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警告大家唔好做漢奸, 俾老尾聞屎洗禮嘅阿富汗, 伊拉克, 利比亞, 鳥克蘭 下場係點大家有眼睇!

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現場有消息指謝安琪正考慮出席佔中
Kyle_ 發表於 2014-9-28 16:41


發夢都唔駛旨意
華誼兄弟要夏森美賠錢 係咪現場果班人幫手夾?

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現場有消息指謝安琪正考慮出席佔中
Kyle_ 發表於 2014-9-28 16:41


謝安琪一定唔會嚟囉 don't be silly
派雞羊2.0就有可能

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幫手推《雞蛋與羔羊》MV views

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Hocc,越來越欣賞你!
fifty1205 發表於 2014-9-28 19:55


何小姐唔知自己係歌手???

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本帖最後由 Korwyn 於 2014-9-28 20:49 編輯
大是大非前唔該唔好再曲線

否則直接ban ac
屮SiU霖屮 發表於 2014-9-28 20:34


原來唔認同呢D暴民既行為就要俾版主恐嚇ban 我

我唔再出聲LA

但願班人好自為之!

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致尊敬的警方

不需要用橡膠子彈
而家d後生狂用smartphone 影野同whatsapp
其實警方
用水炮就可以
射濕 後生仔 D iphone 同 Samsung 入水
他們 smartphone 壞Q晒
上不到 facebook, whatsapp會生存唔到會死
一定會番屋企!!!

要整部電話都要幾日!!!
對佢地打擊好大!!

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千嬅佢點講?
btw,我絕對支持佔中同罷課
Physically in overseas, mentally in Admiralty ...
hugo518 發表於 2014-9-29 18:18



溫馨提示
正確grammar係physically overseas



反ot: 我今日全日返工,宜家再去大學上堂
好辛苦但好充實同好遵守規則

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其實自從TVB 冇左直播
大家應該明白下一步會係點
醒目既及早抽身

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最後忠告: 大家快D回家喇!!!

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本帖最後由 Korwyn 於 2014-9-30 13:06 編輯

大家醒下啦
之前8萬5, 23條, 國教係政府想推行,大家唔想先擱置到
今次係D人逼政府同仁帶推行龔聞提名
佢地一定唔會
簡單D講,冇變有 難妥協過 有變冇
當過多幾日,示威者得唔到政府滿意嘅回應
D示威者仲可以點?
將行動升cup?

點解唔考慮盡快撤退?!

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D示威者咁做根本完全影響唔到呀爺
佢地所以唔急於清場,更唔會妥協
長遠玩死嘅只係香港經濟
示威者要玩死香港經濟 呀爺亦唔會阻你
所以真心希望大家考慮清楚,咩先係為香港好

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宜家皇后大道西塞車,搞到我遲到,好x興!!!!!!!!!

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本帖最後由 Korwyn 於 2014-9-30 19:08 編輯
認真mode,
昨日中環AQHI 4級,全港最佳,旺銅亦較一般站好
今日北風,大陸毒霧襲港,中環銅鑼灣AQHI 8級 ...
新水星 發表於 2014-9-30 18:58



    東區同觀塘區係最好

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今晚多唔多人

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佢黐左線咩
有冇帶埋華誼果張單籌錢賠??

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一個小子 發表於 2014-9-30 22:55



    知名人士。。。好容易俾人抽後算帳

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其實好想班學生快回家
我知道佢地仍然堅持抗爭
尋晚又黃雨,淋雨好易病
尋日我都好唔舒服又痾又嘔 ...
rubylovessss 發表於 2014-10-1 11:57


佢地會輪班架

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本帖最後由 Korwyn 於 2014-10-1 21:38 編輯

http://www.discuss.com.hk/viewthread.php?tid=23844661

大家醒下啦
反佔中有54%!

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【太陽報專訊】【本報訊】


內地官方中央電視台昨首度報道本港的佔中消息,指集會對香港股市、樓市及民生造成負面影響,經濟損失達四百億元,呼籲參與者解散,停止違法行為;

另有內地官媒更措辭強硬地指大部分示威者均是被反對派煽動起來的青年學生,直指反對派推動的遊戲沒有出路,注定是一步死棋。

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點解!點解你唔支持天然呆嘅容祖兒!


容祖兒:「係矛盾嘅,同埋講真,我自己睇咁耐,要讚下班年輕人。有 ...
星勤 發表於 2014-10-1 21:48


LIKE首歌就代表要支持埋佢?
我對事唔對人
不過我同JY一樣關心果D人
你睇番我之前D post, 我不斷叫佢地退出, 安全番屋企

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I suggest you guys to read this article as it offers a very different perspective to your views.

China is Hong Kong’s future – not its enemy
Protesters cry democracy but most are driven by dislocation and resentment at mainlanders’ success
http://www.theguardian.com/comme ... sters-cry-democracy

The upheaval sweeping Hong Kong is more complicated than on the surface it might appear. Protests have erupted over direct elections to be held in three years’ time; democracy activists claim that China’s plans will allow it to screen out the candidates it doesn’t want.

It should be remembered, however, that for 155 years until its handover to China in 1997, Hong Kong was a British colony, forcibly taken from China at the end of the first opium war. All its 28 subsequent governors were appointed by the British government. Although Hong Kong came, over time, to enjoy the rule of law and the right to protest, under the British it never enjoyed even a semblance of democracy. It was ruled from 6,000 miles away in London. The idea of any kind of democracy was first introduced by the Chinese government. In 1990 the latter adopted the Basic Law, which included the commitment that in 2017 the territory’s chief executive would be elected by universal suffrage; it also spelt out that the nomination of candidates would be a matter for a nominating committee.

This proposal should be seen in the context of what was a highly innovative – and, to westerners, completely unfamiliar – constitutional approach by the Chinese. The idea of “one country, two systems” under which Hong Kong would maintain its distinctive legal and political system for 50 years. Hong Kong would, in these respects, remain singularly different from the rest of China, while at the same time being subject to Chinese sovereignty. In contrast, the western view has always embraced the principle of “one country, one system” – as, for example, in German unification. But China is more a civilisation-state than a nation-state: historically it would have been impossible to hold together such a vast country without allowing much greater flexibility. Its thinking – “one civilisation, many systems” – was shaped by its very different history.

In the 17 years since the handover, China has, whatever the gainsayers might suggest, overwhelmingly honoured its commitment to the principle of one country, two systems. The legal system remains based on English law, the rule of law prevails, and the right to demonstrate, as we have seen so vividly in recent days, is still very much intact. The Chinese meant what they offered. Indeed, it can reasonably be argued that they went to extremes in their desire to be unobtrusive: sotto voce might be an apt way of describing China’s approach to Hong Kong. At the time of the handover, and in the three years I lived in Hong Kong from 1998, it was difficult to identify any visible signs of Chinese rule: I recall seeing just one Chinese flag.

Notwithstanding this, Hong Kong – and its relationship with China – was in fact changing rapidly. Herein lies a fundamental reason for the present unrest: the growing sense of dislocation among a section of Hong Kong’s population. During the 20 years or so prior to the handover, the territory enjoyed its golden era – not because of the British but because of the Chinese. In 1978 Deng Xiaoping embarked on his reform programme, and China began to grow rapidly. It was still, however, a relatively closed society. Hong Kong was the beneficiary – it became the entry point to China, and as a result attracted scores of multinational companies and banks that wanted to gain access to the Chinese market. Hong Kong got rich because of China. It also fed an attitude of hubris and arrogance. The Hong Kong Chinese came to enjoy a much higher standard of living than the mainlanders. They looked down on the latter as poor, ignorant and uncouth peasants, as greatly their inferior. They preferred – up to a point – to identify with westerners rather than mainlanders, not because of democracy (the British had never allowed them any) but primarily because of money and the status that went with it.

Much has changed since 1997. The Chinese economy has grown many times, the standard of living of the Chinese likewise. If you want to access the Chinese market nowadays, why move to Hong Kong when you can go straight to Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu and a host of other major cities? Hong Kong has lost its role as the gateway to China. Where previously Hong Kong was China’s unrivalled financial centre, now it is increasingly dwarfed by Shanghai. Until recently, Hong Kong was by far China’s largest port: now it has been surpassed by Shanghai and Shenzhen, and Guangzhou will shortly overtake it.

Two decades ago westerners comprised the bulk of Hong Kong’s tourists, today mainlanders account for the overwhelming majority, many of them rather more wealthy than most Hong Kong Chinese. Likewise, an increasing number of mainlanders have moved to the territory – which is a growing source of resentment. If China needed Hong Kong in an earlier period, this is no longer nearly as true as it was. On the contrary, without China, Hong Kong would be in deep trouble.

Understandably, many Hong Kong Chinese are struggling to come to terms with these new realities. They are experiencing a crisis of identity and a sense of displacement. They know their future is inextricably bound up with China but that is very different from embracing the fact. Yet there is no alternative: China is the future of Hong Kong.

All these issues, in a most complex way, are being played out in the present arguments over universal suffrage. Hong Kong is divided. About half the population support China’s proposals on universal suffrage, either because they think they are a step forward or because they take the pragmatic view that they will happen anyway. The other half is opposed. A relatively small minority of these have never really accepted Chinese sovereignty. Anson Chan, the former head of the civil service under Chris Patten, and Jimmy Lai, a prominent businessman, fall into this category, and so do some of the Democrats. Then there is a much larger group, among them many students, who oppose Beijing’s plans for more idealistic reasons.

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王菀之:
「比以前更厭, 甚至憎恨, 政治傷害的人太多了」
「政治的醜惡和傷害, 現在還不夠清楚嗎?難道要喜 ...
星勤 發表於 2014-10-1 22:31



    下年佢冇得做基本法大使!!!

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發哥你真係全香港人嘅偶像
689個句袋住先....係廢話黎
rubylovessss 發表於 2014-10-1 23:02


發哥亂咁閙人

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本帖最後由 Korwyn 於 2014-10-2 01:33 編輯

喺某討論區見到呢個留言:

由頭到尾, 對人不對事...

梁先生未上台時, 都有人叫下台啦, 精神病...

別忘了, 限奶令, 零雙非產子, 商品說明條例修訂, 制壓樓價升幅操施, 加建公屋, 居屋, 增加樓宇供應,  仲有好多好多...

尼d 全部都係佢上任以來的德政, 點解d 人視若無睹???

之前曾特首, 上任咁耐, 做過咩??? 果時勁勁多大陸大肚婆來搶床位, 有無人理過??? 死都唔肯起居屋, 又無人嘈佢, 叫佢下台????

公x黨 引入雙非, 跟住又想引入菲傭, 咁pk, 又無人叫佢地下台???

飯民, 李x 人, 梁x 雄...仲有果d 收錢議員, 又無人叫佢地下台???
作為普通市民的我, 只見到成班利益集團背後, 做一大堆小動作, 要拉梁先生下台, 因為梁先生阻住佢地發逹!

一早講明佔中, 點解變左佔旺角??? 中環反而無事??? 點解無人想過???

中環係果d 利益集團大本營, 點會比佢有事???
有事永遠係我地尼d 小市民, 得益咪果d 政客, 利益集團law, 死果d 咪比人利用的學生law

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事實上 梁特首上任以來 得唔到民心既原因 又是隱瞞又是說謊先岩岩夠票當選 呢一樣野已經令好多人反 ...
Nicholas 發表於 2014-10-2 01:43


香港人今日爭取嘅野已經太太太遲喇
2000年中國大陸嘅經濟體只係香港嘅7倍, 今年已經係34倍
香港今時今日已經冇咩bargaining power,
呀爺可以唔清場, 由你地自身自滅都影響唔到佢地

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九龍購物區淪垃圾崗 E-mail 此主題給朋友

https://hk.news.yahoo.com/%E4%B9 ... 4%97-224019833.html

佔領中環行動的影響範圍陸續擴散,旅遊熱點尖沙咀成新戰場,九龍兩大旅遊區旺角及尖沙咀先後被佔領,其中車流不息的廣東道全日被示威者封鎖,連食物環境衞生署的垃圾車亦無法駛入,大批垃圾堆滿行人路,惡臭難當。本港購物天堂的形象再受沉重打擊,無論市民及遊客均對旅遊區淪為「垃圾堆填區」深表失望。


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家長怒吼「畀條路返學」
佔中成「持久戰」,中西區及灣仔區學校恐復課無期。據知教育局傾向最快明日復課,但不少區內中學校長擔心交通混亂,建議下周一復課;更有小學校長認為應以學生安全為首,佔中結束才復課。不少家長網上討論區留言怒吼,擔心停課阻礙學習進度,嚴重損害即將提交升中呈分試分數的小六生,及「未教晒書」的應屆文憑試學生,「星期日補課都追唔番」,家長促請學校及教育局制訂應變方案,又促佔中人士不要影響交通,「畀條路返學!」

教局考慮最快明日復課
消息指教育局日前約見部分校長,諮詢中西區及灣仔區復課日期。據知,當局正考慮最快明日復課。教育局發言人說會評估交通情況及風險,適當時候公布相關安排。

灣仔區中學校長會主席戴德正認為,下周一應要復課,「無可能無限期拖延,十月六日係好日子,學生安全暫時唔使太顧慮。睇事態發展,示威者都和平,唯一係交通問題,遲到可以唔計入考勤」。中西區聖士提反堂中學校長陳婉玲說,停課影響學習進度,老師已利用網上平台提供材料及功課,希望學生追趕學習進度。

http://orientaldaily.on.cc/cnt/news/20141002/00176_003.html

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反佔中媽媽的心聲

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中西區及灣仔所有學校明日繼續停課

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?
?
?

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點解自己唔講晒又交個波比林鄭....想點!
聽晚我同你地一齊抗爭689!! ...
rubylovessss 發表於 2014-10-3 00:26


唔好浪費光陰拉

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佔鐘正式完畢?
金鐘都少左人

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一早已經叫你地撒出旺角同銅鑼灣

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其實我覺得今次已經好成功
好成功令689陣腳大亂
比更多人不恥佢所為 ...
屮SiU霖屮 發表於 2014-10-3 23:08



    wake up!!!
全港最大討論區大部份人認為示威學生抵打!
http://news.discuss.com.hk/forumdisplay.php?fid=54

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本帖最後由 Korwyn 於 2014-10-15 17:10 編輯

http://m.discuss.com.hk/index.php?action=thread&tid=23907151


星期三公投 : 68.9%人支持清場!

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TVB 仲有良心記者好慶幸佢地冇忘記到新聞系既宗旨及精神
補返張圖先
   


BTW HEHE D男主播幾正幾好J{: ...
Kyle_ 發表於 2014-10-15 20:53



    冇劉晉安、周嘉儀、葉昇瓚 幾位主播喎

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何韻詩正式被封殺

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多得班佔中L
搞到巴士改路唔停近mtr
我冇帶傘 (朝早已出門) 搞到我俾大雨淋到勁濕

平時D佔中L搞到中西區勁塞車,
累到我成日上堂遲到我都冇出聲啦 (我放工同上夜校中間得一小時commute, 冇得早d出門架!)


我唔敢post 上fb先post喺度post, 費時俾人unfriend同攻擊我

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之前689 , 商界同建制派 話好大影響呢,原來根本唔係咁
kk8733 發表於 2014-10-22 22:54



    你可以覺得影響唔大,代表你好少接觸社會

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真係關事咩? 我最肯定既就係的士司機既生意無受太大影響
    佔中期間 都坐過好多次的士都有問過呢 ...
Nicholas 發表於 2014-10-22 23:34


你要搵不受影響嘅地方一定搵到

問題係有咩受影響

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但係我講不受影響既地方係宏觀...
    唔係有無帶傘既問題呢... 你頭先果個post 都係講因為佔中 咁 ...
Nicholas 發表於 2014-10-22 23:42


朝早出門, 今朝冇FORECAST有落雨

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http://news.discuss.com.hk/viewt ... &extra=page%3D1
老尾下一步... 你地小心D呀

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保普選反佔中大聯盟發起簽名運動,要求還路於民,支持警方執法,由昨日起一連9日舉行街頭及網上簽名,全日收到超過33萬個簽名,其中街站簽名超過27萬個,網上簽名近6萬個,2天累計有65萬人簽名支持。大聯盟指,大多數街站順利平靜,個別街站如沙田大圍鐵路站,下午有十多名佔中者在塲干擾,警方到現場戒備。另外,大聯盟網站昨晚遭受嚴重襲擊,簽名平台一度停止運作,經連夜搶修後,於今晨修復。但今天全日仍然受到斷續的攻擊,影響平台伺服器運作,導致登入簽名速度緩慢。大聯盟又表示,駭客ip地址主要來自歐美,不過駭客未能進入簽名平台內部,市民簽名資料是安全的。

兩日逾65萬人簽名反佔中
http://std.stheadline.com/breakingnews/20141026a214547.asp

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對社會有害無益的人
27/10/2014
幾十年來,相信香港人也是首次因為政見不同,而導致家庭和朋友之間出現分 ...
kk8733 發表於 2014-10-27 22:54


王僞基 最叻抽水, 又拍政治劇又11.19開台
抽少陣水會死咩

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