1.) Population planning is a national policy. We should have taken it further and give money rewards to those with PhDs that have more children.
2.) No one cares about religion in China except for some terrorists. Buddhists are never monitored, I went to a temple before.
3.) Censorship is 100% necessary though I agree on degree. Most english sites are not blocked.
4.) Compensation is always paid. The issue is for illegal slums built on government land which do not get compensation. There was in fact a huge issue last year about Chongqing giving college students an urban hukou without their knowledge right as their farmland was going to be paved over, thus depriving them of ownership and compensation (since by law, only rural hukou have the right to own farmland).
5.) What do you want? It's China. Learn the national language. This is a joke. No country in the world allows higher education in anything other than its official language. What, are you going to expect to go to USA and refuse to learn English and still go to college? No way. What about Malaysia? Chinese Malaysians were forced to give up their language and learn Malay.
1. Population planning in an overcrowded nation is required. No quibbles on that.
However, it is not ideal to do so through a diktat. The better mode would be the democratic way i.e. which persuades the people to understand the negativity of having large families for themselves as also for the Nation.
Giving a diktat only leads to malpractices. This would not have happened if it was done by persuasion:
Sex Ratio In China As Boys Outnumber Girls By 35 Million
At this point China can not escape its fate of a failed “one-child” policy. Parents who defy the law have to pay fines and pay a steep price for their children’s education.
China is in a crisis with over 32 million more boys born than girls. A new report is showing that China will continue to see the high differences in sex ratio worsen even more over the next twenty years.
At this point China cannot escape its fate of a failed “one-child” policy. Parents who defy the law have to pay fines and pay a steep price for their children’s education.
It is routine for Chinese families to opt for abortion when they find that they are expecting a girl. Chinese mothers have early access to ultrasound diagnostics and abortion. China’s laws do not expressly prohibit or even define late-term termination. That infanticide while illegal is speculated to be in the hundreds of millions. Families who want a son will abandon their infant daughters on the side of the road to die. There have been reports that some families will even go to the black market to buy a child that at times has been stolen. …
In 2005 alone China had more than 1.1 million excess male births according to the authors of the report Zhejiang university professors Wei Xing Zhu and Li Lu and Therese Hesketh of University College London….
There have been reports that the shortage of women has already made an impact on crime in China. Many Chinese men are buying foreign wives according to the World Health Organization. The going price for Burmese women is between $600 and $2,400.
Because the low chance of being able to find a partner future males in the Chinese society may lead to antisocial behavior (possibly meaning too many tongzhis) and violence, threatening societal stability and security.
Sex Ratio In China As Boys Outnumber Girls By 35 Million « Moments In Time
The above would indicate the malpractice and social problems that can happen if there are Govt diktats to the population and not persuasion as is done in democracies.
In India, we are also overpopulated, but it is being done with persuasion through public awareness programmes. To prevent gender selection so that there are only male children, sonography for sex determination of the foetus is forbidden and illegal.
Of course, a Govt diktat with fines and education deprivation will have instant success, though with the disadvantage of having an huge surplus of males leading to social imbalance and socially harmful activities.
2. No one care about religion in China?
If so, what do you mean Buddhists are not monitored? Does that not mean that there are Buddhists and does the fact that they are not monitored not mean that the said Buddhists practice their religion? Contradiction in your statement, if I may say.
You state that Buddhists are not monitored. Applicable to the Tibetans or are they the terrorists you allude to and hence don’t exist? Does it mean that Chinese don’t have Christians and Muslims? If they are there, are they not citizens of China? Or are you suggesting that they are not recognised that they also exist. Are there not the Muslim
Huis. even if you wish to classify the Uyghurs as ‘terrorists’.
Now, if there were no religion and no Christians, then maybe this could be explained.
The party versus the pope
The party tightens its grip on the Catholic Church
Dec 9th 2010 | SHIJIAZHUANG |
THE Catholic church in China, according to a state-affiliated Catholic newspaper, Tianguang, has never enjoyed the sort of “political and religious harmony and friendly atmosphere that it has today.” This is not exactly the gospel truth. The Communist Party is trying to tighten its control of the Catholic church in China. Some of its members, as well as the Vatican, are fuming.
The rosy newspaper commentary marked the opening on December 7th in Beijing of a national congress of Chinese Catholic representatives. The Vatican objects to the conclave, which is intended to elect new leaders of the Chinese church’s governing bodies. These are, in effect, government appointments over which the Vatican has no say. Several Chinese bishops, who would have preferred to stay away out of loyalty to the Vatican, have been forced to attend the three-day event.
Tension between the Vatican and the Communist Party’s church-controllers has risen sharply in recent days. Earlier this month a group of seminarians at the Hebei Catholic Theological and Philosophical Seminary in the city of Shijiazhuang, 300km (185 miles) south of Beijing, mounted an unusually open protest. With the support of teachers, all 102 of the school’s seminarians went from their campus on the dusty industrial outskirts of Hebei province’s capital to the downtown office of the government’s religious-affairs bureau. There the students, wearing their white school uniforms, peacefully demanded the removal of an official at the bureau, Tang Zhaojun, as deputy rector of the school. Mr Tang is not even a Catholic. The students began boycotting classes shortly after his appointment on November 11th and only resumed their studies on December 6th. Officials at the religious-affairs bureau brusquely refuse comment. But a seminary priest says the government has made a concession. It has agreed to remove Mr Tang from his leadership position and keep him only in a teaching role. The priest says “more big problems” will arise if the government fails to keep its promise. “We are all very united”, he says.
More at:
China's Catholics: The party versus the pope | The Economist
By the way, are there not clandestine ‘house’ churches in China that are there to avoid Govt monitoring?
3. Censorship is 100% and you say you agree on the degree. You also state that English sites are not censored.
What is the reason why English sites are not censored if Chinese sites are? I have not understood the logic. Does it mean that all who understand English are pro Government and pro CCP people and Communist Party cardholders?
Whatever is the case, could this be explained since this report and your comments are at divergence and so to a layman, as me, it is convoluted.
Blocking the Net
Tuesday, 27 September 2005 00:00 Ron Chepesiuk
Reporters Without Borders (RWB), the Paris-based media watchdog group is what monitors press freedom worldwide,….
The Internet may seem like a medium that can democratize China, but the Chinese authorities have developed effective ways to sabotage online dissent. In fact, the RWB believes that "the way the Chinese government has stifled online dissent offers a model for dictatorships in all corners of the world."
Moreover, the Chinese have help from the West to achieve their repressive objectives. Several large multinationals, including Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo!, have been willing to allow China to censor ideas and stifle free expression in exchange for profit. Last June, Microsoft began blocking consumers of its new China-based Internet protocol from using such "dangerous" words and phrases as "freedom," "democracy," "human rights," "demonstration," and "Taiwan independence." Users who fail to comply get this message: "This item should not contain forbidden speech, such as profanity."
In a society as tightly controlled as China, Microsoft has become a willing participant in sustaining one of the world's most repressive regimes. The newspaper USA Today eulogized about the bitter irony: "What's actually profane is a company that built its future on the freedom provided by the American system helping a repressive regime censor such ideas."
Microsoft certainly has company. In 2002, Yahoo! China signed a pledge not to allow the placement of "pernicious information that may jeopardize state security," while in 2004 Google launched a new search engine in China that omitted sites the Chinese government didn't like, such as the BBC and Voice of America.
In an ominous sign for Internet users anywhere, Yahoo! seems particularly eager to please the ruling class by providing information about its customers. The RWB reports that Yahoo! supplied information to the Chinese government regarding an IP address, which led to Hong Kong journalist Shi Tao being sentenced to 10 years in prison this April. "We already knew that Yahoo! collaborates enthusiastically that the Chinese regime in questions of censorship, and now we know that it is a Chinese police informant as well," RWB said in a press release.
U.S.-based companies are also supplying commercial software to help countries "filter" - that is, censor information. Last June, the OpenNet Initiative (ONI) released a report titled "Internet Filtering in Iran," which documents how the Iranian government has used the commercial filtering software SmartFilter to control every aspect of its citizens' cyber experience, from websites and e-mail to blogs and online discussion forums. Made by the U.S. based company Secure Computing, the software is helping the Iranian government block internationally hosted sites in English, as well as other sites hosted in local languages.
Blocking the Net
4. Compensation is always paid you state. The issue is fair compensation as per the market rates.
As far as demolition on illegally occupied area is concerned, one can understand. There are enough of sites to indicate how even property owned by people are forcibly demolished in connivance with the authorities.
There are many links one could append to include of people committing suicide over the issue or even being murdered.
Let me give only one report from China. Org.
Historical Tongzhou hutong set to be demolished
Century-old courtyards located in shantytown areas near the Tongzhou district's Randengfo Tower have been scheduled to be demolished on Thursday to make way for the local government's "New City" campaign.
An official notice announced the demolition was recently posted on a wall in Xita Hutong. The notice offered residents two possible choices: receive compensation for relocating, approximately 15,000 yuan ($2,197) per square meter of their compound, or move to government-built compounds.
Residents said that they are holding out hope for a third way of preserving their compound's historical character, and that four generations have occupied the areas set to be demolished, built over 100 years ago.
A resident surnamed Yang said foreign and Chinese photographers have lately come to take photos of the courtyards, and the photos were exhibited inside the Randengfo Tower.
Another resident surnamed Zhao, in her late 50s, said that the area was at one time an outpost during the era of the Republic of China (1912-1949), and acted as a place of rest for messengers sending letters from Tianjin to Beijing.
"The outer wall of my yard was still part of that outpost, but the rest became a dump," said Zhao, adding that employees from cultural relic protection organizations and district museums have frequently visited her house to take photographs.
According to the Tongzhou district's cultural relic protection administration, not all the courtyards should be considered cultural relics. The wall where the demolition notice was posted in Xita Hutong is currently the only officially recognized cultural relic in the area.
Residents have been told that they can submit an appeal to the demolition company whereupon a decision can be made following a discussion, said staff of the company.
According to the district commission for housing and urban construction, Xita Hutong's demolition period has been set from April 8 to April 27.
Residents have also been told that they are required to vacate their compounds seven days after April 27, or face a 10,000-yuan ($1,465) per-day deduction from potential compensation schemes.
Historical Tongzhou hutong set to be demolished - China.org.cn
I am sure a century old hutongs are not on illegal occupation of land.
5. I am surprised that you are not aware of many countries where the education is multilingual. As a starter it is suffice to mention India, Spain, Philippines, Africa, France et al.
Just Google.
I would also like to add that many are unconformable with Chinese posters since they pass off justifications that prove to be outright wrong that even is not supported by the Chinese media!
It creates a trust deficit and so even if a Chinese poster is telling the facts right, there is always the doubt that it one of those fast one off the cuff.
Not losing face is an important of Chinese psychology, but then distorting facts is even worse.
Lastly, there is no country that is absolutely perfect, no matter how much we love our country!!