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The fun, the strange, and the what-on-earth-is-this? Trending in Beijing is a wrap-up of top stories in Beijing as told by the trending hashtags, local press, and general power of the internet.
Now that Beijingers are starting to feel safe enough to take the subway again, Line 6 has taken the opportunity to deck out its trains with the kind of teched-out windows that you might see in the first act of a sci-fi movie, declaring to the viewer: remember, this is the future.
On Mar 14, a man surnamed Guo was lining up to enter a grocery store in Dongcheng District when he decided to remove his mask. When an elderly employee of the store asked the man to put his mask back on, the situation escalated into a tussle, with Guo eventually striking the employee with his hand before fleeing the scene.
Understandably, netizens were outraged, following the scandal with the hashtag "Beijing to investigate man sentenced to death" #北京将调查打死老人刑释男子减刑情况# (běijīng jiāng diàochá dǎ sǐ lǎorén xíng shì nánzǐ jiǎnxíng qíngkuàng). But as one lawyer posted, “Article 78 of the Criminal Law stipulates the conditions and limits for a life sentence reduction. If you abide by the supervision regulations, accept education and reform, you can reduce your sentence as long as you show repentance, or if you have done good deeds. Those sentenced to life imprisonment shall not serve less than 13 years."
Beijing’s technology developers have begun mass-producing a graphene face mask that wearers can use for up to 48 hours, thanks to the graphene’s anti-microbial property. Compare that with traditional masks, which should only be used for four to eight hours without sanitization.
Images: Weibo, CnTechPost
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