Monday, June 22, 2015

Chinese Side of Story, Told in Silences

It seems that the Chinese people live in a bubble that is completely different from American people's bubble.  Here are my thoughts about 2 recent events:

1.   World's animal lovers are understandably outraged by the Yulin Dog Meat Event.  Note however, this "tradition" was a recent addition and its introduction coincided with Mongolian invasion/occupation, when the Chinese culture was nearly massacred and starved into stone age.   Yulin itself is a minority self-government area, for it to represent Chinese people's tradition is like saying:  America starts and ends with Baltimore riots.  Chinese animal lovers increasingly are standing behind their pets and wild animals.  Witness the recent burning of illegal Ivory stash by the Chinese government.  The Chinese people once decide against something clearly cruel , tend to go all way against it.  I talk with my Chinese friends, and the overwhelming majority support a vigorous ban on such cruel "traditions", much like the notorious dolphin hunts by Japanese ships.

Yet, mainstream media never mentions all this background.

2.  A couple weeks ago, US government computer hacking by China dominated the headline with sinister names of "Deep Panda" (by security company, say A).  The latest news is security company B, says: no no, This is not done by Deep Panda.  It's actually done by another player.

Truth is: nobody knows.    Whoever tells you: "we know it's China hacking", he's lying.  The security experts could pretend, but not know for sure.

A couple of days ago, a critical vulnerability "Xara" rocked the Apple world.  Guess who found it?  Someone at Peking University, China working in a team with Americans.   Yet China is left out of all the headlines but buried in text(if mentioned at all).

Why?   Chinese culture tends to be self-deprecating and humble and quiet, encouraging "pregnant pauses" and listening to "silences".   Pregnant pauses are well and good, but the long silences are interpreted universally as "admission of guilt".   Chinese culture of insensitivity and long silences gives its enemies (who wish it to Jericho, if I'm allowed to mix this metaphor) the excuse to demonize China and all things Chinese.   Chinese Americans need to go out and tell their side of the story.



Wednesday, June 10, 2015

The Most Rewarding Job in China: Jack Ma

Jack Ma, the billionaire founder of Chinese ecommerce giant Alibaba, today claims he want to help more American businesses access the Chinese market.  The Internet let out a collective gasp of disblief.   Could he actually mean it?  Is this a big bad Chinese trick?  

I do not know.  But first consider the following background about Jack Ma and China.
1.  Jack Ma graduated from a relatively obscure Chinese teacher's college in Hangzhou.
2.  The Chinese Confucianism traditionally honors the teacher as the 5th most honored relation, ranked right below Heaven, Earth, Emperor/King, Parents, Teacher (天地君亲师).   This deep respect for the Chinese teachers permeated the Chinese history for 3000 years, even through hundreds of years of enslavement, wars and famines.   Rewards for teachers were institutionalized, similarly the betrayal/murder of a teacher was punished institutionally as regicide, patricide and matricide.
3.  The Chinese Taoism honors the "Genuine man" (真人) as the highest level of wisdom humanly achievable.  Hence the Chinese tradition retains a deep respect for true-speak, rather than the hypocritical double speak that is sadly fairly common in Western media/political circles.
4.  The Chinese tradition suffered a extended and barbaric attack in the years 1894-1945.  American educators and funding helped start the prestigious Tsinghua University and other modern educational institutions in China.  During the 1937-1945 2nd Sino-Japan War (WW II Chinese theatre), America helped fund the mass evacuation of Chinese universities from the Japanese occupied zone into the safer Kuomingtang government zone in Sichuan.   It was one of the greatest evacuation of educational institutions ever attempted.  Most educated Chinese people understood that Americans' help was vital in Chinese culture's survival.  This Great Debt was widely known and acknowledged.  
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yale-China_Association 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Southwestern_Associated_University
5. Generations of Chinese like Jack Ma grew up learning from American ideas and technology.  They respect the Americans of all civilized people, as teachers and as friends and allies.  By extension, American brands engender great goodwill among the Chinese consumers.
6. Jack Ma picked a nickname for himself Feng Qin-Yang 风清扬“, a character from a martial art novel by Jin Yong.  Feng Qin Yang was a teacher and a master of swordsmanship, apparently from the Taoist tradition.  Two other characters from this novel were more famous.  Yue Buqun entered the lexicon of East Asia as the architypical hypocrite, while the protagonist Ling Huchong became a gentle master who does not seek power or supremacy.  Ling Huchong was raised and taught by Yue Buqun for a decade, before their relationship degenerated into suspicion, slander and multiple murder attempts by Yue Buqun.  Faced with clear evidence of his teacher Yue Buqun's dangerous nature, Ling Huchong could barely fight back (in this Ling Huchong was clearly influenced by Confucianism).  Feng Qinyang taught Ling Huchong for only days, yet the trusting bond between the two remained a powerful force throughout Ling Huchong's adventures.   Both Feng Qinyang and Ling Huchong were clearly going the track of "Genuine Man" rather than the opposite, and they are widely admired in Chinese business/political leadership.  

It is extremely hard for the westerners to understand Chinese business/political leadership, but I think martial arts novels, Taoism and Confucianism could have shed a lot of insight.  They exercised a deep influence that I am barely scratching the surface here.


Now back to my original question. 
Is Jack Ma sincere or faking it?  
I will let you reach your own conclusions.