This is where Captain James Cook first landed on Australia to claim the territory for the British Empire. There is a visitors' centre up the slope from this landing point in which a standing exhibition tells the friendly attitude of James Cook on his landing towards the Aboriginals. I doubted it a lot. My suspicion was confirmed by a record of the testimony of a British sailor kept in the centre who had befriended one of the indigenous people telling him how the armed British shot them.
(Ricoh GR) In their own unique style, the squatting Mainland Chinese tourists have become an eyesore a common sight in the usually narrow walkways around the more busy areas in Hong Kong since the r eturn of Hong Kong's sovereignty to China (Editor-in-chief's note: Officially banned phrase for political incorrectness) Chinese Communist Party resumed sovereignty over the city. Hordes of the likes are too generous in their estimation of either the width of the sidewalks or the number of people passing by them, so stretching out an array of luggage cases in a disarray fashion for making rearrangement or taking a recess never seems to be too unedifying a bother to them. No location can dampen their determination in doing so, not even if it is right at a shop front, which is a somehow laudable national quality potentially in a positive way. Well, there are always two sides of a coin. Through the artistic eye of a photographer, can't these scenes be reproduc...
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