nortex97 said:
Screw CCP but I am certainly praying this doesn't happen.
I agree, hope their people come out ok.. their leaders not so much
nortex97 said:
Screw CCP but I am certainly praying this doesn't happen.
fasthorse05 said:In my younger days, your comment was my exact thoughts.Mostly Sunny Disposition said:
Good. **** China
Now, if the flood could hit the party headquarters and wipe out the politburo, bring it on. However, like many benighted and ignorant souls of a dictatorship, it's likely 80% of the 1.4 billion folks in China are great people who just want to take care of their families and live a life.
So in my old age, I'm conflicted. However, anything that's bad for China can't be too bad for us.
locovaquero said:fasthorse05 said:In my younger days, your comment was my exact thoughts.Mostly Sunny Disposition said:
Good. **** China
Now, if the flood could hit the party headquarters and wipe out the politburo, bring it on. However, like many benighted and ignorant souls of a dictatorship, it's likely 80% of the 1.4 billion folks in China are great people who just want to take care of their families and live a life.
So in my old age, I'm conflicted. However, anything that's bad for China can't be too bad for us.
That's because your testosterone levels are a fraction of what they used to be. 99.9 percent of Chinese people would cheer the death of millions of Americans. If a nation does not oppose its government it is complicit in its actions.
Way too harsh. Even here few are willing to do that because fairly certain will end up prison or worse, and that is here where the odds of being summarily shot and disposed of are far less.locovaquero said:fasthorse05 said:In my younger days, your comment was my exact thoughts.Mostly Sunny Disposition said:
Good. **** China
Now, if the flood could hit the party headquarters and wipe out the politburo, bring it on. However, like many benighted and ignorant souls of a dictatorship, it's likely 80% of the 1.4 billion folks in China are great people who just want to take care of their families and live a life.
So in my old age, I'm conflicted. However, anything that's bad for China can't be too bad for us.
That's because your testosterone levels are a fraction of what they used to be. 99.9 percent of Chinese people would cheer the death of millions of Americans. If a nation does not oppose its government it is complicit in its actions.
Get ready now because later is too late.Quote:
In a rare revelation, Beijing has admitted that its 2.4-kilometer Three Gorges Dam spanning the Yangtze River in Hubei province "deformed slightly" after record flooding.
The official Xinhua News Agency quoted the operator of the the world's largest hydroelectric gravity dam as saying that some nonstructural, peripheral parts of the dam had buckled.
The deformation occurred last Saturday when the flood from western provinces including Sichuan and Chongqing along the upper reaches of the Yangtze River peaked at a record-setting 61,000 cubic meters per second, according to China Three Gorges Corporation, a state-owned enterprise that manages the dam and the sprawling power plant underneath it.
The company noted that parts of the dam had "deformed slightly," displacing some external structures, and seepage into the main outlet walls had also been reported throughout the 18 hours on Saturday and Sunday when water was discharged though its outlets.
rab79 said:Get ready now because later is too late.Quote:
In a rare revelation, Beijing has admitted that its 2.4-kilometer Three Gorges Dam spanning the Yangtze River in Hubei province "deformed slightly" after record flooding.
The official Xinhua News Agency quoted the operator of the the world's largest hydroelectric gravity dam as saying that some nonstructural, peripheral parts of the dam had buckled.
The deformation occurred last Saturday when the flood from western provinces including Sichuan and Chongqing along the upper reaches of the Yangtze River peaked at a record-setting 61,000 cubic meters per second, according to China Three Gorges Corporation, a state-owned enterprise that manages the dam and the sprawling power plant underneath it.
The company noted that parts of the dam had "deformed slightly," displacing some external structures, and seepage into the main outlet walls had also been reported throughout the 18 hours on Saturday and Sunday when water was discharged though its outlets.
It's ccp speak so filter it through logic and what do you get?agent-maroon said:
How does record flooding "slightly deform" a "non-structural" part of a dam? Seems to me that if it can be affected by water flow and it's a part of a dam then it is a part of the structure. This statement doesn't ease any of my concerns or am I just reading this with incorrect assumptions?
rab79 said:
some interesting stuff about the dam and other things chinese at this link
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/china-three-gorges-dam-collapse/
agent-maroon said:rab79 said:Get ready now because later is too late.Quote:
In a rare revelation, Beijing has admitted that its 2.4-kilometer Three Gorges Dam spanning the Yangtze River in Hubei province "deformed slightly" after record flooding.
The official Xinhua News Agency quoted the operator of the the world's largest hydroelectric gravity dam as saying that some nonstructural, peripheral parts of the dam had buckled.
The deformation occurred last Saturday when the flood from western provinces including Sichuan and Chongqing along the upper reaches of the Yangtze River peaked at a record-setting 61,000 cubic meters per second, according to China Three Gorges Corporation, a state-owned enterprise that manages the dam and the sprawling power plant underneath it.
The company noted that parts of the dam had "deformed slightly," displacing some external structures, and seepage into the main outlet walls had also been reported throughout the 18 hours on Saturday and Sunday when water was discharged though its outlets.
How does record flooding "slightly deform" a "non-structural" part of a dam? Seems to me that if it can be affected by water flow and it's a part of a dam then it is a part of the structure. This statement doesn't ease any of my concerns or am I just reading this with incorrect assumptions?
locovaquero said:fasthorse05 said:In my younger days, your comment was my exact thoughts.Mostly Sunny Disposition said:
Good. **** China
Now, if the flood could hit the party headquarters and wipe out the politburo, bring it on. However, like many benighted and ignorant souls of a dictatorship, it's likely 80% of the 1.4 billion folks in China are great people who just want to take care of their families and live a life.
So in my old age, I'm conflicted. However, anything that's bad for China can't be too bad for us.
That's because your testosterone levels are a fraction of what they used to be. 99.9 percent of Chinese people would cheer the death of millions of Americans. If a nation does not oppose its government it is complicit in its actions.
Our first prediction of zombie apocalypse for 2020. That would really cap the year off.Quote:
I just got no idea what they will do other than be prepared for hardcore cannibalism and other mayhem at least in China.
We could offer them some of our communist/Marxist rioters, since they are dying to get out of America and live under communism anyway.zephyr88 said:
After the dam collapses, there's going to be a wave of support from the world to help China.
United States should NOT give them one red cent.
Yangtze River has been the core transportation, settlement and a principle agricultural area for China for Centuries. It was always subject to flooding when it would rain. The people who were moved -- whether at gunpoint or not -- during Construction, were just "right there" by the dam site, and behind it.aggiehawg said:
Are we really sure 400 million people would be affected? Just thinking about all of the stories about construction of ghost towns in China.
I think when Trump was having US companies converting to ramp up PPE, and other equipment, not to mention making deals with the pharmaceutical companies for vaccine and other drug production that issue was likely addressed as well.YouBet said:
Short-term I guess this could be catastrophic for us on the pharma front, but long-term it would be incredible for this country to cut them totally loose. Would be worth the pain now.
I'm not sure I realized until somewhat recently how much of our pharma base is manufactured there. The fact that we are that dependent on one of the most oppressive, de-humanizing countries on the planet for life-sustaining medicine is a catastrophic failure by this nation to protect it's citizens.
Surely to god we are doing something about that right now even if it's not making the news.
Well, I hope so. If this is being corrected it would be one of the greatest things he's done as President even if he will never get credit for it.aggiehawg said:I think when Trump was having US companies converting to ramp up PPE, and other equipment, not to mention making deals with the pharmaceutical companies for vaccine and other drug production that issue was likely addressed as well.YouBet said:
Short-term I guess this could be catastrophic for us on the pharma front, but long-term it would be incredible for this country to cut them totally loose. Would be worth the pain now.
I'm not sure I realized until somewhat recently how much of our pharma base is manufactured there. The fact that we are that dependent on one of the most oppressive, de-humanizing countries on the planet for life-sustaining medicine is a catastrophic failure by this nation to protect it's citizens.
Surely to god we are doing something about that right now even if it's not making the news.
YouBet said:That seems bad.good nuggets said:
Trump is not modest. He will take credit for it...even if Anderson Cooper criticizes Trump for holding a hand over his head.YouBet said:Well, I hope so. If this is being corrected it would be one of the greatest things he's done as President even if he will never get credit for it.aggiehawg said:I think when Trump was having US companies converting to ramp up PPE, and other equipment, not to mention making deals with the pharmaceutical companies for vaccine and other drug production that issue was likely addressed as well.YouBet said:
Short-term I guess this could be catastrophic for us on the pharma front, but long-term it would be incredible for this country to cut them totally loose. Would be worth the pain now.
I'm not sure I realized until somewhat recently how much of our pharma base is manufactured there. The fact that we are that dependent on one of the most oppressive, de-humanizing countries on the planet for life-sustaining medicine is a catastrophic failure by this nation to protect it's citizens.
Surely to god we are doing something about that right now even if it's not making the news.
Insert "Why not both?" Chinese girl here.scottimus said:
So do I need more ammo or TP?
I think she's Korean. Oh hell, I can't tell.Win At Life said:Insert "Why not both?" Chinese girl here.scottimus said:
So do I need more ammo or TP?
No telling. Thats the thing with anything chinese. Everything they say is false, if if you cant figure out why they'd be lying.AgsMnn said:
Are the chances high it will bust?
why not both?Rydyn said:I think she's Korean. Oh hell, I can't tell.Win At Life said:Insert "Why not both?" Chinese girl here.scottimus said:
So do I need more ammo or TP?
good nuggets said:
Quote:
It would be a black swan of epic proportions, China's Chernobyl moment. A tsunami-like wave from a breach in the Three Gorges Dam could wipe out millions of acres of farmland right before the autumn harvest, possibly leading to famine-like conditions. As it is also the world's largest hydroelectric power station, a failure would lead to huge power outages. Low-lying cities of millions along the Yangtze's banks cities could become uninhabitable and the death toll could be staggering.