Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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Spartan95

Junior Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

Well, the trend of singles in PRC "renting" partners to show to parents during important ocasions such as Chinese New Year is turning into a business opportunity for some as there are now apparently agencies set up to do this sort of "match-making".

Anyway, a journalist who continually wrote articles critical of PRC's authorities have allegedly been sacked:

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Associated Press
Chinese journalist says he was fired for writings
By ALEXA OLESEN , 01.27.11, 11:21 PM EST

BEIJING -- A Chinese journalist known for being critical of the government said Friday that he's been fired by one of the country's most daring media companies for refusing to tone down his writing, the latest sign of China's tightening grip on press freedom.

Chang Ping, a former editor and columnist for publications owned by the Southern Media Group, said the dismissal wasn't linked to any single piece of writing but rather his consistently critical tone.

China's censors routinely scrub domestic news and online content of material they consider destabilizing or threatening to the communist leadership, but the Internet is so vast and porous that forbidden information increasingly gets through to the public. This has emboldened many Chinese journalists and publications to push the boundaries in their reporting, a trend the government is trying to contain.

Chang's employer confirmed he had been let go but wouldn't say why.

"Chang Ping's contract expired and it was not renewed," said a woman surnamed Deng who answered the phone at the Southern Metropolis Daily, one of the papers Chang used to write for. She said editors were too busy to be interviewed and that the paper had nothing more to add about the situation.

Chang, 42, drew fire from authorities and other domestic columnists in 2008 when he wrote an editorial saying that foreign media should be allowed to report firsthand on bloody ethnic riots in Tibet and advocating dialogue between the Chinese government and the Dalai Lama. He's also written about corruption and China's need for greater political and personal freedoms.

Southern Media Group's two main publications, Southern Metropolis Daily and Southern Weekend, stopped publishing his commentaries six months ago, he said.

The Guangzhou-based writer said that he thought his dismissal was part of a Chinese campaign against free speech and press that has intensified since jailed democracy activist Liu Xiaobo was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in November.

"I am very angry that I've been punished for my words," Chang said. "The bigger picture, the background is that I am not the only one. There have been other editors recently with other papers that have been dealt with as well."

He cited two recent incidents documented by the Hong Kong-based China Media Project, which keeps track of media reform trends in mainland China. The first was the firing of Long Can, a journalist with the Chengdu Commercial Daily in Sichuan who was dismissed last week after writing about official negligence and influence peddling related to the botched rescue of a group of university students in a remote scenic area. Because of mishandling, a police officer died in the rescue.

He also pointed to a separate China Media Project report about Peng Xiaoyun, an editor with Time Weekly, who was forced into involuntary leave after his publication came out with a list of influential people that included a jailed Chinese food activist and several people who had signed Charter '08, a bold call for political reform co-authored by Liu, the Nobel Prize winner.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

Spartan95, thanks for posting your opinion along with news articles.

This renting a date thing is weird. Who are these people trying to fool? Their relatives? I don't get it at all.

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Chinese man Peng Gaofeng (L) holds his son Peng Wenle, who had been missing for three years after being kidnapped, as they arrive in Shenzhen on February 10, 2011. A Chinese microblog that helps parents find missing children has become a sensation, shining a light on child abductions and the growing power of Twitter-like Internet services in China.

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BEIJING - FEBRUARY 10: A Chinese girl removes the snow around the Great Hall of the People on February 10, 2011 in Beijing, China. Winter snow fall began on Wednesday night as meteorologists believe the latest snowfall which began on Wednesday and continued through to Thursday to be the latest snowfall in sixty years.

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BEIJING - FEBRUARY 10: Two Chinese women play during removing the snow around the Great Hall of the People on February 10, 2011 in Beijing, China

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The cheerleading team from Taiwan's Shih Hsin University rehearse for Friday's Chingay parade next to a float with Shou, the Chinese deity of longevity, in Singapore February 10, 2011. Chingay, which means "the art of masquerade" in Chinese Hokkien dialect, is an annual street and floats parade held during the Chinese Lunar New Year period in Singapore.

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Donald Lee, head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office, talks to reporters in Manila on February 9, 2011. Lee confirmed he was being recalled to Taipei as a protest over the deportation of 14 Taiwanese to China by Philippine authorities. The 14 were arrested in December over alleged credit card fraud, and Taiwan has accused the Philippines of succumbing to political pressure from China. AFP PHOTO / JAY DIRECTO (Photo credit should read JAY DIRECTO/AFP/Getty Images)

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The nationwide campaign aimed at rescuing child beggars has stirred controversy, with some experts arguing that the society should make more efforts to protect the long-term benefits of children.

The debate was triggered by an editorial calling for an end to child begging, which has drawn criticism from the public, some of whom accused it of depriving children of their rights to beg.

The editorial, titled "Let the phenomenon of child beggars disappear from China," was published Thursday in the Beijing News. It said that the government should make more efforts to ensure no children have to beg in the future.

In order to end the phenomenon, relevant authorities including judicial, education and civil administration departments, need to join forces to protect the rights and interests of all children, said the editorial.

Ai Weiwei, an activist artist, told the Global Times Thursday that as a method of survival, beg-ging should be permitted if it is done voluntarily.

Yu Jianrong, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and also one of the first figures to appeal to people to help child beggars in his microblog, told the Global Times that most child beggars were manipulated by criminal gangs, and that they were not mature enough to make judgments by themselves.

"These child beggars really suffer so much," Yu said, adding that he would initiate more activi-ties to call on people to take part in rescuing these child beggars.

Yu appealed to net users in his microblog on January 25 to take photos of child beggars on the streets to help them find families. By Thursday, over 460,000 messages and 2,500 photos had been released on the Internet and six child beggars were rescued around China.

Zhang Zhiwei, a lawyer who specializes in research on protecting children's rights, told the Global Times that it was not the appropriate time to talk about the right to beg.

"It is meaningless to discuss the right to beg. The government should force them to get help," Zhang said.
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

1 of the effects of a society growing more affluent is that divorce rates go up as women become more financially independent. This trend is now taking place in PRC:

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Updated Tuesday, February 8, 2011 10:50 pm TWN, AFP
China's divorce rate jumps; wealth, regulations blamed

BEIJING--The number of people who divorced in China shot up in 2010 — a trend on the rise in the world's most populous nation as men and women earn better money and become more independent. A total of 1.96 million couples applied for divorce last year, a 14.5 percent increase from 2009, according to figures published on the website of the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

A previous state media report had erroneously said 1.2 million couples tied the knot in 2010, while the ministry figures put the number at 12.1 million.

China's divorce rate has risen gradually at an average of 7.65 percent a year since 2003 when the law regulating marriage was amended, simplifying both marriage and divorce procedures, according to the state-run Legal Evening News.

Before, in many areas of China, couples who wanted to divorce had to get a written certificate from their workplaces or neighborhood committees before the split could be finalized, it said.

Some lawmakers in China — shocked at the country's high divorce rate — have called for a return to those practices, but so far the amendment has remained untouched.

The report said rising wealth and independence also contributed to higher divorce rates.

The southwestern province of Sichuan had the highest divorce rate last year, which the report attributed partly to a high concentration of people working away from home, leading to couples being separated for long periods of time.

From what I have heard, "lightning" marriages and divorces are increasingly common amongst the younger generation in the more cosmopolitan cities on the coast.
 

ToxSic

New Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

...

This renting a date thing is weird. Who are these people trying to fool? Their relatives? I don't get it at all.

...

Yes, it is trying to fool their parents/relatives. Maybe they have been nagging way too much and way too long about how their geeky/introverted son - that they created from making him sit in his room and get to know his textbooks a little too well - is not bringing home any potential future bride on X day (new years or what-not-holiday) to ensure his family that they will see grandchildren; and he either:

A. Get some ballz and tell them to STFU
B. Be extremely rude and not show up for Chinese/Lunar New Years in defiance
C. Rent-A-Girl to shut'em up for the day...

;)
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

You know what? For males this problem will increase as of now. because of the imbalance of male to females in China brought on by the one child per family policy.
 

Blitzo

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Super Moderator
Registered Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

You know what? For males this problem will increase as of now. because of the imbalance of male to females in China brought on by the one child per family policy.

I think the gender disparity is actually decreasing, most modern Chinese families don't care as much for boys rather than girls now.
I think the problem has increased, and won't peak too much higher, and then the balance will restore itself.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

Thanks Blitzo! I hope the culture there in China recovers from the "gender imbalance!"

Gender Imbalance? How about an aging population like much of the rest of the world?

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BEIJING, Feb. 11 (Xinhua) -- Chinese society will age fast in the next five years and the government must be well prepared for the demographic change, said Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu here Friday.

Government policies needed adjusting and the social insurance network should be improved, Hui said at a meeting of the China National Committee on Aging.

Also services for senior citizens should be better developed to meet their needs, said Hui, also the committee's director.

The country will also work to expand the pension system in the rural area and cover as many senior people as possible, he said.

Health authorities plan to build more medical facilities for the elderly and urban planning should take the needs of senior people into consideration, he said.

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HAIKOU, Feb. 11 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese fisherman was seriously injured after the fishing boat he was on was sunk Friday by a Bahamas-registered container ship in waters between the Chinese mainland and southern island province of Hainan, transport authorities said.

The accident occurred at 7:35 a.m. on the Qiongzhou Strait, when the container ship "EAGLE SKY" hit the fishing boat registered in Beihai, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, said a spokesman with the South China Sea Rescue Bureau under the Ministry of Transport.

Eight crew members onboard the fishing boat were rescued by the foreign ship.

The injured, who suffered brain hemorrhage, was in a stable condition after treatment, the spokesman said.

Rescuers said it was foggy when the collision occurred. The cause of the accident is being investigated.
 

kwaigonegin

Colonel
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

Good riddance to that rapist. I wish the US have similar laws against such monstrosity.
 

ahho

Junior Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

That is still odd. From what I know they have sprinkler system which prevent such thing. The other thing is what material is the building made of.


As for the article for ending child begging, I can understand why some people are against it, but I think the whole thing was to prevent children being abducted, have their limbs cut or broken and make them beg. There is actually a group that does this inhumane things in China that makes you want to kill those people
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

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Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe (R) meets visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi at State House in Harare, February 11, 2011. Zimbabwe is an important ally to China and Beijing will seek to further strengthen ties, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang said of a country isolated by the West under Mugabe's rule.

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Visitors stand on the deck of Greenpeace's Rainbow Warrior (rear) as a sampan motors by during an open day for the Rainbow Warrior as she lies moored in Hong Kong on February 12, 2011. The Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior, which is currently on a tour of East Asia, arrived in the southern Chinese territory on her final tour before retiring after 21 years in service and will be replaced next autumn by a new vessel. This ship will visit South Korea after Hong Kong.

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This photo taken on February 10, 2011 shows Chinese children playing at the snow-covered Forbidden City during the year's first snowfall overnight in Beijing. The Chinese capital had faced its longest wait for winter snowfall in 60 years as wide swathes of northern China suffers through its worst spell of drought since 1951.

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A worker wears rabbit costume for an advertisement at the Bund, one of the most popular tourist destinations in the town Friday, Feb. 11, 2011 in Shanghai, China. According to the Chinese Zodiac, the Year of 2011 is the Year of the Rabbit.

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This photo taken on February 10, 2011 shows pedestrians walking along a street following the year's first snowfall overnight in Beijing.

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TAIZHOU, CHINA - FEBRUARY 10: Firemen fight a fire at the Sunray International Apartments on February 10, 2011 in Taizhou, Zhejiang Province of China. Initial investigation shows the fire was caused by fireworks while people were celebrating the Lunar New Year.

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QINGDAO, CHINA - FEBRUARY 10: A women poses with a bouquet of roses at a flower market on February 10, 2011 in Qingdao, Shandong Province of China. As Valentine's Day approaches, Chinese people prepare gifts such as flowers and chocolates all over the country for their loved ones.

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Hong Kong actress Sammi Cheng, right, and actor Louis Koo pose for photographers before the filming of their new movie "High Altitude Romance II."

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Photo taken on Feb. 10, 2011 shows the construction site of the new airport of Kunming, capital of south China's Yunnan Province. The investment of the new airport of Kunming has reached 14.26 billion RMB yuan, 75 percent of the project's total budget. [Xinhua]

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Staff members from employment service stations distribute handouts introducing basic information related to jobs at Liuliqiao terminal in Beijing, Feb 10, 2011. Since Feb 9, the first work day after the Spring Festival holiday, such services have been stationed at railway stations and major bus stations in Beijing, to help migrant workers get information about social security and protection of their rights. [Photo/Xinhua]
 
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