A duck with clipped wings

My laptop crashed and I will be without a computer tonight and tomorrow morning and maybe longer, so output will plummet. Apologies.

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Frontline gives Tiananmen Square Tank Man his own Web site

Today I noticed a strange uptick in site traffic due to this google search. I was wondering why so many people were searching for information on the Tiananmen Square “Tank Man.” Usually that only happens around June 4th. Then I found out that PBS has dedicated an entire Web site to the man who captured the heart and imagination of the world in one of modern history’s most breathtaking moments. Suddenly, lots of people were searching for more information on the mysterious hero.

I strongly recommend you go there now. This site is long overdue.

Update: I’ve just spent more time scrolling through the site, and all I can say is that it is extraordinary. What a great service. Lots of eyewitness accounts from the likes of John Pomfret, Jan Wong, Orville Schell and others. The entire upcoming Frontline program on theTank Man will be availabe for viewing online at the site as of Friday at 5PM (EST, I presume). To those of you in China, has this site been locked behind the Great Firewall yet?

Update II: Now I see, via CDT, that the NY Times has reviewed the Frontline documentary.

Tonight’s rambling episode of “Frontline” asserts that from China’s teeming citizenry, one man’s brief, thwarted act of defiance actually changed the world.

“The Tank Man,” as he is called in lieu of a confirmed identity, was the Beijing obstructionist who stood in the way of a column of tanks in Tiananmen Square nearly 17 years ago. This 90-minute episode, produced by the provocative filmmaker Antony Thomas, argues that although the Tank Man’s gesture did not lead to his government’s collapse after soldiers fired on peaceful protesters, it inspired reformers everywhere to challenge totalitarian oppressors.

Mr. Thomas’s ambitious, sprawling take knows few bounds as it maps upheaval from Mongolia to Hong Kong and charts a rural-to-urban migration of hundreds of millions of job-seekers. Along the way, the program hustles to explain dismal labor conditions, Internet privacy and rivalries among journalists. What is billed as a story of one man becomes a catchall format for every useful bit of information about China’s commitment to economic modernization and resistance to political reform.

All this rests on the shoulders of an anonymous figure, and while there are theories about who he may have been, the report named for him gives up the ghost too quickly. “The Tank Man” presents analyses about who would want him to remain unknown and counterarguments about how his exposure would have ensured his survival. By the end, viewers will remain confused about whether his act was premeditated or spontaneous, whether the plainclothes people who carried him away were protectors or persecutors, and, of course, whether the Tank Man is dead or alive.

Still, the episode presents vast stores of information about China’s new wealth — and some accusations against rich Westerners who are, in turn, getting richer. One of the most compelling diversions in this overlong documentary explains the role Yahoo played in helping Chinese officials imprison a dissident journalist. In the narrator’s estimation, compliance with Chinese laws can seem like complicity with rights-abusing regimes.

I can’t wait to see it, even if it sounds less than perfect. Yahoo has sure taken lots of heat for the Shi Tao catastrophe, which seems to dwarf alleged sins of Google and Microsoft.

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Peking Duck Poem

A contributed piece by Jerome Keating. What next – the Peking Duck opera?
————————————————————————————————-

Blogging the Night Away

The night passes;
I remain at the screen.
My spouse/significant other/partner complains,
I should be in bed.

My other tasks lay
Like abandoned orphans
On my desk.

My glass of scotch/vodka/tea
(Pick your poison)
Is drained,
But I carry on.

Do I seek a different, well-lighted place?
Am I secretly struggling to avoid nada?
Do I look for information, an argument?
Confirmation, sharing, or
A platform to proclaim dated beliefs

Sometimes I’m a voyeur.
Look there go Ivan and Math
Good God, here comes China_hand
Rushing to the scene.
Keir and Davesgonechina join in,
It’s getting nasty.
Other Lisa injects
A voice of restraint;
She’s often a peacemaker.
But, I leave for another blog.

Why do we all do it?
Why do I do it?

Perhaps it’s a human need
To tell the world,
“Look, I am here.”

——————————————————————————————

Good question, why we all do it. Masochism? Egoism? It’s certainly not to make money. Maybe it’s just fun.

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Maureen Dowd: Wag the Camel

This is Dowd at her most cutesy. It’s a shame, because she’s making some great points, but the suffocating cutesiness makes it painful at times to read.

Wag the Camel
By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: April 12, 2006

Talk about a fearful symmetry.

Iran was whipping up real uranium while America was whipped up by fake uranium.

Obsessed with going to war against a Middle East country that had no nuclear weapon, the Bush administration lost focus on and leverage over a Middle East country hurtling toward a nuclear weapon.

(more…)

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Taiwan, Taiyuan – what’s the difference?

A funny travel story from an interesting blog.

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Phonegate

Three long years ago I wrote a post about the much-neglected story of how the GOP was playing dangerous games in New Hampshire. I said at the time it was a story to “watch carefully.” Now, finally, it appears the trail leads from New Hampshire to the White House.

Key figures in a phone-jamming scheme designed to keep New Hampshire Democrats from voting in 2002 had regular contact with the White House and Republican Party as the plan was unfolding, phone records introduced in criminal court show.

The records show that Bush campaign operative James Tobin, who recently was convicted in the case, made two dozen calls to the White House within a three-day period around Election Day 2002 — as the phone jamming operation was finalized, carried out and then abruptly shut down.

The national Republican Party, which paid millions in legal bills to defend Tobin, says the contacts involved routine election business and that it was “preposterous” to suggest the calls involved phone jamming.

The Justice Department has secured three convictions in the case but hasn’t accused any White House or national Republican officials of wrongdoing, nor made any allegations suggesting party officials outside New Hampshire were involved. The phone records of calls to the White House were exhibits in Tobin’s trial but prosecutors did not make them part of their case.

Democrats plan to ask a federal judge Tuesday to order GOP and White House officials to answer questions about the phone jamming in a civil lawsuit alleging voter fraud.

Repeated hang-up calls that jammed telephone lines at a Democratic get-out-the-vote center occurred in a Senate race in which Republican John Sununu defeated Democrat Jeanne Shaheen, 51 percent to 46 percent, on Nov. 5, 2002.

Besides the conviction of Tobin, the Republicans’ New England regional director, prosecutors negotiated two plea bargains: one with a New Hampshire Republican Party official and another with the owner of a telemarketing firm involved in the scheme. The owner of the subcontractor firm whose employees made the hang-up calls is under indictment.

The phone records show that most calls to the White House were from Tobin, who became
President Bush’s presidential campaign chairman for the New England region in 2004.

The GOP, the best of the best. No act of treachery will go unrewarded. But this is completely in keeping with a party that sees no trick as too dirty when it comes to winning, even if it involves committing a felony. As unhappy as I am with America today, iit’s consoling to know that the system is still semi-functional and can still put people like Tobin where they belong, in jail. Let’s see how far this story goes; all it takes is one good lead to make this tinderbox explode.

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Leak, leak, leak

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Via Needlenose, a site that I’m enjoying more each day.

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Cast your votes for The Peking Duck

I am deeply honored to see my name up at the top of this list, though I have no idea how it got there. Please consider voting for me, though with competition like the great Riverbend and Needlenose, the odds are better that Hu will dismantle the Great Firewall of China before I win.

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Extraordinary Breakthroughs: China and the Vatican (and the Dalai Lama)

There is no denying it. China is making enormous and rapid strides in improving its image as a persecutor of those who practice religions not wholly approved by the state. This is just one of several recent stories that indicate a real breakthrough that has the potential to shift world opinion and help cast Hu Jintao as a true reformer and purveyor of increased freedom in China.

Hong Kong’s new cardinal said the Vatican and China are holding “real talks” in Rome about normalizing formal relations that were cut off more than five decades ago when the communists took over the mainland.

Cardinal Joseph Zen’s comments on the Sunday TV talkshow “Newsline” on Hong Kong’s ATV World were among the most detailed he has made about the nature of the meetings between the Beijing and Catholic leaders in Rome.

The show’s host, veteran journalist Frank Ching, noted that a senior Chinese religious official, Ye Xiaowen, recently said Beijing and the Vatican have only been in “contact” about the issue of forging new relations.

But the outspoken Zen insisted the meetings were much more substantial than mere contacts.

“My impression is that they’ve entered into real talks,” Zen said, adding that negotiators were meeting in Rome.

Stay tuned. The Peking Duck is reconsidering his long-time stance on Hu, who just might end up living up to the original hopes of his being a reformer – at least in some respects. The jury is still out, but there’s definitely tantalizing evidence to consider. Whether these breakthroughs derive from Hu’s sense of altruisim and universal brotherhood or his desire to maintain the Paryty’s grip on power is another issue. But there’s no denying that, no matter his motivation, he’s willing to take major steps to transform China’s image of mindless intolerance. And that’s good for China, and the Chinese people.

Update: I mentioned the Dalai Lama in the headline; there are interesting stories about Hu reaching out to him, as well, but I’ll have to cover them when I have a little more time. It may be pure Machiavellianism, but I see it as shrewd and smart.

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Celebrating America’s immigrants

This was so nice to read, and must have been apoplexy-inducing to the Minuteman-adoring anti-immigration “patriots.”

Wearing a bright green T-shirt emblazoned with the word “Mexico,” 18-year-old Marco Tapia couldn’t wait to join the biggest march for immigrants he had ever seen. The Mexican-born high school senior was among about 30,000 who marched through St. Paul in support of immigrant rights, and among more than half a million people who rallied Sunday in 10 states. Dozens more marches were planned nationwide Monday.

“Hopefully this will change the way America thinks,” said Tapia, a high school senior who is living illegally in Minneapolis with his mother and sister. “We’re not criminals. We’re just regular people like everybody else here.”

With an overhaul of immigration law stalled in Congress, demonstrators urged lawmakers to help an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants settle legally in the United States. The massive turnout at Sunday’s protests — police estimated 350,000 to 500,000 in Dallas — continued to surprise organizers and police.

“This is a force, an energy here,” said Amir Krummell, a U.S. citizen born in Panama, who marched to Dallas’ city hall amid shouts of “Si Se Puede!”, Spanish for “Yes, we can!”

America loves immigrants. America is immigrants. We need secure borders and sensible regulations. But to make it a crime to help undocumented immigrants and a felony to be in the country illegally — don’t we have more important, more pressing issues to concern ourselves with? Most of these people are looking for a better life, and most pay taxes, too. Criminalizing them is just plain wrong.

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