中国逮捕2名加拿大间谍

可能是想找到中国网络攻击加拿大政府部门的实际证据.

就中国那些核心技术部门, 老外想混进去偷东西, 门都没有, 农民都有那警惕性
西方一贯的手法,就是行贿,对比较穷困的国家,往往能得手。例子:菲律宾、越南、泰国。。。。。
 
在美国跟中国做生意的多了去了。 那做淘宝的交易量一定大过周家。 你以为中情局有那么多经费, 整天盯着你们投机倒把?

再说了, 动动脑子, 这些生意要从美国走不用交税啊? 阴阳合同, 钱转第三方免税国家才是普遍做法。

不要光为了吵架秀智商底线行么
原来博士论文是关于进出口贸易的啊。:monster:
但是李登辉啊,我什么时候说过周老虎的亲戚是中情局的暴的料了吗?我说的是不知道哎,不清楚的事我不会乱说的,这一点我和你非常不一样。:evil:
淘宝的小蚂蚱算什么啊,别说中情局,就是国安也不会随便盯吧?人周老虎亲戚做的生意,淘宝上几万个商家加起来也未必有他那么显眼。
 
哦, 那我就当你不知道就好了, 还多说什么。 大家都会古狗的对吧:)
你就古狗一回给大家看看呗。看看博士的古狗水平是不是也比一般人高嘛。:D
不过要小心,古狗出来的东西一定要自己真的读懂了经得住别人问才能拿出来哦。:evil:
 
原来博士论文是关于进出口贸易的啊。:monster:
但是李登辉啊,我什么时候说过周老虎的亲戚是中情局的暴的料了吗?我说的是不知道哎,不清楚的事我不会乱说的,这一点我和你非常不一样。:evil:
淘宝的小蚂蚱算什么啊,别说中情局,就是国安也不会随便盯吧?人周老虎亲戚做的生意,淘宝上几万个商家加起来也未必有他那么显眼。

周老虎做的生意中情局想管管得着么? 人在加拿大还买过矿呢? 你知道那是他小胰子? 加拿大安全人员知道那是他小胰子?
 
你就古狗一回给大家看看呗。看看博士的古狗水平是不是也比一般人高嘛。:D
不过要小心,古狗出来的东西一定要自己真的读懂了经得住别人问才能拿出来哦。:evil:

写论文是一门课, 我可从来没说过我是雷锋
 
西方一贯的手法,就是行贿,对比较穷困的国家,往往能得手。例子:菲律宾、越南、泰国。。。。。

收买间谍,哪个国家不是靠金钱或美女?
 
周老虎做的生意中情局想管管得着么? 人在加拿大还买过矿呢? 你知道那是他小胰子? 加拿大安全人员知道那是他小胰子?
那还真没准,:evil:反正我不知道中情局会对谁感兴趣也没兴趣知道---不过这也不意味着我默认了你说的我以为是中情局给国安暴的料哈,中情局跟国安有没有这种合作我也不知道。。。总之我认为你扯这一堆很莫名其妙,就是为了连跨几大步给我安一个天真的帽子?:eek::D
 
写论文是一门课, 我可从来没说过我是雷锋
啧啧,昨天还在贴着大统华门前的照片说这么做是为了明天会更美好,你不想当雷锋你管华人的明天美好不美好干什么?:evil:
虚伪呀。:monster::kan:
 
啧啧,昨天还在贴着大统华门前的照片说这么做是为了明天会更美好,你不想当雷锋你管华人的明天美好不美好干什么?:evil:
虚伪呀。:monster::kan:

郎郎要教小孩钢琴不也是为了人家家里小孩明天更美好? 他收费还有人排队呢。

当然你怀着朴素的民族主义感情, 最好什么事情都免费的想法我一直是很了解的。
 
郎郎要教小孩钢琴不也是为了人家家里小孩明天更美好? 他收费还有人排队呢。
好强大的类比。。。你在大统华门前拍照收钱了吗?:evil:
收费教琴还要说是为了让人家小孩明天更美好。。。哪个大牛装X可以装到这份儿上,值得世人顶礼膜拜呀。:D:D:D
 
好强大的类比。。。你在大统华门前拍照收钱了吗?:evil:
收费教琴还要说是为了让人家小孩明天更美好。。。哪个大牛装X可以装到这份儿上,值得世人顶礼膜拜呀。:D:D:D

我自己住在渥太华, 这是我的公民意识, 你非要跟雷锋搅在一起, 是不是土共教育时间太长啊。
 
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...e-with-a-view-of-north-korea/article11298263/

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

Canadian café owners serve up coffee with a view of North Korea
Mark MacKinnon

DANDONG, CHINA — The Globe and Mail

Published Tuesday, Apr. 16 2013, 8:53 PM EDT

Last updated Tuesday, Apr. 16 2013, 8:58 PM EDT

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Vancouverites own more than their share of coffee shops. But none of those java joints offers the front-row seat to unfolding international drama that you get at Peter’s Coffee House.

A 20 yuan (about $3) cup of cappuccino at Peter’s Coffee House comes with a view of the trucks that lumber each morning across the dark-metal frame of the Friendship Bridge that links this comparatively glittering corner of northeastern China to the greyness that is North Korea on the opposite bank of the Yalu River. Owners Kevin and Julia Garratt, Vancouverites who have lived in China since 1984, serve cheesecake, coffee and Western breakfasts to Dandong’s tiny crowd of foreigners plus the growing number of tourists who come here hoping for a peek inside the Hermit Kingdom next door.

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These days, the bridge is a crucial indicator of how much support the paranoid regime of Kim Jong-un has left. North Korea has for weeks been threatening war against South Korea and its ally the United States, bringing tensions on the Korean Peninsula to their highest point in years.

Even China, North Korea’s only remaining ally, has started to openly question the leadership in Pyongyang. Beijing supported tighter sanctions against its unpredictable friend after the Kim regime ignored its advice and detonated a nuclear device in February.

Despite those sanctions, Mr. Garratt said Tuesday that trade across the Friendship Bridge appears routine. Business is also good in the Dandong supermarkets where North Koreans load up with Western and luxury goods. Some banking avenues have been shut, but it remains possible to send cash from accounts in China into Pyongyang.

Still, drivers who cross the border every day say they’re no longer bringing in materials that could have a military use, and those who have helped fleeing North Koreans say there are tighter controls in place over who crosses the border.

Chinese trucks cross the Yalu each morning laden with everything from bags of rice and cans of cooking oil to new cars and kitchen appliances. Each afternoon, the trucks return empty. The North Korean side pays for the Chinese goods either with hard currency carried across the border by hand or with coal that is shipped into China by train.

“Last week we saw hundreds of trucks going in because [Monday] was the Day of the Sun,” the 52-year-old Mr. Garratt said, referring to the anniversary of the birth of North Korea’s founder, Kim Il-sung. “I think China has tightened up [since the sanctions], but you can’t really see that from here.”

Dandong bustles with commerce, while across the water the North Korean city of Sinuiju sits silent and dark despite its designation a decade ago as a “special administrative region” where Chinese-style economic reforms were to have been introduced.

The Friendship Bridge was closed Monday and Tuesday, but a line of trucks was already forming Tuesday afternoon at the customs office on the Chinese side of the border in expectation of crossing Wednesday. Some carried bags of rice, others refrigerators. Also in line to cross was a gasoline truck, five new Chinese-made BYD sedans, plus half a dozen construction vehicles.

Traders say that what isn’t crossing, for now, is anything that could be seen as useful to the North Korean military. “The sanctions are very serious,” said Qin, a 66-year-old truck driver who has been driving back and forth across the Friendship Bridge since the 1990s. “Before, things like chemical products and pipes and steel were very common. Now, very few of these things are going across and the main products going in are fertilizer, washing powder, cooking oil, daily things. It’s all civilian trade. If there are any forbidden things, they have to be smuggled.”

As for luxury goods, which were specifically targeted by the new sanctions, those appear tougher to stop. Truck drivers say luxury items never flowed in bulk across the Friendship Bridge, but rather were hand-carried into the country by North Koreans who came to shop in Dandong’s markets.

And in this shady frontier city – packed with spies, smugglers and missionaries – you can find whatever it is you’re looking for, if you have the money. The Chinese side of the Yalu River is lined with neon-advertised hotels, massage parlours and karaoke joints.

Stores selling Apple products are a favourite stop for visiting North Koreans, as are shops selling big-screen televisions. Liquor outlets are also popular. “They come in here and buy red wines and brandy, the cheaper the better,” said a saleswoman in Tesco, a British supermarket chain that is famous in Dandong as the place North Koreans go to stuff their bags before returning home where such things are scarce and expensive.

Efforts to crack down on the flow of money into North Korea – where few besides those connected to the regime have hard-currency bank accounts – seem half-hearted.

China made a show of closing the local branch of the Kwangson Bank (listed in United Nations’ documents as the Foreign Trade Bank) earlier this year after the United States designated it a “key financial node in North Korea’s weapons-of-mass-destruction apparatus.” But other banks in Dandong said they were still able to send cash directly to accounts in Pyongyang. “We haven’t received notice to stop any of our services,” an employee of the China Construction Bank, which has known ties to the Kwangson Bank, told The Globe and Mail.

Since sanctions were tightened and the crisis began, one thing has changed: It has become harder for those wishing to flee North Korea to leave. Christian groups involved in helping North Koreans escape into China, usually en route to South Korea, say that the security situation is such that they’ve largely had to suspend their efforts during the past two months.

“Along the border between North Korea and China, there is much more security,” one Christian activist said. “In the past, you could bribe your way past the soldiers, but now, because of the security situation, they dare not allow anyone in or out.”
 
Owners Kevin and Julia Garratt, Vancouverites who have lived in China since 1984
 
我自己住在渥太华, 这是我的公民意识, 你非要跟雷锋搅在一起, 是不是土共教育时间太长啊。
你这种为了明天更美好的“公民意识”,本质来讲跟雷锋精神有多大区别?:D
再说了,雷锋不是你先扯出来的吗?:oops:现在你自己的前后话对不上了,倒说是我受土共教育时间太长:eek:--再长也没你长吧?你不是已经当我中辍生了吗,你都学过我没学过的写论文的课,我肯定没有你受土共影响深远啊:evil::monster::monster:
 
郎郎要教小孩钢琴不也是为了人家家里小孩明天更美好? 他收费还有人排队呢。

当然你怀着朴素的民族主义感情, 最好什么事情都免费的想法我一直是很了解的。
我倒不觉得跟民族主义感情有什么关系。
你先说了,要说一下论文的目的结构,结果让你说你又不肯说,连古狗一下都不肯:rolleyes:。。。我觉得吧,综合你一开头说的中国的论文发明全是抄西方的这一观点,估计你在国内就没正经好好写过一篇论文,大概都是copy paste 还不加出处的那种,跟教母刘菊花一样,:evil::evil:所以当初别人打刘菊花学位假的时候,教主一怒之下说中国的研究生论文都是抄的,你特有同感是吧?:monster::monster:
我这个推理算是逻辑通顺合情合理吧?:tx:
 
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