Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Sunday, September 28, 2008

China joins 'spacewalk league' (whatever the fuck that is)

“China joins spacewalk league” blares the front page of today’s South China Boring Most, speaking impartially on behalf of Beijing.

Apparently the man who walked in space for China wore a suit that was made in China, and survived. The Boring Most does not say who his tailor was or if the material was a cotton-rayon mix or one of the advanced washable fabrics favoured by German designers for those awful tight trousers they make.

I’m not at all sure what the Spacewalk League is, or how you score points or win a trophy because the Boring Most doesn’t actually tell me that. I suspect this might be just more nationalistic hyperbole and flag-waving, but don’t want to be seen as cynical so I won’t write that.

My first thought then, as someone who came of age in the 80s, was Shalamar or Michael Jackson – you know, walking forward while looking like you are walking backwards? But apparently not. So the Spacewalk League is not a breakdance or bodypopping league. It is not clear what the Spacewalk League is.

What is clear from the Boring Most article is that China will be competing for points in spacewalking against the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. Except the U.S.S.R. doesn’t exist any more. So, the U.S.A. plus Russia and the bits of Georgia that Putin recently bombed flat. I guess the Spacewalk League is somewhat like international athletics, where competitors travel different distances in competitive times, only now they actually have to be in space in a spacesuit. I wonder if they take steroids. Again, the Boring Most does not say.

The Boring Most does mention that China plans to go to the moon and build a moonstation. My guess is they will then enter a Moonwalking League, which is where they will compete with Michael Jackson and Shalamar, although maybe not. The U.S.A. used to go to the moon but there was no one to bomb there, and no one to preach to about right living, so they stopped going. Maybe China will build a series of widget factories. Maybe N.A.S.A. will bring Michael Jackson out of retirement. It is not clear. The Boring Most does not say.

Finally, and I must go now and have a cup of tea, I should point out that space technology is important because it has been responsible for many important scientific innovations that have improved life on planet earth for many people. One of these inventions is tinfoil. I can’t remember any others right now.

People tend to forget these inventions and focus on the cost of running a Spacewalk League and talk about how when people around the world are poor we shouldn't waste money on shit like this. They overlook the versatility of tinfoil, and focus instead on statistics like these:
  • At least 80% of humanity lives on less than $1 a day.
  • More than 80 percent of the world’s population lives in countries where income differentials are widening.
  • The poorest 40 percent of the world’s population accounts for 5 percent of global income. The richest 20 percent accounts for three-quarters of world income.

Source for statistics: http://www.globalissues.org/article/26/poverty-facts-and-stats#fact3

Monday, September 22, 2008

A NATION MOURNS. Apparently.

20 May 2008

In the papers today, the press is filled with absurd platitudes about mourning the dead.

“A NATION MOURNS” blares the South China Boring Most, with large font and cliché upon cliché to support the official party line.

Not since the death of Mao have so many people stood still in China to mourn at an officially designated time, we are told. This is apparently a wonder of the age.

“They will never be forgotten” says the Boring Most.

By about page 4 the dead have been forgotten and we have moved on to the reckonings that must be due to corrupt officials.

Perhaps they’ll execute them in the shiney new stadia built for the forthcoming Olympics? Assuming, that is, the stadia don’t fall down because they were built by corrupt officials using substandard materials, like the schools in Sichuan that crushed and suffocated the tiny bodies of the children of the poor.

Over on the back page, a Reuters article reveals that prostitutes in Afghanistan are often young Chinese women. They risk the obvious threats of death to make more money than they would have at home. The downside of China’s economic miracle, it seems, is mass unemployment as state industries are closed, and workers thrown to the dogs.

Or in this case, the Taliban.

The nation does not mourn this.