Комментарии:
The cost of fertilizer includes the cost of the hormones added to that fertilizer, add also the massive cost of pesticides and additives, all of it toxic but necessary to make the fruit mature early and stay juicy. The fruit however is tasteless, juicy but no taste.
ОтветитьChemicals
Ответить"The Food Scandal Famine 2026"
- besides the fertile land. where the abundance of wasted rotten fruit polluted the soil, and the toxic food from the market around you, could give you health issues to cancer, so 40% of people are affected by a famine.
the only safe fruits/vegetables are the ones you grow yourself. you only put fertilizer in when it's still a seedling/sapling so it can grow fast and healthy. unless you keep on putting in fertilizer even after it bore fruit many times.
ОтветитьIt means they will stop producing and next year worse famine of all time
ОтветитьWhen people have no purchase power, why they buy fruits?
ОтветитьWhat a shame to waste the efforts of the farmers, let alone the water, fertiliser and the degradation of the land resources 😢
ОтветитьIn China, people are cutting down all spendings in dine out, fresh fruits, clothings etc...all because of bad economy! ( people even eat less rice daily)😮
ОтветитьCan't the farmers dehydrate them and sell them later? Can't they can the fruit to sell later?
ОтветитьThe same thing has happened in the Midwest in the United States due to cannabis dispensaries. You can't even find a neighborhood weed man anymore. 😢
ОтветитьThey can make jams or dried fruits for change
ОтветитьWE WILL NO LONGER FUNDER THE CCP!!!
ОтветитьWell at least your bacon 🥓 has a hint of cheery flavor 👍😆😆😆
ОтветитьGood looking fruit
ОтветитьXi really made the slaves poor.
ОтветитьEnjoying Communism? Blame the CCP
ОтветитьIsn’t it time to compensate the farmers who were promised compensation when their lands were confiscated by the government?
As of 2025, precise data on the number of Chinese farmers who have not received promised compensation a decade after their land was confiscated by local governments is not publicly available. However, historical surveys and reports indicate that this issue has been widespread and persistent.
A 2011 survey conducted across 17 provinces found that 43% of villages had experienced land expropriations since the late 1990s. In these cases, 9.8% of villagers did not receive any compensation, while an additional 12.7% were neither promised nor received compensation. This suggests that over 20% of affected farmers received no compensation at all.
Further reports indicate that, as of 2004, farmers were owed approximately 15 billion yuan in unpaid compensation for land requisitions. Additionally, a study noted that 22.5% of land-lost farmers had not received any monetary compensation since 2001.
These findings underscore the long-standing challenges faced by Chinese farmers regarding land expropriation and compensation. While recent legislative efforts aim to address these issues, the lack of updated and comprehensive data makes it difficult to assess the current extent of unpaid compensation.
In China, land rights and compensation issues are highly sensitive and complex, particularly for farmers who are often left with limited legal recourse. Here’s a breakdown of the situation and potential avenues for complaint, though realistically, success is often limited:
Background Context
Land Ownership: In China, all land is either state-owned (urban) or collectively-owned (rural). Farmers do not own land but typically hold land-use rights through 30-year contracts under the Household Responsibility System.
Land Requisition: Local governments can requisition rural land for urban development. They are supposed to provide compensation, but this is often minimal or withheld.
Common Issues: Farmers may not be paid, or the compensation is far below market value, and often the land is sold or leased to developers for a much higher price.
Recourse Available to Farmers
1.
Administrative Complaint or Petitioning (Shangfang/上访)
Farmers can file complaints with local land bureaus, petition offices, or even higher-level government agencies.
They can also go to Beijing to petition the central government (which is common), but this can result in harassment, detention, or being sent back by local “interceptors.”
2Legal Action (Litigation)
Farmers can attempt to sue the local government or developer in local courts.
However, courts are under the control of local Party officials, and lawsuits against the government rarely succeed, especially in politically sensitive land cases.
3.
Public Exposure / Media / Social Media
Some farmers try to publicize their case through social media or sympathetic journalists.
This can sometimes force local governments to settle, but it carries risks of censorship, intimidation, or even arrest.
4.
Collective Action
Protests or group complaints are more impactful than individual action.
While mass protests occasionally lead to government concessions, they also risk violent crackdowns or police action.
Legal Framework
Land Administration Law (revised in 2020) improved legal language around fair compensation and due process, but enforcement remains weak.
Compensation should include:�
Land compensation fees
Resettlement subsidies
Compensation for attached property and crops
Theoretically, if the contract was violated, farmers have legal standing — but in practice, courts side with local authorities.
Realistic Assessment
Unfortunately, recourse is limited and outcomes are uncertain. The most hopeful scenarios involve:
Media exposure leading to public pressure
Central government intervention, especially if the case becomes symbolic
Legal aid from NGOs (though many have been restricted)
Practical Suggestions
Gather and document all relevant contracts, communications, and proof of non-payment.
Consider contacting:�
Local legal aid centers
Public-interest lawyers (if any still operating in the area)
Academics or journalists who focus on land issues
Petition collectively rather than individually, if possible.
After years of not being able to afford the food i want i forgot what a fruit was.
There is only cupped noodles and water that is all i know. 😐
China continue to import over 80% of their food needs, but all the farmers are the poorest of the poor.
Ответить"People have to eat, so why is fruit not selling?"
They are eating, but the only thing they can afford is rice and noodles.
When fruit is that cheap, time to ferment it and make brandy
ОтветитьHmm sounds like propaganda
ОтветитьWhat about canning and freezing? Doesn't China have any canneries? And what about exporting?
ОтветитьWhy I call this American propaganda ! When your economy is going down the drain, this medias will come out with this kind of videos. Just telling Americans, hey you are not too bad , china's is just as bad ? It's just a bag of shit, china economy as good as ever ! By the way this people who created videos don't even know anything about china at all ,
ОтветитьIts called supply and demand 😮
ОтветитьTofu Dreg fruit. No thank you! 😮
ОтветитьProbably bc China had a plant that makes fertilizer blow up .
ОтветитьKarma sucks
ОтветитьA lot of people have died in China=less eaters
ОтветитьFruit liquor .. 🌚 alcohol sells better than fruits.
ОтветитьThe people like to buy aborted baby for nutritional value
ОтветитьThe variety of spray chemicals looked yummy.
Ответитьfull of chemicals. no thanks
ОтветитьThe slander China propaganda has been going on for year. I see news about China nearly collapse from these channel every 2 videos and no one calling them out on being a propaganda machine. In the meantime China is going to bet the US and be the number economic in the world but hey hey we are blind to the trust and lovinf watch these propaganda machine 👍
ОтветитьListen to this farmer lady. man-made horrors beyond your comprehension
ОтветитьResult Don’t plant cherries
ОтветитьAgain. You are not as many as you think. If you had 1.4 Billion people. They would be buying your food. You barely have 100 million anymore. No one is there to buy your food.
ОтветитьThey aren't really trying. They would rather let it rot than let it go at cost
ОтветитьCCP Step Down !!
ОтветитьThe “ginseng fruits” are actually Pepino melons and they taste like a sweet tomato.
ОтветитьThis also happens to us from time to time but some of the things we do is process our fresh items into preserves, jams or just dried. It might take time or a bit more money but it helps a lot because we can sell them when their prices normalize. Watery fruits make large batch of low alcohol wines.
ОтветитьI count my blessings. I never set expectations for others or markets for that matter. Hang in there 😢
ОтветитьWilll you accept other things beside money to buy?
I will allow people to trade theirs with fruits.
Just make the fruits into jam or alcohol?
Ответить😂😂😂😂..meat b.s.go get a job
ОтветитьKeep the fruit to your self and for your family to to. Eat, the rest share it, and if there's many feed it to. Animals,and to other preserve it, you can make juice and jam. And dried fruit.
ОтветитьLol those much pesticides, no wonder no one want them in that you Can not preserve it oh my.
ОтветитьIt’s actually more than 20 millions illegals, if the due process for everyone it would not work
ОтветитьBring it to Philippines
Ответить