Capturing China: 2003-12-19

by Joe Katzman at December 19, 2003 4:52 PM

Winds of Change.NET Regional Briefings run on Tuesdays & Wednesdays, and sometimes Fridays too. This Regional Briefing focuses on China, courtesy of Adam Morris of Brainysmurf and PRC News. You may want to use the "print friendly" icon in the upper left corner for this one.

Top Stories:

  • Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao visits Washington and wins some very pro-China language from Bush. Taiwan's President, Chen Shuibian, wants to have a referendum on Chinese missiles pointed at the mainland but Bush said that it would be a change from the status quo. Last we heard from Chen he was daring the mainland to lob some missiles his way.
  • Richard of Peking Duck, interviews a Shanghai-based protester during the 1989 Democracy movement ... and finds that he's totally flip-flopped on his political views. A snippet: "Looking back, I firmly believe the government did the right thing ... let's live with Communism for now and change things one thing at a time."

Further topics include: Various takes on the PRC and Taiwan give-and-take ... Native Chinese interaction with expat bloggers ... The Information Revolution is coming to town ... Economic indicators ... Asian Weblog Awards ... And your one-stop shopping for China-based blog commentary.

Taiwan is an inalienable part of China, er, well maybe not

  • Bush's licking Taiwan on changing the status quo got Tacitus to say it's odd that the administration would disapprove of Taiwan's exercise in democracy, and Calpundit responds it's just another rhetorical speech. Brainysmurf disagrees and says it's at least bad politics and may even mean a change in policy. Meanwhile the Gweilo takes Wen to task for some of his less enlightened comments during the trip.
  • Native Beijing blogger Hailey Xie provides a rare look into what many Chinese think on the Taiwan/China issue. She has a post written for a foreign audience here, and snippets of an earlier post as well as a discussion on it can be found here. Before choosing to comment though, consider that people such as Hailey are resources that we shouldn't attack with scathing comments.
  • Parapundit provides a link fest on the issue as well as some deep-cutting questions, and points to the growing economic inter-dependence with the PRC and the US as reason to believe the US will have no choice but to choose the PRC over Taiwan.

The Information Revolution -- with Chinese characteristics

  • China Digital News tells us that "Twenty-five percent of Chinese city dwellers (especially small cities) are regular Internet users... Nearly 85% of them were below the age of 35."
  • So far this year both times Iraq was huge in the news China offered live news coverage of the events. During the Iraq War II it got unprecedented live coverage with no censoring. When Saddam was covered the same happened, as Living in China tells us, although Voluntarily in China says it was rudely interrupted by a talking foreigner figure in the middle of the broadcast. Nonetheless, the news agency is learning the value of live feeds.

Economic activity

China-related discussions

Etcetera:

  • Zhuhai (in southern China)'s night life hasn't been the festive party it once was, but that's because of China's biggest sex crime involving three Japanese tourists and their "comfort tour" with reportedly hundreds of prostitutes led to a court case and a crackdown on the partying there. The reported orgy resulted in a repeat of anti-Japanese feelings, and the pimps got life in prison. It also resulted in some great fodder for a bad soap opera.
  • Media in China notes that Shanghai is banning bicycles on the streets, a policy that is becoming more and more standard as they interfere with traffic flow and the rising number of automobiles.
  • Taiwan-based blogger A Better Tomorrow found an online version of the book Formosa Betrayed. Quite possibly your one-stop source for decoding the history of Taiwan.
  • Vote for your favorite Asia-based blogs, or bookmark ones you've discovered for the first time, over at the first annual Asia Weblog Awards. A lot of work was put by Phil and everyone taking part in it says that the best part about it is the grand blogroll that's been created. Perfect for a lazy holiday afternoon of web surfing.
  • Finally, most China- and Hong Kong-based bloggers are gathered around a community with the central location of Living in China. It has its own original postings, photos, and most notably a constantly updated aggregator of RSS feeds from participating blogs that lets readers check out the latest in China-based blogs. Thoughts and reflections on the site by participants can be found here and here.


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