- 帖子
- 1691
- 精華
- 1
- 威望
- 245
- 魅力
- 0
- 讚好
- 0
- 性別
- 男
|
7#
發表於 2005-4-17 03:49 AM
| 只看該作者
Responding to the statement:. V' H7 X, j1 g
香港人普遍中國歷史唔好,所以對近日事反應唔大, ^, Z; Z7 L, d, ]4 z
8 g. x. w, M u4 ~; f' iThe first part is probably true (thanks to the Queen!) since the younger ones don't feel attached to the last 200 yrs of Chinese history (let alone the past 5000 yrs). And for the olders ones that have first hand experience of the Cultural Revolution, their feelings are probably mixed. I have people telling me the communist hurt them more than the Japanese!
+ u$ f/ x9 H- H5 @8 [) J
2 p: ]4 D2 j1 W' f+ z* @HK is a predominatly capitalist city. People care about their rice bowls before other important issues. Let's just say we are more 'realistic' than our mainland brothers/sisters. The protests in the mainland are caused by more than a single anti-japanese factor. As stated in the previous post, the 'inferiority' factor weights more in the Chinese minds than anything else. Revenge and get right is on the agenda all the time. Just look at the ---s from up north, the emotions are really burning.
3 G* e1 @/ \$ [- I0 p6 g6 J! @& x9 f. E" n. M
I guess it's not fair to compare the reaction here in HK and to the mainland. Two different groups with two different mindsets. It's important to attend the march on Sunday if one knows the reason. The size of the match is not a big deal to me....I would pay more attention to their declaration rather than the number of attendees. |
|