@fatmanuraskoya:

fatmanur🐣
fatmanur🐣
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Region: TR
Wednesday 21 January 2026 22:24:04 GMT
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yasagezdolas
yasagezdolas :
Saçlara alışamadık
2026-01-22 17:57:11
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ali0606lr
Ali06Aylr :
waaaooooew🔥
2026-01-22 17:55:45
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diojen002
Diojen :
iri
2026-01-21 22:25:58
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kakulee
kakulee :
Çok fena çokkk
2026-01-22 21:02:11
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seven_kalbim_sarhosss53
Büşra 🃏 :
cok tatlıı💗💞💓
2026-01-21 22:25:49
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ramazancelik3197
Ramazan Celik3197 :
😍😍😍
2026-01-22 23:42:20
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mert demir :
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
2026-01-22 07:41:46
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iskeleli33
🦂TUNCER🦂 :
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
2026-01-21 22:25:12
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mehmetsaitaslan2
YANLIZ ADAM VESSELAM :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-01-24 00:15:39
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200 million Chinese citizens work in cities where they can't access local hospitals, can't enroll their kids in public schools, and aren't legally counted as residents. They produce roughly half the urban GDP for places that don't formally include them. The system is called hukou, a household registration that determines where your children go to school, where your health insurance works, and where your pension accrues. In Beijing, getting a hukou requires seven consecutive years of social insurance contributions and a competitive points score. A degree from a top 50 global university clears the bar in Shanghai automatically. But if you're a construction worker or a food delivery rider, the door stays shut. The result: 60 to 70 million children at peak were left behind in rural villages while their parents worked in cities. A child raised entirely in Beijing but registered in another province has to go back to that province to take the college entrance exam, at that province's cutoff scores. Where the family is registered determines the floor of options for the rest of the child's life. A 2024 study mapped hukou regulations across 332 Chinese cities from 1999 to 2024. The average threshold fell from 98.8 percent, essentially closed, to 12.6 percent. But Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou kept their barriers high, admitting educated, high-earning taxpayers while keeping the workers who physically built those cities outside. The 200 million produce GDP for places that don't have to fund their retirements, educate their children, or treat their illnesses because they can’t actually live there officially. The floating population isn't a bug. It's a feature.
200 million Chinese citizens work in cities where they can't access local hospitals, can't enroll their kids in public schools, and aren't legally counted as residents. They produce roughly half the urban GDP for places that don't formally include them. The system is called hukou, a household registration that determines where your children go to school, where your health insurance works, and where your pension accrues. In Beijing, getting a hukou requires seven consecutive years of social insurance contributions and a competitive points score. A degree from a top 50 global university clears the bar in Shanghai automatically. But if you're a construction worker or a food delivery rider, the door stays shut. The result: 60 to 70 million children at peak were left behind in rural villages while their parents worked in cities. A child raised entirely in Beijing but registered in another province has to go back to that province to take the college entrance exam, at that province's cutoff scores. Where the family is registered determines the floor of options for the rest of the child's life. A 2024 study mapped hukou regulations across 332 Chinese cities from 1999 to 2024. The average threshold fell from 98.8 percent, essentially closed, to 12.6 percent. But Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou kept their barriers high, admitting educated, high-earning taxpayers while keeping the workers who physically built those cities outside. The 200 million produce GDP for places that don't have to fund their retirements, educate their children, or treat their illnesses because they can’t actually live there officially. The floating population isn't a bug. It's a feature.

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