When the grasshopper plays and it’s the ant who suffers

Heartbreaking story out of rural China via the LA Times: poor farmers defrauded in a pyramid scam involving–would you believe it–ants. Somewhere, a grasshopper is smiling a little too smugly. The story illustrates the get-rich-now mentality here, the constant search for a new angle by those struggling to make a go of it with the communist economy having all but given way to private enterprise, and the frequent collusion of government officials in shady dealings.

Old rules of caution don’t carry much weight in a society that has seen some become absurdly wealthy, seemingly overnight. And government officials often are first in line to fleece the laobaixing, or common folk.

It’s hardly the first case like this here, in fact it’s probably not even among the first 10,000, and it certainly won’t be the last, especially if local officials and the central government stick with a policy of covering their own asses rather than trying to fix the problem.

It’s the dark underbelly of a reemerging China. The noveau riche zip around the country with their new cars and the latest in man-purse fashion. But while the economy is booming, the gap between the haves and have-nots continues to grow.

Morning Tea: Unintentional Comedy on CCTV…Adventures in China PR…Chiang’s Diaries…cheng’guan…and stolen fruit

It’s been a busy week here in Beijing. The Olympic year is not yet two weeks old and China is already doing its damnedest to serve up a whole stir-fry of crazy.

First off, 2008 has thus far not been kind to CCTV. While the state-run station has never really considered itself either yellow or violent, this reliable source of unintentional comedy for those of us living in Beijing has done its best to force that phrase into the cultural lexicon. (Plastered T-Shirts needs to get on this right away, how could they not?) EastSouthWestNorth has also provided a handy list of the top ten ‘very yellow, very violent’ websites for your surfing convenience.

Not to be outdone by the news division, CCTV sports, or, as it is now known, The Olympic Channel, staggered out of the gate when the amorous wanderings of sportscaster Zhang Bin drew the ire of his wife at the official kick-off ceremony. Hell hath no fury like a women scorned with access to cameras, microphones, and a soundstage. The money quote in my book: “Until China is able to start exporting its values, it won’t be able to become a great power. For us to

Getting real about "Getting Real in China"

UC Irvine history professor Jeffrey Wasserstrom has an article in The Nation this week about recent criticism of China. First off, let me say that I have enormous respect for Professor Wasserstrom and have enjoyed his essays a great deal. I also fundamentally agree with the general premise of his most recent piece.

Professor Wasserstrom argues:

I’m distressed by the tendency of so many Americans to assume that everything that goes on in China and everything about the treatment it gets is exotic and unusual. Often things that happen in or involve China are normal–even routine–and we can understand them without factoring in esoteric cultural traits or thinking of the country as a place that, in the global arena, always mysteriously gets handled with kid gloves.

Fair enough. I am no big fan of “Chinese exceptionalism” whether in the field of historical research or in the discussion of contemporary issues, but the examples that Professor Wasserstrom uses in his argument beg certain questions.

For example, he argues that, for all the talk of boycotts, China is hardly the first state with a poor human rights record to host the Olympic games:

Take the Olympics. To read some