CN Car driven into crowd outside China primary school - Similar attacks in recent days have sparked discussions online about the social phenomenon of "taking revenge on society", where individuals act on personal grievances by attacking strangers.

Multiple injuries are feared after a car was driven into a crowd of people outside a primary school in China's souther Hunan province.

There are no details of casualties yet but state media said "several students and adults were injured and fell to the ground", and several people are in hospital.
The driver of the vehicle - identified as a white SUV - was caught by parents and school security officers and handed over to police.

This is the third attack on a crowd in China in a week, and it has fuelled concerns about public safety.

"About a dozen people were hit, some of them seriously, but luckily the ambulance came very quickly," Mr Zhu, a parent of one of the children at the school, told the BBC.

He said he heard the attack just as he was leaving the school rpemises, after dropping off his eight-year-old.

"Six or seven parents had forced the car of the person who hit others to stop. Even the security guard was knocked down. The guard is quite old, in his 70s or 80s, and couldn’t do much," he said.

The school has been identified as the Yong’an Primary School in Dingcheng District in Hunan province.

Video from the scene posted on a private WeChat account showed some children lying on the ground, while others, carrying school bags, were fleeing in panic.
Another video filmed soon after the incident showed an angry pedestrian hitting the SUV with a snow shovel while the driver was still inside.

The driver is then seen stepping out of the other side of the vehicle, only to be surrounded by bystanders who started beating him with sticks.

Similar attacks in recent days have sparked discussions online about the social phenomenon of "taking revenge on society", where individuals act on personal grievances by attacking strangers.

On Saturday eight people were killed and 17 others were wounded in a knife attack at a vocational school in eastern China. Police said the suspect was a 21-year-old former student at the school who was meant to graduate this year but had failed the exam.

Before that, on 12 November, at least 35 people were killed in a car attack in southern China, when a man ran into groups of people exercising on a sports track.
And in October, in Shanghai, a man killed three people and wounded 15 others in stabbing at a supermarket.

According to police records, there have been 19 incidents of indiscriminate violence in China this year in which the perpetrator was not known to the victims. Sixty-three people have been killed and 166 injured in these attacks This is a sharp increase on previous years - 16 killed and 40 injured in 2023, for instance.

While the incidents are still sporadic and rare, they are high-profile. And the videos that often circulate soon after on social media have prompted concern and fear among people.

"These are symptoms of a society with a lot of pent-up grievances," Lynette Ong, distinguished professor of Chinese politics at Canada's University of Toronto, told AFP.

"Some people resort to giving up. Others, if they're angry, want to take revenge."

A slowing economy, high youth unemployment and a property crisis that has hurt savings have led to increasing uncertainty about the future among Chinese people.

Ong said, in the circumstacnes, violent attacks were the "negative side of the same coin".

President Xi Jinping has ordered local officials to ensure the safety and "social stability" of communities and to “strictly prevent extreme cases”.

Officials are keen to show they are acting quickly. They worry that such a high number of casualties in a single year could raise questions about China's safety record, further alarming people and even discouraging tourism.

The Communist Party has rapidly expanded surveillance in recent years and after the car attack last week in Zhuhai, there have been further orders to deploy local officials and community workers to try to prevent unrest.

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You seem to be of the illusion that something changed under the CCP

shh just let me pretend this country I have never visited was beautiful at one point. Hey one could argue that at least it wasn't as bad from an environmental standpoint under pre-industrial revolution rule. I'll blame the commies for the smog anyway because fuck them that's why
 
"lol if we ban guns there's no more mass casualty events"
Chinks:

Anyway, I think the best solution to those cases is to clearly make a example out of them, execute them publicly and then shame the family, kiwi farms style.

"Uuuh but anger at society!!!111", nigger, killing kids because you failed high school won't help it, will it?
This isn't even a Chinese only thing, Japs and Koreans also love to run their small trucks over crowds and stab people, one of those retards did that during the PS3 launch because the shopping districts would be crowded as fuck with little kids.
 
A lot of Westerners don't get any real news from China and the fact that these attacks are being reported by our media means that these issues are happening at an unprecedented frequency.

The Nov 12 attack is interesting in particular because 35 deaths is supposedly the maximum the local government can report officially before they start getting issues from the central government. You will (according to my Chinese wife) see 35 deaths in a lot of accidents or attacks like this, very very rarely more than that. My understanding of the actual deaths in the Nov 12 case is somewhere around 80, as the driver basically drove around the parade track multiple times running over people again and again.

Edit:
Apparently the 35 deaths reporting thing might just be anti-CCP propaganda, oops! Added some qualifiers to my statements above :)
 
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@AltisticRight you live in China, right? Could you tell us about loons like this guy?
Well, this isn't even that bad. One happened two days ago at a university, it was a mass stabbing event which killed 8 people and injured 17.
Allegedly, the guy wrote some seething Reddit tier shitpost about the proletariat rising up and how working a factory job is indistinguishable from "niggers in a plantation (his words, not mine)".
(Hey Jin those "niggers" never get paid. I mean fine, a lot of Chinese workers don't get paid either.)
I still cannot comprehend how one guy was able to stab 8 people to death. Mass shootings in America rarely breaks the barrier of 5 (not that in either situation it should).
I'll make a low effort post, hope the jannies don't mop me up.

Anyway. People like this are a combination of many factors, my somewhat educated guess as someone who is involved in health care:
- Low/lack of focus on metal issues. Like it or not, the kindness of a society can be seen by the way the disabled are treated and a focus on mental wellbeing. Call this lefty bullshit, doesn't matter. It's true.
- Wealth disparity leading to depression. A lot of people simply think they'll never make it so just don't even try (tangping/lay down, look it up).
- Lack of support for those vulnerable, like men who have been divorced or just lost their job. That loon who killed 35 was one of them.
- Zero focus on workers' rights (lol, still think China isn't just another capitalist hellscape?) It's common to work over 12 hours a day without compensation.

This stuff happens in Korea and Japan as well, but on a far smaller scale. China's 1.4 billion population doesn't help either. Do you know some looney troon or an unhinged idiot at work/school? Well at any given moment, China will have at least 100 times more. Now, none of these loons are cared for and no attempts are ever made to help them. At least in the West, they do get help.
 
The Nov 12 attack is interesting in particular because 35 deaths is the maximum the local government can report officially before they start getting issues from the central government. You will see 35 deaths in a lot of accidents or attacks like this, very very rarely more than that. My understanding of the actual deaths in the Nov 12 case is somewhere around 80, as the driver basically drove around the parade track multiple times running over people again and again.
That's bullshit. Stop parroting garbage from Falungong. There is no "number for major event", it's completely made up and based on some stuff from back in 2008 or so.
 
Wealth disparity leading to depression. A lot of people simply think they'll never make it so just don't even try (tangping/lay down, look it up).
I think the concept of face and the extreme pressures on being successful or at least appearing to be in asian societies is really fucking them over when there's no more exponential growth.
 
That's bullshit. Stop parroting garbage from Falungong. There is no "number for major event", it's completely made up and based on some stuff from back in 2008 or so.
Falungong are retards for sure, but I heard from my wife who is originally from mainland China. I guess it's possible that Falungong propaganda has infected mainland Chinese, I'll have to ask her for more info to verify. She dislikes the cult as much as any other Chinese.

It is absolutely true though that local officials are incentivized to downplay the impact of these attacks. Maybe there isn't a specific number they have to stick to, but there are very often enough corroborating reports from locals and early videos on Bilibili or Weibuo that indicate the casualties are much higher than reported.

Edit:
I didn't know you lived in China @AltisticRight, I'd definitely like to know any good sources for info on what is going on in China.
 
Keep in mind that all these incidents have taken place in southern china, and the South chinese are in another class when it comes to out bugging the northerners
This shit wasn’t isolated to Southern China during this time. Guangxi is just a place we know it happened.

But that was years ago in pre-industrial China. I don’t think you can cite that as applicable to China now when so much has changed. From my experience different regions of China are all different sides of the same coin: savage and third world in the rural areas and fake and hypocritical in the cities.
 
This stuff happens in Korea and Japan as well, but on a far smaller scale. China's 1.4 billion population doesn't help either. Do you know some looney troon or an unhinged idiot at work/school? Well at any given moment, China will have at least 100 times more. Now, none of these loons are cared for and no attempts are ever made to help them. At least in the West, they do get help.
Something similar has happened recently in Australia - some schizo Sino poured a thermos of boiling water on a baby.

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SerpentZA weighs in

 
Yeah if they want to fuck with the CCP they would try and run over CCP people. This sounds like schizo breakdown, the same sort of insane behaviour as american school shooters or islamic knives of peace who just use some vague excuse to kill people.

Unless these were the kids of CCP officials. But I am gonna guess not.

FUN FACT: To this day the CCP is absolutely terrefied of guns and shooting sprees by lone wolves after they had one done on them in 1994 when a PLA officer went postal after his wife was forced to abort their second child.

Yeah it is just with a lot of people you'll eventually get a skizo who can, and will, do a mass shoot/stab/asian driving situation.

Expect in India where he can just rape any granny or dog in revenge....
 
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Never really understood the full purpose of those red balls in front of Targets as an American, until I became aware of how people treat trucks of peace etc in other countries.

Terrifying but expected for China.
Those people are close to/are having mental breakdowns from the results of the draconian COVID measures and the continued hell world of being governed by the CCP.
 
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