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[–]xijinpimp 47ポイント48ポイント  (39子コメント)

As a Chinese who attended uni in the states, I made it a policy to limit my contact with the Chinese students at my school. These kids acted like they were still in China, screaming at each other at the top of their lungs on campus in Chinese, going out for hotpots and KTVs, and generally very isolationistic. Many of them cheated their way into uni, and it is painful to watch them struggle with basic English in 101 classes.

To be fair the same is applicable to Korean and Vietnamese students to a certain degree.

[–]DiscoTut 15ポイント16ポイント  (18子コメント)

Thank you. I'm going to bet they ostracized you for it right? I knew a few Chinese students in school that did EXACTLY what you did, went out of their way to make local friends, try new things, and learn English. They were called 汉奸 by their countrymen. Disgusting.

[–]xijinpimp 14ポイント15ポイント  (17子コメント)

I got called 汉奸 for saying shit like Taiwan is independent and for speaking English to them etc

To be fair its super fun trolling them

[–]marshmallowcatcatChina 7ポイント8ポイント  (3子コメント)

hahahaha fucking NYU

[–]prizunwallet 2ポイント3ポイント  (1子コメント)

I saw that at NYU, they have sold out, now Brown has kept it legit

[–]xijinpimp 5ポイント6ポイント  (0子コメント)

We use slave labor in Abu Dhabi for our "international campus", so yea, we sold out.

[–]dandmcdUnited States 7ポイント8ポイント  (7子コメント)

When I lived in the States and worked near the University, you described exactly the scene. The majority of Chinese hung out in packs, and only spent most of their time hogging all the tables in the coffee shops studying for hours a day, library, or eating in some sketchy Chinese restaurant that locals wouldn't dare go to, and never participated in sports events like going to tailgate parties or school rallies.

I met a few Chinese like yourself that made me appreciate China a whole lot more, and inspired me to come to China and study for a couple years. There's some great people who worked hard on their English so they could study abroad and appreciate experiencing a new culture and enjoying the American experience, and willing to share their own experiences back home. And than there are the morons who you describe that only came here thanks to Daddy's money, and act like they never left China and never experience the best the American culture and the colleges can offer them.

[–]lebynthosGreat Britain 11ポイント12ポイント  (5子コメント)

I can't tell if this has just changed "ESL foreigners" to "Chinese students" or not.

When I lived in China and worked near the training schools, you described exactly the scene. The majority of foreigners hung out in packs, and only spent most of their time hogging all the tables in the bars drinking for hours a day, sleeping, or eating dumplings in some sketchy Chinese restaurant that locals wouldn't dare go to, and never participated in events like joining the party or propaganda rallies.

I met a few foreigners like yourself that made me appreciate the West a whole lot more, and inspired me to come to Waiguo and study for a couple years. There's some great people who worked hard on their Chinese so they could study abroad and appreciate experiencing a new culture and enjoying the Chinese experience, and willing to share their own experiences back home. And than there are the morons who you describe that only came here thanks to being losers back home, and act like they never left the West and never experience the best the Chinese culture and the training schools can offer them.

?

[–]FunktagalacticEuropean Union 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Legitimate point. Ultimately, some people are going to be more immersed in the local culture than others.

I'm moving to a new city just because I know too many other foreigners where I'm at now. I think that makes me a little pretentious, but.... I don't really care

[–]justinchina -1ポイント0ポイント  (0子コメント)

or eating in some sketchy Chinese restaurant that locals wouldn't dare go to

uh...i'm pretty sure if you ever go back...that those are the Chinese restaurants with actual Chinese food.

[–]BakGikHung 1ポイント2ポイント  (2子コメント)

Thanks for being different. I like in HK and try not to act like the other foreigners there.

[–]y_13 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

screaming at each other at the top of their lungs on campus in Chinese

This is possibly the most Chinese thing a person could do haha