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发表于 2012-9-25 22:50:33 | 显示全部楼层
各位赞美金秋的照片和诗歌,真是令人陶醉。
秋天是色彩缤纷的季节, 秋天是丰收的季节, 秋天是值得举杯庆贺的季节。 祖国的发展一日千里,硕果累累。 中国的第一艘航母“辽宁”号也正式剪彩服役了。 真是振奋人心。
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发表于 2012-9-25 23:14:51 | 显示全部楼层
mrj: 从端中版块偷来. 曾任端芬中学物理教研组长, 台山一中物理教研组长的物理老大 -- 汪国威先生! 汪老师当年教导俺们两年, 功勋卓著. 旅居波士顿. 江总: 汪老师,是不是照片中第一排右起第一个? 我三十年没见过他了,他也是我一中时的物理老师。
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发表于 2012-9-26 09:31:20 | 显示全部楼层
英国的经济学家杂志【The Economist】这期大侃中日之钓鱼岛之争。至今,已有超过千多条各国读者的网上评论。 详见 http://www.economist.com/node/21563316 China and Japan Could Asia really go to war over these? The bickering over islands is a serious threat to the region’s peace and prosperity THE countries of Asia do not exactly see the world in a grain of sand, but they have identified grave threats to the national interest in the tiny outcrops and shoals scattered off their coasts. The summer has seen a succession of maritime disputes involving China, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Taiwan and the Philippines. This week there were more anti-Japanese riots in cities across China because of a dispute over a group of uninhabited islands known to the Japanese as the Senkakus and to the Chinese as the Diaoyus. Toyota and Honda closed down their factories. Amid heated rhetoric on both sides, one Chinese newspaper has helpfully suggested skipping the pointless diplomacy and moving straight to the main course by serving up Japan with an atom bomb. That, thank goodness, is grotesque hyperbole: the government in Beijing is belatedly trying to play down the dispute, aware of the economic interests in keeping the peace. Which all sounds very rational, until you consider history—especially the parallel between China’s rise and that of imperial Germany over a century ago. Back then nobody in Europe had an economic interest in conflict; but Germany felt that the world was too slow to accommodate its growing power, and crude, irrational passions like nationalism took hold. China is re-emerging after what it sees as 150 years of humiliation, surrounded by anxious neighbours, many of them allied to America. In that context, disputes about clumps of rock could become as significant as the assassination of an archduke. One mountain, two tigers Optimists point out that the latest scuffle is mainly a piece of political theatre—the product of elections in Japan and a leadership transition in China. The Senkakus row has boiled over now because the Japanese government is buying some of the islands from a private Japanese owner. The aim was to keep them out of the mischievous hands of Tokyo’s China-bashing governor, who wanted to buy them himself. China, though, was affronted. It strengthened its own claim and repeatedly sent patrol boats to encroach on Japanese waters. That bolstered the leadership’s image, just before Xi Jinping takes over. More generally, argue the optimists, Asia is too busy making money to have time for making war. China is now Japan’s biggest trading partner. Chinese tourists flock to Tokyo to snap up bags and designer dresses on display in the shop windows on Omotesando. China is not interested in territorial expansion. Anyway, the Chinese government has enough problems at home: why would it look for trouble abroad? Asia does indeed have reasons to keep relations good, and this latest squabble will probably die down, just as others have in the past. But each time an island row flares up, attitudes harden and trust erodes. Two years ago, when Japan arrested the skipper of a Chinese fishing boat for ramming a vessel just off the islands, it detected retaliation when China blocked the sale of rare earths essential to Japanese industry. Growing nationalism in Asia, especially China, aggravates the threat (see article). Whatever the legality of Japan’s claim to the islands, its roots lie in brutal empire-building. The media of all countries play on prejudice that has often been inculcated in schools. Having helped create nationalism and exploited it when it suited them, China’s leaders now face vitriolic criticism if they do not fight their country’s corner. A recent poll suggested that just over half of China’s citizens thought the next few years would see a “military dispute” with Japan. The islands matter, therefore, less because of fishing, oil or gas than as counters in the high-stakes game for Asia’s future. Every incident, however small, risks setting a precedent. Japan, Vietnam and the Philippines fear that if they make concessions, China will sense weakness and prepare the next demand. China fears that if it fails to press its case, America and others will conclude that they are free to scheme against it. Co-operation and deterrence Asia’s inability to deal with the islands raises doubts about how it would cope with a genuine crisis, on the Korean peninsula, say, or across the Strait of Taiwan. China’s growing taste for throwing its weight around feeds deep-seated insecurities about the way it will behave as a dominant power. And the tendency for the slightest tiff to escalate into a full-blown row presents problems for America, which both aims to reassure China that it welcomes its rise, and also uses the threat of military force to guarantee that the Pacific is worthy of the name. Some of the solutions will take a generation. Asian politicians have to start defanging the nationalist serpents they have nursed; honest textbooks would help a lot. For decades to come, China’s rise will be the main focus of American foreign policy. Barack Obama’s “pivot” towards Asia is a useful start in showing America’s commitment to its allies. But China needs reassuring that, rather than seeking to contain it as Britain did 19th-century Germany, America wants a responsible China to realise its potential as a world power. A crudely political WTO complaint will add to Chinese worries (see article). Given the tensions over the islands (and Asia’s irreconcilable versions of history), three immediate safeguards are needed. One is to limit the scope for mishaps to escalate into crises. A collision at sea would be less awkward if a code of conduct set out how vessels should behave and what to do after an accident. Governments would find it easier to work together in emergencies if they routinely worked together in regional bodies. Yet, Asia’s many talking shops lack clout because no country has been ready to cede authority to them. A second safeguard is to rediscover ways to shelve disputes over sovereignty, without prejudice. The incoming President Xi should look at the success of his predecessor, Hu Jintao, who put the “Taiwan issue” to one side. With the Senkakus (which Taiwan also claims), both Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping were happy to leave sovereignty to a later generation to decide. That makes even more sense if the islands’ resources are worth something: even state-owned companies would hesitate to put their oil platforms at risk of a military strike. Once sovereignty claims have been shelved, countries can start to share out the resources—or better still, declare the islands and their waters a marine nature reserve. But not everything can be solved by co-operation, and so the third safeguard is to bolster deterrence. With the Senkakus, America has been unambiguous: although it takes no position on sovereignty, they are administered by Japan and hence fall under its protection. This has enhanced stability, because America will use its diplomatic prestige to stop the dispute escalating and China knows it cannot invade. Mr Obama’s commitment to other Asian islands, however, is unclear. The role of China is even more central. Its leaders insist that its growing power represents no threat to its neighbours. They also claim to understand history. A century ago in Europe, years of peace and globalisation tempted leaders into thinking that they could afford to play with nationalist fires without the risk of conflagration. After this summer, Mr Xi and his neighbours need to grasp how much damage the islands are in fact causing. Asia needs to escape from a descent into corrosive mistrust. What better way for China to show that it is sincere about its peaceful rise than to take the lead?
贫僧法号: MRJ || 欧阳锋 主理        : 为失足男女开光
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发表于 2012-9-26 09:36:39 | 显示全部楼层
不安定因素:从“农民起义”看哪些人爱“造反” 我们的历史喜欢用“农民起义”来概括这些暴力革命,其实我看了看,干这事的并不都是农民,而且即便是农民,起义之后也都被当官的摘了桃,趁乱搞掉原领导,自己上位了。这方面的例子,比如刘邦、李渊、曹操……唉,数不胜数。农民们,基本上都是人家偷完驴,自己去拔橛,然后傻乎乎地就被人办了。当然,其中有不少人并不值得同情,比如杀人如麻的黄巢。 这些倒霉的“农民”都是因为什么原因走上这条道路的呢?我不完全地统计了一下,发现有这么几类。 第一类是下岗失业的,比如李自成。他走上工作岗位后,先后干过佣工、铁匠和驿卒,虽说工作并不很好收入也不算高,毕竟一直有差事做。后来经济越来越萧条、就业越来越难、物价越来越高,在这个节骨眼上,他还“被裁辍业”,没法糊口了,只好走上起义这条路。所以,下岗职工,是社会不安定因素之一。 第二类是求学无门的,比如黄巢。黄巢他们家历代做私盐买卖,属于体制外的富人,衣食肯定是不愁的,社会不稳定对他影响也不很大。按理这样的中产阶级是最稳定的一群人,但架不住他志向远大,一定要为建设国家贡献力量。他自幼爱读书,偶尔还写诗,是个文学青年。为了有更大的发展,他年年都参加科举考试,但也不知道是他学艺不精还是当时教育太腐败而他又没有后台,他考了很多年都没有考中。这接连不断的受挫终于让他仇恨社会,于是他加入了一支反政府力量并很快成为后起之秀。社会给他的这种挫折究竟有多大,从后来他的举动就知道:他起义所过之处,凡抓住的秀才----学业上的成功人士,他都给杀了。心灵扭曲啊!可见拦着别人积极上进的道路,也是会导致社会不安定的。 第三类是邪教分子,比如张角和洪秀全。他们俩都是一开始先受到西方某种宗教的鼓舞,然后很理想主义地要把“福音”传递给全中国的兄弟姐妹,然后受挫,然后走极端,然后就反政府了。他们本来也是出于很善良很理想主义的目的的,但他们建立理想社会的想法和政府维护意识形态统一的想法背道而驰,所以,也成了社会不安定因素。 第四类是没享受到社会保障的人,比如明末的女英雄唐赛儿。她本来是个本分民女,全家靠种地为生。有一年发生旱灾,当地颗粒无收,唐赛儿的丈夫和一群同乡去官府申请低保,结果没申请到还被官府给打死了,于是把未亡人唐赛儿逼上了梁山。看来社保不完善,也会产生社会不安定。 第五类是完不成政府摊派的低级公务员,比如陈胜、吴广。他们在秦朝末年有一次与另外九百人一道,被征发往渔阳戍边,陈胜为屯长。遇上大雨阻路,行将误期,按照当时的国家法律将获死罪,没办法只好反了。所以法律和规定要考虑到不可抗力,且保留申诉渠道,否则一定会逼出社会不安定因素。 第六类是司法不公的受害者。这方面的例子就太多也太简单啦,就不说了。 第七类是贫富差距太大导致心理极度失衡的下层人民,比如北宋末年的王小波、李顺,就手持均富卡,振臂一呼,一大帮不平衡的人就响应了。 上面说的这些“农民”,其实都没有真正夺取政权建立新社会,他们只起到了打破旧社会以及宣泄底层人民不满的目的。在他们的同时代,真正起了作用的都是掌握军权的大亨们。所以,社会最不安定因素是既得利益者,他们得到了一个,就想得到更多,而且他们也有能力如此。既要防底层人民掀起乱局,又要防高层人士利用乱局,政府的担子,还真重呢。
贫僧法号: MRJ || 欧阳锋 主理        : 为失足男女开光
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发表于 2012-9-26 10:39:49 | 显示全部楼层

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雨杜鹃: 才子好诗!现实也有点悲伤。。。 月到十五光明少,人到中年万事休。 儿孙自有儿孙福,莫为儿孙作马牛。 .......
军医姐姐,要不改成如下这样就不显悲伤了吧!无奈小弟历经数十载的风风雨雨,已从一块有菱有角的小石头变成-块无菱无角的鹅卵石了,真所谓世人喜秋实,唯吾独悲秋...... 满目金黄知深秋, 泉水叮咚顺溪流, 青丝渐少虽未了, 未到功成誓不休!
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发表于 2012-9-26 11:09:16 | 显示全部楼层
秋天是梦儿最喜欢的季节,虽然总觉得有点悲伤,
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发表于 2012-9-26 13:12:16 | 显示全部楼层
卜算子-中秋 华山已秋深, 月圆赛明镜. 彩蝶纷飞百花间, 玉露弄清影. 把盏听蝉声, 陶醉未忘形. 名利淡薄无以争, 寒夜不觉冷. 祝一中80村的华山众英雄们中秋快乐!
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发表于 2012-9-26 17:52:12 | 显示全部楼层
1.jpg 送夏迎秋换金装, 幽幽古墓遍地黄。 宠辱不惊溪流水, 花开花落浓淡妆。(玉荷祝福姐妹们 兄弟们中秋节快乐!家庭幸福!健康美丽!
一茎娟洁晓露匀,冰肌玉骨洗俗尘。 天生不向西风媚,素面芳心物外身。
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 楼主| 发表于 2012-9-26 21:35:24 | 显示全部楼层

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玉荷: 送夏迎秋换金装, 幽幽古墓遍地黄。 宠辱不惊溪流水, 花开花落浓淡妆。(玉荷祝福姐妹们 兄弟们中秋节快乐!家庭幸福!健康美丽!
谢仙姑好诗支持! 月圆月缺,花开花落一样会珍惜!
何须名苑看春风,一路山花不负侬,日日锦江呈锦样,清溪倒照映山红。
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 楼主| 发表于 2012-9-26 21:42:37 | 显示全部楼层

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南阳子: 卜算子-中秋 华山已秋深, 月圆赛明镜. 彩蝶纷飞百花间, .......
南阳兄好诗,好意境! 金钱名利皆浮云, 知己良朋共享月。
何须名苑看春风,一路山花不负侬,日日锦江呈锦样,清溪倒照映山红。
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