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  • On this episode of China Uncensored...

  • Wow, some crazy things happened in 2015.

  • Hi, welcome to China Uncensored.

  • I’m your host, Chris Chappell.

  • Well, it's that time of year again

  • the end of the year to be exact

  • the time when we all look back and try to make sense of what went wrong.

  • But before we crack out the leftover eggnog

  • and reflect on the missed opportunities that are now gone forever,

  • let's take a look back at the ten biggest stories from China in 2015.

  • Number 10

  • Beijing Awarded the 2022 Olympics

  • Remember when China promised to clean up its human rights act

  • ahead of the 2008 Summer Olympics?

  • Well, they sort of did.

  • I mean, they cleaned up the streets

  • by taking pesky citizens off the streets and locking them up.

  • But jailing political prisoners

  • didn't discourage the International Olympic Committee in July this year

  • from awarding China the 2022 Winter Olympics.

  • Not that they had many options.

  • The only other contender was Kazakhstan

  • a country known primarily for the fictional character Borat

  • and for the very real suppression of human rights.

  • So why not pick China?

  • Sure, there's almost no snow in Beijing,

  • but why not pick China?

  • Plus, China is already the gold medal champion

  • of making fake goods.

  • In fact they've already started practicing.

  • Just listen to their official Olympic song!

  • "A kingdom of isolation,

  • and it looks like I'm the queen"

  • Sorry, that was "Let It Go" from Disney's Frozen.

  • Here's their official Olympic song.

  • 「一幅画整装待发约定天地之大」

  • "It's funny how some distance

  • makes everything seem small"

  • 「一个家五彩肤色绽放和平之花」

  • Number 9

  • Chinese Doctor Wins the Nobel Prize

  • In October, Dr. Tu Youyou

  • became the first female Chinese doctor to win the Nobel Prize.

  • It was for discovering a cure for malaria...

  • back in the 70s.

  • A little late?

  • Well, only for the millions of people who died each year from malaria,

  • for thirty years,

  • while waiting for the cure to be made public.

  • Dr. Tu found an herb that traditional Chinese medicine

  • used to treat malaria two thousand years ago.

  • So she refined it into a useable drug.

  • For human trials, she tested it on herself.

  • Number 8

  • The Social Credit System

  • That name should fill you with an Orwellian terror.

  • That's what the Communist Party is calling their new rating system.

  • It's like Yelp,

  • only instead of evaluating restaurants,

  • it evaluates people.

  • Every single one of China's 1.3 billion citizens, that is.

  • By 2020,

  • this national government database will judge you on things like

  • your credit,

  • whether or not you have a criminal record,

  • what kind of things you buy online,

  • what books you read,

  • your social media behavior.

  • Oh and of course, the ratings of your friends and family.

  • So what happens if your social credit is bad?

  • Well, people are going to see that when you apply for a job,

  • or housing, or a loan.

  • You don’t want to have a questionable person working for you, do you?

  • One who might bring down your own credit rating?

  • Anyway, this new Social Credit System is sure to be doubleplusgood.

  • Number 7

  • Meeting Your Doppelgänger

  • In November, the Chinese president met...

  • the other Chinese president.

  • And one of those presidents

  • people actually voted for.

  • In yet another linguistically confusing chapter of the One China policy

  • a policy that says Taiwan is a part of China,

  • but doesn't specify which government is the legitimate government

  • the unelected Chinese president Xi Jinping

  • met the democratically elected Chinese president Ma Ying-jeou.

  • It's the first time the two sides met

  • since the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949.

  • Number 6

  • The Year of Hacking

  • You really, really ought to update your computer's software.

  • Because the failure of the US government's Office of Personnel Management

  • to do just that opened the door to a massive cyber attack from...

  • some foreign entity.

  • The hackers stole the personal data of 4.2 million

  • current and former federal employees.

  • And then we learned the number was actually 22 million.

  • Yes, one in every 15 Americans is now in this hacker's database.

  • Information that, in the wrong hands...

  • well, let's just say this is not good.

  • So who was behind the attacks?

  • Well, we don't know for sure, but

  • "What countries are attacking the United States as we sit here in cyberspace?"

  • "Well, I don't want to give you a complete list.

  • But I can tell you the top of the list is the Chinese."

  • Number 5

  • (Cough cough cough cough)

  • There's no better way to ring in the New Year

  • than with a red alert warning that your nation's capital

  • has air too hazardous to breathe.

  • This is what Beijing looked like at the beginning of December.

  • Man, those aunties won't stop dancing for anything!

  • This was the first official red alert from Beijing's new warning system.

  • And in November, in another city, pollution was even worse.

  • On a pollution scale of 1 to 500,

  • 500 being really, really hazardous,

  • the city of Shenyang reached 1,400.

  • Pollution is so thick,

  • Chinese people can't even see the pollution documentary "Under the Dome,"

  • by former CCTV reporter Cha Jing.

  • Just kidding.

  • It's because the Chinese government censored it.

  • Number 4

  • Stock Market Crash

  • China's stock market skyrocketed early this year.

  • And then in June, it crashed.

  • In China, most stock buyers are individual people

  • workers, retirees, etc.—

  • and a lot of them were first-time investors who put money in the market

  • because state-run media told them too.

  • And a lot of them even borrowed money to buy stocks

  • something called "margin trading"—

  • because state-run media told them to.

  • When the markets crashed,

  • they couldn't pay back what they borrowed.

  • Which is why,

  • to help solve the financial crisis,

  • the government recommended people borrow more money to buy stocks.

  • This hasn't worked very well so far.

  • Number 3

  • The Tianjin Chemical Explosion

  • On August 12,

  • a pair of chemical explosions rocked the northern Chinese city of Tianjin.

  • The cause is still unknown

  • and by unknown,

  • I mean we only know what Chinese state-run media told us:

  • It involved a warehouse storing toxic chemicals.

  • And they didn't even tell us that right away.

  • In fact initially, there was a total media blackout.

  • Censors deleted thousands of posts about the blasts on social media.

  • According to official statistics,

  • 800 people were injured and almost 200 died.

  • Number 2

  • Now you can have a brother or sister!

  • At the end of October,

  • China finally repealed the One Child Policy.

  • The policy had led to mass infanticide and forced abortion.

  • Oh, and it failed in its most basic goal:

  • to balance China's population.

  • After 30 years,

  • China now has too many old people

  • that can't be supported by the younger generation.

  • But now that the One Child Policy has been repealed,

  • things are way better,

  • because you can have two kids instead of one!

  • Granted, there'll still be the same

  • overbearing government presence in people's lives

  • like work units monitoring female workers' menstrual cycles

  • and the fines and forced abortions will also continue

  • but now you can have up to two kids.

  • And finally, Number 1

  • Zhou Yongkang sentenced to life

  • Years ago I said Chinese leader Xi Jinping

  • would take out his political rival Zhou Yongkang.

  • It would be unprecedented.

  • Zhou was a member of the Politburo Standing Committee.

  • You don't get much higher than that in the Communist Party.

  • "And that the next step could be Zhou Yongkang

  • facing a fate similar to Bo (Xilai)."

  • The fools!

  • They laughed at me!

  • But who's laughing now?!

  • Ahh.

  • You see, Zhou Yongkang held a lot of power.

  • He was the head of China's internal security network for years,

  • which meant he controlled a police force

  • with a budget larger than even the Chinese army.

  • And he amassed that power primarily through helping former Chinese leader Jiang Zemin

  • run his brutal campaign to suppress Falun Gong.

  • What's the point of a massive security apparatus

  • if you can't torture some religious dissidents, am I right?

  • Zhou was the biggest "tiger" to be hit

  • in Xi Jinping's "anti-corruption" campaign.

  • In June 2015, he got sentenced to life in prison.

  • Again, he was one of the 9 most powerful men in China.

  • Will we see something similar happen to Jiang Zemin next year?

  • Let's just say I don't think Xi Jinping will "let old acquaintance be forgot."

  • So what do you think will be in store for China

  • and the rest of the world in 2016?

  • Leave your thoughts in the comment section below.

  • And thank you for making this the best year for China Uncensored yet.

  • You're the best audience on YouTube.

  • Once again, I'm Chris Chappell. Happy New Year.

  • Merry Christmas.

  • And a very merry Christmas to the factory workers in Yiwu,

  • a town in eastern China's Zhejiang province.

  • Because they've been working on Christmas since January.

  • The fear is this new gene will get passed around

  • along with other antibiotic resistant genes.

  • That could eventually create a pan-drug resistant bacteria.

  • In other words, a bacteria that can't be killed by anything we throw at it.

On this episode of China Uncensored...

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2015年中國10大新聞|中國無刪減新聞網 (Top 10 Big Stories from China in 2015 | China Uncensored)

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    張強 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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