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A Chinese netizen encourages Chinese people to escape the One Child Policy and rebuild China by emigrating overseas to have more children, using a fake photo.
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Listener asks Shanghai radio hosts to stop speaking Shanghainese. In response, host tells the listener to leave the city if they hate Shanghai and Shanghainese.
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Chinese netizens react to the 2009 United Nations Copenhagen Climate Change Conference failure to produce a binding pact with set emission reduction targets.
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Shanghai pushes to provide free compulsory education for 100% of migrant workers' children by the end of 2010, but many Shanghainese are concerned and opposed.
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Photographs posted online of "undisciplined" female Taiwanese soldiers, including one who shows off her pink bra, have reached mainland China's netizens.
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Resisting the forceful eviction and demolition of their homes, Chinese residents in Kunming hang hand-made banners appealing to a tomboy pop star for salvation.
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Chinese netizens react to the chief procurator of Arun Qi in Inner Mongolia, China and her husband both driving expensive luxury SUVs they claim to be borrowed.
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Chinese netizens react to a series of photos (incl. Copehagen Conference) showing the effects of global warming, pollution, & climate change around the world.
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Transcript of an exchange between a Japanese reporter from the Kyodo News Agency & a Beijing (Peking) University student. Netizens are impressed and skeptical.
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Shanxi coal bosses are part of China's 'new rich', possessing immense wealth, spending huge sums of money, & living decadent lifestyles while their miners die.
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Photos of 30 Chinese couples simultaneously getting married at a Zen monastery in Zhejiang province of China, receiving the blessings of a Buddhist monk.
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Chinese netizens are furious over news reports of a woman in Chengdu, China who set herself on fire to protest the government evicting and demolishing her home.
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Nearly 1000 cats were discovered by Chinese netizens stuffed in cages without food or water in Tianjin, China, waiting to be sold & slaughtered for their meat.
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Famous Chinese blogger Han Han and many Chinese netizens are wondering how Shanghai can spend 200 million RMB to replace 5000 road signs. Does each cost 40,000?
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Chinese netizens defend the popular but sometimes controversial 男人装 (Nan Ren Zhuang), the Chinese version of men's lifestyle magazine FHM (For Him Magazine).
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A Chinese urban resident complains online about 'discriminatory' policies preventing city people from getting land or buying houses in rural areas, is cursed.
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A government official in China refuses to answer a journalist how taxpayer public funds are used unless the person asking is a member of the Communist Party.