His comments are so biased as usual.
:(
Peace and best wishes.
Xi
On Mar 31, 8:37=A0am, RichAsianKid <richasian...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> http://kristof.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/30/calling-china/?ref=3Dopinion
>
> March 30, 2008, =A011:13 pm
> Calling China
>
> By Nicholas D. Kristof
>
> I think I'm going to write my next column about China, in the wake of
> the Tibetan protests, and I'd love to hear from some Chinese readers.
> For those of you in China, has the Times website been restored so that
> you can access this site? I gather that it was cut off after the
> Tibetan upheavals, but maybe the links have been restored. In any
> case, my sense is that many Chinese -- whether in China or outside the
> country -- are deeply indignant at U.S. media coverage of Tibet in
> particular and China-U.S. relations in general. I get waves of angry
> emails whenever I write about China and Darfur. So here's your chance:
> What do we get wrong, and why?
>
> Frankly, it strikes me that China's problems are rather similar to
> America's: an obliviousness to how one's own country is perceived
> abroad, a nationalistic people who are sometimes blind to the power of
> nationalism on the part of others (e.g. Iraqis and Tibetans), lousy
> leader****p in the center, and a tendency to take steps intended to
> preserve national security that end up undermining that security.
>
> What do you think? Are the parallels real? Americans are welcome to
> weigh in as well, but In particular I'd love to get some thoughtful
> Chinese voices.


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