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Today's news: Google smacks China

January 13th 2010 01:42
google china
Google has accused China of hacking into Gmail accounts, and has threatened to walk out of China as a consequence.

Google has just issued a statement saying it has uncovered a "highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China". The email accounts targeted were those of human rights activists.


Google did not name the Chinese government, but it didn't have to. And it did say it was "no longer willing to continue censoring our results" on its Chinese search engine, as the government requires.

China may be the world's population leader and a global economic super-heavyweight, but this is a fight which it may want to back away from. Civil unrest is never far from the surface in any community ruled by a totalitarian regime, and the humiliation of a Google walk-out, and the focus it would bring on Beijing's heavy-handed approach to many social issues, will have it considering its response to Google's allegations very carefully.

Google is itself a super-heavyweight in the human conscious, and it will not have understaken this course of action lightly. In announcing the end of the co-operative search engine censorship agreement, Google has come out swinging. It decided to do more than put its hand up and complain. It decided to throw a swinging, stinging counter-punch.

That means the Chinese must react — to simply accept Google's smack on the bottom would be an enormous loss of face.


Google is playing hardball on this one, and the world awaits Beijing's reaction. But none more than a billion growingly affluent and cosmopolitan Chinese citizens who have hopes for a better world.
The New York Times


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China's birthday party

September 29th 2009 23:13
china propaganda poster
The art of propaganda. Translation: 'Make art and propaganda one integrated part of the revolutionary mechanism. Use it as a powerful weapon to organise people, educate people, strike the enemy and eliminate the enemy!'

We would like to wish China's Communist Party a happy birthday. But we won't.

It is 60 years tomorrow since the party was formed, and if it has been in power ever since, it is largely because it has tended to delete rather than debate opposing ideas.

There are, of course, many positives. When Mao Tse Tung proclaimed the founding of the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949, he began a transformation from a poor, strife-torn country, control of which was being raffled by international powers, to an economic juggernaut. Along the way, the population grew from 368 million to 1.4 billion.

Along the way, also, Mao and his party rewrote the style guide to totalitarianism. Say one thing, do another, and don't let anyone else have a say unless they agree with you, in which case they should sing your praises loudly.

Along the way, also, we had seemingly endless five-year plans; we had a Great Leap Forward which was a great leap backwards; we had a Cultural Revolution which was a brutal leap backwards; we saw in 1971 little, inoffensive Taiwan evicted from the UN in favour of big, offensive China, a nasty act of political pragmatism which was cemented a year later by a meeting of non-minds when Richard Nixon stepped into Beijing; and we saw time called on the world's most vibrant harbour city, which Britain had quietly borrowed for 156 years.

The celebrations this week in China will be long and vigorous and stage-managed. No-one will quite believe the speeches and their long lists of Chinese Communist Party achievements. But they will smile and nod, and hope they are being seen doing so.

Happy birthday China, they'll say, and look like they mean it. Except in Tibet and Mongolia and Xinjiang and ...



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United in sport, divided by politicians

December 1st 2008 22:21
india pakistan problems

It's hard to find a more complex set of political and social issues than the Pakistan-India confrontation. The partition and creation of Pakistan in 1947 was politically driven and created more problems than it solved.

I learned a heartbreaking fact a couple of years ago. When the Indian cricket team plays a Test match anywhere in the world, every cricket fan in Pakistan follows the game just as avidly as if it was Pakistan playing. They still accept, indeed take, the Indian team as their own.

If this grassroots, instinctive evidence counts for anything, it says that, 61 years after political partition, culturally they remain one nation.

But since when did the honesty of grassroots instinct and passion sway opinion in the halls of political expediency?

Recommended background reading: Deep Pencil post

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Government spending

August 11th 1999 11:02
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

If economists could manage to get themselves thought of as humble, competent people, on a level with dentists, that would be splendid! -- John Maynard Keynes

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Chinese embassy bombing

May 18th 1999 09:54
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.


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Chill wind from Beijing

February 8th 1999 03:57
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

They dream in courtship, but in wedlock wake. -- Alexander Pope

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Indonesia’s lonely battle

November 16th 1998 02:53
Expendable pawns and few mates

I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political, investment and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, especially in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.
[ Click here to read more ]
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