Archive for the ‘China’ Category

pork buns: tit for tat

Saturday, July 14th, 2007

Last week, while gulping down my morning coffee before the commuter bus arrived, I was flipping through a free local paper and read an article about how the unregulated and “filthy” street vendors in China were selling pork buns made with 60% cardboard filler, 40% fatty meat. I wondered what the hate was all about until I hit the mention of the Chinese govt attempting to “clean up” the vendors before the 2008 Olympics.

There has been a lot of criticism of contaminated and fake food ingredients coming from China since the contaminated ingredients in the massive pet-food poisoning in the U.S. earlier this year were traced back to China.

Seems the Chinese govt doesn’t take kindly to outside criticism - they announced on Friday that the country is blocking shipments of American chicken and pork from Tyson after some were found contaminated by chemicals and bacteria.

The closest I’m getting to street-food here is the takeout dim-sum place I visited in Chinatown last week for lunch. I was low on cash, which is why I headed up to Chinatown, and the cafe didn’t disappoint. For $3.05 I was able to buy enough dim-sum for lunch and dinner (a pork bun and six miscellaneous pieces). I was even able to scrounge up enough change to buy a soda.

The trade-off? Three dollars doesn’t get you a buffer. While I was eating a local, toothless crazy walked in, and after getting over her surprise at seeing me in the cafe, tried to talk to me in Chinese. The lady who took my order was rolling pot-stickers on the table behind me - a giant pile of raw pork and cabbage sitting in front of her. No fillers sight. And an infinitely more interesting lunch experience than than this:

boring

Hollywood powerhouse plays diplomat

Sunday, April 15th, 2007

Maybe La-la-land isn’t such a souless place.

Steven Spielberg jumped into action after Mia Farrow wrote an open letter to the Wall Street Journal comparing Spielberg’s’s involvement as artistic director of the Beijing games to that of Nazi propaganda filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl. Four days later Spielberg wrote a letter to the president of China and shortly thereafter a top Chinese diplomat was dispatched to Darfur to pressure the Sudanese government to accept UN peace keepers. Previously China had abstained from involving themselves in internal affairs in order to keep open access to Sudanese oil.

Hollywood accomplishes in a week what diplomats have been working on for years.

For the full story click here.

I’ve been censored!!!

Monday, September 11th, 2006

I sent the address of this blog out to some of my friends and family, including a journalist working in Guangzhou, China.  This is his response:

What on Earth did you put on your blog?  Declarations of love for the Dalai
Lama?  Your views on Taiwan independence?  The communists have blocked it!!!

Wow.  First-hand experience with the Chinese censors. The journalist says they often block anything with a blog address or name, so given my current fascination with blogs I guess I won’t be making it into his bookmarks any time soon.

I’m beginning to feel like a real Concordia student, contending with issues of censorship and all…  speaking of which….check out the below links to learn more about Concordia’s most recent incident in the world of risk assessment committees, race relations, and alleged censorship.  The timeliness of the story may have influenced the pickup it received from the Guardian. “North of 9/11” will be read tomorrow at the uni co-op bookstore.

http://thelink.concordia.ca/view.php?aid=38622 

http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,,1867994,00.html 

Back to the Chinese censors….the Dali Lama was in Vancouver, B.C. this past Saturday.  Two friends from Victoria went over to see him and were duly inspired.  Apparently there were sound issues that made him a little difficult to hear, and during one of the lulls, 20,000 people in GM Place broke into a spontaneous round of “O’ Canada.” 

Who says Canadians aren’t patriotic?

Patriotism. 9/11. Censorship. Co-op bookstore.  Race relations.  My blog’s never going to make it big in China.  Sigh. 

 

 

 

Author

A little something about you, the author. Nothing lengthy, just an overview.

You are currently browsing the archives for the China category.