• Home
  • About Me
  • Résumé/CV Work Experience
  • Contact
  • More
  • Archives
  • Categories
  • The Truth About Beijing

    2008 - 07.29

    Before I head to Seoul in South Korea to try for a new visa, I have to address something that’s been frustrating me lately.

    I’m getting fed up with what I hear from people I’ve talked to in the States about what is really happening in Beijing right now. It seems like American/western media is reporting what the West would like to hear – That Beijing is cracking down and that will make the Olympics lame. Well not really. Here’s some points that I feel like I have to clear up.

    The Culture Ministry has also been busy. A handful of dance clubs and bars have been closed, mostly around Worker’s Stadium.

  • Nightclubs closing – The only two clubs closing (Mix and Vic’s – see “Reviews” page) are forced to close because they are inside the Worker’s Stadium. The Worker’s Stadium is a venue for the Games. Some soccer will be played there. I talked with the manager of Kro’s Nest, a pizza joint located inside the Worker’s Stadium’s north gate. He couldn’t complain about being closed down saying he reaps the benefits the other 11 months of the year. Yes, bars and clubs are told to close now a 2am, right in the middle of the party, but that will keep things under control.
  • “Life-changing new policies” – Only license plates that end in the same odd/even number as the day’s date are allowed to drive. That takes half the cars off the road for two months. Big deal? Athens did it in 2004. Also, you can’t just walk into any old apartment anymore, you have to use a key card to get into your own building. Students must sign into their dorms. Whopdee Doo! I can’t go anywhere on the Syracuse Campus without swiping my ID card. That sure is a crackdown.
  • The air – Yeah it’s really bad. But I bet it will be just fine come Olympic time. China has something up its sleeve.
  • A bar owner in Sanlitun’s embassy district said the crackdown threatened to leave tourists with the impression of Beijing as a boring, culturally dead and uptight city when the opposite was true.

    Oh, don’t worry. There will still be PLENTY of wild parties next month. But there’s no reporting on that, or the other 99% of places that will stay open.

    There’s just too much politics with all this Olympic stuff. I hope it all goes away once the Games actually get going.

    And, oh, by the way, did you hear that three (yes three) new subway lines opened? One even goes to the airport. There’s several new bus routes special for the Games. There are even tourist bus routes on big buses with large windows. Flowers are all over the city and all the streets are spotless.

    What if the Olympics were in New York City or Washington DC? Surely there would be National Guard Soldiers at every landmark or monument. So what’s the big deal with Chinese security everywhere?

    It’s their country, don’t forget, and they can do whatever the hell they want and do it their way. China may look a little like the West, but it sure doesn’t operate that way. That’s the biggest thing Americans don’t understand. I can correctly single Americans out here after talking with Australians and Canadians I’m working with.

    America is petrified of China for many reasons that I won’t go into here. Americans can’t waltz in here and expect to get things done the American way. It’s just not possible. Just try to book a plane ticket online with a local airline.

    It’s too bad because most western media will only be here a month and won’t get a full view of Beijing or China at all. They’ll come in, choke on the smog, criticize the government and its policies and then leave. They will ask why, but won’t accept the answers, like the clubs closing for example.

    China and its government is trying to keep this country under control. Remember, there’s 1.3 billion people here. That’s a lot to keep happy, and the only way for the government to do that is to remain single party and crack down on any dissent. Without a strong hand, the country would fall apart. The worry is that as soon as one person goes (gets fed up with the current situation) the rest of the country will follow. The government can not let that happen, so they’re acting tough this summer. Do we really want China to fall into chaos?

    Your Reply