Search This Blog

Fake Rolex So Real You Have to Nerd Up to More than One "Tell" to Tell

 Companies in China have been making fake, clone, super fake, ultra copy, counterfeit, knockoff, imitation, bogus, scam copies of Official Luxury items, like ROLEX watches form more than 20 years now & they are getting really good at it. If you are going to buy a used ROLEX watch, I highly recommend watching this video https://youtu.be/P_ZTqC2Yxxs by Watchfinder.co.uk https://www.watchfinder.com



Godless capitalist heathens who seek to steal from & destroy their competition rather than competing fairly. The PRC the most unethical & immoral country on Earth! Sure you can blame North Korea, but overall China produces more pollution, more fake products & more negative impact on other economies than any other country.

China an industrial manufacturing juggernaut without a peer of equal capacity elsewhere in the world, or ability to produce so many real & fake products at such a fast rate for a global export driven economic miracle that took China from a 3rd world agrarian economy with an ancient beautiful cultural history, especially in Tea making, & converted it into the worst brutal communist social bully of a county. Dishonorable, lies & corruption at every level of society, its a land of "fake it until you make it" "corner cutting cost optimization low cost production excellence" where cheap toxic ingredients & components like lead oxide are still added to products as a white pigment when the rest of the world moved to titanium dioxide as a lead free "white" pigment many years ago. In China, what ever is cheaper is what moves. Think low cost high volume production of all matter of goods! 

Many "luxury" goods are actually made in China & that is where the basis of cloning the official good happens by liars & thieves. Many times, the fake items made in the same factory as the official item, nearly impossible to tell apart, aside from the cheaper materials that do not hold up as well over time. Consider the Ultrafake ROLEX for a good example. They even clone the machinery used in Switzerland by the official watch maker, so the fake ROLEX made using the same tooling & methods as the original, resulting in final tolerances that are getting better & better every year. They even clone the Land Rover Evoque SUV in China & sell a fake knock off, duplicated both inside & out, & sold in China as the Landwind X7, the subject of a great legal controversy // see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landwind_X7

I heart from some Christian missionaries that had visited China, that in China, if someone driving a car hits a pedestrian, they will back up & hit them again until the pedestrian is dead out of legal fear of being held accountable to pay for the lifelong injuries from a non fatal strike, so if they do hit someone, they make sure to hit deadly hard. This a "Dog eat Dog" mentality & they do eat dogs or anything else edible or semi-edible. Its hard to feed so many mouths in China, its population the largest of any country. Coal power, the dirtiest, most toxic & lest sustainable form of energy dominates the thermal power mix for grid power & even in domestic cooking & heating applications as small briquettes made of coal are burned in poorly designed stoves that product heavy indoor air pollution thick with particulate matter & carbon monoxide.

I hate the CCP & the PRC because I love the ROC & Taiwan! I also feel sad for the people in Honk Kong, another place that China ruined! There have been protesting in the streets of Honk Kong since 1999, when the British lease ended & they had to give it back to the PRC. 

China really burned my mind with negative memories due to the June 4th 1989 incident in Tiananmen Square & 20+ year long followup persecution of anyone in China promoting democracy ; see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_Tiananmen_Square_protests_and_massacre

The protests started on 15 April and were forcibly suppressed on 4 June when the government declared martial law and sent the People's Liberation Armyto occupy parts of central Beijing. Estimates of the death toll vary from several hundred to several thousand, with thousands more wounded. The popular national movement inspired by the Beijing protests is sometimes called the '89 Democracy Movement(Chinese: 八九民运; pinyin: Bājiǔ mínyùn) or the Tiananmen Square Incident (Chinese: 天安门事件pinyinTiān'ānmén shìjiàn).

The protests were precipitated by the death of pro-reform Chinese Communist Party (CCP) general secretary Hu Yaobang in April 1989 amid the backdrop of rapid economic development and social change in post-Mao China, reflecting anxieties among the people and political elite about the country's future. The reforms of the 1980s had led to a nascent market economy that benefited some people but seriously disadvantaged others, and the one-party political system also faced a challenge to its legitimacy. |

Common grievances at the time included inflation, corruption, limited preparedness of graduates for the new economy, and restrictions on political participation. Although they were highly disorganized and their goals varied, the students called for greater accountability, constitutional due process, democracy, freedom of the press, and freedom of speech. At the height of the protests, about one million people assembled in the Square.

As the protests developed, the authorities responded with both conciliatory and hardline tactics, exposing deep divisions within the party leadership. By May, a student-led hunger strike galvanized support around the country for the demonstrators, and the protests spread to some 400 cities. Among the CCP's top leadership, Premier Li Peng and Party Elders Li Xiannian and Wang Zhen called for decisive action through violent suppression of the protesters, and ultimately managed to win over Paramount Leader Deng Xiaoping and President Yang Shangkun to their side. 

On 20 May, the State Council declared martial law. They mobilized as many as ~300,000 troops to Beijing. The troops advanced into central parts of Beijing on the city's major thoroughfares in the early morning hours of 4 June, killing both demonstrators and bystanders in the process. The military operations were under the overall command of General Yang Baibing, half-brother of President Yang Shangkun.

The international community, human rights organizations, and political analysts condemned the Chinese government for the massacre. Western countries imposed arms embargoes on China. The Chinese government made widespread arrests of protesters and their supporters, suppressed other protests around China, expelled foreign journalists, strictly controlled coverage of the events in the domestic press, strengthened the police and internal security forces, and demoted or purged officials it deemed sympathetic to the protests.

More broadly, the suppression ended the political reforms begun in 1986 and halted the policies of liberalization of the 1980s, which were only partly resumed after Deng Xiaoping's Southern Tour in 1992. Considered a watershed event, reaction to the protests set limits on political expression in China, limits that have lasted up to the present day. Remembering the protests is widely associated with questioning the legitimacy of CCP rule and remains one of the most sensitive and most widely censored topics in China

No comments:

Post a Comment