We should do this too, boycott Chinese products. Good for Vietnam. I
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Boycott Chinese products or products made in China or both?
Even if you boycott Chinese products, they are still laughing all the way to bank if you patronize made in China products also
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OK, so just let them bully us & let them take what rightfully belongs to us without a fight. After all, we can't survive without Chinese products.
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Good for them, and sana sa Pinas din gawin din natin.
Who says we can't survive without made in china products? Kung gusto pwede. Or you can at least minimize naman, especially if there are alternatives. If you make the decision to not buy china made then yes you can do it. But if you say it's impossible, even if you have not even tried, then talaga di pa nagumpisa ang laban talo ka na agad.
Buti made in Vietnam yung Samsung phone ko. Di Kagaya ng mga Apple IPhone at IPad...
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Kaya bilib ako sa Vietnam. As a nation, nagkakaisa. Even if China laughs their way to the bank, they would think twice before invading that country, or taking away it's resources. Just because puro made in China dito, papaka-alipin na ba tayo kasi takot tayo na hindi tayo mabubuhay kung walang made in China?
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Wala ka naman choice kundi bumili ng products na may components na at least made in china, or assembled in china. Pero we can avoid patronizing yung mga basura nilang products na binebenta sa mga bangketa or sa mga malls hehehe..
Mga Vietnamese kasi malakas ang sense of nationalism nila. Sila lang nakatalo sa mga Kano sa Vietnam War. Dito sa Pinas, puro away kahit sa maliit na bagay at walang pag kakaisa...
Kung kaya ng iba,- kaya rin natin iyan!
Let's do it!
“Familiarity breeds awe”
23.5K:fart1:
Technically, i don't think the US "won" in Afghanistan or Iraq. Both those places are still a mess.
Yeah, i think the lack of a national identity is the root of a lot of our problems right now. And i believe this is exactly what Taiwan, Korea, Japan, etc had, that's why they were able to rise out of the ashes after WW2 to be where they are now. If you had a sense of national pride, you wouldn't steal, litter, etc because you have respect for your country, your people, and above all, yourself, and that is why you work to put yourself up upon higher standards.
The problem is, the Philippines is not a nation. It is 7,107 (or 7,106, depending on the tide) islands with hundreds of indigenous groups and tribes separated by mountain ranges, rivers and seas who have less in common with each other than in many bigger nations.
The rule of the "oligarchy" is often harped about... but the real trouble is... all these people are ruled, by dint of superiority of numbers and exposure... by a small subset of the population that just happens to live and work in Manila... which has little care or connection to the rest of the Philippines.
Singapore doesn't have this problem. It is a small, united city.
Malaysia has some of these problems, but it is united by a single religion and traditional aristocracy... and is swimming in oil money.
Indonesia, less oil money, still somewhat united, despite peace and order problems.
Us? We have two or three major religious factions... several major ethnic groups and voting blocks... and somehow, despite the short shrift Malacanang always gives Mindanao, we've managed to keep the entire island from seceding by dint of military force.
That's not a country. That's a jigsaw puzzle made out of pieces that don't fit.
Ang pagbalik ng comeback...
Pretty much. While you can hurt them a tiny, infintesimal bit by not buying Chinese-branded products, I can think of a dozen better reasons not to buy Chinese-branded electronics beyond political protest...
I suppose the idea that buying foreign-branded products that use Chinese parts is okay since most of the profit goes to the foreigners could also apply to Chinese made products that use foreign parts (some cars, electronics that use Philippine semiconductors). It's a tangled web.
With a lot of help and hardware from Russia and China...
Vietnam was really an embarrassing situation for the US, though... supporting a corrupt regime, then getting into a long, protracted ground war without a clear plan for victory...
Ang pagbalik ng comeback...
hmm, i was looking through some vietnam war docs recently. Seems that militarily speaking, the US was actually winning, despite casualties almost reaching half a million...but politically, the VC were winning. They managed to turn opinion in the US strongly against the war until they were forced to pull out. Still, a win is a win.
Going back: for some items i really do avoid Made in China products: e.g. food, cheap electronics. It's more about the quality/safety issues more than any political/racial bias. Especially for gadgets/electronics, nasasayangan ako sa pagbili ng Class C/D China made 'coz after using for a few months, tapon na. In a way we're becoming a dumping ground for China crap. Better to buy something more durable(China made or not) and have it last a long time.
^ diba Intsik naman talaga bumugbog sa kanya. Haha.😄
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Let's do it! Para umunlad bansa natin. Maraming businessman na pinoy maraming trabaho. Go! Go! Go!
pano yan pag binoycott na chinese cars sa tsikot mawawala ba tulad ng foton section..
Ban na natin ang Chinese cars and products dito sa Tsikot Forum
Kaya ba simulan dito sa sariling bakuran yan? Hehehehe
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