2011年12月22日 星期四

Only in China: A 山寨 Town Where You Can't Speak Chinese

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Chinese culture is famous for its love of copying just about anything its people get their hands on. While this can be a serious problem in terms of IP laws, rare is the 外?人 in China that hasn't had a good laugh at a 山寨 (sh?nzhai) version of a familiar brand, product or other entity from their home country. As modern China tends to do, though, they like to make 'em big: a town in Miyun County (密云?), outside of Beijing, is being turned into an exceedingly-accurate English market town (a 山寨寨子?), where, among other things, speaking Chinese will be prohibited, with only English being permitted. While we can't condone banning spoken Chinese in China, of all places, we certainly admire their commitment to the quaintness of classic English market towns - might make for a good respite from the craziness of Beijing? In any event, here's the article, courtesy of the Telegraph:

China to build English market town
China is to build a fake English market town where the Chinese language is banned.
The settlement will demand its residents and visitors to speak only English with those caught gossiping in shops or at the bus stop in their native Chinese punished. "We plan to build in the European architectural style of the English city. The town will be divided into 16 city blocks, with a castle," said senior Miyun County official Wang Haichen. "When people arrive in the town, it will be like going abroad. They have to get a 'passport' which has to be stamped," he added. Four miles of polluted rivers running through 1,000 acres of blighted semi-rural land will be restored and landscaped into scenic standards becoming of the English countryside, said Mr Wang. However, those who ask to hire a punt on the planned navigable waterways in Chinese or speak the local lingo anywhere in the English-only haven, will feel the long arm of the law, he warned.
The planned site for a fake slice of England's green and pleasant land is located just over an hour's drive from Beijing and lies in the shadow of the Great Wall. Mr Wang said the development will help the area become a sophisticated ecotourist destination and lure the middle classes seeking to boost their linguistic skills in an English-inspiring, green setting. And he said the development will help compensate for the worsening slump in the construction and industry sectors. Miyun government figures show a 30 per cent drop since January in the county's once thriving real estate sector. Mr Wang unveiled the county's anglophilisim at the Communist-run Miyun County Fifteenth People's Congress, a major regional government meeting, on Thursday. Mock English towns and other affected European-styled property developments are constructed as gimmicks to attract China's middle classes seeking urbanity and a boost to their property portfolio.
Thames Town on the banks of the Yangtze River near Shanghai was opened amid much fan fare in 2006, boasting mock tutor brick homes, a pub, chippy, privet hedges, manicured lawns and leafy roads. Five years on however, the complex is a near ghost town and draws mainly newly weds seeking a novel backdrop for their wedding photos. American English may be more widely taught than The Queen's in Chinese classrooms, but all things British remain a benchmark for style and standards for many Chinese.
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2011年12月20日 星期二

U.S. general brings Baghdad flag home

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U.S. general brings Baghdad flag home:


Army Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III returns the United States Forces-Iraq command flag to U.S. soil on Tuesday.

Army Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III returns the United States Forces-Iraq command flag to U.S. soil on Tuesday.




  • NEW: U.S. troops did "truly remarkable" things in Iraq, Austin says

  • "Welcome home," Joint Chiefs chairman tells troops

  • Tuesday's ceremony was the formal finale of the U.S. military mission in Iraq

  • As many as 4,500 Americans were killed in the nearly 9-year war




(CNN) -- The U.S. general who oversaw the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq returned home Tuesday with the flag that flew over Baghdad at the end of the war.


President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden joined military leaders at the military's Joint Base Andrews outside Washington as Army Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III returned the United States Forces-Iraq command flag. The ceremony marks the formal conclusion of the conflict.


"Today, we bring home the colors to United States soil," the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, said during Tuesday's commemoration. "At the same time, we embrace many of our own back into the fold just in time for the holidays. Welcome home."


Neither Obama nor Biden spoke at Tuesday's ceremony.


The last U.S. convoy left Iraq early Sunday, bringing an end to a nearly nine-year war that sharply divided the U.S. public. Nearly 4,500 U.S. troops died and more than 30,000 were wounded in the conflict, while estimates of the Iraqi toll run well above 100,000 dead.


"We lack the words to say what you feel on this day because, try as we may, we can never fully know it," Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told the families of those killed or wounded. "But we do know what your sacrifice means to us, to this nation and to a world that still depends so much on America for its security."


The standard that Austin presented in Tuesday's ceremony was the flag that was sheathed last week in a formal "casing of the colors" in Baghdad. He said U.S. troops, many of whom served multiple tours in Iraq, have achieved "truly remarkable" things.


"Together with our coalition partners and corps of dedicated civilians, they removed a brutal dictator and gave the Iraqi people their freedom," Austin said. "Their courage and their ability to adapt has enabled us to persevere through the darkest days of the insurgency, to create hope and to provide the Iraqis opportunities that they have not seen in their lifetime. And so now the stage has been set for Iraq's young democracy to emerge as a leader in what has been and what will continue to be a very dynamic region."


U.S. and allied troops, mostly British, invaded Iraq in March 2003 after accusing then-dictator Saddam Hussein of concealing banned stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons and efforts to build a nuclear bomb. Hussein's government quickly collapsed, but U.S. inspectors later found that Iraq had dismantled its weapons programs under U.N. sanctions in the 1990s.


The U.S. occupation quickly found itself battling an insurgency launched by the remnants of Hussein's regime. The Americans also faced Islamic jihadists loyal to an Iraq-based offshoot of al Qaeda and anti-American Shiite militias that U.S. commanders said were backed by neighboring Iran.


Iraq elected a new government in 2005, and Hussein was hanged in 2006. But soon afterward, sectarian warfare between Iraq's Shiite Arab majority and Sunni minority erupted after the bombing of the Shiite al-Askariya mosque, with thousands of bodies dumped in the streets of Baghdad and other cities for months.


That fighting subsided in 2007, after Washington poured about 30,000 more troops into Iraq and began supporting Sunni Arab groups that turned against the jihadists.


The new Iraq finds itself facing a political crisis within days of the American pullout, as Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shiite-dominated government accused the country's leading Sunni official of orchestrating bomb attacks against government and security officials. The powerful political bloc that draws support largely from Sunni and more secular Iraqis has announced it is boycotting Parliament, and its leaders accuse al-Maliki of trying to amass dictatorial power.


CNN's Dan Merica contributed to this report.











Insuring Your Drive, the Basics!

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Insuring Your Drive, the Basics!: Vehicle Insurance or Auto Insurance is designed for those who wish to finance a car for personal use. A car loan can give you immediate use of the car of your choice in exchange for regular payments over an agreed period of time. Also known as gap insurance or motor insurance these are purchased for cars, trucks, motorcycles, and other road vehicles.