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  • A personal history of the beginning of the Red Guards

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    And the chaos begins

    Here's a promising new blog: Mei-Zhong.com by Anton Lee Wishik.

    The blogger recently translated an article from the reformist journal Yanhuang Chunqiu (炎黄春秋) by Liu Jin: A personal history of the beginning of the Red Guards.

    The piece covers the first stirrings of Cultural Revolution in June 1966. At the time, Liu Jin was president of the work association of the middle school affiliated to Qinghua University.

    The original Chinese article is here.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Boycott

    An online campaign to boycott French goods is gathering a little momentum in the wake of the aggressive, torch-grabbing protests during the Olympic procession in Paris last week. There is more about it at the bottom of this Danwei post.

    Below is a translation of a short blog post by San Lian Life Week journalist and popular blogger Wang Xiaofeng about the boycott.


    Boycott
    by Wang Xiaofeng

    
I received an SMS from a friend calling on me to avoid Carrefour, to boycott the French people that have insulted our country's athletes on their procession. I replied saying that I have always boycotted French culture: I cannot speak French except to say 'salut'...



    I never boycott any type of goods, including Japanese goods, Korean, American, and now French. My first mobile phone was an Alcatel. I stopped using it because it had a particular characteristic: the screen did not display any information, like a cordless land line. I also do not boycott Japanese goods, the first TV set in my home was a Sharp. I don't often buy Japanese goods not because of any patriotic feelings, but because I do not need them. If I need such goods, for example a digital camera, I will definitely buy Japanese goods. I do not like Korean goods because I think their stuff is much better looking than it is useful, for examples their good looking but useless mobile phones. 



    In fact, the best boycott is a closed door policy for the country. Let's go back to the Mao era: can you guys handle it? If you can't handle that, then stop making a fuss, boycotting this and that.

    The best boycott is to make yourself really awesome (牛逼); if you're not cool, other people will pick on you. If you boycott someone when they pick on you, you're just pretending to be be great. If you like it, mayabe you should go to North Korea, where they only have north Korean and Chinese goods. 

Using your purchasing habits to demonstrate whether or not you are patriotic, this is really "universal values" with Chinese characteristics.

    
When you boycott, you are just showing that your target is much stronger than you, that your target is already mixed up in your life. So what the hell have you been doing before now?

    

I just happen to have some discount coupons for Carrefour. I guess if I go these days, there won't be long queues.

    If there is anything I am going to boycott, it's all these stupid idiots [arranging boycotts].

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • What's the value of a day of freedom?

    Chinese Law Prof Blog by George Washington University Law School's Professor Donald C. Clarke is a must follow blog if you're interested in Chinese legal issues. This is a post from yesterday:

    What's the value of a day of freedom?

    The State Compensation Law provides (Art. 26) that "If a citizen's freedom of the person is infringed, compensatory payment for each day shall be assessed in accordance with the state average daily pay of staff and workers in the previous year." For better or for worse, this establishes a uniform national standard of compensation for lost freedom, no matter where you are or what your earning power is. (Better, because surely a poor person's freedom in subjective terms cannot be said to be systematically less valuable to him or her than a rich person's; worse, because in terms of actual lost earnings of which the wrongfully imprisoned person and his or her dependents are deprived, the poor person's freedom really is less valuable.) The Supreme People's Procuracy has just told us what the number is for 2007 (and hence will be used in 2008): 99.31 yuan (US$14.17) per day...

    Compare that to the 73.3 yuan per day that Qin Zhongfei was awarded for his loss of freedom in the Pengshui SMS case.

    As they say in the film Team America, freedom isn't free. But it sure is cheap.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Pomfret's China

    John Pomfret, author of Chinese Lessons, has a new blog on the Washington Post's website called Pomfret's China.

    He's off to a rollicking start with a post titled Don't Expect Protests to Hurt Chinese Regime. Excerpt:

    So is this going to weaken China’s government? On the contrary. The more pressure the Chinese get from foreigners and barbarians – which are actually synonymous in ancient Chinese – the stronger the system becomes. Indeed, China’s system feeds off this kind of adversity. The Communist regime has a peculiar genius for turning these types of threats into opportunities.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Instapundit confused

    Instanpundit is one of the most popular American blogs, written by a law professor from Tennessee whose politics are libetarian, and pro Iraq war.

    You may find his cheery Apple pie tone and hawkish politics too much to take, but his blog can be an entertaining read, and it's packed full of links to all kinds of blogs and news articles. In 2004, Danwei asked a blogger from Tennessee who was living in China to write about Instapundit, figure out why his blog was so popular, and why the professor seemed so clueless about China. The piece is here: What is the Instapundit? Will you be assimilated?

    Why bring this up now?

    Last week Danwei had a traffic spike, thanks to a link from Instapundit. This is what he wrote:

    April 03, 2008

    CHINA'S LATEST INTERNET CELEBRITY: The government's efforts at censorship don't seem particularly successful. See this interview, too. Last night, however, the house was razed.

    The INTERNET CELEBRITY link is to a Danwei post about the Chongqing nail house incident. Which happened a whole year ago. Not exactly breaking news.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Squeezing the Olympic balls

    ESWN has translated a post by Chinese blogger Hecaitou. It concerns Westerners protesting against China by burning Chinese flags and attaching protest signs to Terracotta Warriors in an exhibition in London. Excerpt:

    Thanks to these idiots, I have now changed my mind. Previously, I did not particularly care about the Olympics because I did not feel that it had anything to do with me. But now the Olympics is like a pair of testicles that someone else is holding in his hands in a threatening manner, but his purpose is not to change the practical situation of the Chinese people at all. So I have to say: "*** your mother! If you don't want to come, don't! If you don't want to participate, don't!" I don't believe that this German woman is helping the Dalai Lama. She and her friends are only hurting him because they are making sure that a gate gets shut without any opportunity to open it again. Thanks to their concerns, the Chinese people have rallied at an unprecedented speed underneath the national flag. They have voluntarily given up many rights and freedoms, in order to avoid more injuries and insults from the outside. These westerners are not helping their friends. They are only helping to create an enemy as well as an Asiatic orphan.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Lian Yue on Tîbet and information supression

    The following is a translation of a short post from journalist and Xiamen PX activist Lian Yue's blog:

    Information Theory of Tibet

    1. Any power which tries to withhold information should be regarded as a bad power.
    2. Any power that keeps people from getting information should be regarded as a bad power.
    3. Any information released by a power that has monopoly over releasing information should be regarded as a lie.
    4. A power that tries to distort and withhold information should be responsible for the consequences.
    5. A power that keeps people from getting information does not have the credibility to tell people what is true and what is false.
    6. Information being suppressed is the only cause of the worsening situation and deepening disagreement, because each side can say whatever they want and none of it is provable.
    7. Extreme nationalism is passionate and irrational. It is nourished by the suppression of information. Tibetan supremacist, Han supremacist, anti-Japanese sentiment and anti-Taiwan sentiment run rampant in an environment where information is suppressed.
    8. Mainland China is a place where [people with] extreme feelings are the biggest supporters of power, and these people and feelings prevent power from reforming itself.
    9. Only freedom of information expression can dissolve extreme sentiments. Trying to withhold dangerous information is the most dangerous way to act.

    Therefore, one important way to solve the problem is to give the media freedom to interview in Tibet.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Jay Chou and Assembly

    The Wall Street Journal has launched a blog section.

    One of the blogs is Buzzwatch which describes itself as 'news and notes from the attention economy'. The posts are more like short articles than blog posts.

    Buzzwatch covers global news but Danwei contributor Maya Alexandri will be posting about Asian subjects to it; she has already posted about Jay Chou (周杰伦) and the Feng Xiaogang film Assembly (集结号).

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Chinese hackers on blogs and CNN

    CNN has been running a news segment about Chinese hackers:

    They operate from a bare apartment on a Chinese island. They are intelligent 20-somethings who seem harmless. But they are hard-core hackers who claim to have gained access to the world's most sensitive sites, including the Pentagon.

    If you're interested in the subject, The Dark Visitor is a blog dedicated to news about Chinese hackers.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Tiger Temple on the homeless of Qianmen

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    Not such a happy new year

    The Chinese blog 24 Hours Online is written by an old Beijinger who calls himself 'Temple Tiger' and describes his blog as a 'one man newspaper'. He first got famous when he published photographs and reporting about a stabbing he witnessed in Wangfujing in 2003 that the press ignored. Since then he has ridden a bicycle around Ningxia and Inner Mongolia, adopted stray animals, and written about ordinary Chinese people, often the poorest of the poor.

    Recently he has been documenting the lives of a group of destitute old people who have been living on the streets in the Qianmen area, and are being ruthlessly displaced by the urban reconstruction taking place in that area.

    Tiger Temple's latest post is titled Premier Wen Jiabao, please visit your neighbors (in Chinese). John Kennedy at Global Voices has translated and explained the whole post in English.

    You can read a profile of Tiger Temple by Adrienne Mong on MSNBC.com.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Beijing wifi, clothes and consumerism

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    Three Beijing blogs:

    • Beijing Boyce (a blog by a 'somewhat young China hand on the local drinking scene') is currently doing a winter wireless roundup: a review of Beijing restaurants and cafés that offer good wifi connections as well as decent food and drinks.

    Stylites is a photo blog featuring well-dressed denizens of Beijing and explanations of their clothing. The blog gives one a little hope for sartorial progress in the capital.

    Buy Buy Beijing describes itself as a 'collection of interviews and conversations with people in China about what they buy and sell.' Each interview includes a photo and short transcript.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Reuters has a China blog

    Reuters has started a China blog.

    It's called 'Countdown to Beijing' and describes itself thusly:

    Reflecting life in this rapidly changing country in the run-up to possibly the most heavily-scrutinised sporting event in history and featuring posts on national preparations from Reuters bureaux around the world.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • The China Beat

    Here is a promising new blog: The China Beat.

    With a tagline 'Blogging How the East Is Read'. the site has a line-up of 15 writers, some of whom may be familiar to Danwei readers, including:

    • Jeremiah Jenne of the Granite Studio blog, self-described as 'a Qing historian reads the newspaper'
    • Leslie Chang, a former Beijing correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, now writing a book about Chinese labor issues
    • Jeff Wasserstrom, whose book China's Brave New World was featured in Danwei's 2007 China book roundup

    Unfortunately for Mainland users, it's on Blogspot, which is inaccessible in China after briefly flickering to life earlier this week.


    This article is from Danwei.org

  • The sounds of Beijing

    Thanks to Granite Studio, here is an excellent blog for the Beijing-obsessed and the Chinese language maven: Beijing Sounds. The author uses recordings of real Beijingers and explains, in clear language, how 'Beijing dialect' works; for example see the most recent post Does the Beijing-R mean anything?

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • A Chinese blog from a U.S. soldier in Iraq

    A U.S. Army soldier posted in Baghdad is writing a blog in Chinese about his experiences. He is ethnically Chinese but identifies himself as Striker (or its phonetic equivalent in Chinese - 斯特瑞克), and hosts his blog on MySpace.cn, the version of the social networking site that is hosted and run out of Beijing.

    His blog has become popular in recent weeks in the Mainland, discussed on forum websites like Tianya, and Striker has taken to answering questions from his fans, such as 'How do you join the U.S. Army?' and 'Is any of your military clothing made in China?'.

    He recently uploaded to Youtube a video he had shot just before the end of 2007, with Chinese captions explaining what the footage shows.

    Uploading to the blog is no simple matter: this is how he describes the process:

    After returning the base in Iraq, the connection speed is crap and it can't display Chinese. Whenever we have leave, the soldiers line up to use the Internet to send news to their family. There's not much meat and a lot of wolves so everyone only has ten minutes each. I can't see my Chinese blog, so I can't update regularly or respond to questions from Net friends, I'm sorry about that.

    

All I can do is sit in the Iraqi desert, or in the cramped interior of an armored vehicle. If I have time, I record my thoughts into a small MP3 recorder, then I send the recordings to the small Pacific island of Hawaii. Then my family members transcribe the recordings and upload them to the website in China. Every blog post has to go painstakingly like this from the Middle East to America to Asia.


    Links and Sources

    This article is from Danwei.org

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