Posted by: rp
« on: Today at 09:22:40 pm »Comments:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiQhoa67hes&lc=UgxLZ62TBl5ykrNF1p14AaABAg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiQhoa67hes&lc=UgxLZ62TBl5ykrNF1p14AaABAg
Quote
ngl that's based
ngl that's based
Even the racist anti immigration whites has been replaced lmao
Some of the original tweeter's other tweets:
https://twitter.com/HongqiN701/status/1745211723672359063
https://twitter.com/HongqiN701/status/1742955222895308998
https://twitter.com/HongqiN701/status/1744782237080432902
https://twitter.com/HongqiN701/status/1742981238791745964
https://twitter.com/HongqiN701/status/1744051250201571571
https://twitter.com/HongqiN701/status/1747036850059915290
He is also a progressive:
https://twitter.com/HongqiN701/status/1743787137277792743
Anyone who thinks the second video is better than the first should be prohibited from reproducing.
Inviting White Aryan kings to marry your women
Since Mao
Brown people will never reach this level of basedQuoteMy good advice to my white friends: marrying a Chinese woman who will take good care of you and your children is a good idea. Chinese women are more feminine and virtuous than white women.
SINGAPORE – A Secondary 4 student who considered himself a white supremacist after being radicalised by online far-right extremist propaganda was handed a restriction order under the Internal Security Act (ISA) in November 2023.
Although he is ethnic Chinese, the 16-year-old aspired to carry out attacks overseas to further the white supremacist cause.
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“At the point of investigation, he strongly identified as a white supremacist and pro-white sympathiser, and hoped to be recruited for violent attacks by white supremacist groups overseas to ‘fight for the whites’,” said ISD.
Explaining how he became radicalised, ISD said he had chanced upon videos by foreign far-right political commentator and white supremacist Paul Nicholas Miller and was exposed to violent extremist material online in 2022. Miller advocates for a race war and has been tied to multiple far-right extremist organisations overseas, including the Proud Boys and the Boogaloo movement.
By early 2023, the youth had developed an intense hatred of communities targeted by far-right extremists, including African Americans, Arabs, and LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer) individuals.
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The youth participated in far-right online chat groups and channels, where he shared violent anti-African American videos, as doing so gave him a sense of belonging to the white supremacist community.
He considered travelling to Western countries such as France, Italy, the US and Russia to participate in attacks against the vilified communities, and also expressed interest in a far-right online chat group in carrying out a mass shooting in the US in 10 years.
In 1786 and 1791, the British East India Company signed treaties with the Sultan of Kedah to acquire Penang in the Malay Peninsula.[10] And in 1795, during the First Coalition War in Europe, William V of the Netherlands was in exile in England. He issued a series of letters, later known as the "Kew Letters", to overseas Dutch colonies, instructing the local governors to temporarily transfer the control of the Dutch colonies to the UK for safekeeping, including Malacca, Padang, and other places.[11]
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In 1814, the situation in Europe stabilised. Britain and the Netherlands signed an agreement to return the original Dutch colonies back.[13] Later, the influence of the Netherlands in the region gradually recovered and increased, and they began levying heavy taxes on ships anchored in their colonies in the area, including British ships.[14] Consequently, the British East India Company began to look for another base in the region.[12]
On 22 March 1818, Sir Stamford Raffles became the Lieutenant-Governor of Bencoolen, now known as Bengkulu, in Indonesia.[15] In the autumn of that same year, in order to counter the Dutch influence in the region, he went to India and successfully persuaded the governor there to support him in finding a suitable location in the southeast of the Strait of Malacca to open up a new British post.[15]
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In Singapore, there have been debates and different opinions about 6 February 1819 and its meaning and whether it should be celebrated or commemorated at all.[9]
For some, the historical event represents the start of colonisation, and therefore, unethical and repressive[46] and any commemoration of it amounts to glorification of oppression.[46]