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The ****trait of a Disconnecting "Olympic Host" -- Rejecting dissent,

by Micky Wong <mickywon@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 30, 2008 at 11:02 AM

The ****trait of a Disconnecting "Olympic Host" -- Rejecting dissent,
China exposes its candor gap / IHT

International Herald Tribune

Rejecting dissent, China exposes its candor gap

By Howard W. French
Thursday, March 27, 2008

SHANGHAI: Over the past couple of weeks, two of the world's biggest news
stories were the outbreak of protests and riots in Tibetan areas of
China and the repression that followed them, and the uproar over
comments by the pastor of the American presidential candidate Barack
Obama.

Two continents, two very different topics. What, pray tell, could
possibly link them?

In the most immediate sense, the answer is that China's response to the
events in Tibet, in particular its ferocious denunciations of the
Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, reminded me of one of the most
distingui****ng characteristics of my own country.

I don't just mean the right to free speech. I refer to an American
character not enshrined anywhere in law, but a vital trait nonetheless.

Although Americans may often take it for granted, at their best they
enjoy a largeness of spirit that permits them to air their dirty laundry
in public, not to shy from controversy, and to be able to visit and
revisit even the most painful aspects of their past and to explore them
in the light of day.

I refer to the intellectually refre****ng sensation they can receive in
seeing conventional wisdom formed on any given topic and then just as
surely challenged. Finally, I refer to the right to be wrong, and the
right even to make a fool of oneself in public.

The sermons of the Reverend Jeremiah Wright Jr. and Obama's response
have involved all of these things, while the Chinese conversation about
Tibet, carefully policed through censor****p and through myriad other
methods that China's authoritarian government employs to enforce
consensus has involved none of them.

In the United States, while political correctness may occasionally
grate, in China, it is suffocating. Although the Dalai Lama has
repeatedly renounced all claims of independence for his homeland, the
Chinese press universally dismisses him as a "splittist," scarcely
bothering to re****t opposing views.

The Chinese press is similarly full of claims of Western media bias and
distortion, a charge made straight-faced in a country that routinely
blocks foreign media, strictly censors its own news, and has only
allowed the media to cover street violence by Tibetans. The Chinese
government has effectively banned coverage of the use of force by the
authorities in clamping down not just on dissent in Lhasa, but on the
largely peaceful protests by Tibetans that swept much of western China.

On the face of it, the Dalai Lama and Wright would seem to have precious
little to do with each other. Scratch the surface just a bit, though,
and a relation****p emerges. Although the nature of their rhetoric is
quite different, one serene and the other angry, each man is a member of
a historically aggrieved minority group who has condemned the behavior
of a powerful ethnic majority in his society.

The Dalai Lama has earned fevered denunciations as a "wolf with a human
face and heart of a beast" from China's state-controlled media for,
among other things, warning of what he has called "cultural genocide" in
Tibet.

Wright, a former marine, seems to have drawn the most ire for the phrase
"Goddamn America," for what he perceives as his country's abuses of
power around the world. In the clips of his sermons played endlessly on
television these last two weeks, he has also spoken of the "U.S. of KKK
A.," an in-your-face and, to many, offensive critique of American racism.

Others were outraged by his characterization of the Sept. 11 attacks as
"chickens coming home to roost," although thoughts like these fit within
a broader narrative of dissent, one animated by the likes of the late
Susan Sontag, who provocatively asked shortly after the destruction of
the World Trade Center: "Where is the acknowledgment that this was not a
'cowardly' attack on 'civilization' or 'liberty' or 'humanity' or 'the
free world,' but an attack on the world's self-proclaimed superpower,
undertaken as a consequence of specific American alliances and actions?"

In hearing his words, though, I wondered what would happen to a Wright
in China, were there to be someone with the temerity to publicly damn
this country for, say, tens of millions of deaths in politically caused
disasters, or wave after wave of political witch hunts, which destroyed
countless lives in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, or the atrocities committed
against Tibetans, or Uighurs or Mongolians in various drives to bring
ethnic minorities under control?

The likely answer should give pause to those who are quick to take
offense at speech that goes against the grain: He would be sent for
re-education, like the monks in Lhasa today, or he would be locked up,
never to be heard from again, and certainly not in the Chinese media.

Wright sustained self-inflicted wounds with statements about the U.S.
government being the source of the AIDS epidemic and with offensive
language about Hillary Clinton's privileged life as a white person.

For much of the rest of what he has been exhaustively quoted as saying,
though, Americans can actually feel proud. Not because they approve of
his views on the use of American power or his calls for our damnation,
but because the capacity for vigorous, even bruising discussion of our
failings is a sign of health in a society and not cause for lamentation.

In some quarters, people obsess about China's rise, focusing on its GDP
figures or military spending, but there is a gap that shows no sign of
closing and that is at least as fundamental as these: Call it the candor
gap, and until Chinese society can learn to get over its seemingly
allergic aversion to conflicting views, to the airing of controversy,
and to unsparing exercises in truth-telling, it is hard to imagine this
country truly fulfilling its potential.



International Herald Tribune Copyright
 www.iht.com
 



 1 Posts in Topic:
The Portrait of a Disconnecting "Olympic Host" -- Rejecting diss
Micky Wong <mickywon@[  2008-03-30 11:02:19 

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