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Some Chinese Boycott Carrefour

This Chinese girl protests what she perceives as French support for Tibet, by boycotting French supermarket chain, Carrefour. See video below.

More from WSJ:

BEIJING — Some Chinese citizens, angry over foreign criticism of their country’s policies in Tibet, are calling for boycotts of at least two European retailers for purportedly supporting the Dalai Lama, the latest sign of growing tension between China and the West ahead of the Olympics.

Internet users in China — it is unclear how many — have been using instant-messaging services, blogs and bulletin boards to spread a call for Chinese consumers at home and abroad to boycott French supermarket operator Carrefour SA and cosmetics retailer the Body Shop, owned by L’Oréal SA.

UPDATE: From Wang Xiaofeng via danwei:

??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????“????”?

????????????????????

The best boycott is to make yourself really awesome (??); if you’re not cool, other people will pick on you. If you boycott someone when they pick on you, you’re just pretending to be be great. If you like it, maybe you should go to North Korea, where they only have north Korean and Chinese goods. ??Using your purchasing habits to demonstrate whether or not you are patriotic, this is really “universal values” with Chinese characteristics.

If there is anything I am going to boycott, it’s all these stupid idiots [arranging boycotts].

China: Online Petition vs False reporting by West on Tibet

Like any story, there are two sides to the whole Tibet/Olympics issue, and I ask for a that people outside of China consider looking at the Chinese point of view for a moment.

There’s an online petition (“>en) floating around on the Chinese internet right now, and if experience serves me correctly, there will be few Chinese people with a registered email address who don’t see this in their inbox by the end of the week:

Petition for Chinese people all over the world to protest the Western media distorted reports of the 3-14 Vandalism/Arson incidents in Lhasa.

In early March in Lhasa, Tibet, there were violent incidents of vandalism and arson which CNN, BBC and other news media in the west published a large number of false and distorted reports. If you strongly protested the Western media distorted and inaccurate reports of this event, please sign your name.

Sina Online Petition

Sina Online Petition vs Western Media Bias

Make no mistake, this petition was not started by some individual blogger, or some group like anti-CNN. It’s on Sina.com, one of China’s major portal websites. Note: If it was not a message with government approval, it would be removed very quickly.

There is a graph on the left showing how many people have signed the petition. It would be futile for me to report the number, because by the time you read this, there will already have been thousands more. Lets just say, it’s an Olympic size number! But my point is, a huge number of people within China feel this way about how the Western media sees their country. And it’s not a big stretch to assume that if you were born here you may very well feel the same way.

So lets look at a Chinese perspective, Carl Pei gives some good insight (h/t to HHR) as to why many in China feel the way they do:

Western coverage (CNN, Fox, BBC, …) hasn’t merely been biased against China, but downright against China. . . For instance, the protests were labeled as “peaceful”, when many Tibetans, even monks, were caught on tape with weapons destroying property or beating Police.

When they found this wasn’t working well for them, they then spread the false news that the Chinese Army (PLA) had set the riots up, dressing as monks. A picture was even provided as evidence, but only hours after the report that picture was also found to be fake.
. . .
I find it funny that Western media outlets, that often speak poorly of China’s state controlled media are responsible for such a catastrophic level of journalism. Clearly, they are at least as bad as their Chinese “propaganda-spreading” counterparts.

On German TV, people saw videos of how Nepalese Police beat monks at the same time as reporting as reporting the Tibet unrest in China. If I was an average German citizen, I sure as hell would hate China after watching the news too. All the false, bad press about China has caused major demonstrations outside the Chinese embassies throughout the entire Western world.
. . .
China unites, and fights back. All over the internet, one could see Chinese citizens posting on English message boards in their best English trying to explain their truth. Not long after, students set up a website, Anti CNN, to show the various “lies” that the Western media used to turn the story against China. If you are interested in learning more about Tibet, or how Chinese people feel about the situation, I strongly urge you to check the website.

Also, it’s funny to note that the Chinese government has noticed that the internet can not only work against them, but in favor of them too. After years of inaccessibility from the Middle Kingdom, the BBC, which was responsible for many of the so called lies, was suddenly unblocked in the midst of chaos so that everyone in China could see how they reported. I was shocked at fist, but now believe it was a very smart move.
[Bold is mine]

While I don’t agree with everything Carl says, I think he does raise a lot of points that many people have not yet considered. Both sides can learn something from each other here. It remains to be seen whether or not they will.

h/t to zjjtrans for the link

Further reading: Sina Video page on Lhasa incident

CNet Asia: A few of my recent posts

I’m still writing regularly over at CNet Asia, so feel free to drop over and check it out. Here are a couple of my latests posts:

To stay up to date, feel free to use the RSS feed.

Hey Jude, as performed by a Korean Baby

This is so way awesome.

I want to see where this kid ends up in 20 years. He’s gonna be such a dude. Stay tuned to the very end where he breaks into the “NA NA NA NAAA” part.

So awesome…


h/t to Jason Calacanis, who lists the kid’s bio over on Mahalo:

Ha Yung Wung (nicknamed “Hero”) is a young Korean boy born in September 2003. In May 2007, a video was uploaded to YouTube of him holding a small guitar and singing The Beatles’ “Hey Jude”. Since being uploaded, the song has been viewed over three million times.

Hero won a televised Korean talent contest in early 2008 called “Wunderkids” for his Beatles singing prowess.

Hero’s biography on YouTube is written from the point of view of Hero himself, even though he is not even five years old. It describes him as an extreme Beatles fanatic.

Fast Facts:

  • Hometown: Seoul, South Korea
  • Automobile enthusiast
  • Wants to learn Guitar Hero but is too short

If you liked that, you may enjoy this other Korean musical talent; a drummer who just might have been the inspiration behind Animal of the Muppets.

April Fools in China: Frozen Pedestrians

Here’s a quick look at a video making the rounds on the video sites, showing one April Fools prank staged in China.

For anyone who has spent any time at all in China, you know that walking down a busy street is kind of like being swept down a raging river.

Check out what happens when hundreds of Chinese pranksters decide to simultaneously stop in the middle of a busy pedestrian street:


Ronnie O’Sullivan in China: “Anyone want to give me a nosh?”

Now I don’t watch snooker. Tables are too big, really. They should really have golf clubs…

But anyway, snooker star Ronnie O’Sullivan, while doing a press conference after the China Open, was filmed making some pretty nasty remarks while the interpreters were speaking. Who knew snooker could be so interesting?

The tape shows O’Sullivan growing restless at the time taken for the translation. After answering the first question, and while it was being translated into Chinese, he is seen pointing to his penis and asking out loud: “Do you want to suck that? Do you want to come and suck on that later?” He then laughs and says: “Anyone want to give me a nosh?” . . . “Fuck me, how many more questions are they going to ask?” The reply comes back, “one more.” While it is being asked, O’Sullivan refers to the size and shape of his penis. . . He once stated he did not like travelling to China because “they don’t speak English.” He has, though, become more enthusiastic about the country since signing a six-figure advertising deal with a Chinese watch company last year. Source

Snooker won’t be in the Olympics will it?

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