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damn!为什么有人看不起河南人,日

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虽然我不是河南人但还是很不爽,今天和朋友去吃饭,一个貌似很拽的食客在那里骂一个河南(骂的很难听)服务员因为他上菜慢了一点...而且还是对整个河南冷嘲热讽.说什么小偷,抢劫....我兄弟当场就怒了...要不是我拉着造就和那人干上了...回头想想真是悲哀...河南人到底有什么不好?大家都是中国人,为什么要这样瞧不起

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评论 16

thule  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-14 10:21:05 | 显示全部楼层
这种人就是欠揍

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fallsage  贵宾  发表于 2007-6-14 10:46:16 | 显示全部楼层
这个事情和河南人没关系,这食客是个二百五
现在的傻子多了去了

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Timur  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-14 10:52:01 | 显示全部楼层
以前也听说过类似事情,不过到底为什么有人看不起河南人 ??

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倒立行走  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-14 12:04:15 | 显示全部楼层
老实人受欺负呗,论小偷论造假河南都不及某些地方啊
那个食客真是纯sb

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Timur  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-14 12:21:07 | 显示全部楼层
在这里和以前在大陆都和河南人打过交道,觉得确实还比较实在

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河南老乡  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-14 18:25:39 | 显示全部楼层
什么?俺老乡被人欺负了?怎么不打电话报警?告他discrimination and abuse language.

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johnlee  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-15 07:01:36 | 显示全部楼层
从北宋以后,由于人类活动,河南的生态环境遭到破坏,黄河连年泛滥,战乱不断,使得河南人贫穷,为逃避灾难,远徙他乡要饭。
    就像吉普赛人和犹太人,河南人从此就被怀疑甚至诬陷成偷盗者和掠夺资源者。
    到了今天,河南是第一农业人口大省,出于对农民的歧视和很多人趋炎附势的心态,河南人自然就成了很多无头口水官司的无辜替罪羊。
    河南人在中国的境遇就像中国人在西方一样,校园杀人了,要先想到是你干的;失业了,也会认为是你挤得;泄密了,当然是你偷的;办孔子学院,一定是文化渗透,黄祸,上帝之鞭。
    所以,无根据的骂河南人之前,要好好设身处地的想一想我们中国人被人冤枉时的心情。

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sisiv  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-15 19:02:27 | 显示全部楼层
哪里人都有被瞧不起的,你只是正好碰到骂河南的,不用放在心上。

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河南老乡  曼省名人  发表于 2007-6-16 09:19:30 | 显示全部楼层
From Kaifeng to New York, glory is as ephemeral as smoke and clouds

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: May 22, 2005

KAIFENG, China

As this millennium dawns, New York City is the most important city in the world, the unofficial capital of planet Earth. But before we New Yorkers become too full of ourselves, it might be worthwhile to glance at dilapidated Kaifeng in central China.

Kaifeng, an ancient city along the mud-clogged Yellow River, was by far the most important place in the world in 1000. And if you\'ve never heard of it, that\'s a useful warning for Americans - as the Chinese headline above puts it, in a language of the future that many more Americans should start learning, \"glory is as ephemeral as smoke and clouds.\"

As the world\'s only superpower, America may look today as if global domination is an entitlement. But if you look back at the sweep of history, it\'s striking how fleeting supremacy is, particularly for individual cities.

My vote for most important city in the world in the period leading up to 2000 B.C. would be Ur, Iraq. In 1500 B.C., perhaps Thebes, Egypt. There was no dominant player in 1000 B.C., though one could make a case for Sidon, Lebanon. In 500 B.C., it would be Persepolis, Persia; in the year 1, Rome; around A.D. 500, maybe Chang\'an, China; in 1000, Kaifeng, China; in 1500, probably Florence, Italy; in 2000, New York City; and in 2500, probably none of the above.

Today Kaifeng is grimy and poor, not even the provincial capital and so minor it lacks even an airport. Its sad state only underscores how fortunes change. In the 11th century, when it was the capital of Song Dynasty China, its population was more than one million. In contrast, London\'s population then was about 15,000.

An ancient 17-foot painted scroll, now in the Palace Museum in Beijing, shows the bustle and prosperity of ancient Kaifeng. Hundreds of pedestrians jostle each other on the streets, camels carry merchandise in from the Silk Road, and teahouses and restaurants do a thriving business.

Kaifeng\'s stature attracted people from all over the world, including hundreds of Jews. Even today, there are some people in Kaifeng who look like other Chinese but who consider themselves Jewish and do not eat pork.

As I roamed the Kaifeng area, asking local people why such an international center had sunk so low, I encountered plenty of envy of New York. One man said he was arranging to be smuggled into the U.S. illegally, by paying a gang $25,000, but many local people insisted that China is on course to bounce back and recover its historic role as world leader.

\"China is booming now,\" said Wang Ruina, a young peasant woman on the outskirts of town. \"Give us a few decades and we\'ll catch up with the U.S., even pass it.\"

She\'s right. The U.S. has had the biggest economy in the world for more than a century, but most projections show that China will surpass us in about 15 years, as measured by purchasing power parity.

So what can New York learn from a city like Kaifeng?

One lesson is the importance of sustaining a technological edge and sound economic policies. Ancient China flourished partly because of pro-growth, pro-trade policies and technological innovations like curved iron plows, printing and paper money. But then China came to scorn trade and commerce, and per capita income stagnated for 600 years.

A second lesson is the danger of hubris, for China concluded it had nothing to learn from the rest of the world - and that was the beginning of the end.

I worry about the U.S. in both regards. Our economic management is so lax that we can\'t confront farm subsidies or long-term budget deficits. Our technology is strong, but American public schools are second-rate in math and science. And Americans\' lack of interest in the world contrasts with the restlessness, drive and determination that are again pushing China to the forefront.

Beside the Yellow River I met a 70-year-old peasant named Hao Wang, who had never gone to a day of school. He couldn\'t even write his name - and yet his progeny were different.

\"Two of my grandsons are now in university,\" he boasted, and then he started talking about the computer in his home.

Thinking of Kaifeng should stimulate us to struggle to improve our high-tech edge, educational strengths and pro-growth policies. For if we rest on our laurels, even a city as great as New York may end up as Kaifeng-on-the-Hudson.


上面是New York Times发表的文章,河南开封1000年前的地位相当于今天的New York City,河南曾经是世界上最富裕的地方.

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