In ~2005 in
JFK, I was waiting on line to check-in, 2 senior citizens Chinese - a couple, speaking what seems
to be a Shanghai native dialect, acted as if they were going to kick
me at my back while I was down on the floor opening my luggage to
take something out. Both of them were taken by the Airport security
guard.
People-from-Asia,
mainly Chinese, Vietnamese and Indian attacked me as soon as I
arrived in the Silicon Valley, and the 1st month on the
job in the Patent and Trademarks Office in the DC metro, that
resulted in wrongful termination as well the slit of my
throat/beheading that was meant to kill me.
My EEOC case: http://eeoccase.blogspot.com/
BEIJING — As if “nut rage” weren’t bad enough, Asia got a
Chinese authorities say the tourists could face severe punishment for badly damaging “the image of the Chinese people,” after a video and photographs of the incident were widely circulated on the Internet.
It comes at a time when Chinese people are traveling more and more
The plane, a budget Thai AirAsia flight from Bangkok to the Chinese city of Nanjing, was forced on Thursday to return to Bangkok, where the pilot asked four passengers to disembark. They were reportedly unhappy about not being able to sit together on the plane and continued to berate cabin staff even after alternative seating was organized.
In a video uploaded by a passenger and later broadcast by China Central Television, a man is seen angrily shouting and pointing, cursing and threatening to bomb the plane, and insisting that he had money to pay for better seats. “You think a big boss can’t afford to spend some money,” he says at one point, referring to himself.
The woman who took the video can be heard remarking that she had to post it online because it was “shameful.”
Earlier in the week, the daughter of
But it is also being seen here as another example of how some Chinese tourists are letting their country down with a lack of civility abroad. Last year, a Chinese teenager won notoriety for carving his name on a 3,500-year-old relief
On a visit to the Maldives in September, President Xi Jinping effectively apologized for the behavior of his fellow countrymen, saying China should educate its citizens to be “civilized” when traveling abroad, telling them to refrain from tossing water bottles or damaging coral reefs, and urging them to eat more local food and less instant noodles.
In a statement issued Saturday, China’s tourism administration did not say what punishment the tourists could
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2014/12/14/after-nut-rage-chinese-tourists-face-punishment-for-noodle-rage/
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