Forums > Living in Kunming > Yunnan Thinking and Ways One thing I've noticed about Yunnan is that, compared to other places I've lived in Mainland China (Sichuan), people are a bit less likely to make a big deal out of you, either positively or negatively, just because you are a foreigner. I like this. And people also seem to be a bit more laid back, which is fine with me - yeah, maybe the mountains being high & the emperor far away does relate to levels of corruption, but there is an upside to it too. Remarks about laziness of Yunnan people seem exaggerated to me, although I'm willing to agree that the fixation on work and making money, etc., which is nearly everywhere in China, is a bit lighter here, on average (the money-fixation in Hong Kong, a place I like for some reasons, drives me crazy & is depressing; Shanghai is a place I don't know, but it sounds a bit the same) - I've been a lot of places in China where people all too often seem to forget that there are other things besides material gain.
@Long Dragon: the phrase 'backward culture' may need some clear definition, as well as the logical opposite - 'forward culture', 'progress'? All valid terms, perhaps, but only if clarified & used in relevant context.
Forums > Living in Kunming > What if China and America... @Tonyoad: No, Alien did not.
@Laotou: The Diaoyu Islands and the Spratleys are different groups of islands. The current noise is about the Spratleys, not about the Diaoyu, although the latter issue has been going on for decades.
Forums > Living in Kunming > What if China and America... PS Yankee is right about the plight of Japanese-Americans during WWII, though nationalist-racist hysteria in the US might well have been a danger to them as well - old tradition, cf reactions towards US citizens of partial German descent during WWI. The same bs pops up almost everywhere, especially when economic & political elites disagree about how they will control the planet.
Forums > Living in Kunming > What if China and America... Yeah, depends on how badly the situation might develop. But I'm not overly worried about it for the present, & I don't think others should be either - just try not to add to the universal species-wide collective insanity.
"Don't follow leaders, & watch the parking meters." - Bob Dylan
Forums > Living in Kunming > What if China and America... Most citizens of modern countries give in to the nationalist trick of blaming the citizens of 'enemy countries' for the actions of the governments that control them & 'educate' them. One can certainly expect this to happen in China. Would probably be best to flee the camp. However, if governments of superpowers are so nasty & irresponsible as to start wars in this day & age, with all the weaponry available on both sides, I'm not too sure where one might want to go.
More likely, however, would be small limited engagements that the indoctrinated masses would get excited about - good to keep one's head down in such situations & wait for them to blow over.
Rural Yunnan township takes flak for alcohol ban
Posted bySuggest the drinking is related to difficulties of adaptations to, and even of any clear understanding of, rapid socio-cultural change coming from the outside and the denigration of local culture involved, both in objective terms - insecure sense of identities, commoditization, new irrelevance of traditional cultural understandings, etc. Doesn't exactly strike me as mysterious. Religion, including 'new' religion, can play a part in this, either aggressively or defensively, but usually a bit ambiguously, a bit of both.
1920s China through the lens of Joseph Rock: Simao
Posted byI think Rock is buried in Hawaii.
Editorial: Hydro expansion will fail without energy market reform
Posted byPlenty of articles about problems caused by hydropower. 'Cleaner', well, maybe, but clearly not good enough in the long run, which is going to require further development of solar, geothermal, wind, etc. It's going to be expensive in terms of money, but that's where the money has to be put in. In the meantime, maybe you've got a point, but the meantime isn't going to last all that long, and it's probably not a good idea to move too many people around, silt up dams, ruin fisheries, risk dam collapses in earthquake-prone areas and all the rest...no, I don't know a lot about this stuff, and burning fossil fuels, including natural gas, is obviously lousy, and nuclear power is really good and clean and safe until it isn't (Japan, not long ago)...okay, I'm no expert.
Editorial: Hydro expansion will fail without energy market reform
Posted byThen again, Chinese, as well as Lao and Thai, hydroelectric potential seems to be screwing up the Mekong for many in Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and the Mekong Delta in Viet Nam.
Editorial: Hydro expansion will fail without energy market reform
Posted by@ michael: Got your point. Southeast Asian countries are closer, but then Viet Nam, Laos, Myanmar have plenty of hydroelectric power generation potential of their own, although some of them (Laos, for instance, which can and to some extent does provide power to Thailand) probably don't have the cash to develop it. Rather doubt that Viet Nam, for one, would want to become dependent on Chinese power generation.