很多東西要做,出題目,做網頁,做末牷A溫習。
可是晚上總做,我想做自己的事,
今晚做了只Monkey
不過我知道接下來我會很痛苦,這些債務遲早要清!
北河街開張
北河街第一日開張,早上我就去光顧了一下,
11點,一個人都沒,當然,別人要上課。
一個人,靜靜地學英文,溫pure,C++
總算算是溫到書了。
滿腦總是有很多主意,真難搞!
Cake
又動起手做東西,這次不是卡片,這次是針線紡織!小試牛刀,做了個蛋糕,
不過和我想的差太遠了,既然是第一次,就當作拿經驗吧。我拿一袋棉花,
不知道要多久才能用完,也陪n做一個大大的公仔! 做完的感覺真舒服!
Kitman 錯覺以為系真ge.XD…相片+模糊修飾
特別日子
今日是一年一度的日子halloween,
同時,都是爺爺的祭祀
那麼快就十年了
哈囉喂!
夏天的尾巴優先場
不知道是好運還倒霉,被啊婆選去陪看優先場,地點–HKU SPACE,影片:夏天的尾巴,臺灣片。
坐在凳子上九十多分鐘,還要躲避前面的人頭,看得好辛苦哦! 還在片子還不算爛,有點日本片的味道,
11月1日正式上映,有興趣的可以去看看,就當它半藝術片那樣看吧!
另籌備已久的工作終于開始啦!小安我地要加油啊!做出自己的作品!努力學針線!
今日上英文,由最基本的查字典到發音,Miss說了好多香港人的習慣出來,說得好有道理。其中幾點自己都
經常做的,查字上yahoo,只看字義,輕重音不分,懶音多,想學人pro又pro唔起,是得其反。。。看來以后
要多點用我的牛津字典。那之硒N上了2個月的課,要浸泡入英文的世界。
長達一星期的假期開始了!
China’s Olympic Opportunity
China’s Olympic Opportunity
By MARTIN LEE
October 17, 2007; Page A18
When President George W. Bush accepted President Hu Jintao’s invitation to attend the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Mr. Bush’s press secretary said that he was going to the Games as “a sports fan, not to make any political statement.” I too am a great sports fan — especially of the Soccer World Cup — but I would encourage President Bush to take a broader vision of the possibilities for the Beijing Games. He should use the next 10 months to press for a significant improvement of basic human rights in my country, including press, assembly and religious freedoms.
This should be possible, since Chinese leaders have promised to make these improvements anyway. In their pledges to the International Olympic Committee while bidding for the Games and since, China’s leaders at all levels repeatedly assured the world that they would use the Games to go beyond improving the country’s physical infrastructure.
“By applying for the Olympics, we want to promote not just the city’s development, but the development of society, including democracy and human rights,” one of China’s key Olympic figures, Deputy Mayor Liu Jingmin, told the Washington Post in 2001. Then, Mr. Liu said, “If people have a target like the Olympics to strive for, it will help us establish a more just and harmonious society, a more democratic society, and help integrate China into the world.”
I couldn’t agree more. But instead of the hoped-for reforms, the Chinese government appears to be backsliding on its promises, including in Hong Kong where we have near total political paralysis, not the promised road to full democracy. That is no reason to give up on the prospects for reform in China. But it is reason to step up the direct engagement on these pressing issues.
In accepting the invitation to attend China’s Games, President Bush said this would be “a moment where China’s leaders can use the opportunity to show confidence by demonstrating a commitment to greater openness and tolerance.” Instead of a “moment” of change, China needs structural and long-term reforms: placing the Communist Party under the rule of law, unshackling the media and Internet, allowing religious adherents to freely practice their faiths, ceasing harassment of civil-society groups that work on AIDS and the environment, and addressing modest calls for accountability in the political system. Mr. Bush and other world leaders planning to attend the Olympics should not wait for the opening ceremony, but must start now with sustained efforts to achieve this agenda.
One reason for optimism about the possibilities for progress in China is recent Olympic history. When South Korea bid for the 1988 Games, the country was a military dictatorship. Due in good part to the prospects for embarrassment and international engagement, the Olympics helped kick off an overdue peaceful political transformation in South Korea just six months before the launch of the Seoul Games. Since then, South Korea has endured as one of Asia’s most stable and vital democracies. The parallels between South Korea and China are not exact, but the lesson is that the Olympics certainly present an opening to raise these issues in the context of the Chinese government’s own promises.
In the U.S. and elsewhere, there are campaigns to boycott the Beijing Games over the Chinese government’s trade with and support for regimes in Sudan and Burma. As a Chinese person, I would encourage backers of these efforts to consider the positive effects Olympic exposure could still have in China, including scrutiny by the world’s journalists. This is certainly the time for Chinese leaders to step up and constructively use their clout in Asia and Africa. In so doing, Beijing should open a new chapter of responsible foreign policy and convince the world it is not oblivious to these issues.
Chinese people around the world are proud that China will host the Games. China has the world’s fastest growing economy, and may indeed put on history’s most impressive Olympic Games next August. But how does it profit our nation if it wins gold medals but suffers from the continued absence of democracy, human rights and the rule of law?
It is my hope that the Games could have a catalytic effect on the domestic and foreign policies of the Chinese government, and that the Chinese people will remember the Games long after they are held — not merely for medals won, but also because they were a turning point for human rights and the rule of law in China. That would be something worth cheering.
Mr. Lee is a democratically elected legislator and the founding chairman of Hong Kong’s Democratic Party.
Olympic is going to change nowadays. ” I too am a great sports fan”, I think heshouldopenthe distionary to find outwhat Olympic is !People don’t want to watch a fireof politics during the Olympic games. Enjoy your sports!