Eighteen: Alice Cooper, The Sons of Anarchy, and China’s national adolescence

It’s summer and that usually means catching up on important things like “dissertation research,” “World Cup,” and, of course, “television.”  One of the undeniable pleasures of Beijing is exchanging a few kuai with the local DVD salesman and walking away with two or three complete seasons of trash television.

Of late, I’ve been really into a show called “Sons of Anarchy.” It’s a kind of evolutionary “Sopranos.” Both deal with organized crime (Mafia/outlaw motorcycle gangs) mixed with suburban banality and a fair dose of very dark humor.  (The Sons’ ‘Paulie Walnuts’ is an out of control psychopath who waxes lyrical about necrophilia while removing the teeth from a soon to be identified corpse in the local morgue.)  As you might imagine, it’s a tough show to watch and while it is a well-written and brilliantly acted series, the violence is enough to make the boys from the Bada Bing seem like Carmelite nuns.  (Check out a video clip here.)

For example, in the third episode of season one a former member returns to town and is seen still sporting a tatoo with the club’s emblem.  The solution? You guessed it, a ten-minute musical montage showing the club pouring whiskey down the

Image of the week: A mountain sunrise in Sichuan Province

Our campsite during a recent IES student trek near Yading, Sichuan. The site is located on the shoulder of Xiannairi at about 4800 meters in elevation. This was taken during our circumambulation of the mountain, considered to be a physical manifestation of the Goddess of Mercy, in May, 2010.

Seeking to improve agricultural yields, China looks back to the basics of the Columbian Exchange

There’s an article today in The Boston Globe on efforts by Chinese agricultural scientists to encourage farmers to plant potatoes as a way to solve a potential crisis in food production for the world’s largest nation.

From the Boston Globe:

In the land of rice, China is looking at an unlikely tool for maintaining growth and social harmony: the potato.

The Chinese government has begun ramping up research, production, and training related to the humble spud, and hopes are high that it could help alleviate poverty and serve as a bulwark against famine.

The challenge of feeding a growing nation on a shrinking supply of arable land while confronting severe water shortages has long been a major concern here. China has to feed one-fifth of the world’s population on one-tenth of its arable land, and the nation’s expanding cities are consuming farmland at breakneck speed. China estimates that by 2030, when its population is expected to level off at roughly 1.5 billion, it will need to produce an additional 100 million tons of food each year.

It’s a story with a long history.

Beginning in the 16th century, crops from North and South America such as maize, the potato (in

On Kiwis, Kakapos, and the export of Chinese sensitivities…

Down in the antipode this week, an international scuffle broke out and it had nothing to do with the criminally atrocious officiating last night in both the Germany/Serbia and US/Slovenia matches…*

Russel Norman, MP and leader of the New Zealand Green Party, marked the arrival of Chinese heir-to-be-but-we’re-still-not-telling-anybody-officially-yet Xi Jinping to Wellington by waving a Τibetan flag and calling for Τibet’s independence.

A tacky move I’ll grant you, and one that probably would have rated a mention on page 23 of the Dominion Post (right after the rugby scores) if the Chinese security forces had the sense the Good Lord gave to a drunken kakapo.**  Lest the very sight of the Τibetan colors mortally wound the delicate sensitivities of CHTBBWSNTAOY, Xi Jinping’s security detail harassed the MP with the Chinese counterintelligence weapons of today (the umbrella) and yesterday (a good old fashioned elbow in the ribs).

Mr. Norman wishes to press charges.  Good luck with that.

The WSJ has a roundup of the mini-fracas and the international fallout which ends on a point I’ve made in this space not a few times.  In trying to “manage” situations which have a potential to be embarrassing for the Party or the PRC, Chinese officials

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