Saturday, November 08, 2008

陈云林,台湾,学生静坐,六四学运

陈云林走了,台湾的抗议围城运动也截止了,留下的却真是值得反思的。台湾学生现在还在静坐抗议。我也天天跟新闻有不少的感想。

1。警察行为是否失当?
也许,但现在无法鉴定,唱片店的负责人可以控告警察失当。比起单纯的抗议,大家吵成一团好。

2。改集会游行法?
可以谈,提出具体改的方案。我很同意新台湾星光大道的提议,集会还是要申请,警察也好控制,万一又有“黑道混入”怎麽办,地点要控制,交通至少的顺通的,但如果违例,不用拒马,一条黄线就好,冲过就可以拘禁。

比较六四学运,那时谁也没经验, 现在我相信同样的事件发生,政府会有不同的应对的,这不正是民主的发展吗?

3。民主,和平?
六四时,我还是六年级,只记得电视画面的混乱,有军人被烧死,有车辆被摧毁,也许我是被洗脑的,但士兵也是人,天安们母亲的痛苦,这些士兵的亲人也是有的。六四学运的诉求是对的,但后果呢,社会的混乱,谁来负责,学运的领导者都跑了,他们的血是没流的。

同样台湾的警察的伤和血似乎没人理,暴力小英,5点半也是走的。

最后在野党是应该抗议,天天街头见呢,还是积极参政,做实事呢?

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Fuehrungszeugnis

Finally today my fuerungszeugnis arrived after...exactly four weeks. In fact, with German bureaucratic system, I waited for three weeks. Afterwards they sent a fax and I got it within two days.
My document and myself totally got lost in this
bureaucratic chain. Luckily, it is written with KEINE EINTRAGUNG. :D

Monday, September 15, 2008

Umbrisch-Provenzalischer Markt 2008

Aix-en-Provence und Perugia

Friday, September 12, 2008

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

30.08.08, Meilen, Amden, Switzerland




















Meilen, Church



















Zurich lake



































Amden

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Shakespeare Retold























Shakespeare is immortal. The "Shakespeare Retold" series is really brillian. Great literature should live forever since human nature (the passion, love and hate) is universal.

Macbeth: it is quite funny to see three
garbage men instead of dancing weird witches. Of course, they do the fortune-telling as well. In the same way, it works for Macbeth, for his desire.

The taming of the shrew: the main female figure is a bit over done. It is hard to sell the "husband center" idea nowadays. Sometimes, two worst can be a match made in heaven.




Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Matlab problem with Leopard!

Today finally I can run matlab on my macbook with Leopard. It seems that X11 should be installed automatically during the installation of Leopard. Unfortunately it is not. When you try to initial matlab app, it just pops out and disppears forever!!!

Thanks Xquartz project!!!

Here is the link: http://xquartz.macosforge.org/trac/wiki.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day 另一场倾城之恋













Amy Adams 唱的 if I didnt care 真的是打动了我。
这里伦敦上空的警报成就了两个人的倾城之恋: Miss Delysia Lafosse or pain, old Sarah Grubb 和 Miss Pettigrew.

  • We’re going to war, arent we?
  • Yes, we are.
  • And that is why you must not waste a second of this precious life
  • listen to me.
  • Once, I too had ambitions
  • Not your grand ones, Simple ambitions
  • Marriage, Children and a house of our own
  • He died. In the mud in France.
  • A good, solid man.
  • You would call him dull, no doubt.
  • but he smiled whenever he saw me, and we could’ve built a life on that.
  • Your heart knows the truth, Delysia.
  • Trust it, for life is short.
----------------------------------------------
If I didnt care

if I didnt care
more than words can say
if I didnt care
would I feel this way?
If this isnt love
then why do I thrill
and what makes my head go round and round
while my heart stands still
if I didnt care
would it be the same
would my every prayer begin and end
with just your name
and would I be sure that this is love
beyond compare
would all this be true
if I didnt care
for you

Monday, August 18, 2008

from thank you for smoking to conversations with other women

Conversations with other women

There are always nice people around you. You can definitely find someone nice and loves you. You probably fell in love with him or her too. However, keep the relationship going, specially in the right track, could be hard. Do cherish what you have, otherwise there would be just memory left for you.

Friday, August 15, 2008

La Teta y La Luna, 1994

Growing up is an amazing journey for everyone.




Beijing 2008 Olympic: Spanish people do have humor. :D

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Juliana

It is always fun to hear storys of culture shock. I love this one.
Juli is the short version of Juliana. It is a nice name. But it sounds fun when you say it in a SPANISH way in CHINA. Juli would sound like Huli in Chinese. What is Huli? Fortunately it is not a question like who is Hu.

Yes, this is Huli. :D In the chinese fairy tales, foxes can turn into beautiful women and seduce men. Hmmm...probabaly it is better to pronounce it in the English way.

Monday, April 14, 2008

All about the Mormons?
















Now I think I will reconsider my comments on Falungon after I watched the espisode 'All about the Mormons'.

Yes, I would not pre-judge them anymore. They may be nice persons, nice neighbors even though they may believe in nonsense.

The Truth According To Wikipedia

Dutch filmmaker Isbrand van Veelen stirred a lot of controversy last week at the Next Web conference when he premiered the documentary above, The Truth About Wikipedia. It has now been posted to YouTube and is worth watching when you have a spare 45 minutes. The film pits Andrew Keen, the disapproving author of The Culture of the Amateur, and Bob McHenry, former editor-in-chief of the Encyclopedia Britannica, against Wikipedia co-founders Larry Sanger, Jimmy Wales, and Web 2.0 guru Tim O’Reilly, among others. The film is masterfully made and shows many points of view, but it ends up being more than anything else a vehicle for Keen to put forth his diatribes against Wikipedia. You definitely get the sense that he wins the argument in the movie. And, in fact, when I asked van Veelen afterwards on stage who he personally agreed with the most (I was the conference MC), he admitted it was Keen. This siding with the enemy, as it were, actually makes the documentary more thought-provoking. People in the audience were seething, and one man came prepared with a speech denouncing the filmmaker.

In the film, Keen actually argues that we need gatekeepers for the truth, and those gatekeepers should be experts. Of course, he misses the point that the relatively small handful of people who do most of the writing and editing on Wikipedia may very well be experts in their topic areas, or become experts by writing and researching Wikipedia articles. That is not to say that controversies do not arise all the time about factual inaccuracies, edit wars, and companies trying to conduct PR campaigns by changing their Wikipedia entries. But the film also misses the point that Wikipedia is very much a market of ideas. Like any market, information at any given point in time can be wrong, but in the end it turns out to be right more often than not. Whether you agree with Keen or with the Wikipedians depends on your definition of truth. Keen is an absolutist. There is Truth, and everything else is fiction. Experts are the guardians of that truth. But the truth is that Truth itself is always evolving, even the experts’ notion of it.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I do like the idea of Web 2.0 that people can share enormous information via internet. It is easy to search a new term from Wiki and simply click on the associated links to read more on a particular topic. It is useful and amazing. Most of people I know (including me) do have confidence in the information listed on the Wiki even though Wiki has put the "warning" sign there. Therefore, it is a bit scaring to think how free it could be. I totally agree with Keen's caution and concern. In fact, some ideas in the video remind me of ridiculous ideas during the culture revolution in China. By the way, I am a Chinese and I grow up in Mainland China. I think it is ok for me to put some very personal comments on it. :D

One ridiculous idea from the culture revolution was experts do not have better knowledge than normal people without any academic background. Does it sound familiar??? In the digital new age, everyone has their right to express their ideas free. There is no absolutely right or wrong. Of course, such ridiculous idea created disasters during that period in China. There is no place for science or logic thinking. People believed in everything. Everything can be right or wrong within days. Now we laughs at it when we look the history back. However, I could not laugh when I heard the similar idea from the video. Is it a new digital form of cultural revolution? Can we learn something from history? Would it be more dangerous combining with the free speech idea of democracy?

Friday, April 11, 2008

Comments

So far, there are a lot of discussions and comments on current Tibet and Olympic issue. I can roughly get a common public image of China from those comments. It is very interesting for me, a Chinese to think about the public or international image of China. Who is China in your eyes (or Hu is China??? Sorry, a small joke!)?

We have dominant or only communism party. Our economic development is extremely fast. These two features definitely cause a lot of social problems. However, we are learning and trying to improve government function, legal system (if you can consider other possible forms of social system than democracy). I believe we can do better if other countries can share their experience on environmental and social issues.

Please do come for the Olympics 2008 in Beijing. You can experience China with your own eyes and tell Chinese people what we should improve our society. It is great to have your opinions. You can give us a fresh idea from a different view angle. It would be more positive and more constructive than simply boycotting Olympics.

Here I would like to quote from George Clark. "...But you judge a nation by the direction in which it is traveling, not by the road bumps. And China is clearly moving in a direction of very considerable promise to us all. The Olympics, like ping-pong diplomacy, will push China further in that direction."

About Tibet, I have never been there. All my knowledge is from the textbook. So I would not comment on this point. There is a BBC documentary “One Year in Tibet”. It is interesting to watch.

Brainwashing in China. I am a Chinese. I grow up in mainland China and my mom joined the communism party. My father does not. He thinks it is stupid. He always makes fun of my mom on this point. I did not join the party for the same reason as well. Indeed, it is stupid to meet, read, and discuss about ideas of communism which I would only consider one theory of possible social systems (by the way, it is really interesting to read “animal farm”.). So you see, not everyone gets brainwashed. Do you think, we (normal chinese people) do have brains to think by ourselves???

Idea of evil communists in China. Most people mentioned the cruel control of communism party in China. To my view, it is really rather out-of-date. There are several decades past after cultural revolution. So...do you think it is, in fact, fair to take a new look at China with a open mind???

Religion issue. Ok, I would say it again! Please take a fresh look! My personal experience is that China is very very tolerant for religion belief. Oh...how dare you say that!!! Of course, it is just my personal experience. My university has special muslim cafeteria. My mom’s company has muslim cafeteria. Once I did want to convert to muslim since muslim can get extra beef supply during that short-of-material-supply period. You can only get a certain amount of food for the family during that period. I admit my motive for religion is really not that pure. One of my friend wanted to attend the mass in latin. The church only has the mass in latin in the early morning session. Unfortunately she was a college student and getting up at 5 or 6 was quite difficult for her.

Yes, I do not have any religion as most Chinese. Religion is more a philosophy or way of life for Chinese. You can choose whatever you want to believe. There is no religion tradition in my family as well. My grand grand grand...parents did not have religion as well. So you see, it is not evil communism party’s fault. I am open-mind with religion. You can believe in whatever you want. Good spirits may have many different names. I think the idea of religion in China in fact is great if you think about 9-11 and conflict between Christian and Muslim. The idea of tolerant is to accept other people may have different religion or no religion. However, all of us breathe, eat and worry about job, relationship...

Short comments on Falungong. Anyone wants to talk about this issue. Please do read their books. I did before it was forbidden in China. It is nonsense for me as I do have proper education and knowledge of the world. Of course, it is against free speech idea to forbid their activities in China. However, wrong government execution, specially from the evil communism party, still does not make them more valuable than...(I do not want to use certain words.)

The cost of economic development. A lot of people consider we totally ignore the cost of economic development on environment or on human right. Again, please take a look at China with a fresh mind. We DO. However, it takes time for people or our government to learn how to deal with all those problems. The economic development is just too fast for us!!! How long did it take to realize the cost of economic development in Europe and in USA???

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

China and Tibet issue continued...

To be honest, I am disappointed about all the reports on Olympic torch relay, people's comments on China and Tibet issue. :-(

So far I really like the note from Gregory Clark. http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20080321gc.html

"...But you judge a nation by the direction in which it is traveling, not by the road bumps. And China is clearly moving in a direction of very considerable promise to us all. The Olympics, like ping-pong diplomacy, will push China further in that direction."

Saturday, April 05, 2008

Love Song


Ataraxia

I am still searching for interesting articles and comments about China and Tibet issue.

I found this article: Bias over Tibets cuts both ways, by Richard Spencer. I just love the comments from ataraxia. :D

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/foreign/richardspencer/march2008/tibetbiascutsbothways.htm


Friday, April 04, 2008

Best Free Documentaries!

http://bestdocumentaries.blogspot.com/

First, I was searching for the BBC documentary film "One Year in Tibet". It is a pity that it is not available from the BBC iplayer web site for non-UK. Accidentally, I found this blog page. It is a great surprise! :D There are two episodes on that post. The film is really interesting, especially under the current circumstance (the tense situation in Lhasa or near areas).

Another interesting video is The Fake Trade. Here my interest is very obviously since I am a Chinese. :D China is THE country on that hot list. I am not proud of it. It may seem not harmful to buy a fake bag or a pair of sunglasses. However, it is scary to buy fake medicines or food. At least, I don' t want a world like that. People is losing their trust in things they are buying...in people they are buying those things from...or in the society. In China, we say we are losing public trust 社会公信.

One interesting question arising here is why we buy fake products. The material desire??? We are born-to-be customers? I think the story of stuff has pointed out the problem. Ironically, American fashion magazine Bazaar held the press conference to announce their web site: Fakes Are Never in Fashion.com??? In fact, I think the fashion industries are the problem! Every page of each magazine is sending a wrong message to people: you are defined by the material things you own. In the video, a woman told interviewer that the fake bags she owns are definitely knockout, fake but cheap and with good quality. In deed, it is a knockout if you get a fake bag in less than 100 euros and a real one costs over thousand pounds. By the way, she was doing a botoxing. She is fake too! :D

There is a campaign on the homepage of “Fakes are Never in Fashion”. You can make a design. The winning design will be produced on limited-edition T-shirts???? Limited-edition, how ironical!