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In article ,
wrote: On Thu, 05 Jun 2008 16:08:31 -0700, (JJS) wrote: So we are back to the "white man's burden" excuse again. Look we both know that it doesn't matter what the life style of Tibet is. This is all about power so why keep bringing up how good this is for Tibet when is has nothing to do with helping Tibet. Well I guess you could say that the Chinese are 'helping' themselves to the resources of Tibet. Geezee how many times did you have to repeat a grade before you got your 3Rs right? Take a deep breath and calm down. Youıre beginning to act childish. Beijing already has all the power. Which I have agreed is correct several times. Why repeat what we have agreed to? Do I need to type it in capitals for you to understand? She doesn't need to prove anything to anyone least of all to people like you. Where did I say they had to prove anything to me? Youıre becoming irrational. Beijing has a National Policy for Minorities of which Tibetans form a group that receives the most attention. Lucky for Tibet or should that be unlucky? Belonging to a Chinese minority group brings useful privileges such as being allowed to have more children and these children have preferential admission to institutions of higher learning, the passport to the good life. As such quite a number of identifiable community groups seek Minority status. You do realize donıt you that power over a group is maintained not only with force but with privileges? This is pretty basic when one group is trying to maintain control over another. http://www.everyculture.com/Russia-E...to-China-Minor ity-Policies.html I made no claim that Beijing's Tibet policy is good for the Tibetans. You say this so why keep bringing up how good it is for them? "being allowed to have more children and these children have preferential admission to institutions of higher learning, the passport to the good life'" To put it politely youıre being inconsistent. What Beijing does is pragmatism. Its a damn lot chaper and easier to pay displaced Tibetans to get by than it is to try to force feed them ill thought out "Tibet" solutions. Your experience in the west had seen many multi-million dollar welfare type attempts go to waste. All those failures do is to reinforce the target group's sense of failure and the futility of their lives. The smarter ones develop a penchant to game the system for whatever dollars they can get before another do-good project goes south. It may surprise you but I agree. Your responses so far is to patronize the Tibetans by saying that all their problems can be solved if only Beijing cared. Sigh. No I merely asked if more local control of their lives would work out better for Tibet. You have a knack for distorting what I write. In the same breath you contradict yourself "if only Beijing would leave them alone to work out something at their own pace and time" Tibetans will achieve nirvana. I didnıt write or insinuate that Tibet would reach ³nirvana². I asked if it was possible for them to develop with less Chinese intervention than we see today. You seem to have a low opinion of the people in Tibet. Why it that? You really have some personal issues to resolve first. Oh the irony!!! 8^D That New Town resettlement for Tibetans displaced by climate change actually tells many stories. There are no laws that keep them there. There are no restrictions as to what work they can engage in. There are no laws to say they cannot go back to their old style of life (or a new style if they chose to do so) anywhere in Tibet or elsewhere in China. You don't need laws when you completely dominate another group of people. There are different ways control them. You can move large numbers of Han into Tibet and change the demographics to the point that the locals realize that they need to play the game by the new rules. Yet they stay and they remain bored out of their frigging minds. The incontrovertible fact then is there is nowhere in the whole vast country of China that they can they recreate their former lives. The world has changed and its not the Government's fault. Pay attention. I havenıt claimed that it is the "Governmentıs fault". Iıve been asking about how the Chinese government is handling the situation and why they have selected this approach to the problem. Therefore all this talk about preserving their culture won't bring back their former lives. The best and perhaps only way they can practice it is in the form of festivals. For their everyday lives they must adapt to realities, and that is to find some form of work they can do. And not for the first time I agree but this isn't what we are really talking about is it? What this form will take is something neither you nor I have a clue on since neither of us have been to Tibet let alone what their hopes and capabilities are. We agree again. You have neither the intellectual nor the moral authority to speak for them. Since I havenıt claimed to speak for them I donıt see the sense in this statement. Your post may hold the record for the most Straw Man Arguements contained in a single post. Joe SNIP |
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