Today's Links: E-waste, socialist engineering and the capitalist fight against pollution?

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  • Guiyu is a modern day gold rush town. But instead of panning for gold in babbling streams, workers shift through piles of broken old computer parts in acrid smelling shacks, smelting down parts with crude equipment to extract valuable metals.

  • Researchers in China say they have seen encouraging signs of an increase in giant panda numbers in the country's largest panda reserve.

  • Wang Wenlong knew he wasn't going to get top quality when he plunked down $4,700 for a locally made car. But he didn't expect so many problems from his Xiali subcompact -- from windows that refused to open to windshield wipers that wouldn't wipe.

  • Responding to global concerns, including that from India, China has decided to seek an environmental study on its controversial plan to upgrade an existing road to Nepal and Mt Everest in the fragile Himalayan region of Tibet.

  • After years of being accused by Western nations of making only token gestures to fight fake goods and months of complaints about the safety of its exports, China is taking extraordinary steps to change its image.

  • In a massive campaign that recalls the socialist engineering of an earlier era, the Chinese government has relocated 250,000 Tibetans - nearly one-tenth the population - from scattered rural hamlets to new "socialist villages,".

  • The capitalist fight against pollution? The State Environmental Protection Administration is working with the banking authorities to identify companies that fail pollution checks or bypass environmental assessments for new projects and to restrict their access to fresh credit.

Photo from Natalie Behring.

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Comments (6) [rss]

Funny how Chinese see Pandas as more important than Tibetans.

When Tibetans have nearly been 'bred out' of existance, I'm sure we'll hear something.

Maybe.

The day will come soon when the Dalai Lama's palace is "accidentally" demolished in a freak dynamite accident.

And when foreign tourists come to see Tibetans doing Tibetan things all they'll see are Chinese spitting and peeing everywhere, then they'll think to themselves "Lhasa is really a Chinese city now!"

nanheyangrouchuan

Pandas do not rebel and each carries a price tag of over a million when aboard. Got it?

Panda only costs $19.99 for 8 ounces, medium rare with a side of steamed broccoli where I'm at.

However, I prefer my Tibetans lively, rebellious and free.

nanheyangrouchuan

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