David Stanway and Winnie Zhu: “Harmonious society” and “food safety” among new Chinese media buzzwords

From the Interfax: A new survey into China’s print media reveals that the most common phrases used in the spring and summer of this year have been the “harmonious society”, the Olympic slogan “One World, One Dream”, “food safety” and “Lian and Soong visit the Mainland”, referring to the recent tours taken by Taiwanese politicians […]

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Carol Divjak: Another angry protest in China

From World Socialist Web Site: ……the Hong Kong-based newspaper Apple Daily has indicated that the incident may involve the highest levels of Chinese bureaucracy. The man behind the efforts to drive the farmers off their land may well be none other than the son of Li Peng, the former Chinese Premier, who was directly responsible […]

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Jonathan Porter and Simon Kearney: Defector leaves for US

From The Australian: RENEGADE former Chinese consulate staffer Chen Yonglin has taken advantage of his new status as a protected defector to leave Australia at the first opportunity. Mr Chen boarded a United Airlines flight to Los Angeles yesterday, saying he was headed to Washington. “I am going to a US Congress hearing to testify […]

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Laurence Eyton: Taiwan’s Ma proves an odd winner

From The Asia Times Online: Taiwan is still wondering what to make of the result of the former-ruling Kuomintang Party‘s first-ever serious – in that there was a choice of candidates – democratic election for party chairman. But as the result rolled in Saturday, it looked as if there was hardly any competition. Ma Ying-jeou, […]

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Richard McGregor and Andrew Yeh: China’s economy grows 9.5%

From The Financial Times: China economy up. Swelling exports and strong investment kept China’s economy in a powerful growth pattern in the first half of the year, exceeding many analysts’ expectations to expand by 9.5 per cent. The persistence of strong fixed asset investment, which the authorities had been attempting to slow for more than […]

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Matthew R. Miller: China’s Censored Online Market Booms as India’s Lags

From Bloomberg.com: Yahoo! Inc.’s China Web site warns users they’re not allowed to post content that “divulges state secrets, subverts the government or undermines national unity.” Yahoo’s India site has no such prohibition. Undeterred by China’s restrictions, Yahoo, owner of the world’s most-visited Web portal, invested $120 million in a Chinese search engine in 2003. […]

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Xinhua: Should naked human bodies be used as art symbols?

From Xinhua: BEIJING, July 20 — At four o’ clock on April 13, 41 male and female students from the Chengdu Academy of Fine Arts stripped naked and arranged their bodies into the @ shape. Known as performance art, the @41 project in south Chengdu, Sichuan Province has raised more than a few eyebrows. Once […]

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Anne Applebaum: Let a Thousand Filters Bloom

From The Washington Post: In 1949, when George Orwell wrote his dystopian novel “1984,” he gave its hero, Winston, a job at the Ministry of Truth. All day long, Winston clips politically unacceptable facts, stuffs them into little pneumatic tubes, and then pushes the tubes down a chute. Beside him sits a woman in charge […]

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Joseph Kahn: China Has an Ancient Mariner to Tell You About

From The New York Times: NANJING, China, July 17 – The captivating tale of Zheng He, a Chinese eunuch who explored the Pacific and Indian Oceans with a mighty armada almost a century before Columbus discovered America, has long languished as a tantalizing footnote in China’s imperial history. Zheng He (pronounced jung huh) fell into […]

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Kathleen T. Rhem: Chinese Military Power Report Addresses U.S. Concerns

From DefenseLINK News: The Defense Department’s annual report on Chinese military power, released late July 19, is “deliberately non-alarmist,” a senior official said. However, some findings are “worrisome,” the official added. The 45-page report (PDF), required by Congress each year, “is a very factual presentation of what’s taken place in the People’s Republic of China,” […]

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EastSouthWestNorth: Search Engines vs. Spammers in China

From The Southern Weekend (in Chinese), translated by EastSouthWestNorth: There is a vast amount of economic interests behind the search engines, since being found by a search engine is an important method of increasing the number of hits to a website. Search engines are also important indicators in the “economy of attention” on the Internet. […]

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Christine Chiao and Cissy Wang: China’s Evolving Blogosphere

From The Asia Pacific Media Network: The popularity of blogs has garnered attention of another kind: the government is now taking steps to ensure that the sites are under their radar. China’s Ministry of Information Industry (MII) mandated the registration of all websites and web log host sites in the country before the June 30, […]

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China Daily: Drag Queen underworld in China soliciting tolerance

From China Daily: Through Chinese filmmaker Jiang Zhi’s film, Our Love, the hidden voice of China’s drag queens finally reaches the ears of ordinary society. Based on the lives of three real queens living in Shenzhen’s underworld, the film is half-documentary, half-fiction. Sections of it are filmed in a talk show question-and-answer style, while fictional […]

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