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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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.

I am shocked and horrified by the recent attack. My thoughts and prayers go out to the tourism industry. They're the real victims here.
 
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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).
Like this? :wow:
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Based.

Don't forget what the government did to them during Covid--welding them into their homes, stopping any dissent or questioning, creating absolute panic, etc. I don't blame them for getting mad but mowing down people isn't the answer.
No, mowing people down isn't the answer for us, we have means to get at least some redress from some things. There's no rule of law at all in China. People see no way to get any redress from injustice, and essentially no way to peacefully express their concerns. So some people simply explode, no longer caring about anyone or anything.

Makes you wonder how many similar incidents happen in China yearly but are never reported.
 
Falungong
Are those the same or different than the guys who lift weights with their nutsacks? If they aren't, maybe the CCP should make F*lung*ng join the "lift weights with your balls" cult.
Seriously though, Falungong sounds like it's the name of a Chinese brothel where you can only get fat women.
 
Yeah, some great memes came from it.
CCTV did a roundup of the most popular memes in 2023, this was and the other "bailan/stop giving a fuck" didn't make it despite search interest and virtually seeing it everywhere.
Go figure.
Taiwan and HK did have similar memes sprouting up. Japan and Korea has them too.
The west had "antiwork" and "quiet quitting" which was a similar idea.

Are those the same or different than the guys who lift weights with their nutsacks? If they aren't, maybe the CCP should make F*lung*ng join the "lift weights with your balls" cult.
Seriously though, Falungong sounds like it's the name of a Chinese brothel where you can only get fat women.
They're a quack new age religion that combines Buddhism and a cult of personality in a similar way to older Han Chinese dynasties. They did a stunt where people set themselves on fire to "protest" (they deny this ever happened) so China just kicked them all out. It's basically the western equivalent of wumaos, paid shills running astroturfing campaigns. Popular fake news channels like China Uncensored and that Shenyun bullshit is ran by them. They also fund lots of so called events and like to claim Chinese nationalism doesn't mean loyalty to the party which is retarded, because this "party (CPC)" came up with the idea of a unified Chinese identity, it's something they invented. The previous party (KMT/ROC) was Han supremacist. This one is kind of civnat.
They're also a front of trafficking people out of China. I sometimes visit the embassy to do stuff and they'll harass any chinky looking person. They've even said if I join, I can get permanent residency and citizenship (already have them).
It's just the CCTV rebranded. Same garbage lies with a different swing. Approach them with the same level of scepticism.

Makes you wonder how many similar incidents happen in China yearly but are never reported.
Something like this happens every month.
November has been a rare exception where a few happened with major human losses. The first outlets that reported the two I posted were China's state controlled English language front outlets.
They're not trying to hide it, they are trying to downplay the situation. It's just going to be part and parcel know, like mass shootings. They'll be more copycat cases.
 
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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.
Isn't Korea known for having a cavalier attitude towards depression, and disabled people in general? There was a book and movie made about the sexual abuse of deaf children at a school that was meant to give them specialized help, and depression is typically seen as a "teenage angst" illness rather than something possibly with material causes such as lack of jobs or housing.

Is it like that in China, too? It sounds like it might be - given how I've heard a lot of Chinese as being "looking out for myself only", I wouldn't be surprised. Very much a "fuck you, I got mine" mentality.
 
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There was also that Korean mass shooter, if I recall correctly, it was racially motivated as well.
Elliot Roger the hapa nutcase terrorist probably had a sick sense of racial pride too. They're the r/anzidentity phenotype. Fuck them all.

Isn't Korea known for having a cavalier attitude towards depression, and disabled people in general? There was a book and movie made about the sexual abuse of deaf children at a school that was meant to give them specialized help, and depression is typically seen as a "teenage angst" illness rather than something possibly with material causes such as lack of jobs or housing.

Is it like that in China, too? It sounds like it might be - given how I've heard a lot of Chinese as being "looking out for myself only", I wouldn't be surprised. Very much a "fuck you, I got mine" mentality.
Same as Japan. Some dude went in and stabbed a bunch of people.
Holy shit he stabbed 19 to death????! I was dumbfounded at that crazy chink stabbing 8 to death over failing exams. I thought the total death toll of this attack was like 3.

Anyway, yeah it's like that in China too. I guess, 95% of East Asia. There are areas that are friendlier towards the disabled, places where wheelchair accessibility is mandatory and the state will provide assistance. They're typically wealthier. Japan and Korea is similar, but in general, these countries want to hide the disabled and challenged people from society. Selfishness is very much cultural, it has nothing to do with the CPC. It's a fundamental sickness. The CPC can collapse tomorrow, nothing will change. During ROC or the minority ruled Qing, it was the same. China can force these people to function better with a massive surveillance apparatus. In the past, nobody cared about zebra crossings. Now each of them are rigged with cameras, if you don't let pedestrians pass, you'll eat a massive fucking fine. It solves the issue without addressing it.

I suppose there's white pills to be had as well. Some taxi driver had a customer who went into labour. He ran numerous red lights and was speeding to get her to the hospital. He would have gotten totally fucked with fines and his license revoked (where his car might come in handy for another type of task...), but the courts dropped everything and even implemented new rules for cases of emergencies like this. That's a pretty good juxtaposition to the poor child getting scammed for helping a grandma. Generally people will still assist you if you fall, they'll film it. It's kind of sad.
I think it was this one from 2023: https://baijiahao.baidu.com/s?id=1766473629515720676&wfr=spider&for=pc
And this was the original grandma story: https://baijiahao.baidu.com/s?id=1812677914031966132&wfr=spider&for=pc
(Translate it.)
Basically it was a scam, the granny broke her legs already and tried to scam some kid's family with an existing injury. She was found guilty and charged but dodged prison sentence due to her age. I recall another case where some dude will intentionally ride in front of cars and pretend to fall, he had an old injury. The would-be victim asked for more detail and later got the cops involved. It's so common in China and happens to this day.
There's a specific term for this called pengci, surprise or not, it didn't just come out of no where because of the CPC. China has always been a hotbed of scams. Think of every scam, there's an archaic Chinese idiom for it.
(Ponzi scheme, 拆東墻補西墻 or 空手套白狼; pyramid scheme, 傳銷; bait and switch, 掛羊頭賣狗肉 etc.)
China has the "4 great inventions" but also pioneered in the 4 greatest scamming methods. lol what even
 
These freaks are supposed to be mad at the world and all that then why don't they try inflicting damage to the CCP in some way instead of attacking people at schools? They could at least put some blame for their lot in life on their controlling government.

Maybe they know that on their own they have no chance of doing anything to the CCP. It's likely just a nasty desire to make other people hurt because they are miserable. These people don't expect to or care to change their society.

China being a MASSIVE surveillance state means that any attempted attacks on the CCP would get thwarted very quickly, and the attacker and his/her family would most likely get the maximum punishment for the said treasonous act. Or these waves of attacks could be staged attacks being done by the CCP, as a way to justify taking away people's rights even further.
 
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Crazy how all these people always take out their anger against society and the government by targeting elementary school children. I’m sure you really owned Xi with that one, smart guy
 
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There was also that Korean mass shooter, if I recall correctly, it was racially motivated as well.
Cho Seung-Hui? It seems more like he had mental issues that, while being treated, didn't seem to be dealt with properly. However, people seemed to idolize him as being against anti-Korean racism for some reason. They say he was bullied, but he behaved in strange ways, which suggests he was victim of Kick the Autistic rather than Kick the Korean.
 
Does word spread of incidents like this around the country or is the censorship so strong that the public remains largely unaware of all these attacks? I imagine news of serious violence like this can't be completely ignored. Could people get so addled that the CCP has to say they'll do something about it?
 
Hopefully, in the next 5-10 years and they get it right this time.
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