Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Guns & Roses Scares Crap Out Of SinoCommies

Story here.

ht: National Newswatch

You know the evil Chinese Communist Party feels threatened when they call someone "venomous" and stuff like that.

Let's have a standing ovation for the "venomous" (hissssss!) rock band Guns & Roses! They have the fortitude and gonads to give the evil Commies the finger, whereas most musicians would rather meekly look the other way and shut up in the face of the inconvenient reality of the murderous evil of the Chinese Communist Party, which rules with a tyrannical iron fist over more than a billion increasingly resentful, restless, desperate Chinese.

The Global Times article referred only to the title of the album and not to specific song lyrics. The record's title track makes a reference to the Falun Gong meditation movement that was banned by China as an "evil cult" and warns "if your Great Wall rocks blame yourself," in an apparent message to the country's authoritarian government.

Songs from the album could be heard on Internet sites such as YouTube and the band's MySpace page on Monday and it was not immediately possible to tell whether China's Internet monitors were seeking to block access to it.


Oh, trust me... the SinoCommies will try to block it... though it seems they can't block all access from inside China... to this here blog, which, with unadulterated impunity, calls the monstrous Commies exactly what they deserve to be called, posting the inconvenient truth about that totalitarian, greedy entity. Scroll down to the bottom of this page and you'll see that I've received dozens of visits from inside China. This means that either the Communist underlings and minions are monitoring what I post herein or that ordinary Chinese are smart enough to foil the Commies' attempts to prevent access. Or both.

Unfortunately for the Commie bastards, they simply cannot stop the truth from getting out:

Despite such restrictions, computer file sharing and pirating of DVDs, computer games and music CDs is rampant in China, meaning that much banned material is available through alternative channels.


Long live Chinese Democracy!

Sic semper Communism!