Dewey defeats Truman!

kerry picks gephardt.jpg

What do you expect — it’s the New York Post.

Update: My friend Jeremy writes on his blog today about watching Fox News’ coverage of the Edwards pick:

So, watching Neil Cavuoto, waiting for his repartee on the events that had unfolded. So, Cavuoto goes right to how the market opened and gauges his comments with “not that I’m being partisan, but this is historically true” that the market drops because of Democrats. Okay, the market opens lower today, and three more times Cavuoto says that he’s not being partisan, but …

Okay, the market could have opened lower today because: three Marines were killed, oil is at $40 / barrel, it’s earnings week for a few companies. Any of these are pretty good indications for a drop in the market.

The “not being partisan” was said about two many times, bringing it to a total of oh, about 20 times he said it (exaggeration). It’s like the great joke, “I’m not a racist, but I hate (any ethnic minority will work).” He protested too much.

What does he expect — it’s Fox News. And what a coincidence, that Rupert Murdoch owns both Fox news and the NY Post….

13
Comments

China Daily praises Tung’s decisiveness during SARS crisis

I wasn’t in Hong Kong during the 2003 SARS epidemic so I can’t say whether this article is based on fact or fantasy.

What I can do is quote the emailer who brought this article to my attention: “Is it any coincidence that this praise comes out after a weekend that saw over half a million Hong Kong citizens take to the streets to denounce him and the party for which he is a puppet?”

I suspect the emailer is on the right track, and that the article is a crock.

5
Comments

My respect for McCain drops a notch. A big notch.

it’s just been announced that McCain will be appearing in at least one Bush campaign ad:

President Bush’s re-election campaign has a television ad in the works featuring former Republican rival John McCain and advisers are weighing whether to air it when Democrat John Kerry announces his vice presidential pick.

McCain, the Arizona senator who rejected Kerry’s overtures to be No. 2 on the Democratic ticket, campaigned with Bush in Fort Lewis, Wash., last month. Bush’s admakers filmed the appearance and the footage is being included in an ad, according to GOP sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the plans remain incomplete.

Yeah, McCain is a Republican and maybe you can argue he should be doing all he can for his party. But after what Bush did to him in 2000, an act of pure character assassination founded on a big lie (that McCain was opposed to funding breast cancer research), and after more than 20 years of friendship with John Kerry, I wish he had politely refused to appear in the Bush ads.

McCain was tossed a bone for being a good mascot, and will be delivering the keynote speech at the Republican convention. I want to think that McCain will be the maverick I know and respect, and spice up his speech with some honest thoughts about how his party can make the world a better place (maybe by dissolving itself?). But after seeing his toadying of the past few weeks, I’m not at all optimistic.

6
Comments

Woman, 34, beaten to death by police in Guizhou

I guess she had it coming; after all, she was distributing copies of the Bible.

A 34 year old woman has been beaten to death by police after she was arrested for handing out Bibles in southwest China’s Guizhou province, BosNewsLife learned Monday, July 5.

The French News Agency (AFP) quoted China’s state run Legal Daily newspaper as saying that police in Guizhou’s Tongzi county arrested Jiang Zongxiu, a farmer, on June 18 on suspicion of “spreading rumors and inciting to disturb social order.”

They had planned to detain her for 15 days, the report said, alleging Jiang died in police custody the afternoon she was arrested.

Her mother-in-law, Tan Dewei, who was arrested with Jiang but later released, told reporters police kicked Jiang repeatedly during interrogation AFP reported. Police later informed Jiang’s family she had died of a sudden illness and turned over her body to the family, but relatives saw she was covered with bruises and blood stains, the report alleged.

It’s a scary little article, and the punishment meted out does seem a bit out of proportion with the “crime.”

Many things scare me, but few as much as being arrested by the Chinese police.

4
Comments

Jiang Yanyong’s “forced detention” and “re-education”

There is a rich irony in the current plight of Jiang Yanyong, the whisteleblower universally hailed for alerting Time magazine last year to the truth about SARS in Beijing and the government’s frantic efforts to cover it up.

The irony is that so many people with whom I’ve discussed Chinese political trends pointed in 2003 to the government’s good treatment of Jiang (he wasn’t punished — at least not immediately) as proof positive that Hu Jintao is a reform-minded leader under whose rule freedom of political expression and political reform would flourish.

I can’t say whether Hu is a reform-minded leader or not; I’ve seen hints of that, but in nearly every case they’ve ultimately led to disappointment. But I can say that under him, political reform and freedom of political expression have done anything but flourish. And now, Jiang Yanyong, the pre-eminent symbol of the new-found Chinese Glasnost, is himself locked up by the Thought Police with Hu’s approval!

The government’s response to SARS in April 2003 — acknowledging its sins, firing some bigwigs and getting serious about fighting the epidemic — were seen by many as true turning points. It was a sign that the CCP had seen the light, and would not go back to silencing and punishing whistleblowers, or manipulating the truth to protect itself at the people’s expense. It was as though China had passed through a grave danger (true enough), from which its leaders emerged more noble and more enlightened than ever before.

I wanted to agree with this rather optimistic outlook, but was forced to be more cynical, as a leopard’s spots don’t change overnight, at least not this dramatically. The ongoing stream of stories on rampant corruption and repression of political expression did little to reassure me.

So, returning to the present and Dr. Jiang. Here’s a superb update from Philip Pan (who seems to have replaced John Pomfret as the Washington Post’s foreign corresondent in Beijing).

Chinese military and security officials are forcing the elderly physician who exposed the government’s coverup of the SARS epidemic to attend intense indoctrination classes and are interrogating him about a letter he wrote in February denouncing the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, according to sources familiar with the situation.

The officials have detained Jiang Yanyong, 72, a semi-retired surgeon in the People’s Liberation Army, in a room under 24-hour supervision, and they have threatened to keep him until he “changes his thinking” and “raises his level of understanding” about the Tiananmen crackdown, said one of the sources, who described the classes as “brainwashing sessions.”

But Jiang, who became a national hero last year after blowing the whistle on the government’s efforts to hide the SARS outbreak, has refused to back down, and said in a recent note to his family that he would continue to “face the problems confronting me with the principle of seeking truth from facts,” according to a person close to the family.

The standoff is the culmination of an extraordinary battle of wills that has been quietly unfolding for months between China’s ruling Communist Party and an individual who has already challenged the authorities and forced them to back down once.

China’s state-controlled media have not reported Jiang’s detention, which began June 1. In response to questions submitted by The Washington Post, the government said in a brief statement: “Jiang Yanyong, as a soldier, recently violated the relevant discipline of the military. Based on relevant regulations, the military has been helping and educating him.”

Though Chinese police routinely jail dissidents, the decision to detain Jiang appears to have been made by the Central Military Commission, the nation’s supreme military body, with the consent of the party’s most senior leaders, including President Hu Jintao and his influential predecessor, Jiang Zemin, according to a source familiar with the decision-making process. [Emphasis added.]

The move represents a high-risk gamble by the leadership because of Jiang Yanyong’s public stature at home and abroad. Photographs of his wizened face have been displayed on the covers of national magazines, and state newspapers have published articles crediting him with saving lives around the world by forcing government officials to confront the SARS epidemic.

If the leadership succeeds in silencing Jiang, it would send a powerful message to potential critics about its determination to crush dissent. But Jiang’s detention could also trigger a backlash against a party already struggling to maintain its monopoly on power as there is rising social discontent. And if Jiang is not released, he would almost certainly become China’s most famous political prisoner.

This is one more in a series of recent steps backwards, but it surely has the ingredients for an international scandal. Even inside China, as the article goes on to say, there is huge support for Dr. Jiang, and his arrest could threaten internal stability more than reinforce it.

No one knows yet who’s pulling the strings. Considering the doctor’s outspokenness on the Tiananmen Square Massacre and the role of the Central Military Commission, the smart money is on Jiang Zemin, though Hu evidently gave his buy-in. Maybe it’s yet another manifestation of the famous in-fighting between them. But I don’t know.

Pan has done an awesome job with this sweeping article. Read the whole piece to grasp just how tragic this story is. Read about the victim being separated from his wife, and his bravery throughout the ordeal. Read about the Stalinesque determination to force the doctor to think the way The State thinks. Read about China’s taking a brave and revered old man, a national hero, and how they are seeking to crush him with the most loathsome totalitarian tools, your good old-fashioned “brainwashing.” Read about the New China and its bold new reform-minded leadership.

Update: To understand just how splendid a man Jiang Yanyong is, you may want to read his recent letter to the Chinese government. It is heartbreaking, to say the least. Read it and see what real heroism is.

6
Comments

Shanghai’s “idle youth”

Be sure to check out Shanghai Eye’s excellent-as-always look at Shanghai’s underbelly, populated by scheming rascallions and lazy elitists.

Oh, and while you’re there, don’t miss the humorous op-ed by Shanghai’ Eye’s new columnist, none other than Kim Jong-Il himself!

No
Comments

Propaganda flick to be shown on US military bases?

Awesome.

Army and Air Force Exchange Service, Which Books Films To Be Shown on Military Bases Around the World, Has Contacted Fahrenheit Distributor to Book the Film

Hell, if we use our tax doallrs to play Rush Limbaugh to our troops, why not Michael Moore?

No
Comments

Calvin Trillin’s George Bush poem, “Nanny Dick”

This was emailed to me by a friend so I can’t provide a link. It is absolutely great.

New Poem by Calvin Trillin

George had trouble at his recent press conference. He had trouble understanding the questions, and he had a difficult time constructing coherent sentences. One exchange in particular caught my attention. He was asked not once but twice why he and Dick were appearing together, not separately as had been requested, before the 9/11 commission. He didn’t answer the question at the press conference. Fortunately George later explained it to Calvin Trillin.

I CAN’T APPEAR WITHOUT
MY NANNY DICK

by Calvin Trillin

(George W. Bush explains the interview arrangements
he’s made with the 9/11 Commission)

When called upon to testify
I said I was a busy guy
So maybe we could do it on the phone.
They really want a face to face.
I said, OK, if that’s’s the case,
I’m certainly not doing it alone.

I can’t appear without my nanny Dick.
for Nanny Dick I’ve got a serious jones.
I can’t appear without my Nanny Dick.
I love the way he cocks his head and drones.

Cartoonists show me as a dummy,*
With voice by Cheney (or by Rummy).
I am the butt of every late-night satirist.
But I just can’t go solitaire.
I need the help that’s due an heir.
I need a dad, and dad’s a multilateralist.

I can’t appear without my Nanny Dick.
He brings along a gravitas I lack.
I can’t appear without my Nanny dick—
The one who knows why we attacked Iraq.

Yes, Condi Rice is quite precise
With foreign policy advice
On who’s Afghani and who’s Pakistani.
I like to have her near in case
I just can’t place some foreign face,
But Condoleezza Rice is not my nanny.

I can’t appear without my Nanny dick.
I wouldn’t know which facts I should convey.
I can’t appear without my Nanny Dick.
It’s Nanny Dick who tells me what to say.

*Though Charlie McCarthy’s the dummy
Whose name has been most often heard,
Some folks who remember that act say
I’m close to Mortimer Snerd.

Update: Here’s my friend’s source.

No
Comments

David Letterman’s Top-10 List for Fahrenheit 9/11

Letterman’s “Top 10 George W. Bush Complaints About Fahrenheit 9/11″

10 – That actor who played the president was totally unconvincing.

9 – It oversimplified the way I stole the election.

8 – Too many of them fancy college-boy words

7 – If Michael Moore had waited a few months, he could have included the part where I get him deported.

6 – Didn’t have one of them hilarious monkeys who smoke cigarettes and gives people the finger.

5 – Of all Michael Moore’s accusations, only 97% are true.

4 – Not sure … I passed out after a piece of popcorn lodged in my windpipe.

3 – Where the hell was Spiderman?

2 – Couldn’t hear most of the movie over Cheney’s foul mouth.

1 – I thought this was supposed to be about dodgeball!”

No
Comments

New book explores perils of China’s gender gap

Could China’s gender imbalance, unprecedented in world history, lead to the CCP becoming more authoritarian? That’s the somewhat radical thesis of a book reviewed in today’s New York Times.

Generations of Chinese have called them “bare branches”: poor young men who face a future without marriage or children, reflections of a society with more men than women. Now some political scientists who have been studying skewed sex ratios in places like India and China argue that advances in fetal sex-selection technology have helped produce a new, unusually large generation of unattached young men who hold the potential for violent social unrest within their own countries and beyond their borders.

Demographers and feminist scholars have written widely in the last decade about the plight of China’s missing girls, while criminologists know that violence is disproportionately associated with young, single men. But a controversial new book, “Bare Branches: The Security Implications of Asia’s Surplus Male Population” (M.I.T. Press), goes one step further, connecting these strands with a government’s calculation of how peaceful it can afford to be.

If these young men cannot find wives or jobs or become a viable part of their societies, the book argues, they can pose a threat to internal stability and make governments more likely to create military campaigns to absorb and occupy these youths.

“It should have been an issue 5 or 10 years ago as well, but it becomes even more important today because the technologies that make prenatal sex selection possible only began to be prevalent in Asia in the mid- to late-1980’s,” said Andrea M. den Boer, a research fellow in the department of politics and international relations at the University of Kent, in England, who is a co-author of the book with Valerie M. Hudson, a professor of political science at Brigham Young University. “We are currently on the threshold of a time in which these young men are becoming a volatile social force that will attract the attention of the government. And each successive year, the birth sex ratio got worse, so the problem itself becomes worse with every passing year.”

It’s an intriguing topic, the effect of sex ratios on war and peace and social stability. As the reviewer says, due to political correctness it’s a subject that’s usually avoided. Anyone following the subject of China’s (and India’s) gender gap should read the review, and probably the book as well.

Thanks to the reader who emailed me about this article; it’s appreciated.

9
Comments