Friday, April 18, 2008

A Walk Thru the Park





I attended the Good Luck Beijing Games yesterday, the Synchronized Swimming Event in the Water Cube, The cube is amazing! I was wondering how Beijing Committee preparing for uncertainty and "unexpected events" in the games, were these types of social-political problems anticipated? Security was certainly high for these pre-events but what stood out the most was the incompleteness of the facilities and the lack of transport options to and from the park. Likewise, the air pollution here is as tick & choking as ever. The entire sound system in the cube also crashed (stopped) during the Venezuelan duos performance, how terrible for them!

the most popular phrase here now is "don't be like CNN", so the foreigners here are laying low. The anti-western media backlash in the Chinese Media is intense, however, the sentiment on the street seems as though locals are indifferent to the ongoing international banter. This phrase from a NY Times article for me articulates the main ideological difference between our cultures, that being differing views on the rights of the individual vs the greater, collective good:

"Bai Ru, 22, a business management student originally from Inner Mongolia, said she trusted the government to take whatever measures were necessary to ensure a seamless Olympics. She said personal sacrifice, including stifling one's dissatisfaction with the political status quo, was for the collective good."


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/18/world/asia/18china.html?ref=asia

1 comment:

Tracy said...

Well my dear, don't be like CNN! I don't know if you heard about the story about the Chinese student at Duke who made the mistake of being seen in public *talking* to demonstrators, the other Chinese students at Duke put her out to dry. Like, posted her parents' address in China in the internet. So, things are no different in the Triangle.