Anonymous ID: d31dc9 Jan. 29, 2020, 3:45 a.m. No.7952830   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2843 >>2876 >>2911

HAVE XI AND THE CCP LOST THE MANDATE OF HEAVEN?

There have been forty-nine dynasties in Chinese history. Their average “age” has been just 70 years.

 

The dynasty of Mao Tse Tung and his revolutionaries has reached this age as well, when dynasties are generally at their end – and Mao’s mandate appears to have been revoked.

 

“Mandate of Heaven” is a concept originating in the Zhou Dynasty from before 1000 B.C. which determines whether the emperor is sufficiently virtuous to rule, and 70 years of brutal communist rule have not yet removed that religious concept from the psyche of the Chinese people.

 

The four pillars of the Mandate of Heaven demand that if the Emperor fails to fulfil his obligations to the people, then his Mandate and right to be ruler is over.

 

“Heaven” sends signs when the ruler’s day is done, and it is clear today that it is time for the 50th dynasty to begin.

 

Disasters of nature such as floods, drought, famine and disease are signs that the Ruling Dynasty has lost Heaven’s Mandate to rule, and those happenings justify the people’s right to rebel against them under the four principles of the Mandate.

 

In centuries past, these signs from Heaven led to uprisings – 49 times in Chinese history – and a new Ruling Dynasty came to power, often from within the ranks of those who rebelled.

 

There are many signs the Communist Dynasty’s Mandate is lost – a new deadly disease being simply the latest and perhaps worst.

 

https://richardsonpost.com/howellwoltz/15543/mandate-of-heaven/

Anonymous ID: d31dc9 Jan. 29, 2020, 4:39 a.m. No.7953091   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Chinese shoppers begin stripping Sydney shelves of health, medical supplies

Disturbing images have emerged on social media of empty supermarket shelves in the Sydney CBD as shoppers clear them out of disinfectant wipes, hand sanitiser and face masks. Chinese supermarkets stripped bare by panicked citizens in response to the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak this month.

 

Schools in NSW have taken the preventative step of requiring students who have visited China recently to provide a medical certificate before returning to school.

 

Due to the dual-language signage appearing in Sydney from the shortages, it is clear it is Chinese residents of Australia who are stripping shelves of health and medical supplies. This raises troubling issues for Australians in the face of a rapidly spreading global outbreak.

 

Recent decades have seen the growth of ‘daigou’ shoppers; Chinese expatriates who work as personal shoppers in Australia for friends and associates back in mainland China. These daigou personal shoppers usually focus on items such as infant formula, food and healthcare products to meet the needs of mainland Chinese unable to trust local brands. These items are then shipped via regular postal services directly to the Chinese purchaser. Such Chinese consumers are often willing to pay premium prices for Australian products they can trust.

 

As the coronavirus outbreak spreads in China and more Chinese find themselves unable to access the health and sanitation products they require, they will look to access daigou shoppers abroad in record numbers. This will put enormous strain on Australian health and medical supplies just as Australians may urgently need such items for ourselves and our families.