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主题: 中国共产党和政府才是真正的反日先锋
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作者 中国共产党和政府才是真正的反日先锋   
tomex






加入时间: 2005/04/06
文章: 260

经验值: 140


文章标题: 中国共产党和政府才是真正的反日先锋 (463 reads)      时间: 2005-4-18 周一, 下午12:59

作者:tomex罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org

依我看:中国共产党和政府才是真正的反日先锋

中国的老百姓反日最多拒买日货,往日本大使馆砸石块,砸日本人的商店,甚至砸中国人的日本汽车或物品。
抗日的口号喊得冲天响,实际行动对自身没什么直接影响,99.99%的损失和后果都具体体现在别人身上。

党和政府决不会亲自动手做这些下三滥的小动作,以往的强烈抗议又没有什么直接明显的效果。
于是此次,外交部长李肇星代表中国政府对日本人说:中国拒绝日本要求的因驻华的大使馆和领事馆被砸而道歉;中国政府没(亲手)做了什么对不起日本人民的事。相反,应指责的是(日本)“一连串事件伤害了中国人民的感情”。

别小看了这个意思,轻轻松松地就把这位外交部长的政治前途赔上去了。万一中国政府可能因此而在国际上有什么不利影响,或者引起“蝴蝶效应”而危及政权,这2000万颗别人的人头换来的好处就全都泡汤了。

中国人民的感情早被政府的大小公仆们伤过多次,感情伤不伤也没做过详尽调查,更多的农民兄弟还没明白怎么回事儿,再还剩有的感情也早兑换成二十年的稳定了。所以,人民感情可有可无,不提也罢。

唯一剩下感情伤害的受害者不是人民,而是政府。政府感情刚刚就受到某国伤害:侮辱江核心和掐了的贷款。

各国政府老实点,如果谁伤了中国政府的感情,到时候就别要求中国政府保持礼貌,全部后果自负。


附CNN新闻:

Beijing rejects Tokyo demand for apology

BEIJING, China (AP) -- China on Sunday rebuffed Japanese demands for an apology after stone-throwing protesters damaged the Japanese Embassy and a consulate in demonstrations over Tokyo's wartime history and campaign for a permanent U.N. Security Council seat.

"The Chinese government has never done anything that wronged the Japanese people," Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing told his visiting Japanese counterpart as China allowed new demonstrations in at least six cities.

Li said Japan, instead, was to blame for "a series of things that have hurt the feelings of the Chinese people" over issues such as relations with rival Taiwan and "the subject of history" -- a reference to Japanese school textbooks that critics say minimize World War II atrocities.

Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura appealed to Li to protect Tokyo's diplomats and citizens as his government denounced violence on Saturday in Shanghai, where police allowed rioters to break windows and damage restaurants and cars.

"I wish the Chinese government would sincerely handle this matter under international regulations," Machimura said, apparently referring to treaties that obligate Beijing to protect diplomatic missions.

Japanese public broadcaster NHK quoted Machimura as saying earlier Sunday in Tokyo that he would warn Beijing that relations, "including on the economic front, could decline to a serious state."

Relations between Beijing and Tokyo have soured amid disagreements over the Security Council, gas resources in disputed seas and the new schoolbooks that critics say gloss over Japan's abuses such as germ warfare and sex slavery during its conquest of Asia.

In the southern cities of Shenzhen and Guangzhou, thousands of protesters called for a boycott of Japanese goods, a Japanese diplomat said. Smaller, peaceful rallies were held in nearby Dongguan and Zhuhai and in Chengdu in the west.

In Shenyang in the northeast, about 1,000 protesters marched to the Japanese Consulate but were kept away by police. The crowd threw stones but didn't break windows, said a consulate official, Shoji Dai. He said the protest ended in about 90 minutes.

In Shenzhen, two groups -- one with up to 10,000 people -- marched past a Japanese-owned Jusco department store calling for a boycott of Japanese goods, said Chiharu Tsuruoka, Japan's vice consul general in Guangzhou.

Another 500 protesters were outside another Jusco branch in Guangzhou, Tsuruoka said.

Earlier Sunday, police tried to block a planned protest in Guangzhou, shooing passers-by away from a stadium where a march was to start. Police stood guard outside Japan's Guangzhou Consulate.

Some have suggested that Beijing permitted earlier protests to undermine Tokyo's Security Council campaign. Beijing regards Tokyo as a rival for regional dominance, and is unlikely to want to give up its status as the only Asian government with a permanent seat on the U.N. council.

But Beijing called last week for calm, apparently afraid of causing more damage to relations with Tokyo or encouraging others to take to the streets to demonstrate against corruption or demand political reforms.

The Communist Party newspaper People's Daily called in a front-page editorial Sunday for the public to "maintain social stability."

It didn't mention the protests, but said "frictions and problems of various kinds ... can only be settled in an orderly manner by abiding by the law and with a sober mind."

Japan's trade minister warned Sunday that the violence would hurt China's reputation and economy.

"People around the world are wondering whether it's all right to pursue economic activity (in China)," Trade Minister Shoichi Nakagawa was quoted as saying by Japan's Kyodo News agency.

On Saturday, thousands of police watched as demonstrators -- some shouting "Kill the Japanese!" -- threw stones, eggs and plastic bottles and broke windows at the Japanese Consulate in Shanghai. The crowd vandalized Japanese restaurants and damaged Japanese-made cars.

Shanghai government spokeswoman Jiao Yang blamed Japan for the violence, saying the demonstrations were prompted by "Japan's wrong attitudes and actions on a series of issues such as its history of aggression," the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

On Sunday, the consulate was ringed by hundreds of police, some armed with shields, but there was no sign of new protests. The consulate's walls were splattered blue and black from paint bombs.

Many Chinese believe Japan has never truly shown remorse for atrocities committed during its pre-World War II invasion of China.

Thousands of people held peaceful protests Saturday in Hangzhou and Tianjin. In Beijing, hundreds of police blanketed Tiananmen Square in the heart of the capital to block a planned demonstration.


http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/04/17/china.japan.ap/index.html

作者:tomex罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
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