Dutch Man Waits 10 Days in Chinese Airport for Online Girlfriend, Who Never Shows Up

A 41-year-old Dutch man was hospitalized after recently spending 10 days at an airport in China’s Hunan Province waiting for his online girlfriend, according to multiple reports.

Alexander Cirk flew from his native Holland to China to meet a 26-year-old woman about two months after the pair struck up a relationship through an app, the BBC reported.

Cirk believed his internet girlfriend, who was identified only by her surname of Zhang, was going to meet him at Changsha Airport. But when he arrived, she wasn’t there to meet him as promised, CCTV reported.

Zhang also didn’t show up over the next 10 days, which was how long the love struck man spent at the airport before he was taken to a local hospital.

A series of photos taken over a period of days circulated online showed Cirk reclining in an airport chair, and later looking exhausted and frail.

Zhang told a Hunan television station that she thought it was a joke, saying they had agreed to wait a year before meeting in person, according to CCTV.

“We had advanced our romantic relationship but later he seemed a little callous toward me,” she said, according to a post on the network’s Facebook page. “One day he sent me a photo of air tickets abruptly, and I thought it was a joke. He didn’t contact me later.”

Zhang told CCTV that she was in another city having cosmetic surgery at the time, and that she didn’t see Cirk’s messages when he arrived in China.

Still, she indicated she was interested in continuing the relationship and would meet him after she recovered from the surgery, the station reported.

The man’s story the airport took over local news and social media, with some expressing sympathy for him and others decrying the whole thing as “weird,” according to CCTV.

Cirk apparently returned home Monday, purchasing a return ticket to the Netherlands, the station reported.

Wow! 10 days?

Google And Facebook Battling Terrorist Groups Online

 
For years, Islamic terror groups like ISIS and their followers have used the Internet and social media to recruit and spread propaganda, but now the tech giants are exploring new ways to fight back. 

Google’s Alphabet parent company GOOG has partnered with Facebook FB and Twitter TWTR to sponsor three experiments that will use videos to counter terrorist propaganda spread on their sites, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The anti-terror ads target Muslim teens and young adults with different kinds of anti-radical messaging to see which works best at diffusing disaffected people before they’re radicalized.

Twitter confirms the projects have been in the works since late 2013.

“We partnered with respected organizations such as People Against Violent Extremism (PAVE) and the Institute for Strategic Dialogue to empower credible non-governmental voices against violent extremism,” Twitter spokesperson Nu Wexler tells Fortune. “We also attended government-convened summits on [common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVE)] hosted by the White House, the Australian Attorney-General’s Department, the UK government, the French prime minister, the European Commission, and the United Nations.”

Read the entire article on Fortune Magazine, here

Pennsylvania Football Players Accused Of Killing Wild Animals & Posting Pics On Instagram

CLEVELAND TOWNSHIP, Pa. — Five high school football stars in Pennsylvania have been cited after allegedly beating numerous animals to death and posing with their corpses. The five teens are facing fines for illegally killing wild animals and then posting a picture with their kills on Instagram, according to WNEP. An uncensored photo of the…

via Teen football players accused of beating animals to death, posing with corpses — FOX5 San Diego – San Diego News, Weather, Traffic and Sports | KSWB

Remember the stiff consequences/backlash star NFL player Mike Vick came under for running a dog fighting ring out of his Virginia mansion? Vick is now a proud animal advocate & works with various charible organizations to prevent animal abuse & neglect.

Let’s see if there is any public backlash for these guys.