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隆重颁发第二批酱豆证

已有 6496 次阅读2011-8-11 00:20 分享到微信

应酱豆们要求,桑兰唯钱官司管委会特隆重颁发第二批酱豆证,以表彰磕小粉,魏明佳,局部地区个别人,普渡众生诸位同志(排名不分先后),望不负众望,继续努力。其他需要荣誉证的酱豆们请跟帖申请,将于下一批颁发。

隆重颁发第二批酱豆证_图1-1

隆重颁发第二批酱豆证_图1-2

隆重颁发第二批酱豆证_图1-3

隆重颁发第二批酱豆证_图1-4


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发表评论 评论 (25 个评论)

回复 艾艾 2011-8-12 01:03
大家都有份,哈哈,现在申请酱豆证的,下一批颁发
回复 关东大响马 2011-8-11 23:20
预测准确也应搞个证呀
回复 对岸的灯 2011-8-11 22:09
俺...俺可以申请个豆苗证么?大家都是持证人士,连海明都拿了一个,俺自知能力小、贡献少, 只敢申请豆苗证试试看。
回复 艾艾 2011-8-11 13:43
To: linton 你曾经说:
借您的地方发一文,多谢,我来这里只为关注桑案,案子结束就撤了。

一起从无到有的性侵案的破产

  桑兰象是被她的律师带到沟里去了,性侵案本是他们对刘谢所有指控的一道利器,从始至终,黄海在后面编导,桑兰在前面表演,一路丢丑露乖,出尽洋相。
  性侵案的起源竟然是黄健看到刘国生给桑兰的一封信,里面他象一个家长指责自己不争气的孩子一样批评桑兰:这么多年生活依然不能自理,甚

谢谢您!文章分析得很到位。已经代您发出了
回复 魏明佳 2011-8-11 13:05
谢谢给我的证, 我会珍藏的, 我在此正式接受这个荣誉。

今天是我最开心的日子, 反桑运动的标志性胜利的日子。 这是一个伟大的日子, 碰瓷党, 敲诈团伙走向末日的转折日。

热烈庆祝!!!!!
回复 磕小粉 2011-8-11 11:55
俺们这个证将来可以免费参观海宝游泳池,小乌龟吧?
回复 雷风 2011-8-11 10:39
To: Neptuner 你曾经说:
我刚才“桑兰北京的家里有桑薛合影”的照片提供给成都晚报体育部记者李果http://weibo.com/1468810844(今天他发过桑兰败诉的新闻,新浪有)

他回复有兴趣了解更多消息

李果:十分感谢,我会进行了解,如果你还知道其它详情,麻烦告知,谢谢。 (18分钟前

能否提供这张照片的原始出处

此外记得有人贴过纽约时报关于桑兰和薛伟森的新闻,以及《纽约每日新闻报》关于薛桑

这是北京青年报和美国《每日新闻报》(三篇)当年对桑兰的报道:

桑兰被美国《生活》(Life)杂志评选为“1998年度英雄人物”。日前,她与纽约大学一位名叫温斯顿•谢的华裔学生建立了不同寻常的关系。她称他为“大哥”(他25岁),他称她“小妹妹”(桑兰17岁),但两人并无血缘关系,他们说是命运把他们连在一起。
桑兰8岁开始练体操,从那以后她的生活就是为了奥运会冠军的金色梦想而刻苦训练。去年7月在纽约参加友好运动会时在做一个已做过上千次的动作时却不幸头朝地摔了下来。从此,桑兰在一个新的国家开始了新的生活,从胸部以下瘫痪,她的腿和手都无法动,但还要学习梳头、穿衣、坐入轮椅。
在她住在纽约医院的几个月,和温斯顿•谢聊天是她最高兴的事。温斯顿•谢天天到医院看望桑兰。他的母亲负责中国体操队在美国的衣食住行,一直在医院照顾桑兰直到桑兰父母飞抵纽约。到桑兰1998年11月离开医院时,他们已成了一家人:桑兰和她的妈妈搬到了谢家,尽管桑兰没有金牌可以安慰,但她有大哥哥对她的关心、照顾。谢说是上天注定让他来照顾桑兰。
(摘自《北京青年报》张嘉文)
《体育文摘 》1999-01-21 第1版
Paralyzed Gymnast Dreams Of Walking
BY AUSTIN FENNER
Daily News
Monday, December 07, 1998

In her dreams, paralyzed Chinese gymnast Sang Lan is free of her wheelchair. She is walking. She feels the strength of her muscles bounding off the floor mats. She executes complex gymnastic moves with grace honed during 11 years.

Then she wakes up, paralyzed from the neck down.

But the 17-year-old doesn‘t let the disappointment of her first conscious moments destroy her morale Sang says the dreams are inspiration to overcome spinal injuries suffered at the Goodwill Games in July.

“I think everyone should have hope,“ Sang said through an interpreter last week in a high-rise apartment on Manhattan‘s East Side. “Otherwise, you can‘t make it through the day.“

It‘s been more than four monthssince a routine vault ended in tragedy for Sang on July 21. She landed on her head, crushing vertebrae and damaging her spinal cord.
The young athlete whose plight touched the city is now an outpatient at the Rusk Institute, where she receives physical therapy. She and her mother live in an apartment donated by Winston Sie, 25, a financial analyst whom Sang calls her “adopted brother.“

Though doctors say her injuries are permanent, Sang is determined to walk again. She flings her arms to say hello and clutch Barbie dolls, and has some motion in her biceps, triceps and wrist.

Sitting on a black leather couch, Sang showed off her glowing smile while playing with dolls but winced with pain as she struggled for a better grip.

For someone who could once perform daring physical feats effortlessly, mundane tasks are now challenges.

Sang and Sie who met after the accident have formed a strong bond. He helps her drink and eat, even helping remove a particle of food from her teeth during a recent interview.
The gymnast spends the rest of her time listening to Chinese music, learning English and learning her way around a computer keyboard. And she‘s had good reason to learn about the Internet so far, she has received more than 5,000 E-mail messages at her Web site, www.goodwillforsanglan.com.

Inspired by actor Christopher Reeve‘s fight to overcome spinal injuries suffered in a horseback-riding accident, Sang has become involved in the fight to increase awareness of her condition.
She recently attended a groundbreaking ceremony for a state-of-the-art spinal cord research center at Rutgers University in New Jersey, a facility that is expected to leapfrog spinal cord injury research.

“I had a dream last night,“ Sang said in English during the reception. “I was able to walk again. It was so beautiful.“

Now, Sang is gearing up for her first Christmas.

“We are going to do something special for her,“ Sie said. “She never celebrated Christmas in China. She understands Christmas but doesn‘t get the feeling.“

Although the Goodwill Games‘ insurance policy covers Sang‘s treatment, she still counts on donations for living expenses. So far, she has received more than $100,000.

Donations may be mailed to Good Will for Sang Lan, P.O. Box 852, Armonk, N.Y. 10504.

http://articles.nydailynews.com/1998-12-07/news/18089068_1_spinal-cord-chinese-gymnast-sang-lan-dreams


New 1st ‘Steps‘ For Gymnast
BY TARA GEORGE AND DON SINGLETON
Daily News
Sunday, November 01, 1998

Paralyzed Chinese gymnast Sang Lan awoke yesterday in an East Side apartment, ate a breakfast of noodles and got started toward the No. 1 goal of her life learning to walk again.

The first of many milestones was a trip to a nearby supermarket, where Sang smiled from her wheelchair as she gestured with her arm at items she wanted.

“It‘s like it‘s the first day of my life again,“ she exulted during the trip, squinting as the sun shone on her face and illuminated the three barrettes in her hair and the big, round jade medallion that hung from her neck.

“I can go out when I want to without the constraint of the hospital.“

Lying on a bed in the spacious 25th-floor duplex on W. 38th St., the indomitable 17-year-old athlete instructed her father in the proper techniques for working the muscles of her legs.

Tomorrow, rehabilitation specialists at the Rusk Institute will take over and Sang is determined not to stop working until she‘s walking on her own.

Living space for Sang and her mother is being donated by Sang‘s friend Winston Sie, 25, a Hong Kong-born financial researcher at Paine Webber.

Doctors have said the paralysis that resulted from Sang‘s accident at the Goodwill Games in July is permanent, but Sang clings to the hope shared by paralyzed actor Christopher Reeve, who believes science will figure out how to repair damaged spinal cords.

“We have to keep her muscles up and ready,“ Sie said, “so if medicine comes in five or 10 years, she‘ll be ready.“

Doctors at Mount Sinai were amazed at the spirit and energy of the 77-pound gymnast, who broke her neck while warming up. Though she can move her arms, she has no control of her fingers. Yet she was able to learn to comb her hair, brush her teeth and dress herself.

In the hospital, nurses turned her over regularly, but at Sie‘s apartment, she‘ll sleep in an “automatic turning bed“ that uses air pressure to roll her body into different positions.
Sang‘s father will return to China today because the family can‘t afford to rent an apartment for the duration of Sang‘s treatment. The Goodwill Games‘ insurance policy covers her treatment while she‘s here.

To date, $80,000 has been donated to a fund for Sang. Donations may be mailed to Good Will for Sang Lan, P.O. Box 852, Armonk, N.Y. 10504.


http://articles.nydailynews.com/1998-11-01/news/18078771_1_paine-webber-goodwill-games-sang-lan


Chinese Gymnast Heads Home
BY K.C. BAKER
Daily News
Monday, May 24, 1999

Paralyzed gymnast Sang Lan bid a bittersweet farewell to her friends in New York as she jetted home yesterday to an uncertain future in China.

“Saying goodbye was very hard,“ said Manhattan resident Winston Sie, whose family took in the 17-year-old athlete after she broke her back at the Goodwill Games last year. “She was like my sister.“

The plucky gymnast, who won New Yorkers‘ hearts with her positive attitude, said her goodbyes yesterday morning at the Westchester County Airport in White Plains.
Sang is traveling with her mother, Chen Xiufeng, and Sie‘s parents, K.S. and Gina Liu.
The Lius will oversee her care in China, Sie said. They found her an apartment across the street from the China Rehabilitation and Research Center and made it handicapped-accessible.

Still, life in China won‘t be easy for Sang. “She was crying over my shoulder last night because she was scared,“ Sie said. “This is the first time I have ever seen fear in her. She is happy to be reunited with her family, but she doesn‘t know what will happen.“
Sang fears she may be more homebound than she was in the U.S., Sie said. “China doesn‘t have the facilities for disabled persons that the U.S. does, which is going to be very difficult for her,“ Sie said.

She is hopeful of returning to New York, if only for scheduled annual checkups at Mount Sinai Medical Center. And Sie said his young friend dreams of attending college in the U.S.
回复 雷风 2011-8-11 10:35
To: Neptuner 你曾经说:
我刚才“桑兰北京的家里有桑薛合影”的照片提供给成都晚报体育部记者李果http://weibo.com/1468810844(今天他发过桑兰败诉的新闻,新浪有)

他回复有兴趣了解更多消息

李果:十分感谢,我会进行了解,如果你还知道其它详情,麻烦告知,谢谢。 (18分钟前

能否提供这张照片的原始出处

此外记得有人贴过纽约时报关于桑兰和薛伟森的新闻,以及《纽约每日新闻报》关于薛桑

这是纽约时报那篇报道:
Courage in the Face of an Uncertain Future

By ELISABETH BUMILLER

The New York Times

Published: November 13, 1998

SANG LAN was in kindergarten in China when a recruiter from a state gymnastics school arrived to measure her arms and legs, just as he did with the other children. In her case, the numbers added up to the body of a potential gymnast -- and plucked her from one life into another.

By the age of 6, she was in gymnastics school in her hometown on China‘s southeast coast. By 8 she had moved four hours by car from her parents, who visited once a month. By 10, she was receiving a salary from the State Sports Commission. By 12, she was on the national team in Beijing, a two-hour flight from her parents, who by this time were visiting only twice a year. Far from feeling neglected, she was, in her culture, a young woman of great privilege -- supported by the state and chosen for a life of relative riches.
‘‘It was a lot of work,‘‘ Ms. Sang, 17, recalled this week in a friend‘s apartment in New York. ‘‘But it was a very happy life.‘‘

Among the rewards was a trip in July to New York for the Goodwill Games, the mini-Olympics started by Ted Turner during the 1980‘s boycotts of the real thing. Ms. Sang had dreams for Sydney in 2000. But on July 21, in a routine warm-up vault at the Nassau Coliseum, Ms. Sang landed hard on her head. The injuries to her spine were catastrophic; she was paralyzed from the chest down. She is not expected to recover the use of her legs.
Ms. Sang disagrees.

‘‘I believe I will walk again,‘‘ she said on Wednesday during an hourlong interview in the apartment of a friend, Winston Sie, in a modern high-rise on East 38th Street. ‘‘This is all a big lesson.‘‘ Not that there aren‘t dark times. ‘‘Usually when I feel bad it‘s at night,‘‘ she said. ‘‘But I go to sleep and everything‘s better in the morning.‘‘

Ms. Sang‘s accident was a terrible summer news story that developed into a tale of courage. Leonardo DiCaprio, Jimmy Carter and Jackie Chan visited her in the hospital; Celine Dion came by to sing ‘‘My Heart Will Go On.‘‘ Back home, Ms. Sang has become a media star, and has been offered a full scholarship to Qinghua University, the M.I.T. of China.

But here she is a persevering New Yorker whose life centers on rehabilitation and worries about her future. On Oct. 30, Ms. Sang was discharged from the Mount Sinai-New York University Medical Center. She now spends six hours a day in therapy at the Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine in Manhattan. Then she returns to her friend‘s apartment for tutoring in English, math and computer skills.

‘‘I don‘t have time to think about what I‘d like to do,‘‘ Ms. Sang said, with Mr. Sie translating. ‘‘I‘m just following the schedule.‘‘ Mr. Sie, 25, is a Chinese-American studying at New York University. His mother, Gina Liu, is an official of the Chinese Gymnastics Association.

MS. SANG talked while lying on a gym mat in the living room, although sometimes Mr. Sie helped her to a sitting position. Her mother, Xiufeng Chen, who works in a leather factory in China, was preparing dinner; her father, a government housing worker, has gone back to China. Ms. Sang has some use of her arms and wrists, and was happy to offer a cookie from her own hand. ‘‘I like these,‘‘ she said in English, amused. Ms. Sang still has the crisp body of a gymnast. From her neck up, she is vital, fearless and perceptive.

She cannot forget her accident. ‘‘I remember,‘‘ she said.

Does she wonder how or why it happened?

‘‘We try not to let her think why,‘‘ Mr. Sie said, not translating the question. ‘‘If you start thinking why, then it‘s not going to be good.‘‘

Ms. Sang spoke up in Chinese. ‘‘Oh,‘‘ Mr. Sie said, ‘‘she understands.‘‘

Ms. Sang went on to reply: ‘‘Ask the same question of Christopher Reeve.‘‘(She has spoken to the actor, who was paralyzed in a fall from a horse.) ‘‘It was an accident. There‘s no ‘why.‘ Christopher Reeve told me that his horse had done the jump over and over again. It never had problems with it. Why? It was just an accident. The same with me. My movement was easy. I can close my eyes and do it a million times.‘‘

Ms. Sang added that she believes ‘‘a lot of this is set up by God.‘‘

‘‘Yes, it‘s very unfortunate I had this accident,‘‘ she said, ‘‘but I wouldn‘t have come to know all these people. And I will give back what I can.‘‘

Doctors say it is possible that future medical breakthroughs could restore Ms. Sang‘s ability to walk. ‘‘But I can‘t tell if it‘s going to be 5 years, 10 years or decades away,‘‘ said Dr. Kristjan T. Ragnarsson, Mount Sinai‘s chief of rehabilitation, who is treating Ms. Sang.

For now, friends have set up a trust fund for Ms. Sang‘s living costs and education in the United States; $80,000 has been raised, mostly in small donations from Chinese-Americans. (Her medical care and rehabilitation are so far covered by Goodwill Games‘ insurance, and she still receives her gymnast‘s salary from China, which comes to $78 a month.)

Dr. Wise Young of Rutgers University, one of the leading researchers on spinal injuries in the United States, is a trustee of the fund. He signed on after meeting Ms. Sang. ‘‘She‘s a very, very bright girl,‘‘ he said.

Ms. Sang said she misses China, and ‘‘my father, my coaches, my teammates and my gym work.‘‘

http://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/13/nyregion/courage-in-the-face-of-an-uncertain-future.html?pagewanted=print&src=pm
回复 linton 2011-8-11 09:00
借您的地方发一文,多谢,我来这里只为关注桑案,案子结束就撤了。

一起从无到有的性侵案的破产

  桑兰象是被她的律师带到沟里去了,性侵案本是他们对刘谢所有指控的一道利器,从始至终,黄海在后面编导,桑兰在前面表演,一路丢丑露乖,出尽洋相。
  性侵案的起源竟然是黄健看到刘国生给桑兰的一封信,里面他象一个家长指责自己不争气的孩子一样批评桑兰:这么多年生活依然不能自理,甚至不会自己导尿,其中有一句“连我这个大男人都给你导过尿“,正是这句话让黄贼光一闪,鬼心眼一动,他又向桑进一步证实,桑点头说确有其事,而且不光刘伯伯导过,大哥哥薛伟森也导过。黄听了不禁又惊又喜,想到一个鬼点子,但他不能肯定,于是和身在美国的海明律师沟通。海听了如释重负地缓了一口气,连声说:很严重,这很严重。  
  真象海明说的,这在美国确实很严重,甚至父女之间都是禁止的,但是他们由于利令智昏,忘记了一个最重要的前提:桑兰不是一个健康的普通人,而是一个重度瘫痪的病人,一切都不能自理,需要他人的帮助,如果不帮她及时导尿,难道还看着她被憋出后遗症?这是一个特定环境里的特定情况,与男女情色丝毫无关,而只与人道救助有关。
  为什么不请专业护理?那时的保险应该不包括出院后的家庭护理(近几年保险中才有这项),否则谢晓虹一家决不会自找麻烦;为什么不由女性护理?开始正是由谢晓虹一人护理,但瘦弱的她很快眼睛充血、还犯了头晕症,这时当然首先会由丈夫和长子协助她。相信任何一个有尊严的男子尽管是帮在助他人,但仍要克服心理上的尴尬与不适,甚至几分厌恶感,可以理解他们很快就把桑兰的父母接到家中。
  桑兰性侵案的一个最大特点就是:所谓被性侵者不知道自己受到了性侵,这是一个没有受害人的性侵案。
  尽管桑兰一直嚷嚷当时自己小,不懂,小也十七了吧,其实各国的性侵案都考虑到桑兰所讲的性懵懂问题,所以均从十八岁成年之日算起,难道桑却一直懵懂到三十岁?这当然不是她不懂的问题,而是她以前根本就没觉得自己受到性侵,还对所谓的性侵者感激莫名。那为什么此时出现了性侵?看看那个时机。
  此前他们对刘谢提出了指控,但内容空洞、牵强,均属于欲加之罪的乱盖,用刘谢的话说就是荒唐可笑。而此时海明的一双鼠目似乎从导尿中看到了希望的寸光,不禁如获至宝,他们终于发现了致命武器,这可是对刘谢敲诈勒索的一个重要砝码,于是性侵案才被正式提出。
  桑兰性侵案的第二个特点:性侵案本是最严重的案件,可在本案中,一开始却不是作为一个独立的案件提出,而是作为附加案件,其目的就是为了给先前的民事案增加压力。
  证人的出现为此案增添了荒诞的喜感,这样说是因为这个证人实在太离奇了,到他这里升级成强奸,而且他竟然从头到尾目睹了整个过程,还说受害人不知道自己受到强奸,因为她下肢没有知觉,又一次是没有受害人的性侵案! 
  地点是在人来人往的公共客厅;想起桑兰指控、杨明作证的买胸罩事件,也是几个人公开一起去的;再加上刘国生的公开信,这个案子的奇异之处是:当事人似乎光明磊落,证人倒显得心理阴暗。
  得知桑兰正式报警也包括刘国生,不仅哑然失笑,说来说去还是导尿事件。
  得知她由于时效问题报的还是一级强奸案,她已经涉及报假案了,因为以她当时刚做完大手术的身体情况,如果有一级强奸发生,她的身子骨都会散架。
  许多网友都对桑的性吸引力提出质疑,确实很有道理,许多女体操运动员都在一米五以下,为保持体重长期节食而身材平板,十几岁还象个七八岁没有发育的孩子,当时一个美国的运动员就说桑象个娃娃,人们更容易对她产生的是对一个孩子的怜爱。
  美国对性犯罪历来是最重视的,惩罚也是最严厉的,桑所讲述的性侵案有多处明显的技术性硬伤。得知桑兰面对的是性犯罪组主任,感觉她真是撞枪口上了,遇到了真正的性犯罪专家。在桑兰陈述的过程中,他会仔细观察桑的表情姿态,即所谓身体语言,还会提一些关键问题,看桑的本能反应,只凭其常识和经验就已经知道桑至少有一半是说谎。美国警方的专业素质还是很优秀的,他们只做了初级的工作就已得出结论,根本不需要第二步,例如桑2008年赴美时为何主动要求重回狼窝居住,为何把强奸犯和自己的亲密合影长期挂在墙上?这些都是致命的逻辑硬伤。可惜的是证人的那几公斤卫生纸也没用上,只好自己留着在家熬汤了。
  有人说美国警方的结论是由于大众舆论的影响,这纯属无稽之谈,先不说他们不懂中文,根本不看中文网,甚至对沸沸扬扬的舆论根本不知情;事实上,在司法独立的国家,就是总统亲自打电话也是无用的,这涉及到警官的职业尊严。
  海明确实是一个无良律师,他为了出名和耸人听闻,完全惘顾事实,和桑同样利欲熏心,利令智昏,不惜在家排练,教桑做假,但因为她是残疾人,没人跟他计较罢了,上帝已经预先惩罚了。
  桑兰在从恩人那里接受了十年的经济帮助,自己把基金要过来挥霍一空,在对外寻找新的诈钱之道时,通过海明发现:原来还可以通过司法手段从恩人那里敲诈出更多的钱财,于是一下子显露出其骨子里的无耻、贪婪与恶毒。现在已经可以预见案子的最终结果,但她目前还不甘心,还在做最后的赌博和挣扎,只是赌得越久,输的越多,直到全部输光为止。
  
回复 Neptuner 2011-8-11 08:40
我刚才“桑兰北京的家里有桑薛合影”的照片提供给成都晚报体育部记者李果http://weibo.com/1468810844(今天他发过桑兰败诉的新闻,新浪有)

他回复有兴趣了解更多消息

李果:十分感谢,我会进行了解,如果你还知道其它详情,麻烦告知,谢谢。 (18分钟前

能否提供这张照片的原始出处

此外记得有人贴过纽约时报关于桑兰和薛伟森的新闻,以及《纽约每日新闻报》关于薛桑的文章,各位能否尽快搜集一下!提供给这位记者?
回复 太阳风暴81 2011-8-11 08:33
申请
回复 春风沂水 2011-8-11 08:03
To: 2012不寻常 你曾经说:
555555,俺没有证,现在来报名领酱豆证。
艾艾,我也要豆证
回复 loveparadise 2011-8-11 07:09
俺有自知之明,酱豆证不好意思领,可以让俺领个酱豆苗证吗?谢谢有才的艾艾先.
回复 末日水泉 2011-8-11 07:08
鼓掌!
回复 2012不寻常 2011-8-11 06:50
555555,俺没有证,现在来报名领酱豆证。
回复 爱娱乐 2011-8-11 05:11
To: 艾艾 你曾经说:
谁让你不报名,第三批发,呵呵
俺也报个名,行不?贡献小,给俺个豆苗证也行。
回复 艾艾 2011-8-11 02:31
To: pollyzixin 你曾经说:
怎么没我呢,还是先挣下一证,就稳当了,剩下的谁愿意插队我就装看不见不管了
谁让你不报名,第三批发,呵呵
回复 艾艾 2011-8-11 02:30
To: 太阳风暴73 你曾经说:
没有我????

偏见

你上次没报名呀!现在报名的都在第三批颁发荣誉证。
回复 pollyzixin 2011-8-11 01:55
怎么没我呢,还是先挣下一证,就稳当了,剩下的谁愿意插队我就装看不见不管了
回复 春夏秋冬 2011-8-11 01:50
To: 磕小粉 你曾经说:
炒鸟蛋可香了。谢谢
哈哈。。。。我就吃鸡蛋,鸭蛋还有鹌鹑蛋。。。。。
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