i think europeans or north americans without chinese ancestry that get to that level are rare and most are dedicated hobbyists or in academia. but there are lots of people that speak the language well and can't claim anything close to near native literacy and lots in academia with great literacy that speak the language competently but not fluently. it requires i think time in country or longterm immersion combined with longterm, serious study.
― dylannn, Friday, 13 March 2015 21:14 (eleven years ago)
Something I've noticed/struggled a bit with is also most high level instruction teaches you very standard PTH
Which is great if all you hang around with are highly literate and educated CCP types or academics
And also great if you're in business, probably
But it's also very hard to learn the local dialect and there aren't many resources to turn to other than find a local dude and hang out w/ dude n buddies
This is true even in Beijing, home of "PTH"
― 龜, Friday, 13 March 2015 21:24 (eleven years ago)
i guess i kind of agree but at the same time teaching dialects or even listening to nonstandard accents is pretty much impossible and native speakers i think are even worse at it than non sinophone learners (they're more used to guessing at phrases from context, less tuned to tonal quirks that throw off native speakers). but it is kind of surprising that even for languages like wu or cantonese with hundreds of millions of speakers and their own distinct culture and literature the learning resources are few.
― dylannn, Friday, 13 March 2015 21:29 (eleven years ago)
but http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guangzhou_Television_Cantonese_controversy type of stuff so it's not really surprising
― dylannn, Friday, 13 March 2015 21:30 (eleven years ago)
now that i'm kind of attempting to learn japanese i get discouraged by flashbacks to sitting at my desk writing characters over and over again, the shame of seemingly not being able to competently ask for the right type of zhongnanhai even after studying the language in university, years of trying to feel my way through conversations that i understood ten percent of, prepping for classes with remarks that i hoped would seem improvised and trying to predict possible professor questions while also trying to figure out a photocopied never translated into english story about an aristocratic family in late ming china written in a combination of vernacular and classical chinese. so, flipping through introduction to hiragana and a book of simple greetings, i know that even mastering those things will take too long and my mastery will be unsatisfying and i will look and feel like an idiot over and over again, even if i work at it for years. but when i get that six figure salary working for toyota it will have been worth it. #futureintlangofbusiness
― dylannn, Friday, 13 March 2015 21:32 (eleven years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0o7lajjzBg
― pom /via/ chi (nakhchivan), Friday, 13 March 2015 22:10 (eleven years ago)
http://en.people.cn/n/2015/0105/c98649-8831651.html
http://i.imgur.com/7fjzkg8.jpg
Photo shows a female SWAT member in Sichuan ripping apart a steel wash basin barehanded. Four hours physical training every day turns an ordinary woman into an invincible soldier. (Photo/CCTV)
― 龜, Friday, 13 March 2015 22:28 (eleven years ago)
lol
― pom /via/ chi (nakhchivan), Friday, 13 March 2015 22:31 (eleven years ago)
Example of the strength of Chinese soldiers, or of the poor quality of Chinese manufacturing
― 龜, Friday, 13 March 2015 22:36 (eleven years ago)
Idk if anybody else still watches 非诚勿扰 but lately they've had an 'anonymous' woman on who only appears in Avatar makeup?
http://i.imgur.com/NIn484z.jpg
― 龜, Sunday, 15 March 2015 17:38 (eleven years ago)
http://www.scmp.com/lifestyle/health/article/1742243/changes-chinas-alcohol-use-policies-urgently-needed-researchers-say
For nakh
― 龜, Friday, 20 March 2015 23:30 (eleven years ago)
http://xw.qq.com/news/20150323058980
― dylannn, Monday, 23 March 2015 07:45 (eleven years ago)
http://news.sina.com.cn/s/p/2015-03-23/145131635580.shtml
weibo user returns to hometown of handan, hebei. "reports most funerals in the area feature strippers to 'liven things up.' spectators don't know whether to laugh or cry. as soon as the funeral dirge concludes, the strippers hit the stage."
― dylannn, Monday, 23 March 2015 09:32 (eleven years ago)
http://hongwrong.com/hong-kong-dystopian/
Kinda cliche'd by this point but I still love it
http://i.imgur.com/h92fGmu.jpg
― 龜, Thursday, 26 March 2015 12:39 (eleven years ago)
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20150402-the-worst-place-on-earth
Who wants to go with me
― 龜, Saturday, 4 April 2015 12:04 (eleven years ago)
always appreciate your links, thanks
― sleeve, Saturday, 4 April 2015 15:24 (eleven years ago)
can confirm even without having visited toxic lakes that baotou is one of the worst places on earth
― dylannn, Wednesday, 8 April 2015 08:09 (eleven years ago)
http://sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/04/01/supporters-of-detained-feminists-in-china-petition-for-their-release/?_r=0
i keep feeling like i'm missing something with the detention of these women... they were going to be "distributing stickers and leaflets protesting molestation in buses and subways"? on international womens day? i'm more proparty than the average chinawatcher and i can usually see the fucked up logic they operate on but i really must be missing something here. hillary clinton otm.
― dylannn, Wednesday, 8 April 2015 08:13 (eleven years ago)
http://i.imgur.com/FrQ97Ny.jpg
https://twitter.com/XHNews/status/587838236468256768
― 龜, Wednesday, 15 April 2015 15:22 (eleven years ago)
http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/1780225/china-confirms-three-killed-north-koreans-border-village+http://sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/04/29/china-confirms-killings-on-border-with-north-korea/
― dylannn, Wednesday, 29 April 2015 18:02 (eleven years ago)
http://sinonk.com/2015/03/24/parties-with-different-ideologies-chinas-new-ambassador-to-north-korea/
Despite perceptions of China’s allegedly influence over Pyongyang, China operates in a generally unstable climate in which North Korea’s response to overtures such as building roads to connect it to Chinese-financed cross-border activities, indicating intention to restart Six-Party Talks, or toning down relations with South Korea, is tentative and unconvincing. China, therefore, appears to be treading on relatively thin ice. ... While China has made certain moves in the past year and a half to “normalize” the relationship with North Korea (meaning to deal with North Korea under the auspices of the Foreign Ministry rather than ILD), the appointment of another ILD bureaucrat to staff the Embassy in Pyongyang could indicate that Beijing is not yet prepared to move things too quickly in that direction.
...
While China has made certain moves in the past year and a half to “normalize” the relationship with North Korea (meaning to deal with North Korea under the auspices of the Foreign Ministry rather than ILD), the appointment of another ILD bureaucrat to staff the Embassy in Pyongyang could indicate that Beijing is not yet prepared to move things too quickly in that direction.
― dylannn, Wednesday, 29 April 2015 18:04 (eleven years ago)
― 龜, Saturday, April 4, 2015 7:04 AM (3 weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i'm in
― gbx, Thursday, 30 April 2015 01:25 (eleven years ago)
Nice it is a noize trip
― 龜, Thursday, 30 April 2015 01:37 (eleven years ago)
how do you get to there
― gbx, Thursday, 30 April 2015 01:41 (eleven years ago)
Start digging s tunnel
― 龜, Thursday, 30 April 2015 01:48 (eleven years ago)
http://m.imgur.com/gallery/CoejI5n
― dylannn, Thursday, 30 April 2015 02:09 (eleven years ago)
pls somebody email that to noah feldman
― een, Thursday, 30 April 2015 21:48 (eleven years ago)
http://sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/04/21/what-a-difference-a-decade-makes-xinjiang-film-emerges-from-the-past/
Hope this screens in NYC
― 龜, Saturday, 2 May 2015 19:31 (eleven years ago)
is ed hardy a thing in china
― LMAO. GOLD Chrisso. regards, REB (nakhchivan), Saturday, 2 May 2015 19:32 (eleven years ago)
No idea
― 龜, Saturday, 2 May 2015 19:34 (eleven years ago)
http://i.imgur.com/U7hAYkZ.jpg
― da nubian gangsters (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 20 May 2015 12:50 (eleven years ago)
potpourri, snack, or both?
― head clowning instructor (art), Wednesday, 20 May 2015 12:57 (eleven years ago)
Chinese flower/herbal tea is the best fuiud
― 龜, Wednesday, 20 May 2015 13:17 (eleven years ago)
I hadn't heard of the term "nail house" before encountering it in this article: http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-32900601
Google image search of "nail house" turns up some pretty incredible photos.
― o. nate, Saturday, 30 May 2015 01:16 (eleven years ago)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/for-american-pundits-china-isnt-a-country-its-a-fantasyland/2015/05/29/24ba60e0-0431-11e5-a428-c984eb077d4e_story.html
― dylannn, Saturday, 30 May 2015 07:07 (eleven years ago)
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-01/macau-s-casino-revenue-drops-37-as-slump-hits-one-year
Macau casino revenue down 37%, leading to 24% YOY decline in regional revenue. It's being linked to a crackdown on corruption on the mainland.
― Petite Lamela (ShariVari), Monday, 1 June 2015 09:52 (eleven years ago)
Lmao
― 龜, Monday, 1 June 2015 11:22 (eleven years ago)
More Korea than China, but there's a bit of MERS going around:http://chinadailyhk.com/nation/2015-05/31/content_15270486.html
― etc, Monday, 1 June 2015 15:06 (eleven years ago)
it's that time of year again
― 龜, Thursday, 4 June 2015 12:07 (eleven years ago)
so my parents are in beijing right now. they were at tiananmen square today + apparently most people don't really know anything about 1989? their tour guide said that another group had told them about it but otherwise didn't really know much? it reminded me of a friend (who passed away last year) who came out of the USSR around 1985 and said that until she left the USSR she had no idea that WW2 had anything to do w/ the Jews. she knew that the Nazis killed lots of Russians but apparently it wasn't open knowledge in the USSR that the holocaust had gone on.
― Mordy, Thursday, 4 June 2015 15:25 (eleven years ago)
that's not that surprising
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 4 June 2015 15:29 (eleven years ago)
i guess i'm just surprised that in 2015 a country as large + modern as china could still keep the wraps on that kind of thing. is it that the internet is still pretty monitored? or is it more that you have to make an effort to find out this kind of thing and most people aren't really looking?
― Mordy, Thursday, 4 June 2015 15:31 (eleven years ago)
state controlled media is an amazing thing
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 4 June 2015 15:37 (eleven years ago)
"apparently most people don't really know anything about 1989" is... i think we've talked about this on rolling china etc threads before but no, people know about it. it hasn't been kept secret for 26 years. if you were alive in china 26 years ago and old enough to be watching tv or listening to the radio, you heard about it. if you are a beijing native you've heard of it. not including like... i dunno... most people who are in their 40s, 50s have heard of it.
00 that doesn't mean you want to discuss it with the tour groups you take through tiananmen square.
00 and if you're under the age of like... 30 even if you're vaguely aware you probably don't know a lot about it / care a lot about it and it appears to belong to another era in chinese history. it might as well be the campaign against spiritual pollution or the cultural revolution. if you're a kid working in beijing, the china you grew up in is so different from 1989 that it's like studying ancient history. yo mordy ask some 17-24 year olds what went down on 9-11 and try to get a better answer than "iraq flew planes into buildings."
00 there are people that think 6-4 was a tragedy but was necessary or the only alternative to the fall of the government. they see people that mark the event overseas and in hk as trying to destabilize the party and the people's republic.
00 yeah state controlled media but i think the way the event is remembered in the west and how it's remembered is... maybe out of proportion to what it really means/meant in china
― dylannn, Thursday, 4 June 2015 18:58 (eleven years ago)
yo mordy ask some 17-24 year olds what went down on 9-11 and try to get a better answer than "iraq flew planes into buildings."
i've done this before btw. american schools ime are doing a lot of education re 9/11.
― Mordy, Thursday, 4 June 2015 19:00 (eleven years ago)
okay but i mean could they give a satisfying answer to what made people fly planes into buildings?
but my point was though
-- even if tiananmen is not a topic that can be openly discussed, it's not the only event that's been airbrushed out. the chinese school system does not place much importance on recent chinese history. it reduces it to a nationalist highlight reel of deng xiaoping 1997 hong kong comes back 1999 shenzhou in space 2008 olympics.
-- even if you remember tiananmen and you know something fucked up happened, it doesn't mean you want to mark the event or dig deeper. criticizing the events of 1989 is criticizing the party. the party has brought stability and wealth that the party has brought the country. everyone involved with it is mostly out of visible positions of power (li peng is an exception?).
― dylannn, Thursday, 4 June 2015 19:19 (eleven years ago)
that sentence should be: the party has brought stability and wealth.
for people of the generation old enough to have been in beijing or seen tv coverage, they probably also grew up in a more chaotic time or their parents grew up in a more chaotic time. even if you think the party erred in its treatment of the protests, the party has led china to unimaginable prosperity and stability and you're probably willing to overlook a few misssteps.
― dylannn, Thursday, 4 June 2015 19:24 (eleven years ago)
i mean it could be the tour guide was just putting my parents on and she actually knew all about 89 and just didn't want to talk about it [with them, or in general]
― Mordy, Thursday, 4 June 2015 21:50 (eleven years ago)
more likely knows vaguely that something went down but has been instructed not to discuss political topics while strolling through tiananmen. or they're in their 20s, came from far outside beijing and haven't heard of it because with or without internet censorship there's a lack of interest in tiananmen and in recent chinese history and the event isn't remembered the same by those that were around in china as it is in the west where it's one of a handful of things people can come up with when asked about china.
I DUNNO
― dylannn, Thursday, 4 June 2015 22:00 (eleven years ago)
Probably the better analogy would be to Iran Contra or any of the innumerable horrible things Reagan did while in office
― 龜, Thursday, 4 June 2015 22:21 (eleven years ago)
hope it doesn't turn out like this
― XxxxxxxXxxxxxxxxXxxxx (dylannn), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 16:18 (six years ago)
i dunno, imho ideally stop this and get back to occupying government buildings and scuffling with triad thugs
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EB3LhTyU8AAqDS4?format=jpg&name=4096x4096
― XxxxxxxXxxxxxxxxXxxxx (dylannn), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 16:21 (six years ago)
attacking other HK citizens is terrible tactics, even if they have "i heart the bizzies" t shirts or are wankers who are the HK equivalent to the UK FBPE posse.
― calzino, Tuesday, 13 August 2019 16:29 (six years ago)
turns out he was a reporter for global times.
live feed from hkg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7IvjtgSawY
― XxxxxxxXxxxxxxxxXxxxx (dylannn), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 16:33 (six years ago)
how do i embed tweetsPolice officer had his baton taken from him and was attacked with it. Drew his pistol and aimed at protesters. Astonished nobody killed here tonight. pic.twitter.com/Wox8yziDnz— Mike Bird (@Birdyword) August 13, 2019― XxxxxxxXxxxxxxxxXxxxx (dylannn), Tuesday, August 13, 2019 12:07 PM (forty-three minutes ago)
Police officer had his baton taken from him and was attacked with it. Drew his pistol and aimed at protesters. Astonished nobody killed here tonight. pic.twitter.com/Wox8yziDnz— Mike Bird (@Birdyword) August 13, 2019― XxxxxxxXxxxxxxxxXxxxx (dylannn), Tuesday, August 13, 2019 12:07 PM (forty-three minutes ago)
This video is crazy. It was only after watching it a few times that I noticed the bystander with the wheeled luggage trying to hurry by and getting caught in the melee.
― Mazzy Tsar (PBKR), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 17:02 (six years ago)
congrats on the bbc finding some myopic, thick as pigshit UK twat describing it as a "bitter pill to swallow" cos it has inconvenienced his honeymoon, hope she's shagging the milkman by next week ya weapon!
― calzino, Tuesday, 13 August 2019 17:17 (six years ago)
My (wife's) family in Hubei are in full meltdown about the Coronavirus. Sister-in-law is actually due to fly from Wuhan to the UK next week. Bit concerned.
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Wednesday, 22 January 2020 11:05 (six years ago)
There's a lot of racist crap out there about "Chinese eat anything" but this cunt has not done anyone any favours, ridiculous that this sort of thing is still being permitted anywhere in 2020.
Photo from Douban of a menu at #Wuhan Huanan Seafood Market. Don't know when it was taken, but they sell all kinds of wild animals incl. live wolf pups & palm civets. 2nd photo taken after outbreak discovered shows this storefront (3rd left) covering word “野 (wild)” in its name. pic.twitter.com/HiQlzX4XBX— Muyi Xiao (@muyixiao) January 21, 2020
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Wednesday, 22 January 2020 11:09 (six years ago)
My sister-in-laws's flight has been cancelled, so I guess out of our hands now and not to worry about so much, but parents-in-law are in Ezhou, and our feeling is that there the response is a bit half-hearted. it's a sleepy town of a million or so people, lots of them commute into wuhan, seems like an obvious place for the disease to spread from.
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 23 January 2020 15:50 (six years ago)
Hu Xingdou, an independent political economist, said Chinese people’s love for eating wildlife had deep cultural, economic and political roots.“While the West values freedom and other human rights, Chinese people view food as their primary need because starving is a big threat and an unforgettable part of the national memory,” Hu said.“While feeding themselves is not a problem to many Chinese nowadays, eating novel food or meat, organs or parts from rare animals or plants has become a measure of identity to some people.”
“While the West values freedom and other human rights, Chinese people view food as their primary need because starving is a big threat and an unforgettable part of the national memory,” Hu said.
“While feeding themselves is not a problem to many Chinese nowadays, eating novel food or meat, organs or parts from rare animals or plants has become a measure of identity to some people.”
I would like to know more about this identity claim. Does the rarity of what's eaten give social prestige, or is it something more personal than that?
― juntos pedemos (Euler), Thursday, 23 January 2020 16:00 (six years ago)
things that are rare (to be eaten or otherwise) can get you a degree of social prestige, yes, but also certain animals are supposed to have particular medicinal qualities (not just as an aphrodisiac) which combine with the "you have to be rich to afford this" factor in a way which parallels alleged "superfoods" in the west.
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 23 January 2020 16:09 (six years ago)
Ok, thanks. Is the "wild"ness of the animal a factor in its having these medicinal qualities?
I know a little about bushmeat practices in Africa but little about them in China, except for the little I've gleaned from time spent in Chinatowns around the world.
― juntos pedemos (Euler), Thursday, 23 January 2020 16:11 (six years ago)
CHANG: And why are wild animals so popular as a delicacy in China?SI: Eating wild animal is considered a symbol of wealth because they are more rare and expensive. And wild animals is also considered more natural and, thus, nutritious, compared to farmed meat. It's a belief in traditional Chinese medicine that it can boost the immune system, you know? Of course, some people eat wild animals just because they were driven by curiosity.CHANG: (Laughter).SI: It's really difficult to change the mindset of, you know, eating wild animals is better than eating farmed animals. But it's a common kind of mindset in many parts of China.
SI: Eating wild animal is considered a symbol of wealth because they are more rare and expensive. And wild animals is also considered more natural and, thus, nutritious, compared to farmed meat. It's a belief in traditional Chinese medicine that it can boost the immune system, you know? Of course, some people eat wild animals just because they were driven by curiosity.
CHANG: (Laughter).
SI: It's really difficult to change the mindset of, you know, eating wild animals is better than eating farmed animals. But it's a common kind of mindset in many parts of China.
Ok, this clarifies things a bit more. The wildness is thought to contribute to its naturalness, and thus its goodness. I don't know much about Chinese Romanticism but now I want to!
― juntos pedemos (Euler), Thursday, 23 January 2020 16:15 (six years ago)
I live with it, my wife is training to be (eventually) a TCM doctor (but not the bad kind that use animals! there are a few very different schools of TCM, I have found out)
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 23 January 2020 16:48 (six years ago)
http://chuangcn.org/2020/02/social-contagion/
― Let's kill the Queen and be legends (Noodle Vague), Friday, 27 March 2020 12:24 (six years ago)
He adds that certain species, including primates, bats, and rats, are higher risk than others, because of the number of diseases they harbor and the likelihood of those diseases making the genetic leap required to infect humans. “Some of the Southeast Asian rats are quite big and I’m sure they’re very tasty. There’s nothing wrong with eating them per se, but rodents carry a large number of viruses with zoonotic potential—having them in the food chain is really, really high risk,” he says.With the Covid-19 pandemic, though, interest in these foods appears to be rapidly diminishing: a survey of almost 100,000 Chinese conducted in the midst of the Wuhan outbreak found that nearly 97 percent of respondents opposed eating wild animals, up from about 50 percent in the 2014 study.“These are not traditional habits,” says Kang, citing, as an example, how a drink made from antelope horn, a traditional remedy given to children to treat colds, has become a widely consumed daily tonic. “It’s a combination of traditional concepts with business people promoting a modern concept of, ‘We should try interesting new things because we have more income’. Eating exotic species is about people showing on social media that they are cool.”China’s propaganda machine has recently gone into full gear to undermine that idea. Kang says a spontaneous social media backlash has also driven the point home. A hashtag that translates as #TheSourceoftheNewCoronavirusisWildAnimals quickly racked up 1.2 billion hits on Weibo, the main social media platform in China.“In my friend circle, there is a person who in the past liked to showcase his experience with wild animal food on social media,” says Kang. “Previously, my friends would say nothing, or they’d say ‘cool’. But now he can’t post those things, because people would say if you continue to do that, you’re not cool.”
With the Covid-19 pandemic, though, interest in these foods appears to be rapidly diminishing: a survey of almost 100,000 Chinese conducted in the midst of the Wuhan outbreak found that nearly 97 percent of respondents opposed eating wild animals, up from about 50 percent in the 2014 study.
“These are not traditional habits,” says Kang, citing, as an example, how a drink made from antelope horn, a traditional remedy given to children to treat colds, has become a widely consumed daily tonic. “It’s a combination of traditional concepts with business people promoting a modern concept of, ‘We should try interesting new things because we have more income’. Eating exotic species is about people showing on social media that they are cool.”
China’s propaganda machine has recently gone into full gear to undermine that idea. Kang says a spontaneous social media backlash has also driven the point home. A hashtag that translates as #TheSourceoftheNewCoronavirusisWildAnimals quickly racked up 1.2 billion hits on Weibo, the main social media platform in China.
“In my friend circle, there is a person who in the past liked to showcase his experience with wild animal food on social media,” says Kang. “Previously, my friends would say nothing, or they’d say ‘cool’. But now he can’t post those things, because people would say if you continue to do that, you’re not cool.”
https://thefern.org/2020/03/can-asias-infectious-disease-producing-wildlife-trade-be-stopped/
― Deflatormouse, Friday, 27 March 2020 21:58 (six years ago)
https://m.weibo.cn/search?containerid=231522type%3D1%26t%3D10%26q%3D%23新型冠状病毒来源是野生动物%23&extparam=%23新型冠状病毒来源是野生动物%23&luicode=10000011&lfid=231522type%3D1%26t%3D10%26q%3D%23新型冠状病毒来源是野生动物%23
― Deflatormouse, Friday, 27 March 2020 22:02 (six years ago)
I am seeing plenty of racism against Chinese online of late, especially from supposedly left-wing animal rights people. Bit depressing, though I knew it was under the surface anyway.
― Wuhan!! Got You All in Check (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Saturday, 4 April 2020 21:07 (six years ago)
Animal rights people sus af to begin w
― silby, Sunday, 5 April 2020 04:00 (six years ago)
Yes. The thing I have been trying to explain to people today is that "wet market" doesnt mean "exotic meat slaughterhouse" and that the vast majority of what is sold there is vegetables, just with some live chickens in one corner, and that if you are "campaigning to shut the wet markets" you are campaigning for factory farming and supermarkets.
― Wuhan!! Got You All in Check (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Sunday, 5 April 2020 06:42 (six years ago)
I have never found “trying to explain” to be a profitable use of time but the problem is likely on my end
― silby, Sunday, 5 April 2020 06:54 (six years ago)
it's true that I am probably wasting my time.
― Wuhan!! Got You All in Check (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Sunday, 5 April 2020 07:02 (six years ago)
I mean not everything we do has to be profitable
― silby, Sunday, 5 April 2020 07:11 (six years ago)
China are using this unprecedented time to make another power grab in HK. There is rioting going on at the moment.
More tear gas rounds are fired in Causeway Bay, near the Sogo. pic.twitter.com/UlNmUiJ5NL— Hong Kong Free Press HKFP (@HongKongFP) May 24, 2020
― Wuhan!! Got You All in Check (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Sunday, 24 May 2020 13:50 (six years ago)
Close to $100bn wiped off the edtech market today, following a leaked document saying that the government intends to force tutoring companies to go not-for-profit and ban foreigners from online teaching. The bricks-and-mortar tutoring sector has already been crushed by COVID.
― Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Friday, 23 July 2021 22:19 (four years ago)
The rationale for this is supposedly the idea that intensive tutoring is stressful for kids, makes education more expensive at a point when the government is trying to encourage people to have more children and makes it easier for wealthier parents to get their kids into selective schools and universities. The more cynical take is that too many middle-class kids are competing for those places with the genuinely well-off, who will still be able to afford 1-to-1 tutoring.
Leaving aside the general academic stuff, it’s hard to see how this wouldn’t lead to a fairly hard stop on the growth of English proficiency, particularly in smaller cities, or even a regression. State provision of English is variable but generally a lot weaker than the private sector can offer and companies like VIPKids that recruit teachers from the Philippines deliver a pretty good, affordable service to millions outside of the big cities, in places where traditional private language schools have been patchy. If New Oriental and others are forced to scale back, it may also impact the number of students going to university abroad.
― Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Saturday, 24 July 2021 06:14 (four years ago)
Which would be a blow to the cashflow of a lot of large universities…
― Clara Lemlich stan account (silby), Monday, 26 July 2021 00:29 (four years ago)
These last few months have seen a series of increasingly troubling announcements from Beijing, not sure if calling it the "second cultural revolution" is right, but the direction is certainly not great.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/sep/10/chinas-cultural-crackdown-few-areas-untouched-as-xi-reshapes-society
My in-laws have not been allowed to renew their passports, and at work all of the Chinese students have decided to work virtually rather than travel to the UK.
― edited to reflect developments which occurred (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 10 September 2021 09:56 (four years ago)
the growing cultural authoritarianism of Xi seems very dangerous, but the extreme violence and mass murder that occurred during the OG cultural revolution ... well that was the cultural revolution to end all cultural revolutions or perhaps not. I heard this bizarre shit on the radio a few weeks back on CCCP rappers doing propaganda raps about how great the govt is etc. They can't foist any of that shit on K-Pop ultras!
― calzino, Friday, 10 September 2021 10:33 (four years ago)
My sister works at a NGO and scuttle among the world traveller, NGO, panglobalist crowd is that some sort of Taiwan action will occur in the next year or two (my sister bets that it'll happen right after the Winter Olympics in February)
― Elvis Telecom, Friday, 8 October 2021 06:26 (four years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9GvRx3VmLno
according to this very interesting summary of recent top level shenanigans, General Zhang Youxia has already eclipsed Xi in all but name at the top of the CCP hierarchy.
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Wednesday, 18 June 2025 04:18 (eleven months ago)
i think this particular style of zhongnanhaiology—the secret coup that must be revealed through body language in selected clips of leaders, speculation about the relationships between bureaucrats, crude psychology, state media hermeneutics (this even goes into analysis of radicals in characters used in tang poetry and leaders' names)—is enjoyable, even if the conclusions drawn can usually be discounted. it's a good way to learn about chinese politics!
― XxxxxxxXxxxxxxxxXxxxx (dylannn), Wednesday, 18 June 2025 13:52 (eleven months ago)
yes, it's rather enjoyable and a good way of learning about all the top CCP different characters in play and what power they hold. Even if it is rather eccentric in places and perhaps some of the manoeuvres and mysterious assassinations she has described might not have actually happened!
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Wednesday, 18 June 2025 14:50 (eleven months ago)
the general kinda looks like a frog, which makes me think it's real
― 龜, Wednesday, 18 June 2025 14:51 (eleven months ago)
he's a certified princeling ... and also a frog!
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Wednesday, 18 June 2025 15:04 (eleven months ago)
I discovered from another ep that some guy who was spreading conspiracy theories about Li Keqiang's death being a CCP assassination job, got arrested and was given a 1 year prison for "causing trouble".
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Thursday, 19 June 2025 06:21 (eleven months ago)
*prison sentence*
― vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Thursday, 19 June 2025 06:22 (eleven months ago)