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Chitchat 100 million leftover high ses ATBs! Samsters got try?

syed putra

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i find it strange that they equate having a degree or master degree to having a marriage. You get a fucking degree is for you to find a job or start your own biz or work , NOT marriage!!!!! Where the fuck did they get brainwash in their life to think that way. Totally ZERO relationship IQ.

Marrying someone or in a relationship is about your soul aspect of being a human being, not the fucking degree. These chink pussies never think what is wrong with their thinking and keep complaining that they are not getting married or can't find a man.

These pussies had been duped by their chink system at home to become an economic tool for the system, they are never taught to be a soul human being for relationship and marriage.
That's because the system traps people into debt enslavement. You can escape this by going off grid.
 

k1976

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Rotten-tail kids': China's rising youth unemployment breeds new working class​

'Rotten-tail kids': China's rising youth unemployment breeds new working class

Job seekers crowd a job fair at Liberation Square in Shijiazhuang, Hebei province, China, on Feb 25, 2018. (Photo: REUTERS/Jason Lee)
21 Aug 2024 10:03AM (Updated: 21 Aug 2024 10:06AM)
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BEIJING: Rising unemployment in China is pushing millions of college graduates into a tough bargain, with some forced to accept low-paying work or even subsist on their parents' pensions, a plight that has created a new working class of "rotten-tail kids".
The phrase has become a social media buzzword this year, drawing parallels to the catchword "rotten-tail buildings" for the tens of millions of unfinished homes that have plagued China's economy since 2021.
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A record number of college graduates this year are hunting for jobs in a labour market depressed by COVID-19-induced disruptions as well as regulatory crack-downs on the country's finance, tech and education sectors.
The jobless rate for the roughly 100 million Chinese youth aged 16-24 crept above 20 per cent for the first time in April last year. When it hit an all-time high of 21.3 per cent in June 2023, officials abruptly suspended the data series to reassess how numbers were compiled.
One year on, youth unemployment remains a headache, with the reconfigured jobless rate spiking to a 2024 high of 17.1 per cent in July, as 11.79 million college students graduated this summer in an economy still weighed down by its real estate crisis.
President Xi Jinping has repeatedly stressed that finding jobs for young people remains a top priority. The government has called for more channels for the youth to access potential employers, such as job fairs, and has rolled out supportive business policies to help boost hiring.
 

k1976

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Collapsing’: Inside Australia’s iron ore disaster amid huge China announcement​

The unsteady future of former cash cow iron ore has transfixed Australians for more than a year. But now reality has finally hit. Hard.

Jamie Seidel Jamie Seidel

@JamieSeidel


5 min read
August 20, 2024 - 7:46AM

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06:12
U.S. vs. China: An Underwater Fight for Fiber-Optic Power
 

k1976

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The price tumble began after top steelmaking firm Baowu finally admitted there would be no significant stimulus package from its Chinese Communist Party owners.

On Wednesday, its chairman Hu Vangming warned that the “winter” of steel demand from China’s struggling construction industry would be “longer, colder and more difficult than we expected”.

This prompted spot prices for the raw ingredient of steel, iron ore, to nosedive to as low as $US81.8 a tonne Friday.

It started the year at about $136 a tonne.

Australia is the world’s largest exporter of iron ore. It contributed about $136 billion to national revenue in 2023.
 

k1976

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Ugly Cruel Hao Lian Tiongkok Bu​

Live Mantis Shrimp Attacks Diner at Hotpot Restaurant in Wild Video​

Stacey Ritzen
Tue, 20 August 2024 at 4:40 am SGT2-min read

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A woman dining at a hotpot restaurant in China had the tables turned on her, quite literally, when her unassuming meal fought back and inflicted a painful attack.
The moment was caught on video and posted to a TikTok account that documents food and rural life in China. In the minute-long clip, which has been viewed nearly five million times, the woman can be seen picking the animal up by its antenna—her first mistake—and attempting to drop in in the pot of boiling broth along with a cluster of crab legs.
However, after the shrimp writhed out of her grip, she tried to wrangle it with a pair of chopsticks. On her second attempt, the shrimp latched onto her right wrist with one of its front appendages and then managed to spear her left finger when she tried to pull it off.
 
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