June 29th, 2011 by Jacky Huang | Posted in Life Style |
65 Comments »
From Tianya:
MM(Girls) should be aware of peepers. If you want to prevent peeping, you should know how it is worked. The following content is from the Internet, which do not represent my views and and Sister Xibai’s views. It is only to pass on information. I wish sisters be aware of it at anytime and keep yourself away from peeping perverts.

Let us assume the distance between the knees and the upper edge of the skirt is 4 cm, and the distance between the outside edge of the skirt and the private part is 12 cm. Then from one side, the target peeping area will form a right angled triangle ABC.
» Continue Reading
June 28th, 2011 by Olivia | Posted in News |
29 Comments »

From Southern Weekend:
Recently a registered microblogger under the name of Guo Meimei has brought the Red Cross Society of China (RCSC) under the public’s scrutiny. The 20 year-old girl flaunted about her luxury cars and bags on her micro blog page, but what brought her and the RCSC under the attention is that Guo’s microblog occupation is "General Manager of RCSC Commercial Club".
» Continue Reading
June 27th, 2011 by Key | Posted in Life Style, Viral Video |
118 Comments »
A ChinaHush reader posted this on our Facebook page. From the video, you can tell this happened at a train ticket agency in Wuhan, Hubei Province.
June 24th, 2011 by Jacky Huang | Posted in News |
27 Comments »
From Sohu:

The family is mourning after the tragedy, Xiao Nan’s unfinished homework is on the table
Xiao Nan, the ten years old primary student committed suicide by drinking a whole bottle of dichlorvos (DDVP, organic phosphate used as insecticide) at home, leaving his family in great despair.
It happened early in the morning
Xiao Nan lived in Lan Tian County, Shan Xi Province with his brother Xiao Jun and his grandparents. His mother, Mrs. Fan had a job in far away Xinjiang Provence and happened to be with them this month because she had to come back to reap the wheat.
» Continue Reading
June 22nd, 2011 by Olivia | Posted in News |
43 Comments »
From Netease:

![clip_image001[4] clip_image001[4]](http://www.chinahush.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/clip_image0014.jpg)
![clip_image001[9] clip_image001[9]](http://www.chinahush.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/clip_image0019.jpg)
[The 3 photos taken at the year-end party by Miss A's colleagues which were later used as critical evidence in her lawsuit against the Japanese molester. ]
Miss A worked in a Japanese company. From September 2008, her Japanese supervisor started to sexually harass her by touching her body, like her neck and her waist. After she rejected him, he complained to A that he thinks she is too cool. "I feel extremely stressed at the time and was afraid to go to work."
Miss A worked in a open office. What the accused Japanese supervisor has done to her is seen by the colleagues around. "Some of them took this as a joke, others taught me how to defend myself." She started to have nightmares. "There was time when I was engaged in my work and he suddenly came from behind and put his hand on me. I always trembled from fear."
» Continue Reading
June 21st, 2011 by Key | Posted in Uncategorized |
57 Comments »

It’s time for a giveaway again! If you are in China right now and need access to Facebook, Youtube, Twitter and now even ChinaHush itself… then don’t miss out this opportunity to win a 6 month VPN subscription. That’s right, our partner FBVPN is offering 30 accounts of 6 month subscriptions! That’s half year of free VPN. If you already have access since you are able to access ChinaHush, then do it for a friend, tell them about it or enter to win one for them.
All you have to do is write a comment for this post below. That’s it! Be creative in your comments, I will pick the winners in the next 2 weeks or so till 30 of them are selected. Remember to use your real email address when commenting, it will be used to setup your account.
» Continue Reading
June 20th, 2011 by Michael Evans | Posted in Life Style, Opinion |
15 Comments »

Earlier this month, more than ten million Chinese high school students sat for the two-day national college entrance examination, or gaokao. Every year the country’s attention is captivated by the ordeal of these students whose entire education up to this point has been solely geared to preparing them for this exam, and which in turn will decide not only their college placement, but will likely determine their future career prospects as well.
Yet behind each child immersed in study stands his or her parents, for whom the ordeal of the gaokao is no less nerve-wracking and arduous. The results of the gaokao will not only be a judgment of their child’s scholastic ability, but will judge their own aptitude as teachers and caregivers. All their hopes and struggles to provide the best for their one and only child have all led up to this one deciding event.
And so it is natural that parents are eager, even frantic, to do whatever they can to help their children succeed on the gaokao. In the days and weeks leading up to the test, parents are bombarded with advice from newspapers, magazines, and websites on how best to support their children and maximize their chances of success. But for many parents, this ever-growing list of dos and don’ts can be confusing and exasperating, particularly when the experts agree that the best thing to do is often to do nothing at all.
» Continue Reading
June 17th, 2011 by Key | Posted in News |
12 Comments »
From Netease | translated by Jenny Jiang | edited by Key

Photograph from HongKong Ming Pao
China News: According to HongKong Ming Pao, a chicken-transport truck driver who complained that the government didn’t pay compensation after confiscating his license. He climbed up to the bridge and claimed to jump the bridge to death as protesting. A policeman hurried to the scene. When trying to climb up to the top of the bridge to stop him, he slipped and fell from the 4-meter-high bridge due to the rain. He hit the back of his head and went into a coma. Despite the rescue effort, he died on the job. The driver was arrested for public nuisance. He twice kowtowed (to touch the forehead to the ground while kneeling) to the policeman’s family and cried that he hadn’t intended to harm anyone. “I feel sorry and guilty that I caused the death of the policeman. I’m deeply sorry.”
» Continue Reading
June 15th, 2011 by Key | Posted in News |
3 Comments »
“Ringing Red”, singing nationalistic songs, songs that show love to the party love to the country.
From Hualong via Netease
“Here they come!” today 4:48 pm, at Caiyuanba train station, a T9 line train from Beijing to Chongqing slowly appeared in front of people’s eyes. As the doors started to open, the crowd waited at the station burst into cheers. Carrying flowers, our city’s “Singing Group” performed in Beijing has returned home.
4 days, like a spiritual baptism
» Continue Reading
June 13th, 2011 by Key | Posted in News |
41 Comments »
From Sina | translated by Roy | edited by Key

June 7th, Chengdu, the full-time examinee and part-time businessman 44-year-old Liang Shi went to the examination room again. That was his 15th college entrance examination. He was regarded as “the most awesome nail household of the college entrance examination”and even “modern Fanjin”. Takeing the examination with his son, why was he so determined? “I am adding more fire-wood over and over again, to boil water in a pot, which is not boiled for a long time.”Liang Shi said.
Liang Shi is 44 years old. In 1983, he failed in the college entrance pre-examination. He took the college entrance examinations continuously in the next 5 years but all failed regretfully.
» Continue Reading
June 12th, 2011 by Olivia | Posted in Life Style |
31 Comments »
From Sina:
Mid June to July is the graduation season in China. It’s a tradition that classmates gather together and take a group photo as the graduation photo. It’s kind of important to most graduates, without a group graduation photo their university lives seem incomplete. In the group graduation photo, graduates put on cap and gown or suite up, line up orderly and the photo shooting is done fast and nicely. However, that’s the conventional way to take graduation photos, this year many graduates have chosen to do something different. Here are some of the unconventional graduation photos:

Graduates suit up and line up, but with a paper board hold in hand, on which written "求 XX "( Ask for/ look for…)It’s a humorous way to ask for something, which first gains popularity on the internet. The content of what they "ask for" is different, such as "lose weight", "hug", "pretty boy" and also include some rather controversial issue as "being a kept woman".
» Continue Reading
June 10th, 2011 by Jacky Huang | Posted in News |
17 Comments »
From GZ daily and Daily Sunshine

Yesterday morning, Tao Tao was not willing to go to kindergarten no matter how his parents persuaded him. Because one of the teachers took his pants off in front of the class to punish him for playing his penis. The president of the kindergarten has come to apologize for it and agreed to pay back all the tuition fees.
Tao Tao’s kindergarten has over 20 teachers with all the licenses and good qualifications. “Since this kindergarten has good reputation, many parents nearby all sent their children here. But I can never imagine a teacher to do such absurd thing.” Mrs. Zhou, Tao Tao’s mother said madly.
According to her, the teacher told her that Tao Tao made a little mistake that day when she came to the kindergarten to pick up Tao Tao. Mrs. Zhou did not take it seriously at first. But in their way back home, some children in the same class were pointing at Tao Tao and saying “shame on you” to him.
» Continue Reading
June 8th, 2011 by Jack Liu | Posted in Opinion |
45 Comments »

"It seems to me that every mainland and Hong Kong exchange event would turn into a mainland losing face event eventually." I stated, holding my microphone in a auditorium filled with around 500 other mainland students participating in a such event.
These hundreds of students were from several mainland universities enjoying their cultural/social/intellectual exchange tour in Hong Kong. The last event on their schedule that day was to watch this award winning documentary, and to have a question and answer session with the director. The documentary was about the very young piano genius. It has showed how proud he is with himself and how different he was from other kids. After the screening dozens of hands were in the air quickly.
» Continue Reading
June 7th, 2011 by Olivia | Posted in Opinion |
9 Comments »
From Netease:

Illustration of the number of pandas offered as gift from the China government from 1941 to 1982.
Introduction:
Beijing artist Zhao Bandi initiates a boycott against the recent huge box office hit The Kung Fu Panda 2, accusing the movie is a "cultural aggression" from America and it damages the image of the nation’s treasure giant panda. But what Zhao and his followers are unaware of is, the damage to the lovable pandas is actually from China.
Panda diplomacy began in the Republican period
The Giant panda exclusively habitat in China. These chunky black-and-white animals are liked by people from all over the world. Its use as a diplomatic tool began in the Republican period, when Song Meiling, Song Geling presented two pandas to America for their support of the China Joint Commission on Refugees (中国难民联合委员会) and thus began the "Panda Diplomacy". In 1946, the government of Republic China presented another panda to the Great Britain government. Thereafter, giant panda became the official national present.
» Continue Reading
June 5th, 2011 by Jacky Huang | Posted in Life Style |
5 Comments »
From Zaobao:

Left: lightening marriage Right: lightening divorce, top: “is that too fast?”
The divorce rate in China has increased for 7 consecutive years! According to statistics from China’s civil administration, more than 460,000 couples registered for divorce between January and March this year, increased by 17.1% compared to last year’s statistics, meaning that 5,000 couples get divorced everyday on average.
In 2010, about 1.2 million couples got married while 1.96 million couples got divorced. The divorce rate in large cities such as Beijing and Shanghai is already beyond 1/3.
» Continue Reading
Yes Hong Kong should learn from the Aussie injuns and chase the Mainlanders out of Hong Kong » more