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Published: December 16th 2010
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Uh oh. A couple of websites were blocked again. We would enter the URL but get nothing but a
404 page This happens from time to time in China and I knew that going in. For example, Facebook is blocked, so is You Tube and IMDB. Presumably, this is to restrict me from watching videos of kittens playing with yarn, playing Farmville or watching trailers for
"Dumb and Dumber". Luckily, there are
workarounds, so I can still update my all-important Facebook status anytime I want.
I know that I am a guest here in China and I am fully aware that there are certain subjects that are better left unmentioned. I must not ever mention the
exiled leader of a certain mountainous country to the south. I must never mention an
island nation just east of here (still claimed by the mainland and known for their unusual blood type). In addition, I must never comment on an outlawed religious cult that clutters up the sidewalk right in front of the Chinese Consulate. I don't care about them anyway. I have no god in this fight.
But this latest silliness has
even me rolling my eyes.
An incarcerated Chinese person (who must
remain nameless) has won a prestigious prize in a northern European country known mainly for
fish balls. He-who-shall-remain-nameless won this prize because of, well, it doesn't really matter. The government here is royally pissed about it and their way of tossing a turd into the punchbowl is to block everyone from reading the news posted on a couple of popular websites: the BBC and CNN. They didn't block everyone else, just those two. While that was going on, we simply got our news by reading other news sites. Doh!
Most Chinese do not care about this issue one way or another. Hell, most do not even read English and are preoccupied with looking for a better deal on noodles. But what my esteemed hosts failed to anticipate was the forbidden fruit aspect of the news item, or lack thereof.
Meanwhile, the news sites that
cater to
expats are chattering away about the
BBC and
CNN websites being blocked. When an expat's favorite websites get blocked, the expats start squawking. They also post the URLs for the same sites, but URLs that are not blocked so anybody and everybody had unfettered access to the news that nobody really cared about beforehand.
To make matters worse, the powers that be are trying to ensure that no Chinese citizens of importance attend the awards ceremony. In what was a inspired stroke of cluelessness, the powers-that-beijing decided to
prohibit their intellectuals from traveling abroad for any reason; an educational conference in Singapore, for example. We wouldn't want them transferring to a flight to Scandinavia, now would we?
Everything is back to normal now. As normal as this wacky place ever is. China: the place where you are guaranteed to have at least one "What the...?" moment every day.
And therefore, never send to whom the know bell tolls; it tolls for thee.
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Joe
non-member comment
What?
No news on the IAR's? The powers-that-beijing are blocking that too?