Showing posts with label Cultural Revolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cultural Revolution. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Sun Wenguang: The Bastard Who Won't Stop

At 80, Sun Wenguang probably has the dubious honor of being China's oldest pro-democracy activist.  At sensitive times of the Chinese calender - the anniversary of the Tienanmen Square massacre, the anniversary of the Sichuan Earthquake to name but two - a guard is placed on duty outside his apartment.  During the Bo Xi Lai trial last month, a government rent-a-goon prevented his door from evening opening.
"I am, in their view, a bastard who just won't stop," he says, chuckling in his study late one night after his monitors had left"If my rights are infringed then I have to fight back. I can't just give up my rights."

Branded a counter-revolutionary at the height of the Cultural Revolution, Sun was sent to prisons camps across the country, and was locked up in 1974.  He used the time to contemplate the problems dogging China and it's Communist leadership.  His books, the first one containing essays he wrote on toilet paper using straw from his bed as a pen, eventually earned him a ban on ever leaving the Chinese mainland.

Unlike many from his generation, who've long since given up any hope of political reform in China, he carries on with a determination rarely found in the newer generation of activists.  Directly challenging the authorities instead of trying follow China's malleable laws, he is, as Hu Jia puts it, an icon for Chinese dissidents.


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Monday, September 16, 2013

Qiushi Lambasts Critical Posts Online

Hammering the message home that online message criticizing the government is A Bad Thing, the Communist Party's own journal has come out with some gems.  "Seeking Truth", a magazine, and highly effective cure for insomnia has said that online rumours are no better than the "big character posters" that were put up during The Cultural Revolution, often attacking an establishment or individual as being "bourgeois" or "counter-revolutionary".
“There are some who make use of the open freedom of cyberspace to engage in wanton defamation, attacking the party and the government.  The Internet is full of all kinds of negative news and critical voices saying the government only does bad things and everything it says is wrong.”

Yes, the Chinese government is coming up against that most insidious of terrorist insurgent - a person who goes online and whines about the government fouling things up.  Descending into rhetoric usually reserved from the North Korean News Agency, the communist rag went on to say
“In truth, the work of the Chinese government has received wide praise all over the world, even public opinion in Western countries can't deny that,” Qiushi said. “This is a great truth, and overly criticising the government violates that truth.”

So the yardstick of achievement is measured by how much Western countries acknowledge that you've done good things.  What's missing is any kind of understanding that it's not what you do, but how you do it.

By the standard of simply "achieving great things", then Hitler's Nazi government achieved wonderful, amazing things by having 100% employment in the country.  Everyone was hard at work making guns so that Germany could invade and slaughter people in other countries, and there's the whole Holocaust PR fail, but apart from the that, the economic was powering ahead and plenty of people had enough to eat.

Charles Xue, a microblogger on Weibo with over 12 million followers appeared on TV in handcuffs, telling the good masses how "freedom of speech cannot override the law".  Going after criticism online is going hinder the government rather than help it.  Driving liberal voices online deeper underground, widening the gulf between the people at the government can only foment more violent outbursts of rebellion, not whip the people into line as it's supposed to.
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Monday, September 2, 2013

TV Confessions Unnerve Top Execs

In throwback to the Mao-era public confession that defined The Cultural Revolution, the fashion for parading detained suspects, particularly high profile figures like Charles Xue might be good for Party propaganda but more lawyers are saying that the practice makes a mockery of the legal process.  Making an example of rumor mongers and those indicted on charges of corruption  send the required chilling effect through the business community and party cadres, coerced confessions do little to bolster confidence in rule of law.

“If involuntary to any degree, the admissibility of the confessions is in question,” said James Zimmerman, a managing partner at law firm Sheppard, Mullin, Richter and Hampton and a former chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce China.


China commentators haven't been blinded to the idea that despite denouncing the Mao-era polices that Bo Xi Lai was criticized over in the last Party meeting seems now to have become de riguer .

Publicising confessions before a formal criminal process could reflect “a wider trend of returning to Mao-style criminal justice”, said Eva Pils, law professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.


 


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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Chinese Brain Drain Not Likely to Improve

The Chinese brain drain, according to the China Daily, is one of the worlds worst. It’s not good news for a country that is desperate to establish itself as a world leader in science and technology.

The Chinese love modern drugs. Antibiotics are especially popular, with Chinese patients popping ten times the number of pills that Americans do - nearly 140g a year per capita. GlaxoSmithKline’s bribery scandal shows how much money can be made by pointlessly prescribing useless drugs. Accused of bribing doctors to prescribe more of GSK’s own products, the Chinese entity stands accused of spending nearly £320m to cater to the whims of doctors.

The ease of which doctors can dole out antibiotics also highlights the low penetration of even basic scientific understanding in China. While the cash-strapped doctors who are told to prescribe more expensive drugs for minor ailments certainly bear most of the blame, the patients that demand better care (that is, more drugs with impressively complicated names) aren’t entirely innocent either.

While it’s easy to paint the underpaid doctors as the bad guys and point out that patients are just following the directions of their physician, a study from the Ministry of Health, showed that patients who knew the basic ideas behind what works for a viral infection, or what won’t work for a bacterial infection were less likely to be incorrectly prescribed antibiotics. "A simple intervention in which patient's display of knowledge about appropriate antibiotic use can dramatically reduce the abuse of antibiotics," the report found, also noting that if patients asked if they really needed the medicine they were being prescribed, the relationship they had with their doctor rapidly “deteriorated”.

The Chinese government is desperate to promote scientific theory across the country. It’s no small challenge by any stretch of the imagination, especially considering that during the Cultural Revolution academics - including scientists - were attacked as being bourgeois and were sent to labour camps. For almost a decade, no new scientists were trained and all academic research ground to a halt. It’s this 10 year period that partly explains the desperate measures some Chinese parents go to when the gaokao rolls around every year - it’s the only chance to guarantee an education for the child that their parents never had the chance to get.

Forty years on, China has the money and the equipment, but still lacks when it comes to the actual talent. The outcome-oriented culture has given rise to a situation where highly qualified scientists are reduced to operating equipment making medicines that right now are selling like hotcakes, but, given the alarming rate of the spread of drug-resistant bacterias, might not be so red-hot in the next ten or fifteen years.

At the end of July, the Chinese scientific community could hardly contain itself when news came from Guangzhou that a team of researchers had manage to create teeth from stem cells collected from urine. Buried at the bottom of the press release, the team also pointed out that the teeth were about 1/3 the hardness of real teeth. Professor Chris Mason of University College London was underwhelmed by the development, telling the BBC "It is probably one of the worst sources [of stem cells], there are very few cells in the first place and the efficiency of turning them into stem cells is very low. You just wouldn't do it in this way.” A damning critique that shows Chinese researchers aren’t even doing it wrong.

It’s the closed system, boring work and relentless pursuit of profits that has made many scientists are researchers shy away from professional life in China. When asked, an alarming 87% of Chinese graduates said that they had no plans to return to China in the future.

By contrast, in Denmark, where 1 in 10 scientists at the Technical University of Denmark, the dean, Martin Bendsøe, is under no illusions as to what attracts top flight Chinese talent out of their homeland. Speaking in an interview with ScandAsia, he said ”They come here because we are often cited in international scientific articles. After some time many open their eyes to the advantages of the democratic Danish management structure and the work environment,” said Dean of the Technical University of Denmark, Martin Bendsøe. Chinese scientists make up the third largest demographic after Germans and Americans.

The story is the same the US. Speaking to the China Daily, Joseph Jen, former undersecretary for research, education and economics for the US Department of Agriculture, said “Chinese institutions have new research equipment, much of it better than at places in the US” but that many Chinese “choose to stay in the US is because of the scientific culture ... (in which) scientists have bigger freedoms to pursue research of their choice.”

When it first started allowing students to travel abroad to study, many high-ups in the Chinese government were afraid that the end result would be that once exposed to the high life in the US and other western countries, they would never want to come back home again. For once, their foresight is pretty much bang on the money - not many want to leave the dynamic world of American research. Showing their trademark two dimensional thinking, a plan to lure back scientists was unveiled in the 1994 that promised tax breaks for returning academics. In the 20 years since, a mere 1568 have taken advantage of that particular carrot, this project being only one of seven misfires that have woefully missed their targets.

Once back in China, Chinese scientists face major roadblocks to developing their research into functioning businesses. An underdeveloped credit system and reliance on the “it’s not what you know, but who you know” guanxi system as well as hobbled and patchy small business framework simply doesn't give anyone the confidence to innovate or invest in Chinese startups that focus on risky new ideas rather than copying the ones that are already successful - exactly what the Chinese government wanted to avoid by sending students abroad in the first place. As Nixon’s War on Cancer showed, nothing much comes of top-down directed research, but since the Chinese government is averse to anything resembling real market competition, it will be a long time before we see anything of great interest emerge from Chinese research labs.
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