Archive for January, 2010

Google Leaving China? Chinese Responses

January 14, 2010
By C. Custer

So Google might be leaving China. Ostensibly, the company will be engaging in talks with the government as to how they can proceed to exist in China, but is no longer to follow Beijing’s censorship rules. Various people have speculated about other reasons for Google’s willingness to abandon what will certainly be the largest...
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Posted in Current Events, Science and Technology, Translations | 13 Comments »

China Daily Humor Fail

January 13, 2010
By C. Custer
China Daily Humor Fail

By now you’ve probably all heard that Google is planning to walk away from China. While that story — and it is a fascinating one — plays itself out, I’d like to direct your attention to this China Daily column, which I found via Lost Laowai. It is, evidently, an attempt at humor from...
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Posted in Culture | 18 Comments »

"The Characteristics of 'Patriots'" (Part 2)

January 13, 2010
By C. Custer

By popular demand, we continue our translation of this post by Zhao Weilu. Click here for Part 1. In the post, Zhao Weilu is listing thing Chinese internet “patriots” often do that he finds both widespread and annoying. Translation Part 2 Talking about “the motherland/mother says…” Talking about “Five thousand years of civilization…” Saying...
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Posted in Culture, Politics, Translations | 5 Comments »

"The Characteristics of 'Patriots'"

January 11, 2010
By C. Custer

A lot of people talk a big game on the internet, and Chinese people are no exception. When it comes to the topic of patriotism, especially, the gloves of rhetoric often come off and discussions can quickly descend into a cacophony of name-calling and fallacious assertions. Zhao Weilu, apparently, has had about enough, and...
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Posted in Culture, Politics, Translations | 52 Comments »

Happy Birthday, ChinaGeeks!

January 10, 2010
By C. Custer

Today marks the one-year anniversary of this humble blog, which burst onto the scene with a historical post about the atrocities committed at Unit 731 that virtually no one read. In terms of growth, we’re fast-approaching our 100,000th visitor to the website itself, and have over 800 RSS subscribers according to the last count....
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Posted in Housekeeping, Links | 6 Comments »

A Few Quick Links

January 10, 2010
By C. Custer

This blog has, perhaps, earned its name in some small part due to our coverage of racism in China (even though we’re told it doesn’t exist). On that front, I point you in the direction of a few more drops in the bucket. First, a popular Chinese social network game that allows players to...
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Posted in China From the West, Links | 1 Comment »

"Ai Weiwei, the New Model for Intellectuals"

January 7, 2010
By C. Custer

The magazine Nanfeng Chuang recently ran a short piece about Ai Weiwei‘s busy 2009. It’s a good summary for those who haven’t been following the exploits of the famed artist/activist, and if you have, it’s interesting to see this kind of stuff written about Ai Weiwei in a real magazine rather than on some...
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Posted in Translations | 15 Comments »

Qiushi Magazine on Modern Chinese Patriotism

January 6, 2010
By C. Custer
Qiushi Magazine on Modern Chinese Patriotism

The following translation is an excerpt from this article from the Party magazine Qiushi. The whole article is called “The Main Issue for Modern Patriotism: Pushing Forward the Great Undertaking of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics”; we have translated only a small segment of it. It’s not the sort of thing we generally post, but...
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Posted in Philosophy, Politics, Translations | 5 Comments »

The Death of the GFW? (Probably Not)

January 4, 2010
By C. Custer

UPDATE: Sadly, it seems like the party is already over. That makes the “installing new software” theory seem like the most likely contender. Again, we can’t confirm this, and it seems as though it MUST be temporary, but there are reports that the internet, or at least large parts of it that have been...
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Posted in Current Events | 7 Comments »

Hecaitou Blocked?

January 3, 2010
By C. Custer

Danwei reports (via GVO) that Hecaitou’s two blogs have been blocked by the net nanny, but our (very unoffical) tests indicated it was accessible in Harbin, China, as of 1:20 PM Sunday, January 3rd (Beijing time). Can those of you in China confirm or deny that the sites are still accessible? Herdict, as of...
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Posted in Science and Technology | 11 Comments »