watching the dancing grannies in the town square. That's something I'll miss when I go home

  • @Mattsta2010

    @Mattsta2010

    4 жыл бұрын

    beware the guang chang wu....lol. they take no prisoners.

  • @renatajastrzebski3081
    @renatajastrzebski30814 жыл бұрын

    I arrived here in 2002, still here, and sadly everything you said in this video is true.

  • @Wickedtingzz

    @Wickedtingzz

    4 жыл бұрын

    Renata Jastrzebski hopefully you used a VPN to post this comment ... oh wait hopefully not nord VPN allegedly

  • @X-Prime123

    @X-Prime123

    4 жыл бұрын

    Polska nie dobra? Lol

  • @renatajastrzebski3081

    @renatajastrzebski3081

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@X-Prime123 I am Australian born and unlike a lot of Poles who went to Aus in the 1950s my father did not change our family name to 'fit in'.

  • @renatajastrzebski3081

    @renatajastrzebski3081

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Wickedtingzz Tried Nord, didn't work at all, they refunded the money, no complaints in that respect.

  • @Wickedtingzz

    @Wickedtingzz

    4 жыл бұрын

    Renata Jastrzebski well that is good I suppose. thought I wonder how long ago was this ? because I wonder if this was part of there policy before there recent scandal of poor security and or discretion allegedly

  • @ronaldschaefer7157
    @ronaldschaefer71574 жыл бұрын

    One thing I miss a lot about China is its traditional landscaped gardens like in Yangzhou and Suzhou.

  • @niagarat
    @niagarat4 жыл бұрын

    Positives are how the people are very friendly. I have gone to China in 5 times, 2 times to our factory and tourist traps in Beijing, 3 times to Fuzhou with a family that has homes in USA and China. Staying with a family i was able to experience so much more about China culture more than going to factory and tourist trap trip. Ate everything from fish lips to pork brains and never got heart burn or indigestion, soon as i got back to USA my first meal i was eating Rolaids like M n Ms. Attended a three day Buddist wedding, went to Temples, restaurants, Hot Springs, and many home cooked meals i was very lucky to experience so much that most Americans do not get the opportunity when they visit China. I wished i spoke the language, translation apps are not always accurate. Like in your video their village is being destroyed for high rises, and they had some incredible homes that living in a high rise isnt the same. Stay awesome, i enjoy your videos and view points. I travel alot in USA in my work, going to China since 02 and going to our rust belt areas in USA since that same time, you can see the incredible modern 21 century change in China and the decay in most of our rust belt areas in the USA.

  • @saltyapostle44
    @saltyapostle444 жыл бұрын

    The best thing about China - it's not South Africa!

  • @sturmdrang4976
    @sturmdrang49764 жыл бұрын

    Funny.. Because I just returned from China where I found ancient architect buildings are still intact and undemolished and welll preserved and this fact I found whereever in China ..

  • @sturmdrang4976

    @sturmdrang4976

    4 жыл бұрын

    And there were no pickpockets in China ..from my dozens of times traveling experience..

  • @serpentza

    @serpentza

    4 жыл бұрын

    You're easily fooled or perhaps not very observant

  • @leezhieng

    @leezhieng

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@serpentza haha why you are triggered. i have went to many places in china and saw these ancient buildings as well. Those demolished villages aren't that old actually. Just because it has traditional architecture style doesn't mean it's ancient. The really ancient stuff are being protected by the government, such as many of the ancient hakka walled villages in fujian, still intact and preserved. Don't be ignorant serpentza.

  • @kel8026
    @kel80264 жыл бұрын

    I think what you can do is when they say 'no foreigners allowed' at an accommodation, is instead just go and register yourself at the police station and say you're staying there. I've done this before. It worked anyway, in Inner Mongolia. :P

  • @admagnificat
    @admagnificat4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing all of these insights. Indeed, it's great to hear about how some things have changed over the years that you have lived in China -- whether for better, or for worse.

  • @ExJapTer
    @ExJapTer4 жыл бұрын

    As for positive things about China, I was last there in 2003, had an amazing time, but I know the China of 2003 is long gone.

  • @arthritis2718

    @arthritis2718

    4 жыл бұрын

    Don't be brainwashed.

  • @ExJapTer

    @ExJapTer

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@arthritis2718 are you saying china of 2003, before the big leap in modernization is the same as now?????

  • @ExJapTer

    @ExJapTer

    4 жыл бұрын

    When i was in Shanghai cars were still uncommon and everyone rode bicycles. I am pretty sure that is long gone.

  • @moneymandan6217
    @moneymandan62174 жыл бұрын

    Wow how you're video's have changed, i remember you were always drinking eating out relaxing etc...

  • @laugh-track-matt
    @laugh-track-matt4 жыл бұрын

    enjoid your series for years buddy . keep your head up . cheers yo

  • @lawrenceiverson1924
    @lawrenceiverson1924 Жыл бұрын

    My sister was the 200th foreigner to visit Hainan dao in 1980 . This is a typical complaint ." Oh, it used to be so nice when i first came, but now it's all touristy "