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Has Beijing Olympics 2008 Made Life Worse for Chinese? Or was it for the Better?

‘The greatest show the world had ever seen … Confucius himself might have been pleased’ — The Independent.
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‘Not for decades has an Olympic Games been opened in such a colourful and overpowering fashion’ — Die Welt.
‘Eye-poppers gave way to jaw-droppers, stunners were followed by dazzlers’ — NBC.


The most common reaction to the Olympic opening ceremony has been awe. But the hype and the hoopla can’t hide the fact that the single most awesome aspect of the occasion has been the scale of the deception, and the extent to which the Western media have colluded in presentation of a pageant of propaganda.

Over the seven years since China ‘won’ the 2008 Games, the International Olympic Committee has encouraged a belief that human rights in the country would improve as quid pro quo for selection to stage the Games.

It’s been sorted out in the sense that dissidents have been thrown into jails and the poor hunted out of sight lest visitors be brought face-to-face with the reality of life for the mass of the people.

Far from the Games ushering in more tolerant attitudes on the part of State officialdom, they have brought about a zero-tolerance approach to anyone or anything which might challenge the fraudulent picture of China which the free-market Stalinists of the Hu Jintao regime want the Games to transmit to the world.

The Games have made things worse, not better, for the Chinese people. The point came across with abundant clarity in a documentary on Al Jaazera last Sunday night — tougher-minded and more insightful than anything I’ve seen on British or Irish television — dealing mainly with the problems of petitioners. The practice of petitioning dates back centuries.

Peasants would come to the Old City to beg the Emperor to intervene against oppressive landlords or corrupt tax-gatherers. (What a telling commentary on the nature of the Chinese ‘revolution’ that the same supplicant procedure persists to this day.) More than a million people pour into the capital every year with petitions to present to top party officials. Recently, most petitions have sought compensation for homes demolished on the order of local apparatchiks who then defraud the evicted families of compensation before selling the property off for development. Instances have soared under cover of Olympics-related construction projects. Until this year, hundreds of thousands of petitioners stayed each year in a run-down area of Beijing while waiting their turn at party offices. Some months ago, the entire area was razed to the ground by bulldozers. When Mugabe dealt similarly with a troublesome slum area of Harare two years ago, loud protests in Britain were led by the Prime Minister. This time, not a whimper.
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Ms Han was shown rummaging in a refuse tip for bits of plastic or tin to sell to buy food for her children. Two years ago she led a middle-class life. Her husband had a good job in the State-owned Bank of China. Then he went to Beijing with a petition complaining of corruption at the bank. Twenty ‘security officers’ and the local party secretary waylaid him at Beijing railway station. He was beaten until he looked like he’d been run over by a tank, then handcuffed and hauled off to a prison run by a private company, where he remains. Ms Han and her seven-year-old daughter were held in the same prison for three months.

“All the police bureaux have instructions to prevent petitioners reaching Beijing,” said Nicolas Bequelin of Human Rights Watch. “All the local party units at street level in Beijing have orders to prevent petitioners demonstrating. This is a comprehensive attempt to airbrush away any sign of discontent.”

A woman on the run for trying to petition, living in hiding with her children, said: “The party secretary told me, ‘Even if you report this matter, it will be as useless as farting. We are in control of this matter’.

“The Chinese Communist Party are purely fake communists. Before, the bandits lived deep in the mountains. Now they are the security police.” The Olympic Games have not brought about change for the better, nor was there any serious intent that they should. They have provided a spectacle to dazzle the eyes of the world while the individual capitalists of the West and the State capitalists of the East advance their relationship to the detriment of the Chinese people.

Still, protests continue every day. There were more strikes in China last year than anywhere else in the world. Ordinary people of whom we have never heard lead struggle we never learn about. Human rights advocates risk all. The Games will soon be over. But the real test of endurance is still to come.
[from Belfast Telegraph]

While this article gave a gloom outlook on China, i felt that it was rather cynical.
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nobunsnolife on why Chinese may have felt better because of the Olympics.

    - The Olympics is a victory for the Chinese. How they have curb pollutions and provided a really good Olympics so far for the global athletes, they have shown the world that the Chinese is indeed on track on the global stage and is not on a lower tier than any other nations.

    - We have read reports in the news(at least in Straits Times) on how the Chinese are scrambling for TVs to watch the Olympics. Even in the Earthquake hit regions, they would lay kilometers of electrical cables, just to be in time for the Opening Ceremony. This shows how much it meant to them. And how much they value the Olympics staged on their local ground.

    - While life may be worst for some living in Beijing due to the Olympics, where heightened securities and restrictions may have made life difficult, it is however necessary for the Chinese to protect their global guests and prevent another murder from happening. Let’s just hope that the difficult life for the locals will be temporary and since Beijing’s population constitute for only a part of China, it cannot be a testament for all Chinese too.

    -The Chinese might not have gain anything material through the Olympics for themselves, however the amount of world records and medals that their athletes won, will bring glory to the Chinese, allowing them to feel better when compared to other people in the world.

    - The Olympics has been an important milestone for the Chinese, to let the world witness how far they have gone through progress. While it may not be that everyone would benefit from it, it is arguably that through economic progress, many Chinese have better life than before.

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    4 Comments

    1. Posted August 15, 2008 at 1:07 pm | Permalink

      ya,it is really impress the whole world…
      including those fake fireworks and singing!
      you can read more about those news and my opinion on olympic opening

    2. Posted August 15, 2008 at 1:38 pm | Permalink

      And here’s another guy who emphasis on the little parts of the ceremony which constitute to maybe only 5% of the whole event. The singing wasn’t fake, it’s still sang by a chinese, albeit the lip syncing. Nevertheless, she carried it out well and no one suspected it. It was only known after the music director exposed this little sham.
      While the fireworks were fake on TV, it was real in Beijing. And only one part of it was fake, not the whole fireworks.
      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/othersports/olympics/2534499/Beijing-Olympic-2008-opening-ceremony-giant-firework-footprints-faked.html

    3. Posted August 15, 2008 at 2:12 pm | Permalink

      don’t quote Telegraph lah, it is uncreditable

      lip sync and “fake” effects is common thing in art work and entertainment industry, not a big deal, so happen this time it does not please moral standard. People should get more eeducation on art and stop letting anti-Chinese media influencing their brain

    4. Posted August 15, 2008 at 7:08 pm | Permalink

      haha thanks, will take note of telegraph.

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