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For example, scholarships are available to Americans at the same level. There is also dual enrollment, you can tamper with the policy at will, even if you don't have such a policy when you enroll, they don't care. There are a lot, many foreigners look down on Chinese, although the appearance is quite kind but you can feel it.
Where civilized points abroad, or educated blacks are the friendliest to foreigners. One day I had a flat tire, and a black man helped me fix it for free, and they were very old. One of the white men helped me a little and finally asked me to buy him wine.
Eventually, the black man told me that he shouldn't buy it.
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The time I was discriminated against, I was taking the underground in London, and it was quite late, and there were very few people in Westminster, a usually surging underground station. When I walked into the platform, there was a black guy not far on the left, and there was no one on the right, so I glanced to the left and then turned and walked to the right. Unexpectedly, the black guy walked up to me and said the word chink obviously.
I was a little confused at the time, although I was not small, but after comparing it with the black guy with bulging muscles, I looked around and there was no one around, and I thought it was still cowardly. Fortunately, this guy muttered a few words and did not make any further physical movements. I thought afterwards that maybe he thought it might have been rude for him that I had turned to the right instead of left in his direction.
But in fact, I simply prefer to stay alone in a place with more space, and the same is true in China, so I didn't think that this environment could lead to misunderstandings. So I think sometimes it's a little more thoughtful, maybe you can avoid some conflicts.
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I am not a U.S. citizen, and every time I enter the U.S. Customs, I can't go through the passage specially prepared for U.S. citizens, which is empty, and the customs ** smile at everyone who passes by; As long as you are not a U.S. citizen, whether you get a green card or any other status, you have to pass through the other side, and there is a long queue there, and you have to wait for a long time, and the customs here are on cold alert. In the United States, which claims to respect human rights, this kind of discrimination is very evident here.
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In my experience abroad, including more than three years in the United Kingdom, I went to Paris, Rome and other well-known cities in continental Europe, and also went to the United States, Japan, and South Korea for a short time, and only encountered one phenomenon that I determined was discrimination, and I also successfully appealed in the name of "anti-discrimination", so I think that now Chinese should still be relatively few cases of discrimination abroad.
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I just went to the United States, it was bad at speaking, I found a private driving school to learn to drive, a disgusting white aunt had a bad attitude, she didn't smile the whole time, and she picked up someone else** immediately another attitude, and said I use American education without speaking EnglishIt's disgusting enough.
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A few years ago, I took a cruise ship to travel abroad, and there were 70% of the old men and women on board, and there were only a handful of literate people, because the ship was a buffet except for 2-5 o'clock in the morning, and there was free food at other times**, and the old lady in line was the most unruly, you plugged in and inserted it, and the waiters were basically Filipinos and some blacks, with an impatient look on their faces, they shouted in Mandarin to queue up, because there were many people and the elderly ate slowly and did not leave for half a day. As soon as I found that I had time to sit faster than a rabbit and called a bunch of her relatives and friends, I went to cut the queue to eat and eat after occupying the seat, round after round, eating something spilled all over the table, and some of the leftovers on the plate were estimated to have not touched the chopsticks, and it was difficult for me to sit on it and want to make a place, so I asked the waiter to come and clean it up, and the end shook like a rattle, muttering while cleaning up.
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When I entered Switzerland in Frankfurt, the immigration officer was very unfriendly to the people in front of me, because they didn't know what they were doing here. How long to stay? Who are they?
Such a basic question. I thought it was discrimination, so the attitude was not very good, I asked three questions, I finished fluently in three words, @目的地, purpose, time, directly stamped the crossing, very simple. So with a little knowledge, going out represents a certain level, and the problem is not ......If you don't know what to ask, even if it's your loved ones, you'll be impatient.
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I have not been discriminated against while studying in Brazil, at least I am more focused on my own quality because I represent my country to some extent. College students who have received higher education have to try to improve their shortcomings, and cultural differences are actually the main cause of conflict. Learn to be considerate, empathetic, and honest and don't lie, for example, by exaggerating your own culture (after all, our country is not always perfect).
I don't like that they always call me japonês (Japanese), but I'll be patient with my explanation.
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Once, our own tutor had a meeting with some students, and I heard about this later, so I can't remember exactly what they discussed, but I heard our tutor say: Hong Kong people are different from Chinese. Tutors from other departments in our school have been complained by Chinese students, and it is said that they have said something that is a bit discriminatory against Chinese.
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I have been to Australia, Malaysia, the United States, Japan, and I don't feel discrimination, but the Thai Chinese kill the Chinese, and the Thai people sell things twice as expensive as the natives, but they are for all foreigners.
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Maybe it's because of his high academic qualifications, he has never been discriminated against. Racial discrimination is illegal in the United States, so at least on the surface, no one is openly discriminating against you. As for regional (hukou) discrimination, gender discrimination, wealth discrimination, height discrimination, and skin color discrimination, I personally feel that it is more serious in China.
If you were born in a rural area, are dark-looking or are shorter, you will feel treated more equally in the United States than at home.
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No, I'm only 13, when I was studying, I went to Japan, the service attitude was really good, and the etiquette was great; The United States is very enthusiastic, but it feels like they are very dragged; The old couple in the Netherlands are very kind and kind, when we stayed overnight for study, they took special care of us and told us stories (although I couldn't understand them), they were really happy.
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The citizens of France are very good, there is no escalator in the subway, and there is a little brother who helped me lift the big suitcase to the bottom of the stairs, and put the people and ran, thank you very much! However, the attitude of the people at the airport was so bad that I had to look at the goods when I was taxed, and I asked my family to bring the box, and he had a very bad attitude to let me queue up again, and I couldn't wait for 5 seconds, and threw my passport and ticket directly on the ground outside the table......For Chinese cash tax refunds like to delay, it is best that you can only go to the plane if you can't return, the attitude is arrogant and arrogant, it is really rubbish.
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I have been to Europe many times and for many years, on business trips. Only once flew to Germany at a particularly small airport in the UK, where there were few Chinese, there was nothing in the backpack except clothes, and everyone else passed the security check, and my colleagues and I were checked by the security personnel for half an hour, and a staff member was changed to check, and let us go to the side to fill in **, and finally nothing let us go. The security personnel pulled their faces the whole time, obviously trying to deliberately embarrass us.
It felt particularly bad. Others are very good at some big airports in Britain and Germany, and the customs officers smile and even say hello goodbye to us in Chinese.
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There is very little discrimination abroad My first morning run in Australia Every time I saw someone, they would take the initiative to say hello. Many Australians admire Chinese culture and hope that China will get better and better.
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Improve your quality, don't make loud noises, spit and litter, pay attention to folk customs, so that most of the locals still respect you.
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The various treatments given to international students in China are the best, and the scholarship is easy. And if you look for a house abroad, you can get a scholarship unless you have particularly good grades. Is it discrimination?
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When you go to Thailand to play, you only charge a tip of Chinese when you clear customs, and you can directly pass ...... Europe, America, Japan and South KoreaPiercing the heart, no.
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Traveled to Vietnam, Thailand. As long as you are from Chinese mainland, you have to tip. Vietnam really doesn't have a good face for mainlanders, and they can't pretend to understand anything, but those people are still very qualified, and they will do what they (she) should do seriously.
In Vietnam, there is a kind of back pedaling, people take the tricycle in front, and there are a lot of passengers, but we know that we are mainlanders, and we don't want to sit in ...... even if you add money
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On a business trip in Cambodia, every time I pass through the customs, I am asked for a tip, only for Chinese, other people do not tip, do not tip all kinds of difficulties! China is too good for this country! Even to the Chinese like this.
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I didn't feel discriminated against when I went abroad, but I felt discriminated against in Hong Kong.
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It's very polite to go out to see others, as long as you cultivate your quality and English a little better, be polite and be respected, don't pretend to be an uncle abroad, spit loudly, and abide by the rules, it's all good.
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Unless there is a language barrier ... The last time I went to a museum in Mao, the policeman said a foul word, and I stared at her, she turned her head and left
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