Reluctant Capitalists

August 27, 2010

The New York Times reports that China Passes Japan as Second-Largest Economy, but China’s leaders could care less. They have other concerns like the changing moral climate.

The Economist reported in Party poopers (August 14, page 32), that China’s rulers are not happy with the “vulgar, cheap and kitsch culture” that has appeared in much of urban China.

I wrote about this in China’s Sexual Revolution where many urban Chinese are acting as if they are from Europe or America where the morals have been in decline for decades.

The tone of the piece in The Economist is critical and mentions the 1980s alluding to the Tiananmen Square incident that the Western media misrepresented as a democracy movement led by students.

I doubt if there will be the kind of crack down seen in the 1980s. In fact, for more than two thousand years, the Chinese have seen themselves as more civilized than the rest of the world. The “vulgar, cheap and kitsch” culture appearing in China doesn’t fit.

China’s leaders, who are from a more conservative generation, are expressing their distaste for what is happening. They also realize that in 2012, another generation is taking over and this is their last chance to at least appear as if they are doing something.

When Deng Xiaoping announced, “Getting Rich is Glorious”, China’s leader may not have realized that the “vulgar, cheap, and kitsch” comes with the territory.

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Lloyd Lofthouse is the award-winning author of the concubine saga, My Splendid Concubine & Our Hart. When you love a Chinese woman, you marry her family and culture too. 

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Hsuan-tsang – From China to India for Enlightenment

August 27, 2010

I mentioned Hsuan-tsang (Xuanzang) when I wrote about China’s Three “Journey’s to the West”. However, in that post I did not go into detail about the real Buddhist monk who made the journey.

While doing some research about his life, I discovered an intellectual discussion at Philosophy and Marxism Today.  If this topic interests you and you want to learn more about Buddhism I recommend reading this conversation between Thomas Riggins and Fred.

Thomas starts with, “I’ll start with background based on Chan’s introductory remarks.

“Hsuan-tsang (596-644) was quite a character. He entered a Buddhist monastery when he was thirteen. Then moved around China studying under different masters. Finally, he went off to India to study Buddhism at its source and with Sanskrit masters.

“He spent over ten years in India, wrote a famous book about his journey, and returned to China with over six hundred original manuscripts.

“He spent the rest of his life with a group of translators rendering seventy five of the most important works into Chinese. All of this work was sponsored by the Emperor of the newly established T’ang Dynasty (618 – 906 AD).”

The book I have on Hsuan-tsang says he lived from 602 to 664 AD.

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Lloyd Lofthouse is the award-winning author of the concubine saga, My Splendid Concubine & Our Hart. When you love a Chinese woman, you marry her family and culture too. 

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Nothing Lasts Forever

August 27, 2010

An interesting piece from Forbes scored solid points for pointing out why China is Winning the Economic War.

Of course, there will be some Americans who will disagree. They will say that the U.S. is still the greatest nation on earth, the land of the free, and that it always will be.

I’m sure these misguided patriots would point out China’s flaws like exploiting workers with low pay and long hours.

However, Forbes deals with that flawed logic by pointing out that the U.S. once exploited its workers too and forced children to work 14-hour days.

In fact, the young American Republic once had slaves and women were chattel, who couldn’t vote or own property.

The Forbes piece says, “The U.S. was winning (the economic war against Communism) hands down for a long time, but not so much anymore due to a number of countries surpassing the U.S. in recent years in a number of specific areas.”  

Using a quote from Sam Houston in 1850, Forbes explains why the US is losing. Houston said, “A nation divided against itself cannot stand,” and, for sure, Sun Tzu would agree.

In fact, the U.S. has been divided for the last 15 years in “increasingly bitter time and energy consuming political arguments: the morals of President Clinton, whether or not war should be waged to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq, whether the country’s current problems are due to the depth of the economic hole dug during the last (G.W. Bush) administration, or ineptness of the current administration in pulling the economy out of that (very deep) hole (the Republicans dug).” Source: Forbes Blog

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Lloyd Lofthouse is the award-winning author of the concubine saga, My Splendid Concubine & Our Hart. When you love a Chinese woman, you marry her family and culture too. 

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Man-Made Disasters

August 26, 2010

Global Voices Online writes about man-made disasters, and I couldn’t help myself. I had to leave a comment.

While reading the post at Global Voices Online, I was reminded of the floods in China and the recent earthquake there.

Xinhua reports that China mourns mudslide victims as relief operation continues.  The piece said, “At least 1,248 people have died and 496 are listed as missing.

I read in the Guardian (April 14, 2010), that a 7.1 quake hit Yushu county in north-west province of Qinghai killing at last 400 and injuring 10,000.

When my sister and her children joined me on Mt. Rainier more than a decade ago, I learned that more than two million people lived below this active volcano, which is overdue for an eruption.

Mt. Rainer overlooks the city of Seattle in the United States.

According to experts, if Mt. Rainier blows, the wall of mud and trees that would rush toward the ocean would be 700 feet high and reach the ocean in less than half-an-hour. 

Meanwhile, homes are still being built along that path of future destruction, and there is no way to to protect those homes and people who live there.

When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, the flooding was caused by man.  People built houses on land that has been sinking for decades. The government built walls to keep the water out but the walls weren’t strong enough.  More than 1,800 people died from that hurricane. In New Orleans, 80% of the city was flooded, and over 700 bodies were recovered there.

Why do people build in harm’s way?

See The WHO’s War on Tobacco, about another man-made disaster.

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Lloyd Lofthouse is the award-winning author of the concubine saga, My Splendid Concubine & Our Hart. When you love a Chinese woman, you marry her family and culture too. 

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Train to Tibet

August 26, 2010

Many know Tibet as the Roof of the World. For centuries, Tibet was isolated mostly because it was difficult for anyone to go there—even armies.

In 1903, the British Empire sent an army to Tibet to protect its interests, and it took a year for Sir Francis Younghusband’s invasion force to reach Lhasa in August 1904.

A book was written about that invasion, The British Empire & Tibet 1900-1922. Asian Affairs says, “The great value of Dr. Palace’s study is to highlight the much neglected China angle to the Tibetan issue … [this book is] helping to indicate the very important place of the Tibetan affair in the story of Western imperialism”

Today, the journey to Tibet is not as daunting.  Besides an airport, there is the train to Tibet that leaves Beijing and arrives in Lhasa forty-eight hours later. 

Tourists, both foreign and Chinese, take the train to Tibet to learn more about the people while others stay—changing the demographics.

The train sometimes reaches elevations over 5,000 meters (16,404 feet).

One Western tourist, who had been to Tibet twice, said that the ethnic groups in Tibet are not mixing together. She said there was a Chinese area and another where Tibetans lived.

Makes sense—in American cities emigrants tend to stay close to their kind. In the past, there have been Irish areas, Jewish, German and today there are Vietnamese or Latin or Chinatowns in the U.S.

See Traveling to Tibet

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Lloyd Lofthouse is the award-winning author of the concubine saga, My Splendid Concubine & Our Hart. When you love a Chinese woman, you marry her family and culture too.

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