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USA Today news article "Two Faces of China"
Jan 25, 2008 01:19
  • LEONARDO
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China, a mystic land, is alluring to the rest of world. Although China has opened up to the outside world for over 30 years, China is still like a mystic girl cloaked ina bridal veil. Despite the fact that China has lowered its veil, some amorous guys are tempted to rip off its veil completely to have a full view of its fair complexion and gorgeous beauty. One of its fanatic pursuers is a bellicose eagle who has followed this girl for decades. One day, he tears off the girl’s veil and shouts to the crowd: China has two faces. What would other guys respond? To believe its words, or get close to the girl and see it by their own eyes? Of course, this guy doesn’t’ talk nonsense. He has some grounds. Ok, I should stop talking nonsense. Let’s see how this guy unveils the two faces of China.

Jan 25, 2008 01:22
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  • LEONARDO
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Two faces of China

The West views this Asian country as a new world economic dynamo, but also as a closed society captive to its dated Communist structure.

By Juan Williams
SHANGHAI — The year 2008 is likely to be the Year of China.
The Olympics will move China to the front of world attention, much as its rapid economic rise has already allowed it to surpass the United States in generating global economic growth. But the China the world will see this summer is one that is jampacked with contradictions. I visited China for the first time in December, and the two faces of this country jumped out at me every turn.

(Illustration by Keith Simmons, USA TODAY)

On a street corner here was a small old house where Mao Zedong met with fellow revolutionaries in 1921 to start the Communist Party. When the party's founders conspired here secretly, pretending to be students, the house was in a run-down area behind warehouses.

Nearly 100 years later, the house is a tourist attraction anchoring an upscale shopping mall, complete with $4 coffee at Starbucks and $8 beers at a faux Irish bar. And next to the Xintiandi mall — the name translates into English as "new heaven on earth" — are skyscrapers filled with multinational corporations drawn to Shanghai as the booming financial center of China's super-heated economy.

The ironic location of the cornerstone of Chinese communism next to glossy shrines to capitalism is just one of many sharp contradictions.

Jan 25, 2008 01:24
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  • LEONARDO
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Another disconnect comes with all the talk of China's go-go capitalism. U.S. businessmen here talk excitedly about the economic growth occurring before their eyes. They describe opportunities in China, in the world's second-largest economy, with new markets opening and labor still relatively cheap. The stock market here has been red hot. Yet most big industries and even most of the brokerage houses remain government-owned.

Optimism betrays class divisions

Polling reflects a country struggling to define itself. A report by the Committee of 100 (C-100), a group of prominent Chinese-Americans trying to maintain positive connections between the USA and China, found that 88% of Chinese people believe that their country is headed in the right direction while 42% see getting wealthier as a priority.

But beneath this optimism, China faces sharp class divisions. Wealth is concentrated in the hands of a growing number of millionaires and billionaires while poverty — especially in rural areas — remains a fact of life for the multitudes. Up to 200 million people, in search of jobs and schools, have rushed from impoverished countryside to big cities. But many drift from one low-paying job to another and struggle for basics such as housing. The legal system hasn't kept up, either. The economy is speeding into the 21st century, yet the legal framework is a vestige of the 19th century or earlier, with political influence and bribes trumping the law.

Even the world view of China is shown to be slightly askew after one glimpses the country from within. China is known for its powerful central government, but the local, provincial governments collect taxes, approve business deals and most often enforce the rules of everyday life. They keep the wheel turning.

That gap between the modern face China wants the world to see and the realities at its heart often feeds this global disconnect. The C-100 report found that 45% of Americans have a negative view of China, and 40% of Americans see China's growing economic dominance as a "potential threat" to the United States. But the report shows that much of the American animosity is tied to China's lack of product safety and regulation — issues that have dominated headlines in the USA over the past few years.

A developer here, Vincent Lo, explained that Communist Party officials in the national government and the provinces are judged by the rate of development — new factories, buildings and businesses creating jobs — in areas under their control. But no rewards are bestowed for improving product safety or workers' rights. And that is where the contradiction between China's ambitions and its reality breaks down. A major global economic player must react to the flow of capital as well as the flow of ideas, human rights and public opinion. On that level, China might as well be a walled-in, ancient society.
Jan 25, 2008 01:29
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  • LEONARDO
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Still censored

As a journalist, the most troubling contradiction was the absence of a free press. Government censorship is evident in the watered-down coverage in Chinese newspapers and TV and radio news shows. The result is a rush to the Internet by the Chinese seeking "news" created anywhere but under government influence. Even there, the contradictions are in evidence. The Chinese can argue about anything online so long, as one blogger explained to me, as it does not involve the banned spiritual group *** or the three T's: Taiwan, Tiananmen Square and Tibet. Even so, the government must realize that trying to orchestrate, monitor, much less control the 1.3 billion voices will ultimately prove to be a futile exercise.

To this curious visitor, it is clear that the Chinese people aspire to return their country to a place it occupied centuries ago — as a great civilization and world leader in economics, the arts and military might.

Many Chinese people told me that America's negative views of their authoritarian government, media control and lax product safety is proof that the USA is jealous of China. The Americans, they say, are simply trying to impose their values while undermining this emerging rival.

And perhaps that's what the modern Cold War will be about. Not capitalism vs. communism, but a conflict within China between rapid economic growth and a closed society constrained by an outdated Communist structure.

Juan Williams is a political analyst for NPR and Fox News.
Jan 25, 2008 05:17
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  • JABAROOTOO
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Interesting commentary !!!!!
Jan 27, 2008 20:45
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  • SUMMERSNOW
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Juan Williams is speculating about a new Cold War with China which is just that, speculation -- fear mongering.
Jan 28, 2008 04:01
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GUESTSTEV China, however, has its manufacturing and extremely cheap labor to keep it afloat. China is wealthy because China has become the workshop of the world. I know one thing about all of its people! They enjoyed working, living, and they looked forward to a safe place to raise a family.
Jan 28, 2008 09:06
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  • MARRIE
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guest, it's true that extreme cheap labors weigh lots in making cn center of global mfg. besides, its relatively high skilled and more diligent labor than those in other developing countries is attractive.


Summersnow, i don't understand what you are talking about. economic development is big issue and nobody, wants to become a crazy risk seeker . remember it's not cultural revolution era in today's china.
Jan 29, 2008 04:02
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  • JOHNNY512
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Humans have two faces,too. One dark, one bright. China does have two faces, but IMO its modern faces have overshadowed its past dark face. China is forwarding to a new destination. China is undergoing a plastic surgery. It will have a nice appearance.
Feb 20, 2008 06:35
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  • CHERI
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Every society has its good face and bad face, include USA. Now, China has begun to realize its deficiencies and has taken lots of measure to overcome these problems.
Feb 20, 2008 20:54
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  • ICEBLUE
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China has been developing very quickly since 1979. Its modern face is most shown in the Southern parts of the country. The Special Economic Zones along the southeast coastal cities present the modern appearance of this ancient country. It seems to me that China is undergoing a plastic surgery.The withered old skin is being ripped off.
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