w****l 发帖数: 6122 | 1 1.和印度比,自掉身价。
2.比开幕式,吃饱了撑的,开幕式无非是长秀,要比就比比飞机发动机电脑处理器之类
的硬货。
开幕式谁不会搞啊,朝鲜穷的叮当响都可以玩万人的阿里郎,
北京奥运会和印度的开幕式,说白了都是些无关痛痒的东西,真拿出来作为国力的象征
,让懂中文的日本间谍和美国CIA笑掉大牙。 | W*F 发帖数: 3941 | | p*********g 发帖数: 9527 | | w****l 发帖数: 6122 | 4 生殖器大王,你好,你家里说话就是这个档次?
【在 p*********g 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 你菊花痒让老将捅捅就行了,别过来撅腚恶心人。
| e****i 发帖数: 393 | 5 以看到题目,一股极度的“悲愤”扑面而来。老将对阿三是何等的“怒其不争”啊,真
恨不得开除阿三的“民主”籍。 | p*********g 发帖数: 9527 | 6 对人说人话,对畜生就不说人话,这就是我家的规矩。
【在 w****l 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 生殖器大王,你好,你家里说话就是这个档次?
| w****l 发帖数: 6122 | 7 印度关我屁事,
只有小将,恨不得去学印地语,好看懂印度的车祸新闻,
我发明个新词,叫“indianjob”
请用indianjob造句,
今天小将们,又在网上“indianjob”,达到了“spiritual orgasm”。
【在 e****i 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 以看到题目,一股极度的“悲愤”扑面而来。老将对阿三是何等的“怒其不争”啊,真 : 恨不得开除阿三的“民主”籍。
| p*********g 发帖数: 9527 | 8 老将们整天拿美国和中国比民主自由岂不也是脱裤子放屁,多此一举。 你美国爹天下
无敌,自由民主,宇宙第一,中国一万年也赶不上,好了吧? 快快滚回牛屎。 | w****l 发帖数: 6122 | 9 你太自卑了,
【在 p*********g 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 老将们整天拿美国和中国比民主自由岂不也是脱裤子放屁,多此一举。 你美国爹天下 : 无敌,自由民主,宇宙第一,中国一万年也赶不上,好了吧? 快快滚回牛屎。
| p*********g 发帖数: 9527 | 10 是老将自卑,搞清楚因果。老将认为中国不如美国。
还有,发帖前先研究一下你美国爹的心思,别丢人:
发信人: tgbyhn (CNN), 信区: Military
标 题: 华盛顿邮报上今天有篇比较印度中国文章
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Sun Oct 3 18:49:16 2010, 美东)
India wants to be a great power. So why are its Commonwealth Games such a
mess?
Network NewsX Profile
By Jason Overdorf
Sunday, October 3, 2010
NEW DELHI -- The Commonwealth Games, which begin here Sunday, were supposed
to showcase New Delhi's emergence as a world-class city and India's ascent
to major-power status. In a sort of Olympics-lite for the erstwhile British
Empire, thousands of elite athletes from 71 nations and territories are to
compete in everything from boxing to lawn bowling. But in the days before
the opening ceremony, the world was instead treated to a farce of failure
and recrimination.
This Story
After setbacks, Commonwealth Games off to strong start in India
The games just started, but India has already lost
Local hospitals, reeling from an epidemic of dengue fever, reported four
patients to a bed. The road I take every morning to go jogging in a local
park disintegrated into a minefield of craters under the monsoon rains. For
the media tour last month, the competition venues looked impressive enough -
- although showpiece Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium was still under construction.
But that was the least of New Delhi's problems.
International sports officials touring the athletes' housing at the Games
Village found rooms littered with construction debris and walls stained red
with betel-leaf-colored spit. Monkeys and stray dogs ran amok, and an
underpaid, overworked laborer had acrobatically left his own special
signature -- a coil of excrement in one of the sinks. Instead of a
celebration of Delhi on a global stage, the run-up to the games was a series
of humiliations.
It was also an ice-water wakeup. India's huge population and rapidly growing
economy have long drawn parallels to China's, and India's debut on the
international athletic stage naturally prompted comparisons with the
dazzling Beijing Olympics of 2008. But India, it turns out, is no China.
"The lesson that we have to learn is that we have to improve our
implementation," said Himanshu Jha of National Social Watch, an organization
that monitors government corruption. Jha thinks the government is "in
complete disarray: It's nonresponsive, it doesn't deliver on time, and when
it does, it's at a much higher cost" than is justified.
The juxtaposition of Beijing's Olympic triumph and Delhi's Commonwealth
shame highlights the most ominous signals that collapsing bridges and
dissolving roads send for India's future. Everyone knows that China builds
awe-inspiring railways and highways and stadiums -- and brutally crushes
dissent -- while India builds nothing and lets everybody complain, criticize
, protest and file suit. But too much democracy is not India's problem and
is not the reason the Commonwealth Games are such a debacle. The nation
suffers from a much more common ailment -- too little. As Indiana University
professor Sumit Ganguly told me, "The rule of law is fractured, and
democracy has become an excuse for appalling governance."
Too enamored of its reputation as the world's largest democracy, India
appears to be headed in the wrong direction.
I lived in Beijing in 1995 and 1996 and again in 1998, when China was just
beginning to believe in its own foretold economic rise. In 1995, when the
chairman of Kodak said that multinationals that failed in China would soon
cease to exist, it had an unconvincing one-roll-of-film-per-family ring to
it. In 1998, as Beijing worked on its Olympic bid, the skyline showed cranes
in every direction, and when I came back for a visit in 2000 -- a year
before Beijing was awarded the Games -- the Chaoyang neighborhood I knew so
well had changed so dramatically that I got lost.
In some ways, the atmosphere is similar in Delhi today. India liberalized
its economy in 1991, 13 years after Deng Xiaoping opened China's doors, and
despite the differences between the two countries, it's often said that
India is following in China's footsteps -- 10 or 15 years behind. The
conventional wisdom from bankers and consultants has been that India's
problems in building power plants, highways and ports can be offset by the
strength of its institutional infrastructure -- namely, its democratic
government, codified rule of law, free press and civil society. Moreover, as
China's population ages, India's is getting younger, purportedly providing
a "demographic dividend" that will see India become the world's labor force
by 2030.
But while China's fear of losing face has helped it avoid complacency, India
has concluded that its rise to become one of the world's economic powers is
inevitable. As if it will be solved by magic, concern about the growing
overpopulation problem has been supplanted by enthusiasm about the next
generation's legion of workers. For four years after Delhi won the bid for
the Commonwealth Games in 2003, India's senior officials turned a blind eye
as
【在 w****l 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 你太自卑了,
| f**********r 发帖数: 18251 | 11 是啊,那你鸭还那么起劲地比是为了啥?
【在 w****l 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 1.和印度比,自掉身价。 : 2.比开幕式,吃饱了撑的,开幕式无非是长秀,要比就比比飞机发动机电脑处理器之类 : 的硬货。 : 开幕式谁不会搞啊,朝鲜穷的叮当响都可以玩万人的阿里郎, : 北京奥运会和印度的开幕式,说白了都是些无关痛痒的东西,真拿出来作为国力的象征 : ,让懂中文的日本间谍和美国CIA笑掉大牙。
| N*******d 发帖数: 5641 | 12 你每天都要拿美国爹和中国比,太掉身价了
【在 w****l 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 1.和印度比,自掉身价。 : 2.比开幕式,吃饱了撑的,开幕式无非是长秀,要比就比比飞机发动机电脑处理器之类 : 的硬货。 : 开幕式谁不会搞啊,朝鲜穷的叮当响都可以玩万人的阿里郎, : 北京奥运会和印度的开幕式,说白了都是些无关痛痒的东西,真拿出来作为国力的象征 : ,让懂中文的日本间谍和美国CIA笑掉大牙。
| b*********d 发帖数: 3539 | 13 yy健脑。大家都有合法自娱自乐的权利。
【在 w****l 的大作中提到】![](/moin_static193/solenoid/img/up.png) : 1.和印度比,自掉身价。 : 2.比开幕式,吃饱了撑的,开幕式无非是长秀,要比就比比飞机发动机电脑处理器之类 : 的硬货。 : 开幕式谁不会搞啊,朝鲜穷的叮当响都可以玩万人的阿里郎, : 北京奥运会和印度的开幕式,说白了都是些无关痛痒的东西,真拿出来作为国力的象征 : ,让懂中文的日本间谍和美国CIA笑掉大牙。
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