Understanding China, One Blog at a Time

An American in China

Dhinese Entrepreneur

Posted by wtdevflnt on February 20, 2012


3 Responses to “Dhinese Entrepreneur”

  1. Brewskie said

    “Drive across, breathe, eat and falsely hope at your own risk.”

    In the land of lethal lamb, death dumplings, toxic tofu, mortiferous mutts, cancerous cows, “baked” baby formula, rancid rice and wanton water of waste, it turns out China has an endless all-you-can-eat tofu buffet of: baneful bridges of bloody bereavement. Be warned: I’m only listing half the bridges in the post.

    http://www.haohaoreport.com/l/28719

    “In China, it seems every year can see a bridge collapse, here is a list of bridge collapse accidents in recent years, after seeing many tragedies I think our government really should take measures to avoid it.

    Guangdong Jiujiang Bridge

    The Jiujiang Bridge collapsed on June 15, 2007. after a cargo vessel ploughed into a section of the 1,600-meter-long bridge. Four cars plunged into the river and nine people were killed.

    Jujiang Bridge was open to the traffic in 1988; it is an important transport hub linking eastern and western Guangdong. Test in 2005 showed that everything is all right with the bridge.

    Qijiang Rainbow Bridge

    The 180 metre-long Rainbow bridge collapsed in Qijiang county On Jan 4th 1999,three years after it had been built by a private contractor. Forty people died and 14 people were injured in the tragedy.

    [...]

    Liaoning Yingkou Xiongyue Bridge

    Xiongyue Bridge was broken under the impact of the flood on August 2, 2006, two piers collapse and two bridge plates fell down. In the accident, a car fell into the river, and one of victims was recovered from water, but the other one was missing.

    Western Hunan Tuojiang Bridge

    Aug. 14, 2007, the 328-meter-long, 42-meter-high Tuojiang River bridge in Fenghuang County, in western Hunan Province, collapsed on Monday afternoon when an estimated 123 workers were dismantling its steel scaffolding. Construction began in March 2004 and had been scheduled to open to traffic at the end of the month.

    [...]

    Heilongjiang Tieli West Bridge

    June 29, 2009, Heilongjiang Tieli West Bridge collapsed, resulting in eight cars fell into the water, four people were killed. Hulan River Bridge was built in 1973, 1997, has been repaired.

    Chongqing Pengshui red mud Trough Bridge

    May 27, 2010, Chongqing Pengshui red mud Trough Bridge collapsed, an engineer vehicle fell under the bridge, the driver injured. The bridge was put into use in 1998.

    [...]

    Xinjiang Korla Peacock River Bridge

    April 12, 2011, Xinjiang Korla Peacock River Bridge collapsed, no casualties, the bridge was completed on August 1, 1998 and known as “the first cross-river in the Northwest.”

    Fujian Mount Wuyi Mansion Bridge

    July 14, 2011, Fujian Mount Wuyi Mansion Bridge wholly collapsed, a tourist bus fell down the bridge, one person was killed and 22 injured. The construction was started in1996, and open to traffic in 1999 with a total investment of about 17 million Yuan.

    Hangzhou Qiantang Thrid Bridge

    July 15, 2011, part of Hangzhou Qianjiang Third Bridge collapsed suddenly, a heavy truck fell from the bridge Qianjiang Third Bridge was opened to traffic in 1997, with a investment of half a billion. In October 2005, Qianjiang Third Bridge began its first overhaul; May 2006, Qianjiang Third Bridge again was closed for reinforcement; before the accident, the leadership of Zhejiang Provincial Communications Department drove by the road and found that there were cracks in the bridg and were ready for transport blockade maintenance.

  2. Brewskie said

    More news in a strange communist land that brain-dead American librarians, oddly, have a quixotic fetish for…

    Bank lending to Shanghai (or “Shag-hi) property developers fell 9.6% Aren’t property developers hurting for cash?

    http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=494835&type=Business

    China’s high-speed real estate train of doom is in a kinetic motion it cannot stop, destined to wipe out over the bend. Declining prices has one upshot: desperate, and horny, buyers will finally have the chance to get suckered into buying worthless pads that will make Cabrini Green’s age look graceful; turkey-stuffed girlfriends/wives’ wrath in response to stupidity will be swift and eviscerating.

    http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=494803&type=Business

    New inventory is up 40% in China over the past year (50% in Shanghai).

    http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=494623&type=Business

    Wuhu’s fucked: Proposal to reinvigorate property market introduced last Thursday gets incinerated via central CCP thugs’ orders.

    http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=494296&type=Business

    Sad: Yunnan’s in the midst of a 3-year drought; little reprieve expected.

    http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=494826&type=National

    A farm town in S Guangdong has released pig & cow shit, industrial chemicals, and who knows what else into a water plant’s water source, affecting the water of 50,000 residents. American economic libertarian retards: How’s the “no rules, now worries” economic life style working for China working? Can hear those idiots now: “Nothing to worry about pig poop here, just a silly Jewish/Islamic/Oprah scam. Pig dung contains plenty of good bacteria; salmonella and e. coli ain’t real, just like that global warming crap; I drink a glass full of shale gas fracking fluids every morning, does no harm to my breath or kidneys.”

    http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=494741&type=National

    Yes, like cancer (remember: China’s #1 killer?) the systematic infection of China’s banking sector is EVERYWHERE.

    http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=494615&type=

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 41 other followers