Friday, August 26, 2005

Plastic Bag Ban

Most of you have been here long enough to remember when the plastic bag ban came down. Well, in India several states have done that as well. Mumbai has become the latest locality....

Mr Deshmukh said the ban had been prompted by the indiscriminate use of plastic bags, which blocked sewage and drainage systems during record monsoon rains. Flooding and landslides killed more than 1,000 people in the state.

The ban is to take effect on September 24. Until then, residents of the state could file objections and suggestions, he said.

Other Indian states have already banned use of thin plastic bags used by shoppers.

Last month some prominent Mumbai residents, including movie producers, sued the state government for responding slowly to the crisis created by floods that paralysed India's financial and entertainment capital. Residents blame haphazard planning, bad drainage and poor roads for the flooding and landslides.

So it ain't just us, folks....

The China-Taiwan Fruit Fracas

The Asia Times has an excellent overview of the struggle over the fruit trade between Taiwan and China.
Reviewing the list of 18 kinds of fruit that China has opened its market to, Liu Jau-jia said, "It is nonsense from the perspective of marketing." Liu explained that two of Taiwan's top three fruits, bananas and lychees, were not granted tariff-free status, while some fruits that could be easily overproduced, such as oranges, could not even be exported to China. "The six kinds of fruit they announced later [on May 3] are even weirder. They are not even major kinds in Taiwan," Liu said, referring to coconuts, plums, peaches, persimmons, loquats, and prunes.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Be Specific!

How can I answer this?

Dear Michael

My name is ______ and I am 31 years old and live in _____, South Africa. Currently I am teaching English at ______ in _____ and have been teaching English for the past __ years. I believe it is now time for a change in scenery and I am considering teaching either in Taiwan or Japan. I have a BA degree with English as one of my major subjects.

Can you possibly assist me with some information regarding this matter. My future wife is also a teacher and she is just as keen to "start a new" life overseas.

I really hope you can help me.

All the best
....Except to say: view my site and ask me any specific questions.

US, China Duel in South Asia

One thing I've been tracking in this blog from time to time is the ongoing struggle between the US and China over their influence with other nations, a replay of the Cold War struggle between the US and the USSR. Space War brings us this analysis of the US-Pakistan-India-China missile and nuclear issues....

The South Asian nuclear arms race, one of the most potentially unstable and dangerous on the planet, has gone global.

Not only are Pakistan and India feverishly racing each other to develop more sophisticated and powerful nuclear delivery and missile defense systems, they are looking increasingly to China and the United States to help them.

Asiapundit has been collecting articles on the oil policies of China. Some bloggers have been pointing to recent articles that argue that China may well collapse. My attitude: it's not going to happen. We're going to be seeing this struggle for a long time to come, and we had better get used to it and plan for it.

Confirm Comments Feature

Due to the high volume of spam I've been receiving in my comments (how do vermin like spammers live with themselves?) I've been forced to enable some annoying security features for comments. My apologies to the online community. Hopefully this will soon pass.

Michael

Taiwanese Investment in China Falls

Taiwan's investment in China has fallen, though it is hard to see the reason. A simple blip? But outgoing investment approvals fell 20%.

Taiwan approved a total of 747 applications for China-bound investment worth US$3 billion in the seven months to July, down 20.36 percent from a year ago, the Investment Commission said yesterday.
There was some evidence that investors were pulling out do to the appreciation of the yuan, real or anticipated, that I blogged on earlier this summer. But this looks like a case of normal fluctuation...

Taiwan's corporate investment in China fell 2.1 percent to US$371 million in July from a year earlier, the Investment Commission of the Ministry of Economic Affairs said.

.....

Taiwan's foreign investment last month more than doubled from a year earlier to US$410 million, according to the commission.


While year on year figures for June double, YOY figures for July fall. The difference is $410 million to $371 million, so the real difference is between the figures for last year, it looks like. However, good numbers are hard to obtain, as this 2002 article points out:

Unofficial estimates, however, have always put actual investment much higher given that many Taiwan companies circumvent government supervision by investing in China through a subsidiary in a third country, in particular tax havens such as the Bahamas and the Virgin Islands.

Imagine Taiwanese circumventing the authorities. That just never happens....

"Political Responsibility" and Authoritarianism

Taiwan News has a great commentary on political responsibility in a democracy, on a theme that other media outlets have also commented on in much the same way over the years.

Under former imperial systems or autocrats for life, such as the Chinese Nationalist Party dictator Chiang Kai-shek and his son Ching-kuo, ministers in related agencies would "take responsibility" and resign to appease public outcry and anger over major bureaucratic errors or even accidents under the principle of "good men" government.

The "disgraced" official would usually be reassigned to other positions in the KMT hierarchy and another politician would be tabbed as the "new" and "good" minister, who would end up by doing no more toward reform of the underlying problems than his or her predecessor.

Sunblocks questioned

I'm sun-sensitive, and if I am out and about for any period of time, always use sunblock. Yesterday the local Consumer's Foundation reported on sunblock sold locally:

Many of the sunscreens tested claimed they could block out both long wave UVA rays, which penetrate the under layers of the skin and contribute to skin aging, and medium wave UVB rays that produce sunburn and can cause cancer as well as weakening the immune system.

But three brands - SK-II whitening block, Anessa's hair protection sun block cream and Cellina's waterproof sun screen lotion - while effective in blocking out UVB rays, were weaker in blocking out UVA rays, contrary to the claims made on their labels.

The Consumers' Foundation survey also found that two products in the survey - Cellina's waterproof lotion and SEA & SKI sunscreen for children - contained benzophenone, a chemical believed to be particularly irritating to the skin. A number of other products included organic solvents and acids alkalis that also could harm sensitive skin, including Anessa's cream and Chic Choc UV sunscreen.


Fortunately we've always used a quality sunblock.

Taiwan's Enviro-Spies

The Christian Science Monitor writes:

Portuguese sailors in the 15th century named Taiwain "Formosa," meaning "beautiful island." But on most days, it's hard to even see the mountainous island through the shroud of smog. So the government is fighting back, tightening environmental rules, and enlisting an army of citizen sleuths to spy on Taiwan's biggest polluters.

These environmental spies are armed with binoculars, notepads, and digital cameras, and have been tasked with snooping around small businesses and big corporations alike to make sure they're putting their toxins and trash in the right place.

Deputizing volunteers to be enviro-snoops is just the latest effort by Taiwan to curb the pollution that has accompanied its rapid development over the past 50 years. It's also indicative of an emerging civic activism in this young democracy.

Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Weekend and on...


AJ and Malv contemplate the carnage.

Another weekend of Axis and Allies ended in victory for your trusty writer as a string of lucky die rolls and some go-for-broke strategy ended with the Russians reeling and the Brits without a navy.


Aaron and Karl contemplate AJ and Malv.

On Monday I trucked down to Kaohsiung to finish writing a paper.


Bridges in Nantou


More bridges in Nantou.

On Tuesday, I am happy to report, we had a complete paper ready to submit to the Journal of Nursing Education. My co-authors, accomplished, vivacious, intelligent, and beautiful, are pictured here inspecting the final product.


Jane and Jenny stare in wonder: can a native speaker really make this many mistakes?

As I blogged earlier, a couple of weeks ago my wife led the construction of the mother of all Axis and Allies boards. Left behind were lots of paint...and lots of white walls....and a wife with too much time on her hands. The results: a primitive stairwell struggling to be born.


Filling in the squares....

Researchers Perpetuate Cultural Stereotypes

The Taipei Times reported today on a research that shows that Asians and Americans process visual data differently. After an interesting finding....

Shown a photograph, North American students of European background paid more attention to the object in the foreground of a scene, while students from China spent more time studying the background and taking in the whole scene, researchers at the University of Michigan say.

.....comes the idiot cultural explanations that perpetuate shallow stereotypes of Americans and Asians.

"Asians live in a more socially complicated world than we do," he said. "They have to pay more attention to others than we do. We are individualists. We can be bulls in a China shop, they can't afford it."

The key thing in Chinese culture is harmony, Nisbett said, while in the West the key is finding ways to get things done, paying less attention to others.


Earth to Nisbett: social relations in US culture are every bit as complex as those in Asian cultures -- it is a conceit of people who are clueless about the US that its culture is simple -- in fact, a stereotype. This is actually a twofer in stereotypes -- the great thing about American culture is that not only can you think it is simple, you can actually say that out loud and nobody questions its underlying ethnocentricity. To see what I mean, imagine if our good researcher had written that about the Igembe Merus of Kenya. Everyone would have been up in arms about what a colonialist and racist Nisbett was.

US social relations are not simple (just ask any of the students who have to master the exasperating intricacies of politeness in US culture) and the key thing in Chinese culture is not harmony (in any case all too often "harmony" in Chinese culture means "seeming to agree with those in power"). Anyone who wants to see the bull in the China shop can stand on a busy street corner in a large US city, and then on one in any Chinese city....which pedestrians and vehicles behave in a more orderly fashion? Who is the bull in the China shop? Who can afford to be more brusque? In which culture is "harmony" valued, and what does each culture mean by that term?

A second way that the experiment reveals ethnic stereotypes in its construction is the way that used Americans of European descent to stand for "American culture." The underlying ethnic stereotype is of course that American culture is "white." There were no African-Americans. No Asian-Americans. The study might have meant something if, for example, 50 Asians and 50 third generation Asian-Americans had been used, but at the moment one could just as well argue that the researchers have discovered that Asians and Caucasians are wired differently. It also encompasses stereotypes in that it uses Chinese to stand for all Asians, and constructs an idealized and non-existent exotic Other of Asia, where social relations are complicated and harmony rules, against the individualism of the US. Yet anyone who has watched Americans stand in line, play team sports, and nurture their civic culture, has to wonder about how these ideas of "harmony" are defined. Certainly a culture where everyone stops at red lights and waits peacefully in line has a lot more harmony than I encounter in my daily life here. It is high time these ethnocentric categories that orientalize everyone -- Asian, American, Chinese, European-American -- were dumped and researchers refrained from cheap, shallow cultural analysis.

Further, the researchers have not ruled out other cultural explanations -- that the Asians understood the researchers to want information about the whole picture, whereas the Americans understood them to want information about the object in the picture. In other words, the cultural response may well lie in the social interaction with the researcher (one wonders about the translation at this point) and not with the way the two cultures process data.

All in all, I hope the next time the Taipei Times publishes an article of this nature, it knocks out the sensational stereotyped hogwash, and focuses on the interesting if inconclusive results.

UPDATE: I dropped a line to the Taipei Times about this one. Just couldn't help myself.
UPDATE: 8/25 Taiwan News also ran the same story. I am compelled to point out how stupid this explanation is too:

In ancient China farmers developed a system of irrigated agriculture, Nisbett said, in which farmers had to get along with each other to share water and make sure no one cheated. This is especially the case in rice farming, he said.

Western attitudes, on the other hand, developed in ancient Greece where there more smallholders ran individual farms, raising grapes and olives, operating like individual businessmen. Thus, differences in perception go back at least 2000 years, he said.


Hello? Western attitudes have many roots (the barbarians, Rome, the Vikings, the Babylonians...), and selectively choosing among these doth not a coherent explanation make. And further, this comment is just plain ignorant: Mediterranean climates require irrigation and water storage for agriculture, and ancient Greece had plenty of water systems, just as modern Greece does today (see this book). Finally, China had TWO early agricultural regions, and one did not grow rice. It's difficult not to scream when you read such vast ignorance trumpeted on the front pages of major newspapers.

UPDATE: (8/29) Kerim blogs on this at Savage Minds.

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

The Journalist on Hatred in Taiwan

ESWN has once again tossed some bait my way with another translation "explaining" Taiwan affairs from The Journalist.

It's hard to know where to begin with a piece like this because it is bad on so many levels and in so many ways. The author begins the piece with a tactic that every skeptical reader ought to grasp at once: self-validation by identifying oneself as "above the fray" (disclaimer: I am not above the fray. I am passionately pro-democracy and pro-DPP). I'm shamelessly stealing ESWN's translation. Here's the first paragraph:

A friend said that he does not read political news or commentary in the newspapers or magazines, because "they are often full of hate. For me, it is not a smart thing to pay money to bring hatred into my home." The clash between political ideologies has made many people unhappy. If the struggle was limited only to the fight between unification and independence, or the political power struggle between the blue and green camps, it would not be as bad. Most citizens would know at least which topics upset them and they can filter out those kinds of information. Unfortunately, though, the elements of unhappiness are like randomly discarded pollutants that have seeped under the ground to all areas of life.
There seems to be a growing mythology in Taiwan's society that Taiwan's problems stem from the media. It is certainly true that the print media here is not of the highest quality, and the broadcast media is unmentionable, treating potential news like a 12 year old who has just found his father's cache of Playboy magazines.

The comments in here are quite interesting: "The clash between political ideologies has made many people unhappy." Hey, no kidding. When one side consists of a corrupt authoritarian party that hates Taiwan and wants to annex it to China so it can stay in power, unhappiness is bound to result. This is not the ordinary case of two parties disagreeing on policy, but the unique case of one party disagreeing that the nation has a right to exist. The media are not to blame for this problem....

Water shortage should be an economic problem. Water works and water resource management are mature subjects of knowledge. The provision of water is a highly technical problem, and the mature government bureaucracy in Taiwan should have the technical expertise to deal with the matter. But the whole thing was positioned as a political struggle between the central and local governments from the very start, or even an internal political struggle within the central government. This was how the government officials behaved, and the media also looked at this economic problem from political angles. The black-and-white political positions restricted any professional and technical discussion.

The commentary here is frankly, naive. It reflects the long-discredited view, still current here in Taiwan, that public policy is really a question of technical matters and that "politics" is something that interferes with the smooth process of public choice under expert guidance. This narrative of technocratic triumphalism went out sometime between Ellul and Kuhn, propelled by Mumford, the Holocaust, and Hiroshima. Public choice -- public policy -- is a matter of values, which cannot be settled by technological expertise. Your expert can tell you the conseqences of different water management policies, but she cannot tell you which one you should choose, because that is a matter of values, not expertise. The media can be criticized for its lame-brained presentations of public policy issues, but it cannot be criticized for politicizing them. That is the inevitable result of public policy in a democracy.

The fact is that water policy does reflect the struggle over centralization in Taiwan's government structure and cannot be de-linked from it. Taiwan's counties are laid out along water basin boundaries and are essentially creatures of water policy. To claim that local government can be delinked from water policy is to argue that Taiwan's county borders have nothing to with local government, a position of immense absurdity. The tussle between local and central government also reflects the inherent tensions that have arisen as the DPP attempts to find a formula that will enable Taiwan to democratize without it spinning out of central government control, a serious problem when so many local governments are corrupt beyond belief. But I suppose it would be 'hateful' to point out which political party was the cause of that problem.

Which brings me to my next point, which is that much of the criticism of public discourse in Taiwan by locals actually reflects uneasiness with its freewheeling nature. The pundits who lord it over local discourse came of age in an authoritarian society where discourse was defined by limits everyone understood. But those limits, whose ultimate bound lay in a swift clubbing and a body dumped off the local beach, have gone. As I've said before, many locals interpret the freewheeling savagery of local discourse as an anarchy to be shunned rather than a potential democratic discourse to be embraced and elevated. Let us see which way the writer in The Journalist takes it....

The media are like groundwater carrying the pollution of hatred everywhere. Of course, the politicians themselves are the source of the pollution. In Taipei City, a police informant for stolen cars wanted to deliver results and went into Taipei County to steal cars himself. After the case was exposed, the Taipei County head and the Deputy Police Director held a press conference to accuse Taipei City. It is astonishing that the very busy Taipei County head would make time to hold a press conference and use this hot headline news to poke at their neighbors who are ruled by a different political party. Should not the Taipei County head be spending his effort to get the county police to have closer liaison with the city police in order to close the loopholes?

All sorts of things are happening here.....first, the author, having conventionally blamed the media, can now even more conventionally blame the politicians. "Of course, the politicians themselves are the source of the pollution," he says. This obnoxious shallowness precisely reflects the type of discourse the writer imagines he deplores, but is actually a prime exponent of. We've seen this problem before, of course, in ESWN's previous translation discussing Apple Daily. Note that the article from The Journalist is composed entirely of unsupported claims, and that there is no reference to history, except as a vague Golden Age prior to the intervention of the horrible media driven by those horrible politicians, a time, presumably, when public policy was made by brilliant technoscientific elites who had no need to reference politics in their choices, instead merely handing off contracts for concrete and fertilizer to close associates of the ruling party. A sure clue that an article is bullshit is that it makes no concrete reference to history, establishing its bona fides only in relation to current events. Here The Journalist has waved his rhetorical wand and history has disappeared.

The major problem here is that the hatred is not the result of politicians but the legacy of fifty years of KMT rule, and ongoing KMT policy. Many Taiwanese hate mainlanders passionately and for entirely understandable reasons, and many mainlanders hate the DPP for no other reason than that it is slowly removing them from the places of power they once held in Taiwan society. The Journalist simply glides past all this passionate feeling with the brilliant and historically sensitive explanation that it is all due to those politicians. If only they would stop producing poison, and if only the media would stop spreading it and intensifying it, then all would be well. Note how The Journalist carefully stops short of explaining what it is that politicians do that produces all that hatred. To do that would be to enter the realm of the Concrete, and there There Be Dragons of a very nasty kind, the Reality Kind that Bites You on the Ass. Like my students, The Journalist would prefer to live in a Laputa of abstractions rather than dirty himself with things like legislative vote patterns, political corruption, and Chinese cultural patterns of political interaction. Good writing is concrete....

Also like my students, The Journalist has selected an example that doesn't fit his case very well. The Taipei City and Taipei County governments blaming each other may reflect party divisions, but anyone who has lived in Taiwan will also recognize the deeper pattern of pre-emptive finger-pointing that often goes on in Chinese institutions, in which party A quickly organizes to blame Party B before Party B can get its act together and blame Party A. Further, here the media in this case is obviously and only the tool of the politicians -- if the Taipei County Police organize a press conference should the media stay away? Isn't it the media's job to report events like this? I'm a little confused by The Journalist's idea that perhaps the media should not report that the Taipei County Police are blaming the Taipei City Police for the antics of one fruitcake police informant. Another thing I often tell my students -- make concrete and positive recommendations. But our heroic analyst for The Journalist has none, of course. He concludes;
The quarrels in Taiwan can no longer be described as 口水 (literally, saliva, but refers to free-swinging opinionating). Taiwan has been poisoned by hatred. The politicians create it and the media spread it. The haters are especially sensitive to it, they react strongly to it, they become more obstinate in their positions and they insist on disagreeing rather than agreeing. Who can say: Taiwan is a "body with a common fate"?
The quarrels in Taiwan never were described as 口水 so again we have the writer referencing a Golden Age that never existed. Prior to the advent of real party palitics there was one-party rule and 口水 got you locked up, exiled, or killed. Like so many Chinese writers I have read, the writer here has become drunk oncheap moralizing and abstractions, and forgotten that true insight dwells in reflecting on, and interacting with, the world of the concrete.

It is true that Taiwan has been poisoned by hatred. Unlike South Africa and other one-party states, the White Terror has not resulted in a Truth Commission whose express purpose is to heal society. The high-ranking KMT members who were responsible in their younger days for the application of martial law and its violent arbtrariness have never been punished for their evil, nor has the KMT ever really apologized for what it did to Taiwan. Nor has the party abandoned its dream of crushing Taiwan's democracy and annexing the island to China. In the absence of concrete gestures from the KMT to heal the breach between the mainlanders and the Taiwanese, naturally hatred will remain. And that is not a bad thing, for the opposite of hatred is not love, as people are wont to think. No, hatred and love are complementary passions, as one turns constantly into the other -- in Taiwan, the three most passionately anti-mainlander and pro-Taiwan independence women I know all married mainlanders. No, the opposite of hatred is resignation, just as the opposite of love is apathy. And with the KMT determined to sell the island to China, and 700 Chinese missiles pointed at Taiwan, resignation is not what the island needs right now. As a motivator, hatred will do very nicely, thank you.

ESWN ends with his own commentary on the issue:
But the fact that Apple Daily is succeeding means that the the younger generation are being turned off from politics. Not only do they refuse to hear about party politics, they don't even want to deal with anything else that is contaminated by partisan politics, when in fact those are critical issues in their lives (such as water management, environmental pollution, and so on).
Quite true, and a trend long predating the arrival of Apple Daily. But locating apathy among the young, a universal problem, in hatred fostered by the media, is absurd. The young in Taiwan are apathetic because they have no control over their lives, dominated as they are by an authoritarian family and social culture, a school system that offers them few choices, a lack of civic culture that encourages growth as a politically involved citizen, and a culture that does not permit the kind of self-expression they need to develop their own autonomy, and also because the previous ruling party encouraged the habit of apathy among the young. They have been trained to apathy by their elders. The shallowness and nihilism of Apple Daily, with its negative, anti-Taiwan politics, naturally appeals to that. But the young are young, and someday, like all young everywhere, they will outgrow that. And like the old everywhere, we will deplore the slow, lazy curve of that growth. That is what that thing that has vanished from this discussion -- history -- teaches us.

Taiwan Studies Fellowship

H-Asia reports:

H-ASIA
August 22, 2005

Taiwan Studies Research Fellowship 2005
*********************
From: _classicalliberalism@GMAIL.COM_
(mailto:classicalliberalism@GMAIL.COM)

Taiwan Studies Research Fellowship 2005

The Cultural Division of the Taipei Representative Office is pleased
to announce a Taiwan Studies Research Fellowship, funded by the
Ministry of Education in Taiwan.

The program is designed to assist postgraduates and academic staff to
undertake a visit to Taiwan in connection with a research project
about the Republic of China on Taiwan or on an aspect of Taiwan's
relations with the UK. The purpose of the program is to enhance the
knowledge and understanding of Taiwan among UK academics. Two awards
will be made this year. The academic selection process will be
undertaken by the British Association for Chinese Studies.

Level of award: Return airfare to Taiwan and a stipend of US$180 per
day.

Period of award: Up to 3 weeks (inclusive of arrival and departure
dates).

Application deadline: Applications must be submitted by 7 September
2005.

Dates of visit: the visit must be completed by 31 November 2005.

Conditions: A written report on the visit must be submitted to the
Taiwan Representative Office by 31 December 2005.

Eligibility: Applicants must be a) UK citizens and a full-time member
of academic staff or a postgraduate student at a recognized
institution of higher education, b) holders of a postgraduate degree
or equivalent (applicants without formal qualifications must
demonstrate successful research experience).

Application forms are available from your department or from Carol
Rennie, secretary@bacsuk.org.uk

Other queries about the scheme should be addressed to
Mr To-ming Chu, Assistant Director
Cultural Division of the Taipei Representative Office in the UK
Tel: 020 7436 5888 _cduk1@dial.pipex.com_
(mailto:cduk1@dial.pipex.com)

Monday, August 22, 2005

Blogging Depression

For those you who are total blog addicts, The Nonist offers a pamphlet on blogging depression.

There is a growing epidemic in the cyberworld. a scourge which causes more suffering with each passing day. as blogging has exploded and, under the stewardship of the veterans, the form has matured more and more bloggers are finding themselves disillusioned, dissatisfied, taking long breaks, and in many cases simply closing up shop. this debilitating scourge ebbs and flows but there is hardly a blogger among us who has not felt its dark touch. we're speaking, of course, about blog depression.




Sunday, August 21, 2005

ESWN: Media in China making $$ off disaster

ESWN has a great article on how the media in China blackmail businessmen. From time to time similar tales have made their way into the press here, though it has been several years since I recall seeing one. ESWN writes:
A coal mine in Ruzhou (China) was flooded and a number of workers were trapped. No, this is not that other story in Guangdong which was broadly covered, including expose's about the people behind the mine. Chances are that you have never heard of the Ruzhou coal mine disaster, for reasons that this translation will explain.....