PDA

View Full Version : heartbreaking in foreign land



captainamanda
02-21-2009, 08:37 AM
i can find no chinese character to write, so i have to make it in english.



on 02,19,2009, i was stolen in the motel during the night when i was asleep!!!

my bag was gone,!

in side my bag, there were...money, passport, ID card, camera, Mp4,student card and library card, keys, stuff for friends...

i lost all of them!!!

when that happened, i stayed way cool and calm, i did not even complain.

however, when things happen, my two companions turned their back to me. and if you know who i was about to go abroad with, then you are right, it's them!!!!

when i have no penny at all to pay for the motel, they just moved out! not even talking to me! i am not exaggerating at all! you know what , they tried to avoid me and single me out. when they moved out, leaving me to face everything, i was at the end of the hard day , i cried for a long time, crying the sea out actually. then a elderly lady came in , speaking Korean and hugged me , i cried even harder. we were barely strangers and she cared about me, although we could not understand each other, but i cried in her arms and she just like my grandma.

i realize that, someone seems to be ur friends may be the one who can actually hurt u to death.



today , i called the police, and we tried to understand each other in broken english. then they knew i wanted to go to the Chinese Ambassy. they send me there using the police car, i got a free ride!~ there was a ambassador, the same age as my father, he helped me a lot. i got to the Ambassy at 8:53, we met at 9:00, then he drove his car taking me to other offices. 7:25pm, we aparted. he spent his whole day accompany me! but there's still some official paper lacking, i have to get them ready next Monday. wow, although i may leave Korea, but i will still have problems when i am back to China's Customs House. wait and see.



the nice fatherly ambassador persuaded me to borrow money from my teacher, i did. i also wrote a money-borrow slip for her. yes , she is one of my companion.



yestoday, my companions went to lunch without telling me and left me alone. i only had some cookies for the whole yestoday. today was totally differet, the ambassador took me to a nice korean bbc, i ate like a horse~ haha~



just wish i can go back China with few obstacles.

now i still do not hate the thief or thieves, to some extent i thank him or them for teaching me such an important lesson, which i hope can be beneficial for me all my life.



how i wish i still had everyting.

librarius_qui
02-21-2009, 08:44 AM
how i wish i still had everyting.

er. Welcome!


Librarius aliqui ...
People call me Libri,

friends call me Tim.
I'm huge Tim. The "avatar" is tiny one.


Tim~

Emil Miller
02-21-2009, 09:28 PM
i can find no chinese character to write, so i have to make it in english.



on 02,19,2009, i was stolen in the motel during the night when i was asleep!!!

my bag was gone,!

in side my bag, there were...money, passport, ID card, camera, Mp4,student card and library card, keys, stuff for friends...

i lost all of them!!!

when that happened, i stayed way cool and calm, i did not even complain.

however, when things happen, my two companions turned their back to me. and if you know who i was about to go abroad with, then you are right, it's them!!!!

when i have no penny at all to pay for the motel, they just moved out! not even talking to me! i am not exaggerating at all! you know what , they tried to avoid me and single me out. when they moved out, leaving me to face everything, i was at the end of the hard day , i cried for a long time, crying the sea out actually. then a elderly lady came in , speaking Korean and hugged me , i cried even harder. we were barely strangers and she cared about me, although we could not understand each other, but i cried in her arms and she just like my grandma.

i realize that, someone seems to be ur friends may be the one who can actually hurt u to death.

today , i called the police, and we tried to understand each other in broken english. then they knew i wanted to go to the Chinese Ambassy. they send me there using the police car, i got a free ride!~ there was a ambassador, the same age as my father, he helped me a lot. i got to the Ambassy at 8:53, we met at 9:00, then he drove his car taking me to other offices. 7:25pm, we aparted. he spent his whole day accompany me! but there's still some official paper lacking, i have to get them ready next Monday. wow, although i may leave Korea, but i will still have problems when i am back to China's Customs House. wait and see.

the nice fatherly ambassador persuaded me to borrow money from my teacher, i did. i also wrote a money-borrow slip for her. yes , she is one of my companion.

yestoday, my companions went to lunch without telling me and left me alone. i only had some cookies for the whole yestoday. today was totally differet, the ambassador took me to a nice korean bbc, i ate like a horse~ haha~

just wish i can go back China with few obstacles.

now i still do not hate the thief or thieves, to some extent i thank him or them for teaching me such an important lesson, which i hope can be beneficial for me all my life.

how i wish i still had everyting.

I was very interested to read your story. Yes, you have learned that in the filthy liberal democracy that has poisoned western thinking since World War 2,
nothing is sacred and nobody is safe. In China there is till punitive sentencing to deter the scum of the world from damaging other peoples lives. There is also the Confucian (Kong Zi) code of conduct that keeps people's respect for other people at the base of Chinese society. My advice, if it is now needed, is to distrust all westerners, until they come to their senses and return to the punitive sentencing of pre World War Two years, and to resist , at all costs, any attempt to introduce the poison of liberal democracy into China. The result would be catastrophic for everybody except the legal profession who would wax mightily while civil order waned dramatically.

librarius_qui
02-21-2009, 09:32 PM
I was very interested to read your story. Yes, you have learned that in the filthy liberal democracy that has poisoned western thinking since World War 2,
nothing is sacred and nobody is safe. In China there is till punitive sentencing to deter the scum of the world from damaging other peoples lives. There is also the Confucian (Kong Zi) code of conduct that keeps people's respect for other people at the base of Chinese society. My advice, if it is now needed, is to distrust all westerners, until they come to their senses and return to the punitive sentencing of pre World War Two years, and to resist , at all costs, any attempt to introduce the poison of liberal democracy into China. The result would be catastrophic for everybody except the legal professuon who would wax mightily while civil order waned dramatically.

Why do you relate our decadence to the WWII, Brian?


L#

Emil Miller
02-21-2009, 09:54 PM
Why do you relate our decadence to the WWII, Brian?


L#

Because before the war we had punitive sentencing in the UK and crime was massively reduced by post-war standards. Believe me, I'm old enough to know it as a fact, for although I wasn't around during the pre-war period, I saw with my own eyes the massive rise in murders after capital punishment had been abolished and the truly colossal rise in all other crimes following the introduction of "rehabilitation" rather than punishment for criminals who had damaged innocent peoples lives.
Whenever I read of some killer being executed in China or America, I thank God the justice has prevailed in the face of those disgusting self-righteous liberal fools who are actually on the side of the criminals and, by default, against the innocent.

librarius_qui
02-21-2009, 10:02 PM
Because before the war we had punitive sentencing in the UK and crime was massively reduced by post-war standards. Believe me, I'm old enough to know it as a fact, for although I wasn't around during the pre-war period, I saw with my own eyes the massive rise in murders after capital punishment had been abolished and the truly colossal rise in all other crimes following the introduction of "rehabilitation" rather than punishment for criminals who had damaged innocent peoples lives.
Whenever I read of some killer being executed in China or America, I thank God the justice has prevailed in the face of those disgusting self-righteous liberal fools who are actually on the side of the criminals and, by default, against the innocent.

Oh, you mean hanging, and such? Yes, no doubt it changed with WWII. I can't say whether I agree or disagree with you, but I see you've got a point, and, once I have no opinion on it myself, it's to be considered.

I'm not sure these Western human rights are a good thing, after all. But Star Trek fans will say I'm a savage and primitive thing!

Well, fact is that I have no criminals in my family, so it's easy for me to talk about it. I might think otherwise, if I had any.

(Unless adultery is a crime. Then there's plenty in the family :blush: )

(Well, no, it isn't a crime, I think. Only against god(s). But old peoples would "hang" (stone) such people ...)


L#

Emil Miller
02-21-2009, 10:41 PM
Oh, you mean hanging, and such? Yes, no doubt it changed with WWII. I can't say whether I agree or disagree with you, but I see you've got a point, and, once I have no opinion on it myself, it's to be considered.

I'm not sure these Western human rights are a good thing, after all. But Star Trek fans will say I'm a savage and primitive thing!

Well, fact is that I have no criminals in my family, so it's easy for me to talk about it. I might think otherwise, if I had any.

(Unless adultery is a crime. Then there's plenty in the family :blush: )

(Well, no, it isn't a crime, I think. Only against god(s). But old peoples would "hang" (stone) such people ...)


L#

I don't say hanging killers is the best way of punishing them, I think shooting or lethal injection is more acceptable, but that they should forfeit their own lives is just. My concern about human rights is that there should be no human rights without human reponsibility. If you are irresponsible and damage other peoples rights, you forfeit your own. As for adultry, it is considered a sin in religious doctrine but as the Christian religion is in decline it is likely to remain a punishible offence only in Islamic countries;notwithstanding that some of those countries practice polygamy.

qimissung
02-21-2009, 10:53 PM
"my companions went to lunch without telling me and left me alone..."

They sure weren't your friends, were they!? I guess I don't understand, if you weren't traveling alone, why they didn't offer to help. How very lonely that must have felt. I'm glad you found your Korean "grandmother" and the Chinese ambassador, and I hope you make it home safely, captainamanda!.

librarius_qui
02-22-2009, 12:48 PM
I don't say hanging killers is the best way of punishing them, I think shooting or lethal injection is more acceptable, but that they should forfeit their own lives is just. My concern about human rights is that there should be no human rights without human reponsibility. If you are irresponsible and damage other peoples rights, you forfeit your own. As for adultry, it is considered a sin in religious doctrine but as the Christian religion is in decline it is likely to remain a punishible offence only in Islamic countries;notwithstanding that some of those countries practice polygamy.

(Of course, not hanging ... It was a metaphor for other methods of "taking life", which is an euphemy in itself (...).)

I was talking the thing with my father, and it came to me an interesting idea ... I think that, in Western history, the most effectively successful rehabilitation "place" there was ever was Australia.

Therefore, I reinforce my idea of colonizing space. There should be the place to send people considered as bad as worth killing.

It's only a "crazy" idea, though.

However, I agree that the Human Rights lead us to dangerous fields, in the Western world, at least.

Very tough matter, this one.


L#