Let the 1911 Foolishness Begin...

I’m sure this is not the last time I’ll write about 1911 over the coming year BUT…

The centenary of the Wuhan Uprising/Xīnhài Gémìng 辛亥革命 is, well, nearly 18 months away which makes the planning process in Wuhan a little premature perhaps, but nobody ever lost a wager betting against the reflexive compulsion on the part of Chinese local officials to take the most mundane and boring event and blow it out of all proportions.

Nevertheless, “some people” (the Global Times’ favorite source) are already concerned about the costs associated with the Wuhan municipal government’s plan to commemorate the 100 year anniversary of an accidental uprising that succeeded completely in spite of itself, which is not exactly how Wuhan’s leaders spin it:

The Wuhan government’s plan to spend 20 billion yuan ($2.9 billion) to celebrate the centenary of the Xinhai Revolution, the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty, has stirred debate among residents who say the government has failed to effectively use public money.

Ruan Chengfa, the mayor of Wuhan, Hubei Province, and also a deputy to the National People’s Congress, told the Xinhua News Agency that a grand celebration is needed because the revolution is a landmark event in China

Yankee Doodle Beijing...new blog in the roll

Through Twitter and a bit of procrastination, I stumbled across the very well-written and often chortle-worthy blog Red, White and Blue in Beijing.   While clearly of a genre, it’s nice to see the “expat rambles” thing done so well.  For those of you familiar with the Beijing blog world, think of it as a Yankee cousin to the consistently excellent and amusing Froog blogs.

Henan Cultural Preservation Office resists calls to commercialize Cao Cao’s tomb

Even centuries later, Cao Cao sure knows how to start a turf war.  This week the Henan Cultural Preservation Office issued a statement saying that there were no plans to commercialize the recently discovered tomb of Three Kingdoms era general Cao Cao.  Spokesperson Sun Yingmin said that great care was needed to preserve and study “one of China’s greatest archaeological discoveries.”

I suspect what may be going on here is akin to an ongoing battle in Shaanxi over the tomb of Qin Shihuang, the first Qin Emperor.  Some government officials, anxious to develop the regional economy, are eager to exploit famous archaeological sites for tourism hoping to add some cash to the local coffers.  Archaeologists, historians, and the like are reluctant to rush excavations for fear of causing irreparable harm to the contents of the tombs.

This sounds like a bit of preemptive strike on the part of Henan Cultural Preservation officials to their more profit-driven brethren to back off and let the researchers work.

Be careful when you ask for a little cream for your coffee…

I’m usually resistant to the mystical properties of Chinglish and knock-off English, but this is positively transcendent.

(h/t Danwei.)

If only we could all be like Liu Xiang...then we'll REALLY be ready for the Japanese next time

Amidst the usual nonsense in China’s annual head feint toward participatory democracy, CPPCC celebrity watchers have enjoyed gaping as the likes Song Zuying (whose political credentials so far as we know mainly revolve around her — ahem — presidential services during the Jiang Zemin administration) and TV host Yang Lan play politician for the masses.

And of course there is also hurdler Liu Xiang, taking a much heralded leap into politics.  Now the mixing of athletes and politics is a long standing tradition in the US, and something of a religion in places like the Philippines, and Americans who were expecting their unemployment  checks this past Monday can attest to just how dicey a match up this can be: For every Jack Kemp there is also, unfortunately, a Jim Bunning.

Unlike Senator Bunning however, Liu Xiang kept to his mandate — athletic eye candy for the masses — and in this capacity delivered the basic message that China’s youth should exercise more and that “a healthy body is everything.”

It’s not the worst way to start a political career.  The earliest incarnation of Mao Zedong thought was a rather archly literal interpretation of “national strength” by the future Chairman: a

日历

March 2010
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031