09.18.12

East China Sea Islands…

Posted in Chinese Nationalism, Law and Order, Politics at 20:24 by

Was walking home today after reading some of the China-Japan news and passed by the local Ito Yokado store. The store is usually jam-packed with affluent Chinese buyers buying imported milk and other food products. Not today. This time there was a big sign saying the store was closed until tomorrow. The big Ito Yokado sign on the roof was covered by large pieces of tarp, there were security guards stationed outside each entrance, and huge Chinese flags were flying upfront. I wanted to take a picture but it was too dark.

I continued walking and managed to notice this sign in a local storefront window.

The irony in the fact that the store sells Japanese-inspired designer clothing was lost on the shop clerks inside.

P.S. Notice the effort put in to make the sign multicolored and multilingual — stylish….

05.13.11

Thank You, China Mobile, for Belatedly Notifying Me of Osama Bin Laden’s Death

Posted in Beijing, Internet and Media, Law and Order, Politics, Rumors, Technology, USA at 18:27 by

This SMS came in at 2:59pm on Monday, May 2:

新闻早晚报快讯:美国总统奥巴马1日表示,美军方当天对巴基斯坦一所建筑发动袭击, 打死了“基地”组织领导本·拉丹,并对其尸体进行了确认。新华社

News Alert: On May 1st, United States President Obama said that earlier in the day U.S. military forces had attacked a building in Pakistan, killing Al Qaeda leader bin Laden and confirming the identity of his corpse. Xinhua News Agency

The sender was 10658000,  also known as China Daily Mobile News, a paid service that sends daily news headlines and links to mobile users.  I don’t subscribe, but occasionally they’ll send me  particularly important updates — usually matters of obvious nationwide concern, such as natural disasters or the latest epidemic sweeping through the capital. I never received any “regular” news like this, though. It was also odd that it arrived over three hours after I had watched Obama’s speech live (or, more likely, almost live) on Chinese TV.

So, why? Here are my top four theories:

  1. China Mobile hoped to earn money by getting millions of people to forward the message to each other or call each other. But presumably that was already happening. And besides, if they sent the message to all their users, then they would be more likely to discourage a flood of text, since everyone would already know. Which brings me to my second theory:
  2. China Mobile wanted to tell everyone once and for all because the network was being overloaded with texts and calls. This is also unlikely, though; I doubt traffic could compare to the Chinese New Year peak period, where everyone sends good wishes to their family and friends.
  3. Rumors and disinformation were already spreading, and the government deemed it important enough to send out an official statement to quell those rumors.
  4. The folks at China Mobile got caught up in the Twitter-fest like everyone else and just wanted pass along the news to their (several hundred million) customers.

Of course, the correct answer is “no why” (不为什么) .

01.30.11

Wuhan’s Li Na Loses Australian Open to Chinese Fans in Three Sets

Posted in Beijing, Chinese Nationalism, Manners, Politics, Sports, Wuhan at 14:19 by

Li Na lost in three sets to Kim Klijsters in the Australian Open Finals yesterday, and at least part of the blame goes to her own Chinese supporters:

MELBOURNE -Li Na told her coach and husband she would love him “forever” after she lost the Australian Open final Saturday, but she had little love for the “amateur coaches” in the stands who broke her rhythm against Kim Clijsters.

Fed up with boisterous shouts from Chinese fans during the tense second set, ninth seed Li marched to the chair umpire after being broken at 3-3 and asked her: “Can you tell the Chinese, don’t teach me how to play tennis?”

“There were a lot of people coaching me,” she told reporters. “It was really loud and it wasn’t just one direction, it was from all sides.

“I think Chinese people watching tennis can’t be polite … (saying) ‘Take her out!’ and other things.

When they were calling out things it was during returns, so I felt” — and here she inhaled sharply — “so tired!”

The outburst was reminiscent of her moment during her semifinal against Dinara Safina at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, when she told the local crowd to “shut up.”

Flustered by the frenetic atmosphere at Rod Laver Arena, the 28-year-old from the Yangtze river port of Wuhan demanded British umpire Alison Lang order fans to quiet down and railed at flashing cameras as the third set slipped from her fingers.

Unfortunately I didn’t see the match and can’t confirm what exactly the crowd was doing or saying, but still… Obnoxious Chinese fans? Distracting camera flashes? An argumentative Wuhaner? Nothing out of the ordinary there.

Despite her loss, Li’s ranking will rise to a new Chinese record of seven and she is guaranteed a hero’s reception when she returns home, where hundreds of millions tuned in to watch the match live.

I wouldn’t say guaranteed, now that she has made Chinese fans lose face on an internationally televised event. All internet flamers aside, it will be interesting to see the official reaction here. It could be an opportunity to scold Chinese audiences into being more “civilized”, similar to what Beijingers endured in the years preceding the 2008 Olympics. Less likely but still possible is a Wang Zhizhi Situation, in which Li is deemed a “traitor” by the motherland and forced to make a groveling public apology.

The latter is unlikely, as Wang’s was a much more serious offense involving breaking his contract, and it was made against the People’s Liberation Army. For Li, the best case scenario is that they do nothing and just let her play:

06.13.10

“Group Licentiousness”, Neo-Colonialism, and the 2010 World Cup

Posted in Internet and Media, Laowai, Politics, Sports at 20:51 by

This recent China Daily article attempts to draw attention to the accusations of “group licentiousness” against a teenage girl in southern China:

GUANGZHOU – A 17-year-old girl who is suspected of participating in group sex parties has been put on trial in Dongguan No 2 People’s Court in Guangzhou.

Li Jie (alias), a sophomore at Houjie vocational school, is being charged with group licentiousness in Dongguan.

In the public indictment, the prosecution said Li, who repeatedly had sex with several male students on one occasion, committed group licentiousness.

It would seem unlikely that the girl not only participated parties where she had sex with multiple men, but also agreed to be filmed doing so. Unlikely, but not impossible, especially in Guangdong province, where in the past few years it has become something of a fad for teenage girls to gang up on a classmate, hit, kick, and slap her, pull her hair, rip off her clothes, and otherwise humiliate her, and then film the whole thing and put it online.

Equal consideration is given to both sides of the story — whether the girl knowingly plotted “group licentiousness” or was simply drugged with ketamine and gang-raped. It is both enjoyable and sad to watch the author drop hints, in the most tortured and indirect of ways, that the accusations against the girl are perhaps a bit over the top. No mention is given to any actions taken against the three male students she supposedly “partied” with.

Even more interesting to me, though, were the links in the two right-hand columns. Top billing in the “Specials” column goes to World Cup, which is being played in South Africa. Just below it is an AP story about black slave children in the antebellum United States. Actually, it’s about a photograph of black slave children. This key piece of news was deemed more important than an analysis of China’s economy, which is listed third among the “Specials”. For those who were too dim to catch on, the leading piece in the adjacent “Columnists” section is titled “Africa, World Cup and neo-colonialism”.

02.14.10

2010 NBA All-Star Weekend: BTV 6, Dwyane Wade, and the Haiti Earthquake

Posted in Beijing, Chinese Language, Internet and Media, Politics, Sports, USA at 11:19 by

I’m watching the NBA 2010 All-Star Weekend festivities right now on BTV 6, Beijing’s sports channel. (CCTV 5 would probably have this in other years, but today it’s showing the Winter Olympics.) After Steve Nash won the skills competition, Dwyane Wade stepped to center court and gave a short speech asking people to contribute to relief efforts for the Haiti earthquake. At the end he said, “And now please listen to this special message from former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.”

The broadcast immediately switched back to the BTV studio, where the three hosts babbled for about five minutes straight. I can’t imagine that the NBA didn’t allow this message to be shown in China, so I can only assume it was BTV’s decision. I haven’t found any video clips posted online yet, but I did find the website for the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund, which somehow hasn’t been blocked in China. Here are some excerpts from the homepage:

On January 12, a magnitude 7.0 earthquake struck Haiti just outside the capital city of Port-au-Prince. The devastation – in lives lost, property destroyed, and families displaced – is immense. . .

Our immediate priority is to save lives. The critical needs in Haiti are great, but they are also simple: food, water, shelter, and first-aid supplies. The best way concerned citizens can help is to donate funds that will go directly to supplying these material needs. . .

We ask each of you to give what you can to help ensure the people of Haiti can build back stronger and better than ever.

It’s too bad the ex-Presidents haven taken such an extreme position and chosen to use such inflammatory language. I can only hope that broadcasters around the world, American ones included, followed BTV’s lead and did not let this message go out.

UPDATE: NBA China uses oblique means and stealthy feints to implant another controversial message from Dwyane “Time Delay Capsule” Wade. This time he smiles and wishes the Chinese people a happy new year — in Chinese! Disgusting.

11.20.09

We are Chinese. Love Us, and Make Us Powerful

Posted in Economy, Laowai, Manners, Politics, Religion, USA at 14:10 by

fletch-afro

ODB just passed along a great interview from the new English language edition of China’s Global Times newspaper. GT’s Lu Jingxian talks with Jack Rosen, chairman of the American Jewish Congress and American Council for World Jewry. (It’s unclear whether or not Mr. Rosen is related to the well-known Dr. Rosen in Los Angeles.)

The tone of the interview reminds me of countless conversations I have had on politics here in China. The Chinese interviewer gets right to the point with a blunt statement and question:

American Jews are known for their formidable lobbying power in the US. How is this accomplished?

I get in a Beijing taxi and tell the driver my destination. He puts the car in gear and looks at me in the rearview mirror as the car starts to move. “Which country are you from?”

“The United States.”

“You Americans love to start wars!”

GT: The AJC is a powerful political group in the US. China is also learning to build more lobbying power there. What stage are Chinese currently at? What are your suggestions?

Rosen: The primary objective of the Jewish lobby has been in keeping US values.

If you go back 40 years, the Jewish lobby was lobbying on behalf of individual rights and civil rights. And they did it for African Americans, they did it for Latin Americans, and they did it for Chinese.

Working hard for the rights of individuals is a core US value. The Jewish lobby gained that influence by lobbying on behalf of issues that 90 percent of Americans would agree with.

Then there is the issue of Israel. Why are Jewish groups so successful in lobbying for Israel? Again the American public is very supportive of the only democracy in the Middle East, the only country in the Middle East that gives equal rights and freedom to everyone. Woman have equal rights in Israel.

So it’s easy to lobby for Israel, because 90 percent of Americans believe in what you are lobbying for….

That sounds about right.

If you ask if the Chinese community has a strong lobby, I don’t believe so, because they don’t lobby for those kinds of issues. What do they lobby for? “Love us Chinese?” It’s a nice idea, but it has no substance.

We don’t say, “We are Jews, love us, and make us powerful.” We have specific issue that we fight for. And the result is we become the leadership. We are very active in government in very high positions.

Usually it’s someone over 40. I can tell at the beginning of the conversation if the question is coming or not. I can feel how bad he wants to ask it, but he doesn’t seem sure how to put it. “So….do you like China?”

A thousand thoughts pass through my mind from the last fifteen years of study, life, work, travel, and thought about China. This question will take another fifteen years to answer properly. I suspect my face is betraying panic and confusion and try to maintain a casual expression. I take the easy way out. “Ummm…Yes? Yes, sure.”

GT: For Chinese to lobby in the US, obviously we have ideological clashes. How can Chinese remove that barrier and win the hearts and minds of American public?

Rosen: You have to understand there are differences. The US people understand you have something to offer, and they accept the differences. They disagree with you publicly sometimes, but we have to find things in common.

We do have ideological differences, but they don’t matter compared with things we cooperate on. They won’t affect Chinese investment in US and US investment in China. They won’t affect economic policies, and they won’t matter where we support each other over issues of concern.

They will matter if there is an issue. Regarding Sudan, Americans care about humanitarian issues. You need to take the time, make the effort, and get the American people to understand you.

China’s position on Sudan aside, Rosen has a point. A couple of recent Global Times articles (one from September 30 and one from November 10) on Sino-Sudanese relations rely almost solely on official (and generally positive) Sudanese government statements; comments from the Chinese side, whether from the government or the reporter, are conspicuous in their absence.

GT: Inside the US, what is the general attitude of the Jewish population toward China?

Rosen: It’s a positive one. We know China has no anti-Semitism. We are always thankful of Chinese people for that and for those Chinese who saved Jews in World War II.

No anti-Semitism? Not so sure about that. At the very least there’s a tortured mix of admiration and envy — a less negative version of common Chinese attitudes toward the US and Japan.

GT: Last year, several Jewish groups in the US called for boycotting the Beijing Olympics. How should we see this?

Rosen: They probably didn’t call for boycotting Beijing Olympics because of Jewish issues, but for some other issues….

The Jewish community tends to be very liberal and they may disagree with certain issues in your country or countries you support. American people and some in the world oppose that, and some of them are Jewish.

The taxi driver again: “Why are you wearing that uniform?”

“I’m going to play soccer.”

“But you’re American!”

(neither of us knows what to say next)

GT: There are some Jewish politicians in the US who take a strong stance against China. What’s their influence on US policy toward China?

Rosen: The fact that they are Jewish is not relevant. They are politicians, American politicians, and they represent Americans. They may happen to be Jewish, and they may disagree with some Chinese issues, but connecting the two is not correct…

At this point the reporter seems to be trying hard to restrain himself from shouting, “Why don’t you Jews love us Chinese?!?”

GT: Chinese companies may meet local resistance when they try to expand in the US market. How should they work to avoid that?

I don’t think Chinese companies are particularly anticipating these problems, working through them, and doing the right public relations campaigns.

Rosen: I don’t think Chinese companies have problems in the US. Some Chinese companies have problems entering into the US market. It depends on the industrial sector they operate in. Chinese entrepreneurs are quite welcome in the US and they shouldn’t be fearful of that.

But on some sensitive business, China has to be thoughtful of what the reaction would be. They have to anticipate the reaction and work to limit the damage of that reaction.

Chinese business can’t just parachute into America. They have to anticipate the problems involved. The technology sector is probably problematic.

That’s good advice for both sides.

Bonus link 1: Here’s a “foreign view” published in the Global Times in August that discusses the lingering stereotype of the  Wealthy Jew in China.

Bonus link 2: There’s a tiny link on the Global Times article for True Xinjiang, which appears to be ssimilar in concept to the entertaining China Tibet Information Center and ChinaTaiwan.org.

11.17.09

Give Shila Dixon the Chen Liangyu treatment

Posted in Economy, Law and Order, Politics, Shanghai, USA at 14:59 by

You don’t actuallyneed to read this.  The issue is that the mayor of Baltimore used gift cards not intended for her to make purchases for herself, family and cronies.

Think about it.  The sitting mayor of Baltimore is on trial for petty theft.

Meanwhile, while American city mayors are bogging their cities down by committing criminal activities, Shanghai is emerging as world economic center.  Well, I suppose Shanghai did have its Chen Liangyu.

Here’s hoping Dixon meets the same fate.

09.17.09

Chinese Jeans Anger Iran

Posted in Awesome, Politics, Religion at 16:50 by

Jeans

The Guardian reports on a Chinese clothing company that has angered Iranians by creating a line of jeans bearing the Islamic expression “In the name of God, the compassionate, the merciful”.

A Chinese clothing manufacturer probably thought it was on to a winner by exporting jeans bearing the Islamic expression “In the name of God, the compassionate, the merciful” to Iran. But an otherwise sound marketing ploy was undone by one embarrassing flaw: the phrase (Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim in Arabic), which graces each of the Qur’an’s 114 chapters, was prominently displayed on the pockets of the jeans’ backsides, something likely to be seen as disrespectful by devout Muslims.

The Guardian is quoting Asriran.com who is accusing China of “attacking Iranian Muslim sacred symbols in the most offensive manner”. Also, the importers of the Jeans have been arrested.

08.14.09

Syria: U.S. Behind Riots

Posted in Politics, USA at 13:13 by

Instigators

The Middle East Media Research Institute – MEMRI reports on who the Syrians think are behind a recent disturbance in China.

In a recent article in the Syrian government daily Al-Thawra, Syrian columnist Dr. Farid Hatem Al-Shahf wrote that it was the U.S. that was instigating the rioting by the Muslim Uighur minority in Xinjiang, China. The U.S.‘s goal in doing so, he explained, was to pressure China so that it would agree to purchase U.S. government bonds and thus rescue the collapsing U.S. economy.

Another quote:

But wonder of wonders, they [the US] set up a great outcry over the Muslims of Xinjiang, who are [actually] victims of riots arranged by dubious circles in the U.S. and the West. The media, which has [always] turned a blind eye, and is still turning a blind eye, to the actions of the U.S. and its allies against Muslims all over the world, was summoned to cover the events [in Xinjiang]. It [continued to] ignore the fact that what was done and is still being done to the Muslims in China and elsewhere is clearly instigated by the U.S.

05.31.09

Double Edged Sword with no handle: China’s youth since Tiananmen

Posted in Beijing, Chinese Nationalism, Internet and Media, Law and Order, Politics, Technology at 17:23 by

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090530/ap_on_re_as/china_born_on_the_fourth/print

SHTig’s commentary to this news story are in blue

KAIFENG, China – Twenty years ago, on the night of June 3, rumors were flying about an impending military crackdown against demonstrators in Beijing. That’s when Feng Shijie’s wife went into labor in his hometown, Kaifeng.

The baby born the next morning, June 4, is now an undergraduate at Kaifeng University. After class, he plays games online or shoot hoops at a campus basketball court. He can list the latest Hollywood releases and NBA stats. But he knows next to nothing about the pro-democracy movement that ended in a bloody crackdown the day he was born nor does he care .

“My parents told me some incident happened on Tiananmen Square on my birthday but I don’t know the details and neither do they,” [so that's not true, his dad does ~ but most dads do not] says Feng Xiaoguang, an upbeat graphic design student in faux Nike shoes and an imitation Prada shirt.  The article will mention later on that young Chinese don’t have “inferiority” complexs.  How can they not have a bit of one when they wear lame faux apparel?

Xiaoguang is one of China‘s 200 million so-called ‘post-1980′ kids — a generation of mostly single children, thanks to the one-child policy and many forced abortions, born on the cusp of an unparalleled economic boom. Aged between 20 and 30, they are Web-savvy, worldly, ultra nationalist  fashion-conscious — and largely apolitical.

Asked what kind of reform the Tiananmen students were after, Xiaoguang says he doesn’t know. who besides Perry Link actually knows?  It was a protest against corruption mostly, not democracy, right?  The government has taken the crack down on corruption quite seriously.  China is still corrupt, but unlike many of its problems, it admits it is a huge problem and takes measures to combat it. 

“Did it have something to do with the conflicts between capitalism and socialism?” he asks.

It would be hard for him to know more. The subject is taboo. The demonstrations are classified as a counter-revolutionary riot and rarely mentioned in public. Textbooks touch on them fleetingly, if at all. 

Few young people are aware that millions of students, workers and average people gathered peacefully in Beijing and other cities over seven weeks in early 1989 to demand democratic reform and an end to corruption. They are not told how communist authorities finally silenced the dissent with deadly force, killing hundreds. Just like they’re not told about Cultural Revolution or Great Leap forward.  I call this China’s Suck-It-Up poltical pyschology solution.   

Chinese leaders today argue that juggernaut growth and stability since the early 1990′s prove that quelling the uprising was the right choice. Indeed, young Chinese people are materially better off now than they have perhaps ever been, with annual income per capital soaring to about 19,000 yuan ($2,760) in 2007, up from just 380 yuan ($55) in 1978.   I think that is adjusted for inflation, in which case that’s an astonishing improvement.  But then, the fault of why the country was making $55/yr/head rests squarely within this country.  Chinese people didn’t deserve to start at such a low base. 

But the tradeoff has been that young Chinese have no real role in shaping their country’s future — and may not be very interested in having one.  Really bad and dangerous.  That’s why cities like Shanghai are falling apart morally.  I suspect the moral and ethic decay is happening in the small cities and towns too, and yes I’m aware that a lot of decaying happened under Mao.  It’s getting worse.     

An official survey released this month found 75 percent of college students hoped to join the Communist Party, but 56 percent of those said they would do so to “boost their chances of finding a good job.” The rest wanted to join for personal honor — 29 percent — while 15 percent were motivated by faith in communism, said the Internet survey of 12,018 students by the People’s Tribune. Having lived in China so long, this makes sense to me.  When I’m looking thru resumes, I look for party membership as a guidepost credential.  It’s not required by any means but it shows that the person made a cut that many others cannot make.   The fact that party membership here is restricted makes me smirk at the thought of Americans who call themselves Republicans or Democrats.  America is different though; a new country built on immigration needs to give people as many “affiliations” as they want to build social ties.  Chinese society is culturally very clear of who it is and there is an ethnic affiliation.  

An accompanying commentary said students today are clearly “cold” about politics and cited concern from education experts about “extreme egotism” among the youth. Yes.  They’ve only seen things get better. 

At Peking University, a hub for the 1989 protests, only one political group cracked the top 15 extracurricular clubs — the elite Marxism Youth Study Group, reputed to be good for career networking.

The generation that demonstrated on Tiananmen Square grew up surrounded by political discussion, scripted as it often was, and lived through mass movements that demanded full public participation, notably the tumultuous Cultural Revolution that ended in 1976.

But the 1989 crackdown put an end to most public debate on the topic of whither China. Few now risk serious political discussion even behind closed doors, with good reason.  That’s true — not even behind closed doors do they talk about it.

Consider The New Youth Study Group, a short-lived club of young Beijing professionals that met privately to talk about political reform and posted essays online, including one titled “China’s democracy is fake.” Four of the members were convicted of subversion and intent to overthrow the Communist Party in May 2003 and sentenced to between 8 and 10 years in prison.  Believe it or not, this is one of the factors contributing to cultural decay.  Chinese have such a hard time organizing as strangers on any common social issue or activity, lest it be branded political.  They won’t organize ANYTHING on their own.  The consequences are horrendous — strangers are worthless, and strangers treat each other as such.   

With this fear of political dissent, it’s hard to tell whether young people like underground musician Li Yan are being shallow or shrewd when they shrug off Tiananmen. Li Yan, also known as Lucifer, was born in May 1989 and is a performing arts student in Beijing with a cultivated rebel image.  6 is a lucky number in China.  666 is really lucky.    

“Young kids like us are maybe just more into popular entertainment like Korean soap operas. … Very few people really care about that other stuff,” says Lucifer, before mounting the stage at a Beijing club to belt out “Rock ‘N Roll for Money and Sex.”

Tiananmen veterans read the reaction as apathy and lament it.

“All those magnificent ideals have been replaced by the practical pursuit of self-centered comforts,” says Bao Tong, former secretary to Zhao Ziyang, the Communist Party leader deposed for sympathizing with the 1989 protesters. “The leaders today don’t want young people to think.”  true.  This is why China is not surpassing the West.  When they fix this, watch out America.  If they don’t fix this, watch out Japan (and hope the wrong dude doesn’t get control of the weapons ~ I’ve been keeping a blacklist of names if you want it).    

According to Bao, 76, China’s youth are in the arms of the government being fed candy. They could continue this way if the economy remains strong and the government distributes wealth more equitably, he says, but he doesn’t think either is likely. I guess old people always say the young generation are not as good?  

Others say the reckless optimism of the Tiananmen era is the reason young people today lack ideals. The fearless naivete of 1989 serves as a cautionary tale, not inspiration.   That’s my boss’ experience.  He was born in the first year of the Cultural Revolution and was a Tiananmen protestor.

Sun Yi’s father was a Tiananmen-era dissident. In a self-published magazine in 1990, he openly criticized the crackdown and was soon imprisoned for speaking out. She admires her father but wonders if his sacrifices, a broken marriage and seven years in jail, were worth it.

“It was a really heroic undertaking, but still I feel he gave up so much, too much,” says Sun, a 22-year-old engineering student in Sydney, Australia. “His voice was heard by some of the people but not many, not many compared to the population in China. Is that worth it?”  No.  That’s why Chinese respond with apathy and ignoring and we blow up at beggars exploiting children.  They are actually doing it the right way and we are wrong. 

Wu Xu, 39, was a Tiananmen participant. His generation was plagued by insecurity, he says, and hoped that China could “catch up” to the West politically and economically.   My Chinese global economics professor talked at a major Shanghai university like this…when will we “catch up” with America.   

“This generation is totally different,” says Wu, author of a recent book about Chinese cybernationalism. “There is no kind of feeling of inferiority. … They have had the advantage of the last thirty years of China’s economic performance.”   Chinese should never feel inferior.  They’re anything but.  But the ultra nationalist sentiments are not helping and will not help them.   

Wu contends that China’s youth know more than they let on, and while they tend to be fiercely proud of their country they are also highly critical of their government. He calls them “a double-edged sword with no handle,” because their opinions cut in many directions and are not guided by any single ideology or organization.   That’s why the government was fine with the petitions that circulated in 2005 protesting Japan’s security council positioning, but cracked down when demonstrators tried to actually come out on the weekend to protest.  Doubled edged sword with no handle. 

Xiaoguang, the boy born that June 4, bears out the theory. He criticizes the United States for the “inadequate apology” it made after a mid-air collision between an American spy plane and a Chinese fighter jet in 2001. He is angry at CNN for allegedly exaggerating Chinese military brutality against Tibetan rioters last year. Both views parrot the government. Later though, he scoffs at classmates keen to join the Communist Party and grouses about corruption.   Brainwashed.  The facts never came out.  Both China and the US were playing war games, and there was a collision.  How can civilians from either country demand an apology as if they know what really happened.   

His convictions are worn loosely, like a fashion, and have not translated into action. Like many Chinese  and American people today, he appears satisfied with his hobbies, pop culture and other distractions.

He lives with his parents down a dusty dirt road in a simple concrete home. A grapevine snakes up a trellis in the courtyard. The family is supported his mother’s monthly 800 yuan ($117) retirement pension and his weekend odd jobs.

In his bedroom, he can watch downloaded pirate copies of Hollywood films like “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” with slapdash Chinese subtitles. At the same time, he texts friends on his Nokia phone and sends instant messages online.

His parents have scrimped and borrowed to provide their only child with these luxuries — 2,800 yuan ($410) for the computer and 500 yuan ($73) a year for the Internet connection — because he says he needs them for school.

An anxious scowl steals across Xiaoguang’s usually cheery face as his father recounts the night he was born.

A debilitating stroke ten years ago has made speaking difficult. But, with help from his wife, Feng told how he dropped his wife at the hospital on the evening of June 3, 1989, then dashed to Kaifeng’s Drum Tower where a crowd had gathered in solidarity with protesters in Beijing.

He spent an hour there and the experience inspired his son’s name, which means light of dawn.

“His name has great significance. I had just seen China‘s dawning promise and possibility.”

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc.

 

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