AndyDufresne wrote:--Andy
Enough with the anti-China shit. You make DY look like Mao.
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AndyDufresne wrote:--Andy
mrswdk wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:He didn't mention that each and every Chinese person has land available to them from the towns they migrated from.
And what use is that to them when their hometown is a piece of shit backwater?
Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:He didn't mention that each and every Chinese person has land available to them from the towns they migrated from.
And what use is that to them when their hometown is a piece of shit backwater?
I thought you said the Great Leap Forward abolished backwaters?
_sabotage_ wrote:I have a contractual obligation to defend China, I have to consider what my wife may see as an insult.
_sabotage_ wrote:Of course compensation isn't always fair. It usually covers the cost of buying a new place, but rarely leaves people better off. On the other hand, Gang Xia is a good example of deslumming an area and compensation that can be expected in prime locations. It's not like they are going to urban plan my mother-in-law's house out of existence in rural Hunan. I have little sympathy for those who were so unfortunate to be given land that through no act of their own came to be worth several million US and then received that sum to vacate it.
_sabotage_ wrote:My wife is the Chinese version of MuyThaiguy.
AndyDufresne wrote:'A Universe Beneath Our Feet': Life In Beijing's UndergroundIn Beijing, even the tiniest apartment can cost a fortune — after all, with more than 21 million residents, space is limited and demand is high.
But it is possible to find more affordable housing. You'll just have to join an estimated 1 million of the city's residents, and look underground.
Below the city's bustling streets, bomb shelters and storage basements are turned into illegal — but affordable — apartments.
...
...apartments go one to three stories below ground. Residents have communal bathrooms and shared kitchens. The tiny, windowless rooms have just enough space to fit a bed.
With an average rent of $70 per month ... this is an affordable option for city-dwellers.
--Andy
mrswdk wrote:lol, like anyone goes to prison for living in illegal accommodation.
mrswdk wrote:Uh? It's true. Even assuming that living in such accommodation is punishable with jail time (which I doubt it is), as OP alludes to these people live in concrete rooms in the basements of tower blocks because they are too poor to live anywhere else. Were someone to compel the police to come and evict them, I doubt the police would do anything more than tell them to leave.
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