- Joined
- Jul 15, 2014
- Posts
- 26
When will China issue tourist visas?
Even without the current nonsense, there is absolutely no reason to visit China as a tourist in January, February or March. It's freezing cold anywhere north of Guangzhou, and even there the sun shines less than two hours a day. So there.
Some might not wish to say such glib nonsense about a country home to something like a fifth of the world’s population.Some might well say 'never again will I visit mainland China', not just ruling out three months of each year.
What an odd statement. What is the relevance of the size of the Chinese population or that the population of China's has no other option? As people who live outside of a China we do have a choice as to whether we travel to a country. Us visiting won't bring about regime change.Some might not wish to say such glib nonsense about a country home to something like a fifth of the world’s population.
Some may also be able to distinguish between a government and the people with no other option whatsoever but to live under it.
Then again, some have perhaps already made up their mind.
Some might not wish to say such glib nonsense about a country home to something like a fifth of the world’s population.
Some may also be able to distinguish between a government and the people with no other option whatsoever but to live under it.
Then again, some have perhaps already made up their mind.
How to identify yourself as a non-skier without saying you don't ski. Maybe they should move the Harbin Ice Festival to a more comfortable climate.Even without the current nonsense, there is absolutely no reason to visit China as a tourist in January, February or March. It's freezing cold anywhere north of Guangzhou, and even there the sun shines less than two hours a day. So there.
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Good points made, apart from the irrelevent reference to something which might or might not be happening in the US...Being born in China which is where my entire family except my mother resides, I feel compelled to add my few yuan's worth here.
I have been unable to visit my extended family for the last 3+ years including my aunt who raised me before I came to Australia. I cannot get a family reunion visa because I no longer have any first degree relatives living in China - unless my mother, a Chinese national, decides to return there - and considering she had been house bound for three years due to fear of COVID (she is otherwisd healthy), I'm not betting my house on that. The only way I can visit my family is by getting a tourist visa. China does not give out long term visas for overseas former citizens like India does.
There will not be a "major change" there during our lifetimes. The CCP, for all its faults, has managed to lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and built reasonable infrastructure, unlike in the USA where Congress perpetually blocks anything that the other party wants to achieve. Even if the Communist regime falls and a transition to "democracy" occurs, China will be effectively run by a one-party state, and probably a national conservative one based on fear and intolerance. The tiny number of educated, enlightened Chinese living overseas and the math prodigies and child violinists are simply not a representation of wider Chinese society, most of which have not completed high school, let alone have any ability in critical thinking.
And yes for me there is otherwise a long list of nations I will not visit due to politics, which I will not name. But I am still Chinese and I still have family there and I still have a moral obligation to visit my motherland. As far as if anyone else wants to go there it's their own choice. I will not advise them to either go or not go in spring, summer or autumn.