Friday, August 31, 2007

Hollywood Wins One

News Corp.'s Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. and five other Hollywood film studios have been awarded a total of 192,000 yuan ($25,500) in compensation from a Beijing seller of pirated DVDs, the China Court Web Site reported Friday. The case was heard in Beijing Xicheng District People's Court. The defendant was a video shop belonging to the Beijing Yongsheng Century International Cultural Development Co. The pirated films included "Lord of the Rings" and "The Day After Tomorrow," the Web site said. It didn't identify the five other studios.
Actually, the pirated films included every film produced in the last three years and 20% of the films worth watching in the last 20 years if they are anything like our DVD sellers. Expats love their DVDs. They've been after our piratiers in Shanghai and none of us like it.

England's 9/11

Here it is - what we've all been waiting for:

Why Princess Diana still fascinates us

I was walking back into the newsroom when a colleague rushed past me and, over his shoulder, turned and said: “She’s dead.”

And I said: “Don’t joke. She can’t be.”

It took a while for me to grasp what had happened. It was too big, too unthinkable.
It only gets better.... Don't forget to click on the "Videos: Remembering Princess Diana" or "FirstPerson: You Remember Princess Diana". This could keep you occupied for days -

Yes, It's Because He's Black

Here is an amusing accusation of racial bias and moral equivalence from a Ms. Kathy Rudy. . . an associate professor of women's studies at Duke University - shocked?

Vick treated his dogs very cruelly; there is no question about that. But I see one important difference between these more socially acceptable mistreatments and the anger focused on Vick: Vick is black, and most of the folks in charge of the other activities are white.
The infamous "But", followed by "white people are bad too."

Some might argue that the difference between dogfighting and these other forms of animal abuse is that dogfighting is illegal. That's true, but the fact that dogfighting is illegal while other institutions remain acceptable is because dogfighting no longer a sport of the middle and upper class.
Technically, when you combine the "middle" and "upper" classes of Americans you get a "majority". If you use wealth as the defining factor between middle and lower classes in the US, then the lower class represents about 13.3% of the population. Because we live in a democracy, there aren't a lot of issues that the lower class is going to decide unilaterally.

Dogfighting (and cock fighting) used to be "sports" enjoyed by the upper classes in the United States and were, then, perfectly legal.
In ancient Rome, the Coliseum hosted battles between the gladiators. Two hundred years ago, Americans bought and sold slaves to tend the fields and run their households. Today in many parts of the world, a woman can be stoned to death for having premarital sex. Values change. Is she advocating that Vick should go free because white upper class society enjoyed this sport 50 years ago?

In the last 50 years, however, they have become the domain mostly of blacks, Latinos and poor whites — and were ruled illegal. Now, while white middle and upper classes continue to watch horses run to the point of exhaustion and risk breaking their legs, they regard dogfighting as something that only low-class "thugs and drug dealers" find entertaining. Indeed, a reading of many of the Vick news stories indicts him and his friends as much for being involved in hip-hop subculture as for fighting dogs. Several proponents of animal rights have used the Vick case to draw attention to the widespread abuse of animals, but they are primarily trying to persuade people to become vegans.
I enjoy the Preakness as much as the next American; however, I agree horse racing needs to change. Having said that, there is no moral equivalence between sending two dogs in to kill each other and racing a thoroughbred around a track a couple of times. Dog fighting is illegal because society believes that sending two dogs into a ring with the intent and the expectation that one or both will die in the process is immoral. It is not equal to "that cow would look great on the seats in my Lexus." I have no idea what that last sentence is doing in there. Editors?

I look at this another way: If we find dogfighting unacceptable but we can live with other forms of animal abuse, what is the underlying distinction? Could it have more to do with the culture surrounding the human beings involved and less to do with the animals?
I love this form of argument. It is the same approach the global warming set uses. Some group of nuts unilaterally decides that the world is flat, or that Bush caused Katrina or that the earth will self implode in 5 years, and the argument is settled. We all agree that global warming is bad; therefore, how can you justify driving an SUV.

However, I've been involved with animal rights and animal welfare both intellectually and personally for many years now, and in my experience animal advocacy is predominantly, if not exclusively, a white movement. Animal advocates must start building coalitions with other social movements and non-white minorities if we hope to bring about widespread change for animals.
Hum. Why is animal rights a white movement. What do minorities and "lower" class individuals have in common - apparently besides dog fighting? Perhaps lack of education. Perhaps a large segment of the underclass, or "lower" class if Ms. Rudy prefers, are undereducated. Perhaps because Ms. Rudy, and this is just an assumption on my part, believes that the poor should be stuck in schools that couldn't educate cat to use a litter box while society continues to throw money to educators who still can't educate. Perhaps if parents and students a had a choice they would choose schools and educators who have proven their ability to educate students. Perhaps then "lower" class citizens could determine for themselves that dog fighting, or horse racing, is bad. But that is my soapbox issue.

Whether or not dogs are fought more by minorities than white people is actually unknown, but the media representations of the last several weeks make it appear that black culture and dogfighting are inextricably intertwined. We need to find ways to condemn dogfighting without denigrating black culture with it.
WHAT? Her whole article is geared toward trouncing white Americans for penalizing a "black sport". Where does this disclaimer come from? Does any American institution of higher learning require a writing sample before they hire these nuts? It is bad enough that she is wrong, but in her elevated position at the esteemed Duke University, she ought to be able to write.

Time to Get a Backbone

China pledged to raise standards at domestic factories and processing plants by the end of the year in a bid to restore US consumer confidence in Chinese exports, the Financial Times reported. The conciliatory tone at a Thursday media briefing in New York was a departure from the rhetoric in a domestic media campaign that aired last week criticizing foreign recalls of Chinese products as a "new trend in trade protectionism." Kuang Weilin, China's deputy consul general in New York, said there would be "zero tolerance for violators or government officials who fail to perform their duties."
Here's the problem: the domestic market is the market that needs to hear the tough rhetoric rather than the whiny trade protectionist victimization propoganda. That domestic ad blitz last week sent a message to domestic manufacturers that China's manufacturing standards are good enough. Wrong. They aren't.

This is a crummy time to send mixed messages which is all the Chinese government seems to be capable of. Hu needs to take the lead and say "By XXX X, 2008, China will have these quality standards in place and no deviations will be allowed". Then he should delegate enforcement responsibilities to his ministers and hold them accountable for enforcement.

I'm not sure why, but the Chinese roll over and play victim frequently.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Sucker

One of the negatives of Shanghai is the abundance of stray kittens. I'm not a cat person. They scratch everything, urinate on things and miao. I'd rather have a dog lifting its leg on the side of my bed.

God has a sense of humor. This is my second kitten. The first one was running up and down Beijing Lu during rush hour. It took me three or four days to find a home for it.

I discovered this one on my way home from work tonight inside my highrise complex screaming. Too young to be without its mother, of course. It is dirty and loud. So of course I take a couple of the security guards with me (always spread the fun; it makes you feel warm and fuzzy inside) trapsing through the bushes chasing this thing. They think I'm an idiot. I tend to agree.

Thankfully it likes cheese.

I'm smart enough to know it is going to take a while to get rid of it, so I immediately started calling the people in my office. How much of a raise do you want this year? So far, no takers. They must be over paid. Perhaps my new colleague from the US would like a kitten. I recall he said something about having a cat at one point in his life and he has kids. I'll have to call his wife first in case he didn't like the last cat. Most of the time if you separate the couple and corner the wife your odds improve dramatically.

Street Food

This is pretty horrible.

Never Ever Ever Eat Shanghai Street Food! Ever.

I am not one who is easily put off food, and I have happily munched on Shanghai street food in my time. However, what I saw tonight has definitely put an end to that.

Sabrina and I were walking home from Huahai Rd and were cutting through the back streets near Xintiandi when we saw two people standing in the middle of the road with a man hole cover removed from the sewer. I didn't pay them any mind at first because it is a common site to see people cleaning out the traps in the sewers with buckets on long poles.

However, I soon realised that it was dark (7.30pm) and they weren't in the normal sanitation workers blue uniforms.

As we neared I saw it was woman reaching down into the man hole with a long handled pole. The man was standing over watching. Neither were in uniform.

This piqued my curiosity so I watched what they were up to. She pulled the long handled pole up out of the hole and I could see the the small bucket on the end filled with a thick whitish semi solid gloop. It was after the second bucketful that she pulled out when the horror of the situation hit me - they were scooping fat (oil, lard whatever) out of the sewer!

Where we were was in an area awash with small street eateries. These eateries would have large amounts of oils & fats go down their sinks everyday during cooking and cleaning. Where this man hole was positioned was a grease trap that prevented the oils from moving further into the sewerage system (where it could block pipes).

So after this realisation I figured they were scooping out this oil to be reused - what else could possibly be the explanation. But so as not to be unfairly judging them, I watched as they finished cleaning out the grease trap, replaced the man hole cover and then walked over to their 3 wheel bike thing. They then poured the oil into big metal buckets that oil gets delivered in. That was the clincher.

I have no doubt in my mind that these people were removing waste oils from a grease trap (mixed with waste food, everybodies spit, cockroaches, rats turds, rust and every other nasty thing you can think of) and were collecting for reuse. Whether its for their own restaurant or for reselling I don't know - but I am not taking any chances. Sabrina told me she remembers reading a story from a few years ago where the same thing happened, the people doing it were selling the oil to the street food stalls - its cheap!

So, no more Youtiao or other foods from street vendors for us. Also, I'm sorry to have to deliver this news if you are a Shanghai street food aficionado, but it had to be said!
I don't eat street food any where - I see the delivery guys hauling the food in on their mo-peds. Nothing about the process looks sterile. The food sits out there in the sun all day and I have no idea what the turnover is.

Too Dumb to Teach?

These are the people who couldn't get jobs teaching:

THE artist behind a controversial work depicting terrorism mastermind Osama bin Laden morphing into Jesus today invited those considering her work to look a little more deeply than the obvious comparison of good and evil.

Queensland artist Priscilla Bracks denied she had deliberately set out to be offensive.

"Absolutely not, no, no. I am not interested in being offensive. I am interested in having a discussion and asking questions about how we think about our world and what we accept and what we don't accept," she said on ABC radio.

Bracks' work and a statue of the Virgin Mary wearing an Islamic burqa by Sydney artist Luke Sullivan have been entered into Australia's top religious art competition, the Blake Prize.

"But I could actually be saying it is a juxtaposition of good and evil which I see as the base level reading of that work. But then on a more sophisticated level you could perhaps look how it could be an image which is a cautionary tale, asking the question do we have to be a little bit more careful about what we focus on in the here and now."
Stupid.

The Importance of Iraq

A good article from Mark Steyn on the implications of "pulling out" of Iraq:

American victory in the Cold War looks inevitable in hindsight. It didn't seem that way in the Seventies. And, as Iran reminds us, the enduring legacy of the retreat from Vietnam was the emboldening of other enemies. The forces loosed in the Middle East bedevil to this day, in Iran, and in Lebanon, which Syria invaded shortly after the fall of Saigon and after its dictator had sneeringly told Henry Kissinger, "You've betrayed Vietnam. Someday you're going to sell out Taiwan. And we're going to be around when you get tired of Israel."

President Assad understood something that too many Americans didn't. Then as now, the anti-war debate is conducted as if it's only about the place you're fighting in: Vietnam is a quagmire, Iraq is a quagmire, so get out of the quagmire. Wrong. The " Vietnam war" was about Vietnam if you had the misfortune to live in Saigon. But if you lived in Damascus and Moscow and Havana, the Vietnam war was about America: American credibility, American purpose, American will. For our enemies today, it still is. Osama bin Laden made a bet Â-- that, pace the T-shirt slogan, "These Colors Do Run": They ran from Vietnam, and they ran from the helicopters in the desert, and from Lebanon and Somalia Â-- and they will run from Iraq and Afghanistan, because that is the nature of a soft plump ersatz-superpower that coils up in the fetal position if you prick its toe. Even Republicans like Senator John Warner seem peculiarly anxious to confirm the bin Laden characterization.

Depending on which Americans you ask, " Vietnam" can mean entirely different things. To The New York Times and the people it goes to dinner parties with, it had "few negative repercussions." And it's hardly surprising its journalists should think like that when its publisher, Pinch Sulzberger, in a commencement address last year that's almost a parody of parochial boomer narcissism, was still bragging and preening about his generation's role in ending the war three decades later. Joseph Nye, Dean of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard (which is apparently some sort of elite institution for which people pay many thousands of dollars to receive instruction from authoritative scholars such as Professor Nye), told NPR last week: "After we got out of Vietnam, the people who took over were the North Vietnamese. And that was a government which preserved order." If by "preserved order," you mean "drove a vast human tide to take to the oceans on small rickety rafts and flee for their lives."

But, if you're not a self-absorbed poseur like Mr. Sulzberger, " Vietnam" is not a "tragedy" but a betrayal.

More China Speak

The Chinese government continues to demonstrate a need for PR skills:

"If it comes down to blame, then it all lies with the U.S. side," the paper said of the Mattel magnet recall, noting that the problem was a design defect. "The Chinese manufacturer only produced according to those specifications."

A China-based company that let lead in the toy paint would be punished, but even here Mattel must share blame, the paper said, noting that the U.S. firm had worked with it for over a decade.
Why punish the China-based company if all the blame lies with the US side?

The paper said foreign media reports about unsafe Chinese food and products were exaggerated and ignored the good record of nearly all the country's exporters.
I think I predicted yesterday a contradiction on the food safety issue would arise within two weeks. It has been one day. See more below.

"If product quality is sub-standard, foreign businesses and joint ventures cannot shirk their blame", it said.
Ultimately, US companies should be responsible for insuring the quality and safety of the goods they source from China. But to suggest that Chinese manufacturers have no responsibility toward the safety of their products is a copout.

"The foreign organization does not understand how difficult it is for us to find and keep skilled workers because of stiff competition," Mark Yi, Hong Kong owner of a toy factory in Guangdong province, told the China Daily referring to the U.S.-based China Labor Watch.

"We have tried every means to improve the living and working environment of workers. My company now offers at least 30 to 50 percent higher salaries than it did three or four years ago, but we simply do not have enough workers during peak seasons."
As Mark speaks, the world's smallest violin plays softly in the background. It is difficult to attract and keep labor when workers can make more money and be treated better some place else. This problem is not unique to China.

More news on the Chinese government's efforts to convince the world it does not have quality problems with its food:

China has sent a notice to the World Health Organisation defending its food safety standards and sentenced another food and drug watchdog official for bribery, its latest moves to assure the world its exports are up to par.
. . . . Except for that whole bribery thing.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

We Never Met a Terrorist We Didn't Love

Check out this little kumbaya piece on Ahmadinejad from the AFP (France, of course). The journalist is drooling over the "simple peace loving" Jew hater and terrorist thug.

Better known for his defiance on Iran's nuclear programme, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Tuesday revealed he was a handy cook who prepares "delicious" food and regrets not spending more time at home.

In a television interview aimed at showing his personal side, Ahmadinejad made no mention of Iran's disputes with the West and instead portrayed himself as a hardworking husband who only leaves his job in the small hours.

"Before (I became president) I used to do the grocery shopping. Now sometimes I help in the kitchen and I know how to make all the Iranian food," Ahmadinejad said.

Pressed by the interviewer for more details, Ahmadinejad continued in typically defiant fashion.

"Of course what I make is delicious -- ask everyone who has eaten it! I can make all the different kinds of soups and Iranian stews," said the president.

Ahmadinejad, who has long boasted of his ability to work hard, said he is often at his desk by 5:30 am and sometimes does not leave until after midnight.

"I used to visit my relatives more but now I do so less. I see them when they are all in one place, but I regularly visit my mother and when I visit her the rest come to see me."

While sparking international controversy for comments predicting that Israel is doomed to disappear, Ahmadinejad has also sought to cultivate an image as a simple peace-loving man who offers friendship to everyone.
Actually, the controversy wasn't sparked because of a prediction from Ahmadinejad that "Israel is doomed to disappear." He said: "Israel must be wiped off the map" and "[a]lthough the main solution is for the elimination of the Zionist regime, at this stage an immediate cease-fire must be implemented", among other comments. Nice try France.

More Good News on the Climate Change Front

Climate Change May Open a New Route Between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans


L.A. in 1,000-Year Earthquake Lull

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Death Sentence Reform

This is pretty entertaining. No one in this country would voluntarily confess to anything because you are guaranteed to wind up in a wooden box.

The country's top procuratorate yesterday confirmed it had issued a guideline to streamline and standardize how prosecutors handle appeals of death sentences - a move to further ensure justice in such cases.

The guideline requires prosecutors across the country to keep detailed records of the entire process of the appeals of those sentenced to death, including the case acceptance and handling, as well as court hearing and verdicts, the Supreme People's Procuratorate (SPP) said.

Prosecutors are required to examine evidence and confessions to make sure they are not collected through illegal means such as forced confessions or threats.

SFDA Admits Food, Drug Problems

Yan Jiangying, spokeswoman of the State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA), says at a regular press conference on Wednesday (Aug. 8) that the SFDA would hold regular press conferences every two weeks to brief the media on China's food security situation. Yan admitted China''s food and drug situation was unsatisfactory and vowed to improve it.
Some time in the next two weeks a government official will lash out at the media for promoting the idea that Chinese food products are inferior. To date, this has been the pattern. An official publically admits there is a problem, and then three chastize the media and the international community for perpetuating rumors of unsafe products.

China Fires Shot

The Chinese government politely reminds the US government that it is financing American debt, and it's tired of US bullying regarding the yuan:

In a Wednesday opinion piece in the state-run China Daily, a Chinese government researcher made what sounded like a warning to U.S. policymakers not to get too tough in insisting the yuan should appreciate. The researcher, He Fan, noted that China has accumulated "a large sum of U.S. dollars" and that its holdings contribute "a great deal to maintaining the position of the U.S. dollar as an international currency." If the yuan's exchange-rate against the dollar does not remain stable, he said, China could be forced to take strong action. "The Chinese central bank will be forced to sell U.S. dollars once the [yuan] appreciates dramatically, which might lead to a mass depreciation of the U.S dollar against other currencies," wrote He, who works at the China Academy of Social Sciences. The Daily Telegraph of London also quoted Xia Bin, director of the financial research department of the State Council, which advises the Chinese cabinet, describing Beijing's foreign reserves as a "bargaining chip."
I'm with China on this one. China can't afford an unstable currency right now. And this government doesn't respond well to threats. Nor do the Chinese people. They are crafty and smart and will silently undermine your efforts.

A politician mentioned that 2007 will be a good year for US-China relations if nothing at all happens. That was best case scenario. The little rhetoric that has come from presidential hopefuls hasn't been encouraging or intelligent.

Here is more from the China Economic Review:

US President George W. Bush has warned that any attempt by Beijing to push down the value of the dollar in retaliation for US pressure over China's alleged currency manipulation would be "foolhardy." Speaking to Fox News Wednesday, Bush said he hadn't seen an article that had appeared in Britain's Daily Telegraph newspaper which cited two Chinese officials at leading Communist Party institutions as saying that a mass sell-off of US Treasuries could follow any move by Washington to impose trade sanctions to force a yuan revaluation. The president doubted the report was an official government position while US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson described a potential Chinese attack on a weakened US dollar as "absurd," AFP reported.
Secretary Paulson may view the threatened attack as "absurd", but the Chinese, if faced with an economy in ruin (following a forced revaluation), would most likely strike back.

There is an expectation that everyone thinks like we do. The Chinese have a completely homogeneous society and with a few very brief and very small exceptions always have. They have not had much exposure to "western" thinking. So they don't see things the same way US government officials do, and their behavior isn't always predictable in the same way that say, France, is. This runs true in business too.

MNC Polluters

More on the environmental front today. One of the English language rags in China put this op ed piece out there for western consumption. On one hand, I agree that western companies should hold themselves to a higher standard, even if the government doesn't. On the other hand, the article is a bit over the top given the statistics he is relying on (western companies represent .0142 of the problem).

An environmental organization named "Institute of Public & Environmental Affairs" recently released the "Name list of enterprises violating environmental protection rules." More than 7,000 enterprises have their names on the list. Of this, most are domestic enterprises, and more than 100 are multinational corporations. Some of these 100 foreign enterprises are even major polluters. Among them are some World Top 500 enterprises such as Pepsi, Whirlpool and Bosch, and some famous brands such as Nissin, Kao, etc.

Most of these transnational enterprises are European and American companies with good reputation for environmental protection. For instance, a Japanese enterprise, according to the investigation, has a total of eight local companies in Japan and seven of them reported zero pollution emissions. But in China, its company even failed to reach basic emission standards.

It is universally acknowledged that European and American countries adopt high standards in the areas of environmental protection, welfare, health security, etc. They should not have any difficulties in meeting Chinese standards technically and financially. We are so sorry to see such a large "gap". Obviously, some multinational enterprises use double standard in China.

When explaining why there are losing senses of responsibility after entering China, they usually claim that they are just making adjustment to the Chinese market. This is really a lame argument. Yes, the Chinese market has not been standardized and supervision is still far from mature, but this should not become the excuse for multinational enterprises to justify their behavior violating environmental regulation and laws and abandoning the fundamental industrial moral standards in China.
I couldn't find much running a Google search of "Institute of Public & Environmental Affairs". Assuming for the sake of argument that it is a legitimate organization, I'd say that the list of 7,000 is a bit low. Presumably that is just the 7,000 largest polluters.

If Pepsi & Co. are among the heavy polluters in China, US management should make some changes. China is an environmental disaster. It is one thing for the Chinese to trash their own country; it is something entirely different for US companies to take advantage of lax environmental laws and oversight. When US officials travel to China waiving the American flag and demanding change, the argument becomes that much more difficult to make when we are part of the problem.

Chinese Medicine

A word about the Chinese health care system. Disaster. Doctors in sophisticated cities like Shanghai are often paid less than the median income. Their revenues come from prescription drugs, leading, not surprisingly, to over prescription. This article highlights the problems associated with this approach:

Almost 70 percent of child pneumonia patients in a recent Chinese survey were resistant to drugs used to treat the disease due to overuse of antibiotics, the Health Ministry said on Monday.

The figure climbed to nearly 90 percent in a more targeted study of three children's hospitals in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, said the official Health News, published by the ministry.

Medicine abuse is making about 10,000 Chinese children deaf each year, state media said in April, putting the blame firmly on doctors and parents alike for the overuse of antibiotics
I have not been to a Chinese hospital. My colleague in Beijing accompanied a friend to a hospital for treatment of a cold (there are no traditional doctor's offices, so Chinese go to the hospital for everything, never seeing the same physician). He described a room full of chairs and saline IVs. Have a cold? The hospitals pump you full of sugar water, and you walk out bouncing off the walls with the same cold. It is an absurd system.

Doctor's specialize in particular fields. All doctors. There are no general physicians. If a patient suffers from a stomach disorder that is caused by something outside the stomach, the gastroenterologist has no ability to diagnose the problem and neither do the other doctors. The government is aware of the problem and is now encouraging general practitioners. The Chinese are aware of the problem and special care western-style hospitals are popping up for upper income and upper middle income Chinese who can afford them.

If you live in the US, be thankful.

Wrong Approach

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged China to address the issue of climate change, as she starts a three-day visit to the country. But China said that it was still catching up economically, making it harder to reduce emissions. Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao said developed nations have contributed more to climate change because they have been growing fast for 200 years.
Urging China to tackle Global Warming will get the Chancellor no where. China's environmental problems are so severe that approaching them from the "Climate Change" standpoint isn't necessary. China needs to clean up its environment for the health and safety of it residents and as part of its challenge of entering the modern world.

If the UN wants to make itself useful, it should establish reasonable targets for China similar to those of western nations (x% of China's water should be potable by 20xx). The environmental challenges should be approached in terms of "if you want to be a leading nation competing with the western world, sixteen of the top twenty dirtiest cities in the world need to be in India, not China". China responds to challenges, not threats. It is a competitive nation and a "face saving" nation.

The Chinese government is aware of its environmental problems, but it isn't about to shoulder the world's "Global Warming" problems. It will be receptive to aid (technology transfer, not money).

Algore should stop talking about useless carbon credits and purchase western environmental technology and transfer it to the Chinese. That puts money in the pockets of American businesses and gives China the technology to clean up its water and air that it cannot afford.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Take Down that Wall

Under the cover of fog, two heavily armed Palestinian militants used a rope and ladder to scale a border wall Saturday and enter Israel from Gaza, attacking an army base with explosives and gunfire before they were tracked down and killed by Israeli troops.

Militants frequently attack the Israeli border. But Saturday's infiltration was one of the few times they have managed to slip through the heavily fortified fence enclosing Gaza.

Tensions have risen further since the Islamic militant group Hamas seized control of Gaza in June.

Maj. Tal Lev-Ram, an Israeli army spokesman, said there was "an intention to carry out a large attack in Israeli territory." He said the militants were armed "head to toe" with grenades and automatic weapons.

As if we needed more evidence that the wall is a good idea, and that the Palestinians continue to be craven animals 100 years away from deserving statehood. . . .

Note how the AP writer includes this human interest story.

The infiltration was the latest incident in a spike of violence that left eight Palestinians dead in less than 24 hours. Among those killed was an 11-year-old boy shot Friday while visiting relatives in a West Bank village.
Good to get the part about the 11 year old boy in there. We find out a little later on that he lives in Israel.

In Gaza, three militant groups — the Popular Resistance Committees, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades — claimed responsibility in a joint statement.
Everyone wants in on the action.

Israel considers Hamas a terrorist group and has stepped up its activities in Gaza, launching incursions to halt rocket attacks and searching for tunnels that can be used by militants.
It's nice to know that the AP doesn't consider them terrorists, just militants.

Bush's Worst Disaster as President - Hurricane Katrina??

This amazes me:

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton returned to her favorite family vacation spot Saturday to raise money for her presidential campaign at a celebrity-studded event where she took some pointed swipes at President Bush.

Clinton—accompanied by her husband and their daughter Chelsea—smiled broadly and swayed to the music as singer Carly Simon and her two children, Ben and Sally Taylor, sang "Devoted to You" for a Martha's Vineyard crowd of more than 2,000.

Simon, along with actors Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen, showered the Clintons with praise and predicted the senator from New York will be elected as the nation's first woman president.

In her speech, the New York senator blasted the Bush administration on everything from failure to address problems with global warming to education and the economy.

She aimed her sharpest remarks at what she described as the Bush administration's "indifference and incompetence" in dealing with Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.

"It is a national disgrace," said Clinton who is traveling to New Orleans this week to mark the second anniversary of the disaster. "What happened because of Katrina was a turning point in our country."
Not the part about Carly Simon or Ted Danson and Mary Steenbergen (that is to be expected), but that the best swipe she could take was over Katrina in New Orleans. I could do better than that, and I voted for him. Twice.

This is nothing new and since she isn't stupid, I'm assuming she was speaking to her N.O. crowd in advance. But what in the &)%$ was President Bush supposed to do about a hurricane in a state he wasn't governor of prior to entering office? After the hurricane hit, THE governor of the great state of Louisiana DIDN'T want the Feds involved because she wanted to hand out the state cleanup contracts. On top of all that, the Mayor of N.O. may have proved himself to be the worst mayor in a state that has a policy of only electing the worst of the worst.

Who really wants the President of the United States running down to disaster areas for photo ops and taking over what should be a state function. Bush doesn't know what resources are available to a particular state in the middle of a crisis. I hope he doesn't know anyway. I'd prefer our president concentrate on where we are headed as a nation and let governor's be accountable for internal issues.

Gee, I Wonder Who Will Win?

Thailand's prime minister Surayud Chulanont and the Election Commission (EC) agreed on Monday to hold the general election on Dec. 23 this year.

EC Chairman Apichart Sukkhakhanont said Surayud and the EC reached a common stand that Dec. 23 would be the best timing for holding the poll.

The election will elect 480 Members of Parliament (MP) according to the new Constitution which was approved by a national referendum on Aug. 19. The past general election was held on April 2 last year, but it was annulled later since election fraud was found.
For 15 years, Thailand managed to maintain a democracy. Thaksin was a second term, popularly elected Prime Minister and generally believed throughout this region to offer hope for a country without a great deal going for it. He was re-elected in 2005 by a landslide and if he were on the ballot again today, he would likely win by a landslide again.

Thaksin was in the process of decreasing the power of the military in Thailand and getting rid of a few folks when the trouble started. The military party, CNS, accused Thaksin of corruption, tax evasion and a host of other activities and staged a military coup to regain power. Unfortunately, the popular king sided with the military for unknown reasons.

I have yet to meet anyone who thinks there is much to the election fraud claim, and most people believe he took advantage of a tax loophole in selling his stock that was probably politically stupid, but not illegal.

Thaksin's accomplishments were well-established and numerous. No one expects anything positive from CNS.

Thailand has tourism, the sex trade and silk. That's about it. Of the 3, the sex trade is probably the biggest revenue generator. All of the wealthy degenerates head to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam for their sex-capades, whether their preference is men, women, children or animals. It's all available.

Guiding Public Opinion Correctly

Chinese society may be better off without this junk on TV, but the People's Republic of China lingo in this article is great. And this is an excellent example of the quality of our government sponsored newpapers over here:

Recently, some local TV stations broadcast a program about plastic surgeries called Meilai Meili Xinyue and some other programs related with transsexual operation. These programs full of horrible and bloody scenes did not set a good example in guiding the public opinion. The contents were lowbrow and the production was made with lavish spending. Targeting at a high viewing rate, local censorship bodies neglected their duty by allowing these programs to pass censorship check too easily. The programs have stirred great controversy among the public after they were aired on TV, the notification said.

In order to guide public opinion correctly and fight against lowbrow programs, in order to raise media's influence and credibility among the public and to safeguard its good image in society, SARFT requires that starting from the day when the notification was publicized, all local broadcasting institutions should not design, produce or broadcast any programs in which the masses get involved in public events related with plastic surgeries or transsexual operations (any news, feature programs, or talk shows that focus on this topic are also forbidden). If such programs are being made or broadcast in any local radio or TV stations, they should be banned immediately.

The program contained a lot of contents about plastic surgeries. Some ordinary people were invited to the program and the whole process in which they were taking the plastic surgeries was broadcast live to the audience. Many netizens say they feel awful after seeing the detailed process of the surgeries.

Slow News Day in China

A little navel gazing by the China News:

Every city has its main color. In Paris, for example, the main color is grayish white and in London, yellowish gray becomes the dominating color of buildings in the city. What is the major color in Beijing, then? Not long ago, an authority in Beijing said that gray is the main color in the capital.

Why did he say so? Because during its 800 years of history as the national capital, gray had always appeared as the most suitable color for Beijing. It conforms to the city's local culture and its climate features.

When one strolls about the city, one can see that most of the buildings in the city are painted in gray. The quadrangles are made with gray bricks and the city wall, the walls surrounding the Forbidden City, the Temple of Heaven and the Summer Palace are all painted in gray color. Such gray is not the common "mud gray" color as we often think. It is a color mixed with a bit of blue, making it seem very clean and with an air of solemnity.
The reason that Beijing is gray is pollution. The writer is trying to romanticize dirt, fumes, and exhaust. It is in the air and on the buildings which have never been washed, and there is nothing romantic about it.

Yahoo and Microsoft Sell Out

The China operations of Yahoo and Microsoft are among a number of firms that have signed a code of conduct for their blogging businesses in the country, AFP reported. The code, which involves a "self discipline" pact under which they commit to "safeguard state and public interests," according to the China Internet Society, was signed on Friday, after the companies had announced they would agree to it on August 22. The pact "encourages" firms to register the real names and other personal details of their bloggers and also delete any "illegal or bad messages." Foreign internet companies have attracted considerable criticism for agreeing to Beijing's demands for certain content to be censored or banned. The companies argue that they have no choice but to obey local laws in China. The new code of conduct was condemned by Reporters Without Borders.
At least we know about it ahead of time (unlike Yahoo's last sell-out for which some poor Chinese guy is sitting in jail).

Punishment for Sex-Selective Abortions

China's State Council is planning tougher laws against sex-selective abortions to deal with a gender ratio that is becoming ever more skewed toward males, AFP reported. The regulations being drafted specify punishments for parents and doctors who abort fetuses after discovering they are female. Sex-selective abortions are already illegal in China - where the one-child policy means couples are more likely to abort females - but no particular punishments are tied to such acts. "The root cause is traditional thinking that boys are better than girls, especially in poverty-stricken areas," said Song Jiang, a population expert at Renmin University in Beijing. "Those people expect boys to support the family."

Because He's Pushin' Up Daisies

Newsweek's Evan Thomas ponders: "Why the US Can't Find Bin Laden"

"There hasn't been a serious lead on Osama bin Laden since early 2002," says Bruce Riedel, who recently retired as a South Asia expert at the CIA. "What we're doing now is shooting in the dark in outer space. The chances of hitting anything are zero."

How can that be? With all its spy satellites and aerial drones, killer commandos and millions in reward money, why can't the world's greatest superpower find a middle-aged, possibly ill, religious fanatic with a medieval mind-set?

Not Wishing to Leave Anything to Imagination . . .


Our last hotel in Kathmandu was a historic sight that was saved from demolition by a local architect. He traveled from demolition sight to demolition sight saving old windows, doors, beams - whatever he could retrieve - and then expanded the existing structures to accommodate more guests. I believe it may 50 or so rooms.

It was clean and boasts two excellent restaurants and a fine staff.









Kathmandu, Nepal

I've finally bothered myself to retrieve the remaining pictures from Kathmandu off the camera. Here are a few street scenes that are fairly representative.




Can't remember if I mentioned the garbage strike earlier. Anyway, there was trash everywhere. Clearly it had been going on for a while.



There were thousands of dogs, and they all resembled one another. Your choices were brown or black, with ears or without ears, male or female. A fairly homogeneous lot.



More people pics:






I'm not sure what this woman was trying to accomplish:



A word about these gentleman. They were by no means the only two in this condition. A number of others wore nothing but a heavy leather piece resembling a jock strap affixed to their groins with a heavy chain. Covering the remainder of their bodies were ashes from the nearest human cremation. In Nepal, they are considered holy men. In the US, we would consider them candidates for padded rooms. They contribute greatly to my belief that Nepal will not be joining civilization for a while.




Of course there were cows wandering everywhere: in and out of traffic, along side homes, around the temples and historical sights.





As in Tibet, prayer flags flew from every building.



Friday, August 24, 2007

UN to Israel: Commit Suicide

This should come as no surprise, but I am a staunch supporter of Israel and a staunch believer that the US should stop contributing to the abomination that is the United Nations in the hope that it could not survive without our contribution.

My opinions are based on a very large number of things, not in the least statements like these:

Israel must provide more freedom of movement in the West Bank and open crossings into Gaza to avoid driving even more Palestinians into poverty after Hamas seized the coastal strip two months ago, the United Nations Mideast envoy said Wednesday.

Israel's decision to shut Gaza's borders to all but humanitarian aid in the wake of Hamas' takeover is threatening an already badly damaged economy — and "this shows every sign of getting worse," Michael Williams said in an interview with The Associated Press and two other media outlets.

"We do not see how that can be changed short of opening additional crossing points, particularly Karni," Williams said, referring to Gaza's main cargo crossing with Israel.
It is an absurd request and will, without question, lead to Israeli deaths. That Israel continues to keep borders open for humanitarian aid is more than any of its neighbors would do for it. I do not understand that animosity that the liberal press carries toward Israel, a very liberal nation.

Chinese Government to Chinese Citizens: Behave When Traveling Abroad

This says quite a bit:

"Keep peaceful in public places, don't talk loud and avoid sticking out," said the guidelines, seen on the Foreign Ministry's Web site Tuesday.

"Don't get involved in other people's quarrels in public places," it added, a nod to the Chinese habit of gathering in large crowds to observe or even take part in others' arguments and fights.

The suggestions also urged Chinese tourists to respect local laws and not to attempt to cut corners or make threats.

"When your legal rights are violated, avoid making things worse and resolve the problem through upright channels, not through extortion or other illegal methods," the guidelines said.


Honestly, I don't recall any unpleasant incidents from Chinese tourists in America. But I'm hoping I'm around when a Chinese gentleman hacks and spits in a plastic plant at one of the airports.

The Shopping Experience

To those who have been to a "western" grocery store in China, you will empathize with my story:

Today I ran downstairs to a small grocery located in our office complex - City Super, whose name was recently changed from City Supermarket after an unpleasant trademark lawsuit brought by a Hong Kong grocer - to grab a bite to eat. I approached the checkout counter with four items, three of which were beverages.

Note that you receive ZERO assistance from the folks working there. The store has four aisles, a small bakery and a small alcove for meats, cheeses and dog food. But the people working there speak no English and have no idea what they sell. You are ultimately tasked with finding it yourself, and placement often seems random.

I scanned the four open checkout counters to see if anyone in line looked like they might use a credit card. Credit cards are the kiss of death in China because they require at least two store employees to complete the transaction making an already painful process even more arduous.

I lucked out. The outside lane had three people, one of whom was completing the transaction with cash and two of whom had under three items each. The minutes ticked by and I approached the counter. With four items. The checker greeted me politely and then scanned the first item and set it to the side. He then scanned the second item and set it to the side. Then the third item . . . . and then the fourth item . . . . There is absolutely no sense of urgency. Take all the time you need. The slower the better.

After an eternity, he was ready to start putting things in the bag. He reached down to get the bag . . . . then slowly lifted the first item in the bag. Then slowly went for the second and placed it in the bag. Then on to the third. . . . then the fourth. . . . Time to pay!!!

You always want to pay with exact change if possible - all checkers will stop the transaction to ask if you have the correct change - and in any case, avoid using a 100 yuan bill (the equivalent of around US $12). Having no small change, I pulled out a RMB 100. After promising I had nothing smaller, we began the usual examination process. Hold the RMB 100 note up to the light to examine it carefully for signs of counterfeit. Then slowly turn it over and examine the other side. It's good. Now for change.

He has to do the calculation in his head. This takes time. He opens the cash drawer and stares at the contents for a few seconds slowly deciding how much to return to me. Finally, transaction complete.

If you are raised on Wal-Mart, Alberson's, Kroger, Schnucks, whatever, this process makes you nuts. It is time intensive for absolutely no reason other than no one has suggested to the staff that speed is a factor in customer service. It is much worse in larger markets like Wal-Mart or Carrefour because people have many items and lines are much longer. Best to bring a book along to keep your mind occuppied.

As expats prepare to enter life in their homelands again, these aspects of China become intolerable. I still have a few months to go on my contract and am therefore not as prone to outbursts as others, but I'm sure it is coming.

A friend and colleague of mine from Beijing is preparing to return to his native Canada. I asked him why he thought it was time to go home. He said, "Because I don't want to become one of those grumpy old men who sits around at the bar complaining about China, and I'm headed in that direction." I understand.

Food Standards Instituted

This is interesting, but leaves many questions unanswered:

Foreign food importers will be able to tell certified Chinese food products from fake ones thanks to a "CIQ" mark that all legal food exports are required to carry on their packaging from next month.

The mark stands for China Inspection and Quarantine, which guarantees that the exports have passed quality tests, according to a regulation unveiled by the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ).
What quality standards is the government proposing to use and what tests will it take? US standards? Hopefully.

And why are those standards only used on export goods?

Keep in mind that the Chinese are capable of making a copy of a Rolex watch down the the smallest insignia on the back. 80% of all Microsoft products sold in China re counterfeit. They are able to make "antique" pottery so that even seasoned researchers have difficulty authenticating age. What prevents someone from replicating a CIQ mark?

Good Decision to Recall Defective Goods That Are Not Defective

Vice Commerce Minister Goa Hucheng has been taking lessons from Baghdad Bob:

China said Thursday that a global recall of millions of its toys was the responsible thing to do, but said that was the result of new industry standards, not poor quality.

Vice Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng said 18.2 million of the recalled products were pulled off the shelves because of a May revision of standards involving magnets. "The U.S. dealer voluntarily recalled the toys that were made and sold before 2007, which at the time conformed to standards. This is a very responsible action for the health of children and consumers," Mr. Gao said at a news conference.
"But strictly speaking, it has nothing to do with the toys' quality or its manufacturers." Mr. Gao said Mattel should also share the responsibility in the latest recall because it did not conduct "strict examinations" when it received toy shipments.
Minister Gao is talking out of both sides of his mouth. However, I agree with his assessment that Mattel should share the responsibility. Ultimately, Mattel, as retailer, should be responsible for the quality of the merchandise which carries its name.

Duel Use Restrictions

China accused the United States on Thursday of being an overly protectionist and uncooperative trading partner and urged it to loosen its high technology export controls if it wants to bring down its trade deficit with Beijing.

The United States reported a trade deficit of $235 billion with China last year, a figure that is expected to grow.
China is whining about export controls on duel use items, and it has a point. There is great frustration among some US businesses that they are prohibited from selling to the Chinese what their competitors in Australia and Europe are already selling.

If technology used in a sophisticated fire truck could potentially be used for military operations, the CIA and State Department put that duel use item on a restricted list without regard for whether the same technology is already being used in China or is being sold to the Chinese through another source.

Duel use issues generally don't come under congressional scrutiny. They don't have the time or expertise to determine whether technology is or isn't available. That falls to the generally unaccountable State Department/Pentagon.

Getting something off the restricted list is an arduous process. China is of course being a bit disingenuous for implying that restrictions on duel use items are to blame for the trade imbalance. Duel use items that should probably be unrestricted made up a small portion of trade overall.

Global Warming to Hit China

China prepares for Global Warming:

According to an Aug 22 report by the State Meteorological Administration, global warming could cut China's annual grain harvest by up to 10% by 2030, creating a strain on the country's farmland, AFP reported.
I wonder if China is gearing up to use Global Warming as an excuse for every environmental mistake it makes in the coming years. The government has already made it clear that Global Warming is a western creation, and China has no obligation to take action to mitigate or prevent this phemonenon.

In the US, you'd think we'd never had a tornado or hurricane before 2006.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Letter to the Editor

Dear Fine Citizens of Shanghai:

I appreciate that it is hot in this city. I don't like the sweat running down my back on my way to work or the steamy bursts of exhaust coming out of the buses as they roar by either. However, it is hot in other places too and people manage to dress each day. In Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, India and even Hong Kong it is just as hot if not hotter. Granted, people in these places might wear less than people in Iceland, but shirts, pants and undergarments are typically considered good form.

To the elder gentleman who stands in front of the large window of Bellagio Cafe with your boxer shorts, only boxer shorts, pulled up to your armpits, rubbing your belly through the slit in your boxers, cigarette dangling from pursed lips, please consider adding a wife-beater t-shirt to the ensemble. The diners will thank you.

To those ladies in your nightgowns at 15:00 riding your scooters down the street or shopping at Carrefour, shorts and a t-shirt aren't that much hotter and yet say so much about you - positive, that is.

To the couples who wear matching nightgowns/pajamas all day long: What the (&*^$#%^??

This isn't just about the heat, because I see you in your flannel PJs during the winter. I've heard different theories on why appearing about town dressed for bed is considered fashionable; however, I am assured that it only happens in Shanghai and Shanghai is certainly the only place I've witnessed it.

It is awkward standing next to a man of your advanced years in your boxers, dress socks and black leather dress shoes preparing to cross Beijing Avenue. Where exactly are you headed in that getup and what is your wife doing when you are getting dressed in the morning? Or is she one of the ladies in the nightgowns? And for those gentlemen thoughtful enough to at least put on PJs: Quit buying the PJs with copyright infringing Mickey Mouse on them. You look like a pedophile and that isn't a compliment.

Sincerely,
A Concerned Expat.

China's One Boy Policy

Evidence of the effectiveness of social planning by the Chinese government:

An increasing crime rate, growing demand for pornography and illegal marriage are some of the consequences that could result from the widening gender gap in China, experts have warned.

Currently, there are about 18 million more males of marrying age than females, the Xinhua News Agency said on Wednesday.

The report said it is estimated that by 2020, males between the ages of 20 and 45 will outnumber their female counterparts by 30 million.

At the moment, 119 boys are born for every 100 girls in China, Jiang Chunyun, director of the China Family Planning Association, one of the country's largest non-governmental organizations, was cited as saying by the report.
Thankfully, the one child policy is still alive and well in many sectors of China. People want boys because they are often in a better situation to financially assist their parents in their old age. As a result, abortions on demand are available on every street corner.

Miss Slackistan and the Burka Beauties

This is funny -

And a quote from the grumpy bystander:

"I cannot believe they thought people were going to laugh. No one would want to curtail freedom of speech, but it's hard to differentiate this from downright bullying."
There's always a "but" from this crowd, isn't there?

I think the use of the term "bully" here is a bit over the top. These are England's version of the guys that paint their faces yellow and green and go shirtless to a football game in Wisconsin in January too drunk to chant properly. A bit tasteless? Perhaps.

In contrast, a youth of Middle Eastern origin stabbed Theo Van Gogh in the chest after shooting him in Amsterdam. I don't remember any liberal complaining about how the "youth of Middle Eastern origin" was behaving like a bully. I heard precious little about bullying when the federal government paid to have "Piss Christ" on exhibit either.

My point is, you cannot have it both ways. Society is either tolerant, or it isn't. If you expect Christians to put away their crosses and bibles as they enter the Kingdom of Saud, I don't want to hear you bitch about how someone in America made fun of you in a parade.

What is Lateral Thinking?

You've probably been wondering . . . Well, for US $550, you can attend a seminar to find out.

Red Carpet presents
UpClose with Edward de Bono

Beijing, Monday, September 17, 2007, 10am to 3pm
The Kerry Centre Hotel

Shanghai, Thursday, September 20, 2007, 10am to 3pm
Le Royal Meridien

The man named by leading business journals as one of the 20 visionaries alive today and the pioneer of the concept of Lateral Thinking, Dr. Edward de Bono, will present his ground breaking, interactive one day seminar on creative thinking to the business communities of Beijing on 17 September 2007 and Shanghai on 20 September 2007.
Who is Dr. Edward de Bono? Embarrassed as I am to admit it, I wasn't certain either. Turns out he is:

Dr. de Bono has been teaching his creative thinking techniques worldwide to CEOs and senior executives of major corporations for more than 30 years, including IBM, Du Pont, Prudential, British Airways, NTT (Japan), Ericsson and Siemens.
Someone who appears to have a "light" resume, despite the fact he's been able to sucker large corporations into paying his way. But he writes a lot of books.

What can I hope to get for my US $550??

*think your way to a better future for yourself and your organisation
*gain a clear understanding of the logic of concept change and creative thinking
*learn creative attitudes
*master the use of powerful tools and techniques
This is a program only an HR person could love.

I want a seminar to:

*help me double my income in 2 years
*teach my dog to go to the bathroom outside
*teach me to rearrange the letters of my last name so that they spell "Walton"
*teach me to politely address flagrant dress code violations in the office

I'd pay US $550 for that.

Editor Found

It turns out that the mine bosses were not responsible for the flash floods as reported yesterday by the China Economic Review. I'm sure they were relieved.

Li Xueju, China's civil affairs minister, said that a recent major mining accident involving a flooded coal mine was a "natural disaster," AP reported. "The disaster was caused by heavy rain, not problems within the mine, so it was decided that this was a natural disaster," said Li. Some 181 miners were trapped in two flooded mines in Shandong province on August 18. Rescue efforts have proven futile - officials have said that it will take 100 days to drain the floodwaters - and the miners have been presumed dead. Most of the workers were trapped in a mine owned by Huayuan Mining Co. The mine's bosses have been accused of ignoring warning signs that could have averted the accident. Mining accidents in China kill an average of 13 miners a day, according to official figures.

Japan Sticks it to China Again

This will go over well:

Japan's prime minister, Shinzo Abe asked India to join his country to create the Asian links in an "arc of freedom" that would exclude China, the South China Morning Post reported. Abe introduced his idea of an "arc of freedom and prosperity" that would include Australia and the United States, but made no mention of China. "This partnership is an association in which we share fundamental values such as freedom, democracy and respect for basic human rights," Abe said.
I've described the Chinese/Japanese relationship before. It isn't good. And it is largely Japan's fault which is saying a lot considering how China conducts its foreign policy. When you have two countries wrapped up in "face" saving and one of them is particularly arrogant (Japan) it is difficult to maintain a strong bond.

China to Support Homeless

Tourist spots and western hangouts are hoppin' joints for the beggars in Shanghai.

The Chinese government has extended its cost of living benefits to all beggars and homeless people, Deputy Minister of Civil Affairs Li Liguo said at a press conference on Wednesday.

Li listed three main causes of begging in China: "Some become beggars because of poverty, but a few choose begging as their profession and some are coerced into becoming beggars."
I know there are some who are truly unable to get jobs - they are pretty obvious. You can't miss them. Their deformities are unlike those you would find in the States.

Then there are the others. One of the gals that works in our office took the bus every morning with a grandmother who got off at the same stop my colleague did to sit down and beg all day. Her young well dressed son always accompanied her to the bus. My colleague finally approached her to ask why she begged. She said she was bored, and it was something to do. Her son, she said, discouraged her from begging because the family had enough money. But, she felt it gave her something to do, and she enjoyed talking to people.

This may have been an isolated incident. There are rumors of women picking up orphans at the orphanages and using them to beg during the day. There are lots of children begging often with their parents standing over to the side encouraging them. There are rumors of begging rings.

An expat sent around an email the other day to say he had been accosted at the Kerry Centre by a number of female beggars (with children of course) after he withdrew money from the ATM. They beat him over the head until he was bleeding and had to go to the hospital. But he proudly claimed that they did not get his money.

China Blocks US Soybeans

More of the same from China:

China, the world's biggest buyer of soybeans, said it found ``substantial'' quality-related problems with imports of the U.S. oilseed and urged the U.S. to investigate and improve its export procedures.

Soybeans shipped from the U.S. often contained low-grade seeds, as well as weeds which may threaten the local environment, the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection, and Quarantine said in a statement on its Web site today. Some shipments had fungicide residue, it said.
I think conceptually, China doesn't understand quality. You see this in much of what it produces, particularly compared to Japan. Japan's quality standards far exceed the US - they demand almost total perfection in everything from packaging to functionality.

To the Chinese, just turning the corner for Mao's self imposed extreme poverty, making a buck is more important. They are short term thinkers; there is no link between excellent quality today and profits tomorrow. This thinking is pervasive. It dominates every industry.

When you go to Carrefour or the electronics market to buy a DVD player, the sales clerk will insist on plugging the item in before the purchase. About 1/3 of the products (hair dryers, TVs, DVD players) don't work straight off the line. The first DVD player I selected did not function - I was glad the clerk plugged it in at the store. This percentage is acceptable to the Chinese. It is good enough.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Slow News Day

Here is a surprise:

Women the world over find veil limits job choice

Aysha Obeid couldn't get a job as a shop assistant in Dubai because of the veil that covered her face, exposing only her eyes to the outside world. So to improve her employment prospects, Obeid stopped wearing the veil.

"No one takes women with niqab in the retail sector," said Obeid, 22.

While women who cover up for their faith may expect problems getting some kinds of work outside the Muslim world, those in the region also say they have trouble getting jobs -- particularly ones requiring them to interact with the public.
How about "Archaic Practice Limits Career Choices".

Back in America, a concerned columnist for CNN covers Rehan Seyam, a New Jersey Muslim who made a soul searching decision to wear a hijab and now complains about her treatment in general, and in particular last Christmas at Wal-Mart:

Seeing her distinctive traditional Muslim head covering called a "hijab," a man in the store, addressing her directly, sang "The 12 Days of Christmas" using insulting lyrics about terrorism and Osama bin Laden.

She was stunned.

"Do I look like a terrorist to you?" Seyam said she asked the man.

According to Seyam, the man replied, "What else does a terrorist look like?"

Such stories are not altogether uncommon for Muslim Americans. According to a recent poll by the Pew Research Center, 53 percent of Muslims living in America said it has become more difficult to be a Muslim in the United States since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Fifty-one percent said they are "very worried" or "somewhat worried" that women wearing the hijab are treated poorly, according to the poll.
The gentleman's behavior was mean-spirited and in poor taste; however, the columnist's premise that after 9/11, "it has become more difficult to be a Muslim in the United States" begs the question: And . . .

Muslim terrorists killed 3000 people and the Muslim population in America was largely silent. Their leadership wasn't: it immediately began precondemning acts of aggression toward Muslims that never happened (outside of a small handful of cases). Americans looked for a sign after the attacks that the American Muslim population stood with them against the perpetrators. In most cases it never came.

"Kingdom of the Bike"

Beijing has stumbled upon a new technique to reduce pollution in advance of the Beijing Olympics. It has spent the last 5 years doing what it can to discourage bikes and scooters, so the Beijingers must be a bit confused.

[A]uthorities in the city are hoping a new bike promotion campaign will be equally popular and reinforce its status as the capital of the "Kingdom of the Bike".

Following the success of the car reduction test event, which ended yesterday and recorded four consecutive days of Grade II air quality, the government on Saturday unveiled a new bike rental scheme to maintain the momentum.
Actually, according to the Olympic's Committee, the car reduction test event wasn't terribly successful.

Under the scheme, 50,000 bikes will be available for rent soon throughout the city. They will cost 100 yuan ($13) for a one-year contract or 20 yuan per day. Users have to pay a 400- yuan deposit, but this is refunded, less annual rental fees, on return of the bike.
Consider that a fairly new bike only costs 200- yuan, and the rider can forego the 400- yuan deposit.

Regular repairs and an old-for-new exchange service are also included in the price.
I can't imagine this appeals to most Chinese. There are bicycle repair shops on every corner and repairs seem to run less than 10 yuan.

In recent months, the Beijing government has been running trials of the service in 31 locations across the city.

"It has proved really popular, so it is worth rolling it out across the city," Du Shaozhong, deputy director of the Beijing municipal environmental protection bureau was quoted by the Beijing News as saying.

It is estimated the rental network will cover some 200 locations by the time of next year's Olympics in a bid to ease traffic congestion.

"Bikes have never become outdated in China, and they are even starting to have an impact on cities around the world," Du said.

A China Daily poll found most people were in favor of the scheme, saying it would help reduce pollution and ease traffic congestion.

At the end of 2003, Beijing had more than 10 million registered bicycles.
I like the bike idea even if I'm not willing to sacrifice my own life to ride one. One of the attractions of Shanghai is all the bicycles in mass chaos in the morning. Many areas of Shanghai have discouraged bikes for years, but the City also discourages cars (US $6,000 per license plate is a bit steep) which is a bit tricky.

Wanted: Positions Now Available at Power Plant

I'm not sure whether this legislation is designed to deter terrorism or job dissatisfaction, but it appears a bit over-the-top.

China will apply death penalty to those who damaged electric power facilities, resulting in serious consequences, according to a new judicial interpretation which takes effect on Tuesday.

Anyone who damaged electric power facilities and caused following four types of serious consequences will be sentenced to imprisonment for 10 years, life imprisonment and even death penalty, according to the judicial interpretation issued by the Supreme People's Court (SPC) of China on Monday.

In line with article 119 of China's criminal law, the four kinds of grave consequences brought about by the destruction of electric power facilities are as follows:

-- killing one or more people, seriously injuring at least three people, or slightly injuring 10 people or more;

-- causing power cut for six hours or longer which affects the life of 10,000 households or industrial production;

-- leaving direct economic losses of over 1 million yuan (131,500 U.S. dollars) and

-- causing other serious consequences that endangered public security.

The interpretation said those who negligently sabotaged electric power facilities but caused serious consequences will also be sentenced to imprisonment ranging from three to seven years.
Apparently, this has been a big problem up until now. Too bad all the human rights protesters are tied up at Guantanamo Bay.

Nike Wins IPR Lawsuit Vs. Chinese Manufacturers

This is great news. The problem of course will be in enforcement of the judgment, but the win sends a message.

U.S. sportswear giant Nike has won lawsuits against two Chinese shoemakers and a Shanghai-based French supermarket over copyright infringement of its Air Jordan logos.

The Shanghai No.2 Intermediate Court ordered the supermarket and the shoemakers to pay damages totaling 350,000 yuan (about 46,000 U.S. dollars).

The court heard that Nike employees succeeded in buying four pairs of sports shoes bearing logos identical to its copyrighted Air Jordan Logo of former NBA star Michael Jordan slam-dunking a basketball in three outlets of Auchan in Shanghai.

The shoes were manufactured by Jinjiang Longzhibu Shoes Company and Jinjiang Kangwei Shoes Company in east China's Fujian Province.
The reference to the French supermarket would be Carrefour, an enormous (referring to store size) chain competing with Wal-Mart in China. I hope Nike takes them to task separately in the US or France. Curiously, the Chinese have as much distain for the French as the rest of the world - excluding, possibly, Belgium -, and they arrived at their opinions independently.

The Public Relations Saga Continues

One step forward:

The government is to establish its first database on the inspection and quarantine of imports and exports to keep producers up to date with the latest safety requirements, the country's top quality control watchdog said yesterday.

Commodities in the database will fall into 154 categories under 14 major catalogs, such as animals and related products, plants and related products, food and food packaging, cosmetics, textiles, and chemical and mineral products, a statement from the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ) said.
Two steps back:

China has returned 272 heart pacemakers imported from the United States after they failed quality inspections, China's top quality control agency announced on Monday.
Following the quality control issue resembles a tennis match. The US/Korea/Japan/Europe discovers a serious quality issue with a Chinese product and the Chinese government detains or rejects an [usually] American product. As long as the government treats this issue as a public relations problem the "Made in China" label will continue to symbolize substandard quality.

Eat More Pork, Government Urges

Here is the problem with having a closed society with no transparency and no free press. Stories like this one fail to restore confidence.

A disease that has killed hundreds of thousands of pigs in China is now under control, according to Jia Youling, the Ministry of Agriculture's chief veterinary officer. Jia said initial rumours that millions of pigs died from the disease were exaggerated, and that a vaccine had been developed and distributed to stricken regions, AFP reported. He said 100 million pigs had been vaccinated, while 175,000 had been culled and 68,000 have died of the disease in China so far.
Observing the government flumbling through bad press on tainted toothpaste provides no comfort that it would handle diseased cattle skillfully.

I was told by someone well placed and familiar with Chinese operations that China had no system for addressing a pandemic or mass outbreak of any kind.

Corporate Social Responsibility

This report raises a reasonable question: Do MNC's have an obligation to ensure that their suppliers follow labor and wage requirements of the host country? Wal-Mart uses its best efforts to do so and still gets slammed by groups like this.

A report by China Labor Watch, a US-based workers' rights group, found "brutal conditions" and labor violations at eight Chinese factories making toys for multinational corporations, Reuters reported. It accused several of the world's top toy brands, including Disney, Bandai and Hasbro, of paying "little heed to the most basic standards of the country," with low wages, no benefits, dangerous work environments and humiliating living conditions.
From a social responsibility standpoint, I think it is a wise move, as long as everyone realizes that only the US will be doing it. Japan, Korea, India, Europe, forget it.

I haven't read the underlying report, but the article fails to mention how many Chinese factories it surveyed. If it surveyed 150 and only 8 were a mess, that's a pretty good track record for the toy brands.