@Yankee, I'm going to be kind and assume that you are putting us on! If you're serious, how about explaining what you mean by reasonable?
@HFCampo: Actually, I don't think learning to speak Chinese is EXTREMELY difficult, though of course it's more difficult for those with totally unrelated mother tongues. I'm not saying it's easy either - the tones seem to be more difficult for some people than others, for one thing - but certainly the grammatical hoops that one has to jump through for Indo-European languages, Semitic languages and many others are much more difficult to negotiate than those for Chinese grammar. I also think it's easier to learn to speak Chinese if one also learns to read, at least a little - although the written language is indeed perhaps the most difficult - still, some knowledge of it is helpful, and I mean for speaking, not just for reading.
Anyway, the choice should not be that of either setting out for complete Mastery or Nothing - I know 2-3 foreigners in Kunming who seem to have looked at the language in this manner years ago and chosen Nothing, and they are still pretty much in the same bubble of virtual isolation from their surroundings as they were 10 years ago - can't say 4 syllables in a row - though they've long ago lost most of their awareness of the great vastness of life outside the bubble from their consciousness and assumed that their short-hand generalizations of life outside are more or less accurate.


Exploring history: Jianshui through the ages
Posted byJim's article is, as usual, excellent, but although he mentions renovations, perhaps he has left off a few that are really quite extensive. For example, there is a tourist street in Jianshui that has all the 'traditional' curved Han-style shop roofs you might like to see, but they were all built since the first time I went there some 10 years ago. More recently, the old South Gate has been built from scratch - wasn't there 10 years ago either.
The significance of the Confucian temple should not be missed - the conquerors of Yunnan were Mongols, with Central Asian troops, many Muslim. The fact that a Muslim ruler built such a large structure in this far-away province is a good example of the nature of the rulers: they were big supporters, not only of Islamic learning, but of Confucianism and Buddhism as well. And by the Ming Dynasty, if not before, the fact that this was the second largest Confucian temple in China, after the one in Qufu, the Kong (Confucius) family home in Shandong, is a clear statement of the attitude of the dynasty towards this frontier, Han-minority province, which had been very much independent, and under non-Han rulers, before the Mongols: This place is Ours now, and b'god we're here to stay!
And then note the role played by Lin'an (Jianshui) during the massive 'Panthay Rebellion' against the Qing (Man, or Manchu rulers), led by Muslims but with numerous Yi and Han followers, which went on for 18 bloody years in the 19th century...
Yunnan's history is unique, and it's fascinating.
$17 billion Chongqing-Kunming railway nears completion
Posted byTrain is as fast and more comfortable, I mean.
$17 billion Chongqing-Kunming railway nears completion
Posted byDoesn't it cost more in terms of the planet? And not necessarily cheaper in personal cash terms either. More comfortable too, and not faster to Chongqing - 3 hours, the article says - how much time would you spend getting to the airport, boarding the damn thing, then sitting scrunched up, getting baggage, etc.?
$17 billion Chongqing-Kunming railway nears completion
Posted bySeems to me this is a better idea than a lot of airports and air traffic.
Spring City's tallest skyscraper nears completion
Posted byGood question, nnoble. My not-too-informed knee-jerk reaction would be to say no, but I'd be happy to consider any opinion that came with reasons.
Also the question: 'Does Kunming need this building...' makes me think of another one: who, precisely, is this 'Kunming' who either needs or doesn't need?