Probably imported the materials from Mexico
Looked more like plumbing vents to me. Removing them will not fare well, either.EX TEXASEX said:
So people could see the anntennas shaking from the street that sent people fleeing like Godzilla was coming after them. The solution ? Remove the anntennnas on the top of the building so the shaking cant be seen from the ground anymore !!
What are the odds it's "white supremacists"?MuchosPollos said:
Shenzhen's third tallest skyscraper, the 356 meters tall SEG Plaza, shook once again for the third time in May after similar shaking on the 18th and 19th.
SEG Plaza building shaking like a mofo. They try to blame subway trains and winds.....
If you hear this in China,"We are here from the government to help you."EX TEXASEX said:
EVERYTHING MADE IN CHINA IS CRAP.
Watch just the first 55 seconds to make your jaw drop but I would watch the whole thing. I would be terrified of being in any building that was made after 1949 deadly. Happens again and again and again. A lot of times the thumbnail pics on videos are clickbait. Nope not these. There are obviously more.
Oh, I don't know about that.HTownAg98 said:
They steal our technology, realize we over-engineer for safety reasons, and make it cheaper with inferior materials and cut corners. Then **** breaks, and they don't really care if a thousand or more people die.
Why do you say that? Because you support the CCP killing their own people??YellowPot_97 said:Jbob04 said:
Good. Wipe em out
This forum has become a cesspool.
MookieBlaylock said:
Probably imported the materials from Mexico
There's a reason poor quality steel is called "Chinese-ium grade steel".EX TEXASEX said:
EVERYTHING MADE IN CHINA IS CRAP.
Watch just the first 55 seconds to make your jaw drop but I would watch the whole thing. I would be terrified of being in any building that was made after 1949 deadly. Happens again and again and again. A lot of times the thumbnail pics on videos are clickbait. Nope not these. There are obviously more.
aggiehawg said:Quote:
Two dams in China's northwestern region of Inner Mongolia have collapsed after torrential rain, the water ministry said on Monday, highlighting the safety risks posed by ageing infrastructure during the summer flood season.
The dams, in the Inner Mongolian city of Hulunbuir, collapsed on Sunday afternoon. They had formed reservoirs with a combined water storage capacity of 46 million cubic metres, the Ministry of Water Resources said.
People living downstream were evacuated, with no casualties reported, it said.
The ministry said that on average, 87 millimetres of rain fell in Hulunbuir over the weekend and as much as 223 millimetres at the Morin Dawa monitoring station.Quote:
Hulunbuir's city government said on its WeChat account that 16,660 people have been affected, with 326,622 mu (53,807 acres) of farmland submerged. Bridges and other transport infrastructure had also been destroyed.
Footage posted on Chinese social media showed one of the dams being completely swept away by the water, inundating nearby fields.
China has more than 98,000 reservoirs used to regulate floods, generate power and facilitate shipping. More than 80% of them are four decades old or older, and some pose a safety risk, the government has acknowledged.LinkQuote:
A lack of financial resources means that nearly a third of the total number have not had mandatory safety appraisals completed, Wei Shanzhong, deputy water resources minister, told a briefing this year.
That doesn't appear to be a safe place to watch that, to me.
Link
YellowPot_97 said:Jbob04 said:
Good. Wipe em out
This forum has become a cesspool.
aggiehawg said:Quote:
Two dams in China's northwestern region of Inner Mongolia have collapsed after torrential rain, the water ministry said on Monday, highlighting the safety risks posed by ageing infrastructure during the summer flood season.
The dams, in the Inner Mongolian city of Hulunbuir, collapsed on Sunday afternoon. They had formed reservoirs with a combined water storage capacity of 46 million cubic metres, the Ministry of Water Resources said.
People living downstream were evacuated, with no casualties reported, it said.
The ministry said that on average, 87 millimetres of rain fell in Hulunbuir over the weekend and as much as 223 millimetres at the Morin Dawa monitoring station.Quote:
Hulunbuir's city government said on its WeChat account that 16,660 people have been affected, with 326,622 mu (53,807 acres) of farmland submerged. Bridges and other transport infrastructure had also been destroyed.
Footage posted on Chinese social media showed one of the dams being completely swept away by the water, inundating nearby fields.
China has more than 98,000 reservoirs used to regulate floods, generate power and facilitate shipping. More than 80% of them are four decades old or older, and some pose a safety risk, the government has acknowledged.LinkQuote:
A lack of financial resources means that nearly a third of the total number have not had mandatory safety appraisals completed, Wei Shanzhong, deputy water resources minister, told a briefing this year.
That doesn't appear to be a safe place to watch that, to me.
Link
SWC Ag said:
Lots of vids out there of Chinese escalators swallowing people too. Everything they make is crap. I hate that we outsource so much to them.
YellowPot_97 said:Jbob04 said:
Good. Wipe em out
This forum has become a cesspool.
which is why so many wear masks all the time...Boo Weekley said:Problem is, it won't harm anyone in power.Jbob04 said:
Good. Wipe em out
nu awlins ag said:aggiehawg said:Quote:
Two dams in China's northwestern region of Inner Mongolia have collapsed after torrential rain, the water ministry said on Monday, highlighting the safety risks posed by ageing infrastructure during the summer flood season.
The dams, in the Inner Mongolian city of Hulunbuir, collapsed on Sunday afternoon. They had formed reservoirs with a combined water storage capacity of 46 million cubic metres, the Ministry of Water Resources said.
People living downstream were evacuated, with no casualties reported, it said.
The ministry said that on average, 87 millimetres of rain fell in Hulunbuir over the weekend and as much as 223 millimetres at the Morin Dawa monitoring station.Quote:
Hulunbuir's city government said on its WeChat account that 16,660 people have been affected, with 326,622 mu (53,807 acres) of farmland submerged. Bridges and other transport infrastructure had also been destroyed.
Footage posted on Chinese social media showed one of the dams being completely swept away by the water, inundating nearby fields.
China has more than 98,000 reservoirs used to regulate floods, generate power and facilitate shipping. More than 80% of them are four decades old or older, and some pose a safety risk, the government has acknowledged.LinkQuote:
A lack of financial resources means that nearly a third of the total number have not had mandatory safety appraisals completed, Wei Shanzhong, deputy water resources minister, told a briefing this year.
That doesn't appear to be a safe place to watch that, to me.
Link
Were they taking pictures?
YouBet said:
Not seen are all of the white tourists the Chinese people trampled and threw out of the way to get to this scenic overlook first.
As long as they keep bleeding our gdp it can go on. My time in china was 12 years ago and everything was rotten from the inside. Rain inside our office building, tens of thousands of empty malls and office space, etc. it hasnt slowed down yet.Coach Jimbo said:
It's stuff like this that makes me feel china might be a flash in the wok. It's jusy very chernobyl esque...
Suppose it's wishful thinking, we had better leaders at that time.
Big difference between China and the people it dehumanizes, don't be like China.Jbob04 said:YellowPot_97 said:Jbob04 said:
Good. Wipe em out
This forum has become a cesspool.
China is our enemy. If you don't like it, maybe you should move over there.
Jbob04 said:YellowPot_97 said:Jbob04 said:
Good. Wipe em out
This forum has become a cesspool.
China is our enemy. If you don't like it, maybe you should move over there.