Actually, there are many, many places around the world that really, really dislike Chinese people. There is an article about the "dilemma of staying or leaving" faced by the "Qingtian Gang." It mentions Qingtian County in Lishui, Zhejiang, where for decades people have been secretly smuggling themselves to Spain, and eventually half the entire county's population emigrated. If you're interested, you can search for it.



Spain does not actually dislike these Chinese illegal immigrants. On the contrary, over many years, Spain has granted Chinese smugglers green cards through multiple amnesty programs. What Spaniards hate is that when Chinese people open shops in Spain, whatever business they do, local people cannot compete. They don't leave any room for others to make a living.

Local residents close their shops at 4 or 5 p.m., and do not operate on weekends. But Chinese people work year-round, even 24/7. There is a Spanish saying: "working like a Chinese," which refers to someone willing to work themselves to death for money.

Not only do Chinese work much longer hours, but they are also clever—skilled at tax evasion, cutting corners, employing illegal Chinese workers, paying cash under the table to avoid taxes, and so on. This results in their operating costs being much lower than local businesses, ultimately forcing local people out of business.

When the economy is good, it’s easier to accept—there's enough pie to share. But later, when Spain faced an economic crisis, local people directed their anger at Chinese immigrants, smashing, looting, and burning Chinese-owned shops.

Torn between staying or leaving, they have become unaccustomed to life in China and cannot stay in Spain either. The Qingtian Gang feels lost and confused.

Southeast Asian Chinese are likely in the same situation. Most wealthy people there are Chinese—only Chinese are willing to fight desperately to compete and make money.

In the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, there used to be investment immigration programs, but they have gradually been abolished. They found that Chinese immigrants moving to Canada mainly do one thing: buy property. This has caused housing prices to soar, making it difficult for locals to survive.

Developed countries all have property taxes based on annual property assessments. If you own a house for personal residence, rising property prices do not benefit you; instead, you pay more in property taxes each year, which really frustrates local residents.

Chinese people have the highest homeownership rate in the world. Even when they emigrate abroad, they do not change this trait—they just keep doing the same: competing, saving money, buying houses, competing, saving money, buying houses, competing, saving money, buying houses... What is enjoyment? Chinese people don't know what it means to enjoy life.

Wherever there are Chinese people, no one else can expect to live comfortably.
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