The Grey
(Beijing, China)
It’s not too often that I’ll get to a place and think, ‘Nah,
I could never live here.’ And I’ve been to some pretty messed up countries. But
after the first few hours in China I was shaking my head thinking, ‘what the
hell is going on?’
Downtown Beijing and the smog |
First thing I noticed was the horrendous smog, which not
only blocks out the sun and makes the whole city look grey, but can be seen
indoors, given the room is large enough. This smog, which is essentially
pollution from Beijing’s rampant industrial boom, has led to an epidemic of
people in their middle age developing emphysema despite never having touched a
cigarette in the whole life.
Portrait of Chairman Mao at Tain'men |
CCTV overload (on one of few clear days after rain/snow) |
We’ve all seen that footage of the guy who stood in front of
a tank on the way home from a grocery store. Yeah, well, he was never seen
again. In 2008, when Beijing hosted the Olympics, the international governing
body of the Olympics (ICCO or something) insisted that China allow protest
during the games. Of course, protest is more or less illegal in China, political
dissent can attract the punishment of a serious crime, and if you wear a ‘Free
Tibet’ shirt you’ll soon come to regret it. Well, the Olympic officials said
that it was part of the spirit of the games to allow open protest. So China
said, Yeah, okay, we will set up protest zones throughout the city, just to
make you happy. The Olympics came and went without a single protest. Maybe the
Chinese population is happy with the way everything is going? No, not exactly.
If you wanted to protest at one of the protest zones, you had to first apply
through the government; you couldn’t just show up. So people did apply, wanting
to protest a range of issues. And when they did, the Chinese government put
those people on house arrest, so there was no way they could get to the protest
zones. Breathe in that smoggy air,
that’s the smell of freedom.
Also, censorship is out of control, with more foreign news
websites, YouTube, Facebook and a whole range of websites banned, so the
government can control what information enters the country. And that’s scary,
that they can choose what they do and do not want their citizens to see. (They
even block BlogSpot, which is why this blog is so delayed).
Therefore, as interesting as it was, after just a couple of
hours in Beijing, I was thinking ‘nup, this is not my kind of place.’ Give me
poverty, decrepit buildings, and poor hygiene. I reckon I could cope with
those. But if you take away basic freedoms, the forum for open dialogue and
criticism, and the rights of the people, then it’s no better than a jail. Of course,
it’s better now than forty years ago, when you were told what job you were
going to do by the government, and where you were going to do it, and you
couldn’t choose where you lived or to travel abroad. They would get your school
results and if you were a dumbass they’d put you on the factory line, and
that’s where you would work ‘the rest of the morning, the rest of the
afternoon, the rest of your life’ (of course, until the market economy was
introduced). Still, today it seems very backwards, making Australia look like a
bloody good place to be born, and Japan, so close to China, look Utopic.
This all went through my head in the first few hours I was
in China. And maybe, because I was exhausted, uncertain of this strange country
and city, annoyed with that bloody taxi driver, and a little homesick, this all
looked more horrific than it actually was. But I don’t think so.
Next blog I’ll detail my stay in China and be a little more
positive about this undoubtedly interesting country.
See ya!