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Links » Crème » Top Ten Search List (June 26)


Top Ten Search List (June 26)

Posted: 26 Jun 2012 02:52 AM PDT

Here's the top ten real-time search list for today, recorded at 1:25PM.

1. 引产孕妇成卖国贼 yǐnchǎn yùnfù chéng màiguǒzéi – "Forced Abortion Mother Cast as Traitor": In a startling turn of events, rather than coming out to show support for Feng Jianmei after the traumatizing forced abortion of her seven month-old fetus at the hands of officials in Ankang, Shaanxi, a faction of townspeople has now turned against her and her family, parading through the streets with banners bearing venomous slogans which call for the family's expulsion from town and accuse Feng's husband Deng Jiyuan of being an evil traitor for accepting interviews by the foreign media. The local government has also defamed the family in the local newspaper.  Here's the story in Chinese and Here's a story in English.

2. 开天窗吸毒 kāitiānchuāng xīdú – "Open Skylight Drug Injection": On the eve of International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, a story about a 12 year-old boy nicknamed Little Chao—a recovering heroine addict in Chenzhou, Hunan—is all over the news. Little Chao's parents were both sent to prison when he was 8: the moment Chao, now in a rehabilitation center in Chenzhou, calls the "turning point" for him. After his grandparents (who were looking after him) died, he became involved with gangs. One day, his gang superiors administered his first heroine injection, and he soon became addicted. In and out of different gangs—aware that these were "bad people"—but unable to get away, Chao began taking the injections into his groin by age 12. This kind of injection of a drug into a main artery, referred to as "opening the skylight" (开天窗 kāitiānchuāng), can be lethal. Needless to say, Little Chao's story is shocking and upsetting to everyone. Here's the story in Chinese.

3. 8个月女婴被剁双手8 gè yuè nǚyīng bèi duò shuāngshǒu – Yesterday's news of a grandmother in Jinan, Shandong who chopped off the hands of her eight-month old baby granddaughter is still in the forefront of everyone's minds. There are still no reports as to why or how this could have possibly happened, but netizens are wishing the baby a speedy recovery at the same time that they remain in utter disbelief regarding the grandmother's behavior. It is unclear whether this was on purpose, but as it is simultaneously unfathomable as an accident, the grandmother is being described as sick, twisted, and atrocious, among other things. Here's the story in Chinese.

4. 散装粽子有肉虫 sǎnzhuāng zòngzi yǒu ròuchóng – "Bugs in the Zongzi": This past Saturday was the Dragon Boat Festival (端午节 duānwǔjié), a time when families nation-wide traditionally eat zongzi (粽子zòngzi). Zongzi are a special kind of dumpling made of glutinous rice, stuffed with different fillings, and wrapped in bamboo or reed leaves; as these goodies are extremely gooey on the inside, and therefore slightly precarious as far as textural grossness goes to begin with—it would be bad for zongzi-eater morale if anything were to actually go wrong. Alas, over the weekend one Beijing man was dismayed to find that the zongzi he had purchased in Haidian for his own family's celebration were in fact riddled with little bugs. After going back and forth with supermarket management, he has finally been compensated, 50 RMB. No grand milk scandal, but still, bugs in the zongzi, man. Here's the story in Chinese.

5. 上海地请女性自重 Shànghǎi dìtiě qǐng nǚxìng zìzhòng – "Shanghai Metro Tells Women to Behave Themselves": A controversial warning posted on the Shanghai Subway operator's Weibo page on June 20th which placed the blame of sexual harassment on women and their choice of dress continues to draw widespread attention. The latest development: two young women in protest of the announcement recently entered line 2 of the Shanghai subway with their heads covered in what looked like the top halves of burqas, and the rest of their bodies dressed in "sexy" clothes (less sexy, more like goofy references to the idea of sexy; namely, one of them wore a silver homage to the Madonna cone bra, but over a lose-fitting t-shirt). The two held signs printed with the battle cries "I want to stay cool in the summer, you cannot harass me for it" and "I can be flirty, you cannot harass." (The latter is a play on the word "harass" itself, or sāorǎo 骚扰; the first character, sāo, can denote flirtation when written by itself, and the second character, rǎo, still means "bother," or "harass." So her sign reads, "I can sao, but you can't rao!" Get it? Anyway.) This instance of performance art has been met with a mix of praise of the anonymous girls for standing up to the man and criticism of them for oversimplifying the issue, but at the very least public reaction to the Shanghai Metro's initial warning is still overwhelmingly negative. Here's the story in Chinese.

6. 为奶牛办丧事 wèi nǎiniú bàn sāngshì – "Funeral Arrangements for Milk Cows": In early September 2011, a video of Buddhist monks in Luohe, Henan performing funeral rites for dairy cows went viral. On the neck of a model cow hung a sign with the words "I was starved to death;" papers and incense were burned, deceased cattle mourned. The dairy company responsible for the funeral next issued a statement saying that twelve years ago, the provincial government gave it a 600,000 RMB subsidy for its 230 cows, but that the Zhaoling village government had intercepted and misappropriated all of the funds. The company claimed that after much back and forth, the village government only returned 300,000 RMB to the company. "70 cow-deaths and over 40 tons of spoiled milk later, the dairy farm was forced to close, unable to make its rent." After further investigation, however, it seems that the cow deaths were not in fact as many as the company reported, and that the cause of death was varied and not entirely related to the village government's withholding of funds. Furthermore, it turns out that the Zhaoling government did not withhold as much as was originally stated. Most netizens, however, are more concerned that there would be any relationship at all between corruption and bad milk in the first place. Here's the story in Chinese.

7. 毒驾入刑 dú jià rùxíng – Recently, cases of traffic accidents related to drug use in China have been on the rise, and Wang Junke, director of the narcotics division of the Guangdong Province Public Security Bureau, announced at a press conference yesterday that "the dangers of illegal drug use have been seriously underestimated in China, especially with regard to the relationship between intravenous drug use and the spread of AIDS." Wang called for a policy of "driving on drugs as a criminal offense" (dú jià rùxíng 毒驾入刑) as a way to crack down on harmful drug use and maintain traffic order and safety, signaling a zero tolerance policy not just for drunk driving but also for "drugged driving."   Here's the story in Chinese.

8. 聚赌官员免职 jùdǔ guānyuán miǎnzhí – On the night of June 16th in Meizhou, Guangdong, eight officials, including the vice chairman and financial secretary of the county CPPCC, were arrested for gambling. 81,500 RMB in gambling money was seized, and the officials have all been removed from their posts. Netizens far and wide are expressing their…lack of surprise. Here's the story in Chinese.

9. 山东原副省长黄胜 Shāndōng yuán fù shěngzhǎng huángshèng – This past December, The Central Committee of the Communist Party decided to remove Huang Sheng, vice-governor of Shandong province, from his post. Huang was suspected of "severe violation of discipline." The obvious has now been stated: his "violations" include using his status to put friends in positions of power, accepting bribes, causing serious economic damage to the state, and moral turpitude. Here's the story in Chinese.

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Today’s China Readings June 26, 2012

Posted: 25 Jun 2012 05:16 PM PDT

  • 房地产信托兑付洪峰:今年1758亿是去年4倍|房地产信托|兑付高峰|华澳实德_21世纪网

    lots of real estate trust products coming due this year. 4x 2011 amount. 175.8B RMB worth.

  • 不良贷款来了_专题频道_财新网

    Caixin cover story on bad loans now online

  • CapitalVue News: Shanxi Coal Boss Detained By Discipline Commission

    related to liu zhijun case

  • Amazon.com: China's Environmental Challenges (China Today) (9780745660912): Judith Shapiro: Books

    In this trailblazing book, noted China specialist and environmentalist Judith Shapiro investigates China's struggle to achieve sustainable development against a backdrop of acute rural poverty and soaring middle class consumption. Using five core analytical concepts to explore the complexities of this struggle – the implications of globalization, the challenges of governance; contested national identity, the evolution of civil society and problems of environmental justice and equity – Shapiro poses a number of pressing questions: Do the Chinese people have the right to the higher living standards enjoyed in the developed world? Are China's environmental problems so severe that they may shake the government's stability, legitimacy and control? To what extent are China's environmental problems due to patterns of Western consumption? And in a world of increasing limits on resources and pollution "sinks," is it even possible to build an equitable system in which people enjoy equal access to resources without taking them from successive generations, from the poor, or from other species?

  • Consolations at the End of the World: Book Review: China's Environmental Challenges

    Judith Shapiro's readable new book, China's Environmental Challenges, untangles these contradictions and provides a snapshot of China as it teeters on the edge of unprecedented ecological limits. Shapiro was one of the few Americans to enter China before relations between the two countries were normalized in 1978 and now teaches global environmental politics at American University. In the book, she looks at how national identity, government structure and civil society play into China's approach to environmental issues.

  • 'One-way bet' on selling coal to China could unravel | beyondbrics

    Add to all this gloomy news one more item: more analysts are joining the camp that believes China might not be a long-term structural importer of thermal coal. This could mark a very important shift.

  • Evergrande Fights Scathing Report With Wall Street Titans – Deal Journal – WSJ
    Since then, sell-side analysts covering the stock have come out in the company's defense, prompting Evergrande to release a statement on Sunday highlighting the investment banks' swift counterattacks against Citron.In the statement titled "Eight Famous Investment Banks Support Evergrande to Dispel Rumors Spread by A Short Seller," Evergrande said the efforts by these firms have helped stabilize its stock and restore market confidence.

    The eight banks Evergrande names include Citigroup Inc., Deutsche Bank AG, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse AG, UBS AG, Macquarie Group and DBS Group Holdings. (Though Evergrande erroneously refers to the Swiss bank as "Suisse Credit" throughout the statement.)

  • EA Poaches Top Microsoft Talent in China as it Ramps Up for Free-to-Play Era | PandoDaily

    In a coup that signals its accelerating shift to a freemium model, gaming company EA has conducted a talent raid on Microsoft's Shanghai office, poaching dozens of its top developers to build a global ecommerce platform that will drive in-game purchases.Since luring Microsoft development manager Junbo Zhang to its Shanghai office, EA has hired at least 50 developers from Microsoft for its ecommerce division, including some of its most experienced staff, according to multiple sources. The highly respected Zhang had been responsible for overseeing Microsoft's ecommerce team.

  • Evolving attitudes to foreigners – Globaltimes.cn

    Four years ago, Beijing sang "Beijing Welcomes You" for the 100-day countdown to the 2008 Olympic Games, but now the city has added an "if" during the 100-day crackdown on illegal foreigners. Beijing welcomes you if you are not an illegal immigrant, have not overstayed your visa or are working with the right visa…
    Instead of relying on tips for exposing illegal foreigners, China's National People's Congress is considering updating the country's current laws to regulate the entrance, residence and working status of foreigners in accordance with new conditions.
    If the new law is approved, police will have more power to directly handle illegal entries and related cases, and a special custody house will be set up for foreigners who break the law.

  • Shanghai Subway Tells Scantily Clad Women To Expect Sexual Harassment | Tea Leaf Nation
  • China's Jiaolong submersible has hidden military goals: Duowei|Politics|News|WantChinaTimes.com
  • Stealth Fighters Are Hard: Modernization of China's Aerial Arsenal Encounters Obstacles | Offiziere.ch

    China has a brand-new jet fighter. Only it's not really brand-new at all. The emergence of the much-touted Shenyang J-16, following years of speculation, represents a surprising twist in China's more than decade-long effort to build a world-class air force — and a reminder to outsiders that even Beijing with its tight central control, extensive manufacturing base and apparent deep pockets cannot perform aerospace miracles.

  • Americans in China | This American Life

    profiles kaiser kuo

  • China urges ASEAN to be independent – Xinhua | English.news.cn

    "ASEAN should exercise its independent judgment to move this region forward. If ASEAN takes sides, it would lose its relevance," Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Fu Ying told The Nation in an exclusive interview over the weekend.

  • The Jamestown Foundation: From Strength to Strength: Military Exercises Bolster Sino-Thai Relations
  • The East is Drunk: Hammered and Sickled in China | The Awl

    The pressure to drink, and drink a lot, is so great that even Mormon Jon Huntsman admitted he tippled while serving as U.S. Ambassador to China.

  • Politics – James Fallows – 5 Signs the United States Is Undergoing a Coup – The Atlantic

    How would you characterize a legal system that knowledgeable observers assume will not follow the law and instead will advance a particular party-faction agenda? That's how we used to talk about the Chinese courts when I was living there. Now it's how law professors are describing the Supreme Court of the John Roberts era.

  • China's biggest, least populated city of Xisha born in disputed waters – Politics & Society – Morning Whistle – Latest chinese economic, financial, business, political and society news
  • China mobile sees 150% surge in data traffic – Companies & Industries – Morning Whistle – Latest chinese economic, financial, business, political and society news

    imagine the surge as smartphones proliferate

  • Experts warn on China's "reckless" wind power expansion — Morning Whistle -

    Hebei province recently approved an offshore wind power project, China's third, which will have totalled installed capacity of 560 megawatts. The two existing projects are the
    102-megawatt Donghai Bridge Wind Power project in Shanghai and the Rudong Offshore Intertidal Zone Wind Power project in Jiangsu.All is not good, however. A project insider told the China Economic Times recently that "the whole Donghai Bridge Wind Power project is a 'freak': onshore turbines were directly moved to offshore wind farms and can't function properly, the turbines automatically shut down and large amounts of investment are wasted".

  • Citron做空恒大地产-财经网

    caijing has set up a micro-site on the citron attack on evergrande

  • 人民日报-对话,让电影更美好

    People's Daily on making movies even more "beautiful", on the close of the shanghai film festival

  • 人民日报-精确沟通产生良性互动(今日谈)
  • Chinese army urged to ensure stability of Xinjiang – People's Daily Online
  • Skyscraper frenzy brings loan risks to new heights – People's Daily Online
  • 惠州涉黑大佬胡炜昇被捕 [鲜橙热闻]__鲜橙互动 南都网 南方都市报 新闻互动网站 南都数字报

    more on the arrest of the US passport holding, alleged mob boss in guangdong. nice pics

  • 地方政法委备受诟病 被指干预司法_多维新闻网

    duowei reporting "castigation" of many provincial politics and law committees, for interference in judicial process. follows recent duowei reports on this issue, including the one claiming confirmation of pbsc having 7 members at 18th party congress

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