Tag Archives: CCP

China bound for reform or repeating history?

19 Mar

Was Bo Xilai an enforcer of justice on the corrupt or a corrupt enforcer of justice?

In reading up on some of the fallout from China’s NPC and CPPCC, I keep coming back to this one particular quote. Early in the Qin dynasty, the man perhaps most responsible for the creation of singular Chinese state, Lord Shang, wrote:

To club together and keep your mouth shut is to be good; to be alienated from and spy on each other is to be a scoundrel. If you glorify the good, errors will be hidden; if you put scoundrels in charge, crime will be punished. (Fairbank)

So then the question becomes, who is the scoundrel? Is it better to hide errors and be thought of as good? Is it better to empower the scoundrel if it means justice will be wrought?

Is Bo Xilai a scoundrel or was he just part of the club? Is the CCP a club, or a scoundrel in its own right? Is China better of with a scoundrel at the head? Is justice worth suffering at the hands of that scoundrel?

 

New marriage law in China favors men?

30 Aug

Swarms of Chinese newlyweds pose for the perfunctory wedding photo shoot on the beach in Xiamen, Fujian.

A new interpretation of China’s marriage law is fueling some interesting “debate” in the Sinosphere.

The crux of this new interpretation stipulates the party to provide initial payment on a home or car is entitled to that property in the event of a divorce, unless initially stipulated as joint-ownership. In a sense, it is a mandated pre-nup.

Traditionally in China, the groom’s family will provide the down payment for a new apartment, and the spouse’s will furnish and decorate it. So, by extension, this new rule seemingly guarantees that if a couple is to divorce, the man gets their home. (Note on semantics: Rough guess, I would say 90% of Chinese live in apartments. It drives me nuts when people call them a “house.” Am I nuts here? They’re homes, not houses, right?)

Women are apparently “outraged,” according to some media reports.

Now, before I get into the wackiness of this story in general, let me get something off my chest: The way Chinese conceptualize marriage is borderline insanity.

OK, maybe it’s just bizarre. But for most, and in many ways, it’s like puppy love en masse– all cutesy, and lovey, and cuddly, and teddy bears. And then, at some point, boom! The switch flips, and it’s old school king of the castle, male-dominated, know-your-role-woman kind of stuff.

A couple of quick anecdotes to set a little context here:

1. Studying in Shanghai, I once got into this bizarro-world conversation with a young Chinese girl. When I told her I was heading back to the US to visit my family for Christmas, she responded, “Wow, aren’t you scared? You are almost 25 and don’t even have a girlfriend.” She was 23. And single. After assuring her I was not scared, she sort of scoffed. “Well, I will definitely be married by 25.” Baffled, I asked her how she could be so confident she would meet Mr. Right in the next 14 months. “I will just find someone suitable and learn to love him. You foreigners don’t understand love. We Chinese love each other forever.”

2. I used to work with a young Chinese guy in Shanghai. Real cool kid. Handsome, pretty funny. He worried obsessively about when his parents would buy him a new apartment. He was 24. They had already bought him a brand new car, but he told me it wasn’t enough to woo a Shanghainese wife.

As The Globe and Mail put it,

Owning your own house has long been seen as a prerequisite to getting married in China. A survey released on Valentine’s Day this year found that only 38 per cent of women would be willing to enter a so-called “naked marriage,” the popular term for a wedding held without first purchasing a house and car.

But skyrocketing real estate costs have forced more and more young Chinese to turn to their parents for help in achieving that goal, and the court hinted that its real aim was to protect the rights of parents who invested their life savings in a home for what is often their only child.

I knew a bunch of people like this at the TV station. One host drove a new Mercedez his parents had bought for him. His monthly salary was a shade over a $1000USD/mo. Yet, he was ballin’. For an apartment? A square foot of real estate in Shanghai can cost you up to $8200USD. That’s about the equivalent to most annual salaries.

3. When I was living in Xiamen, I was lucky enough to meet a group of awesome young 30-year-old guys who fell into the “rich second generation” category. Their parents had started factories, and now they were reaping the benefits. Through them I met one character with whom we used to party. He had a mistress who lived in my building, in an apartment he paid for. He had a handful of other girlfriends in Xiamen that he met regularly. Back in his home town, a bout an hour away, he had a wife and a child. All of them new about each other, and they didn’t apparently mind, as long as he could maintain bankrolling all of their interests simultaneously.

So here’s the deal: You’ve got a huge population that faces a lot of parental pressure to abide by traditional rules and marry young. Keep in mind, in China an unmarried 25-year-old is called 剩女, or left-over woman; in Taiwan, they’re called 败犬, meaning “defeated dog”. Endearing, no?

In the case of the average middle-class Chinese, you have a young kid who has lived at home his/her entire life, with the possible exception of college. Growing up, most Chinese kids never work and aren’t even allowed to date, as parents feel time should be spent studying. After all, passing the 高考 to get into college is equivalent to providing your family’s future. So, these kids have little to no experience dating, and have never had to deal with any adult responsibilities.

So, two kids who like Hello Kitty and playing computer games together get married because they are in love. They take some pictures in special outfits. Collect a couple 红包, have mom and dad buy a house, and, just like that, they’re supposed to go hand-in-hand until they “have white hair,” as they say in Chinese.

Now comes the social pressure. It’s all about “Keeping up with the Wangs” and climbing the social ladder. Infatuation with wealth is universal, and Chinese are no different. In fact, the pursuit of wealth at all costs may be even more intense, as China’s booming economy makes it seem easily attainable.

Women, in particular, have dropped the veil on their social aims. Ma Nuo, a now infamous dating show contestant, once rejected a guy saying she “would rather cry in a BMW than laugh on a bicycle” with him. And she’s not alone,

“I would choose a luxury house over a boyfriend that always makes me happy without hesitation,” said one 24-year-old contestant on If You Are the One, one of China’s most popular television dating shows.” And my boyfriend has to have a monthly salary of 200,000 yuan [$31,000USD],” she demanded. (link)

Eager to impress, the husband joins the Communist Party to increase his chances of being promoted. He starts going out with the boys club. The bougie banquet dinners, the 白酒 drinking, the dirty KTV– eventually, he finds himself a young mistress. A 小三 or a 小老婆 (literally, a “little three” or “little wife”), is pretty much par for the course in China. I’ve actually met women who tell me they would feel ashamed if they married a man who didn’t merit mistresses.

Where does all this lead? All the pressure to abide by traditional social norms? The powerful, bread-winning man? The young, beautiful bride? Marrying young? Well…

Divorce, once extremely rare in Chinese society, is on the rise. There were nearly two million registered divorces in 2010, up 14.5 per cent from the previous year. The country’s divorce rate has more than quadrupled – from 0.4 per 1,000 people in 1985 to 1.85 per 1,000 in 2009 – since the country began a jarring economic transition that has put far more money, and all the issues that come with it, into the hands of ordinary Chinese.

Mo’ money, mo’ problems for young Chinese.

Does this new marriage caveat really favor men? Or does it protect families?

Does it discount women’s contributions to families and disregard the hardship of child birth? Or does it serve as a warning to gold-diggers?

Does it encourage men to cheat? Or does it promote marriages based on the right reasons in the first place?

Click here to see what Chinese netizens are saying in blogs, or here to how housing speculators are viewing the news.

Boom & Bust: The Story of Eco-cities in China

25 May

Every once in a while I like to ruffle people’s feathers by calling China the most progressive country in the world. Is it? I wouldn’t even know how to begin qualifying that statement, but certainly, from a quantitative view, China is the Vin Diesel of reform: fast and furious, hit and miss.

All aboard the bus to a greener future in China!

One thing I admire about the Chinese is their sense of urgency. In a country increasingly eco-ambitious, the government’s efforts to tackle social and environmental issues have been forthright. History’s largest urbanization has forced the CCP’s hand, but it has– at least domestically– shown plenty of bravado.

The Project 2049 Institute recently took a look at the boom-and-bust nature of China’s on-going efforts to build sustainable eco-cities. The article, “The Rise of China’s Eco-cities: A Harbinger of a Sustainable Future?”, does a laudable job of providing some perspective to the country’s pursuits.

If successfully implemented, China’s efforts at constructing eco-cities would not only revamp the urban landscape and improve high-density living conditions, but also reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change. China’s eco-construction sector is an attractive, profitable investment opportunity despite the existence of bureaucratic boundaries, but such projects are at risk of failure due to abandonment, unaffordability, poor management, and lack of local expertise.

China had as many as 168 eco-projects underway by last year, according to the institute.  In a country nearing the brink of complete ecological collapse, the scale of the solution must match that of the problem: massive.

Now, there’s a lot of rhetoric to sort through when it comes to discussing the environment in China and how it’s handling eco-crises. Let me say this, while the government certainly didn’t do itself any favors in Copenhagen a few years back, it did what it had to. As long as the economy is stable, the CCP will have plenty of spare change to drop on projects like eco-cities and to invest in green technology. These guys aren’t imbeciles. They can see the writing on the wall– it’s in green crayon. A child could read it.

The message, to paraphrase GG, is clear: “Green is good.” It’s going to line the pockets of the next great superpower. So, yes, the question so often repeated is a valid one: Is China going to lead the world’s green economy?

Tough to say at this point– but I haven’t heard of 168 eco-cities under construction in the US.

China’s “Communist Blocks”

22 Mar

Chinese netizens have begun a viral campaign to post photos of local government buildings. Chinasmack has translated some of the comments and posted photos from some of the country’s most popular BBS forums here.

Go to Chinasmack.com to see more photos.

My friend Mike and I would always harp on the excessive brutishness of China’s government buildings. Discussing our own experiences travelling throughout the country, we came up with a set of laws:

People from Wenzhou are known to love showing off their wealth. Apparently, this goes for the local government as well.

1. In any given city, county, or dirt road village, the three nicest buildings in town will be the government office, the State Grid electric office, and the China Telecom office (all state-run).

I've been to Wuxi. Next to nothing happening there, but big interest in turning it into an industrial zone.

2. Of each government building, 7 out of 10 offices are empty or unused.

I'm thinking the missing windows are unfinished offices. Zero percent chance this place is full.

3. Of the 3 in 10 offices used, the three principle activities being carried out inside will be (1) smoking cigarettes, (2) drinking tea, (3) napping. Honorable mention: playing ping pong, drinking baijiu, writing threatening letters to local land owners or environmental advocates.

Walked by this building dozens of times, never saw more than one or two people going in and out.

4. Never forget that China’s government buildings primary purpose is intimidation to the masses, straight out of the old USSR handbook. “Look upon my works, ye mighty, and despair!”

I've never even heard of Jiujiang.5. China’s government buildings will always be the last to collapse in a disaster (i.e. Sichuan 2008) or fall in a war. They look like bunkers because they are bunkers.

Let's see... concrete? Check.

6. For every Chinese that thinks of the buildings as excessive and wasteful there are two that are proud of its representing a strong China.

By far my favorite. I wonder why?

CCP Will Not Fall

21 Feb

 

Police talk to a couple of men filming interviews in Chengdu's central Tianfu square while I was on vacation there last year.

Don’t hold your breath. Recent news of protests in China will not amount to revolutionary change as seen in the Middle East. But damn you, CCP, for perpetuating this interminable argumentative paradox.

 

It’s safe to say that most foreigners who have earned the expatriate title living in China have a love-hate relationship with the country. Obviously, most find enough weight on the pro side of the scale to remain. Still the vicissitudes of daily life provide ample sway.

While in China, friends and I seem to spend an inordinate amount of time blasting the inconsistent rationality of most things Chinese. Yet, as soon as I return home, the tables turn. I find myself unwittingly and yet seemingly forced to defend China, warts and all.

A perfect example of this behavioral paradox manifested itself this weekend. I was reading Michael Turton’s blog, a man I generally agree with and find quite insightful. He posted something to the effect of the Confucius Institute is a covert international spy network set up by the CCP. It was bold, and reaching; I saved the link.

China’s lack of an exportable (soft) culture is seen as a huge hole in its PR toolbox. There are plans aplenty to rectify this. For instance, the government has promised millions in funding to try to set up a 24-hour English news channel a la BBC or CNN. The idea being that it could spread the “China voice,” more effectively exposing the world to the country’s (read: the CCP’s) opinion on international matters. The Confucius Institute, essentially a mandarin language center, has been the party’s most successful attempt at garnering an allegedly non-political and respectable Chinese presence abroad.

It should come as no surprise that candidates hoping to work for the institute are thoroughly vetted by the supervising body. Foremost is the increasingly illogical yet persistent fear of a country offering a visa to a Chinese who might defect and never return home. But beyond that, I am sure the powers that be want those representing the country to be loyal and patriotic– as would any state-run enterprise abroad.

Stories of spy games and blacklisting seem to me unsubstantiated at best and not surprising to say the least. To assume government organizations abroad are not players in international policy is foolish. Not to sound like a conspiracy theorist myself, but I think US history (most notably Central and South America) assures us that our own “national interests” have met these means over the years.

So right as I was about to post this rebuttal, the CCP went ahead and made itself look like an asshole again locking up alleged dissidents for fear of Middle East-inspired protests. I certainly don’t condone or support this effort, yet it also doesn’t surprise me.

Unlike the Northern African nations who are just now realizing they played their cards wrong, the CCP has China by the balls. The New York Times and others calling the crack down a show of “nervousness” is more than a stretch. Reports peg the number of arrests and lockdowns at around 90. Mind you that Chinese authorities could arrest the entire population of Bahrain, Libya, Tunisia and Egypt combined and there would still be 1.2 billion people going about business as usual.

The amazing, albeit horrifying, aspect of these events is the individual willingness within the police state to crack down on dissidents. There must be at least a few intelligence officers who go home at night and scrub their hands until they bleed. But for whatever reason, I imagine that number to be practically infinitesimal. The fact that unknown streams of normal netizens log on as pro bono nationalist hackers is a quick reminder of how strong support for the party remains.

So come what may of these arrests, the CCP isn’t going to flinch. These North African regimes are falling because they have failed to provide basic societal needs– security and opportunity. While they have ignored festering tensions among the masses, the CCP has not. There is a brutal mastery in manipulation of public accord, a wave of the wand China knows well.

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