fulltimestudent
JoinedPosts by fulltimestudent
-
22
Theocratic Warfare - Is it in writing?
by cappytan ini'm just wondering if the theocratic warfare doctrine is anywhere in writing or if it's a word-of-mouth kind of thing where it's mentioned at elder's school, but not put in writing.. anyone?.
-
fulltimestudent
There was a WT in the 1950;s that named it as a useful strategy when faced with "unlawful" (as defined by Divine law-grin) opposition -
1
Challenging concepts- Are you reproduction-oriented? (Global Times Metropolitan section Two Cents page).
by fulltimestudent ini guess the idea behind this term is not really knew.
after all, the western term, "dinks, (double income, no kids" must be at least 30 years old.
but what really surprised me was this paragraph:.
-
fulltimestudent
I guess the idea behind this term is not really knew. After all, the western term, "dinks, (double income, no kids" must be at least 30 years old. But what really surprised me was this paragraph:
"These days, there are more and more online services to match men and women who want children, but not to have a relationship or to get married. People on these websites sign a contract with each other, stating whether they want to co-parent or raise the child on their own."
In the west, its more likely that people in that situation (in Australia, anyway) will use an invitro method to re-produce, however I guess passing a vial of semen is also an often used method. Anyway here's the article, and the link is: http://services.globaltimes.cn/epaper/2015-03-23/MB03.htm?l=0
Recently, a new term has become popular on China's microblogs and social media feeds:"reproduction-oriented."
As in, the next time you're mocked by the hetero-normative mainstream for being a "leftover woman" or a diaosi ("loser") or a lesbian or a queer, you can turn the tables by ridiculing your would-be persecutor by telling them that they are merely reproduction-oriented.Indeed, the term reveals the pathetic logic behind why and how most people in China are pressured into conforming to hetero-normative relationships. It's in order to have children, to placate one's parents.
The reason it's common for gay people in China to get married is so they can have a child to fulfill the sacred duty of reproduction.
For straight people, it is a similar story, with many agreeing to loveless marriages for the sole purpose of rearing a child for their parents' sake. In China, whether you claim to be heterosexual or homosexual or bisexual, most of us are in fact, reproduction-oriented.
As a bitter spinster of many years, I can finally blame my depression and miseries on the reproduction-oriented society. It all makes sense now.
While it's true that China has come a long way since the days of arranged marriages, many people are still forced by social pressure to get married even when they don't want to.
Underlying this is the pressure for young people to reproduce for their elders. It is for this reason that the nuclear family remains the norm in society.
I despise the kind of people who insist that I need to be married before I'm 30 years old. Like most people in their 20s, I find the idea of getting married purely in order to have children to be repugnant and ridiculous.
But after reading up about our society being reproduction-oriented, I've gradually realized that the influence of this kind of thinking is so ubiquitous that there's no way I can fight it.
I can't help but feel the pressure coming from my friends and my cousins, when I see them happily raising their own chubby little devils. Whenever I turn on the television, there is a constant stream of advertisements telling "leftover women" to join a dating site of some sort, and to get married as soon as possible, in order to fulfill their sick grandmother's dying wish.
Some of my friends, who used to tell me that they would rather die alone than marry men they aren't into, are now married with men they aren't into. I can feel them looking down on singletons like me as if we were weirdos.
The reproduction-oriented rule the world. Rebellious, young and naive people like me can't help but be sucked into its vortex.
People in the country are not even trying to hide the fact that it is a reproduction-oriented society anymore.
These days, there are more and more online services to match men and women who want children, but not to have a relationship or to get married. People on these websites sign a contract with each other, stating whether they want to co-parent or raise the child on their own.
It's interesting that there are such options outside of marriage.
But I can't help but feel that being reproduction-oriented is a virus that will take all of us down in the end.
This article was published on the Global Times Metropolitan section Two Cents page, a space for reader submissions, including opinion, humor and satire. The ideas expressed are those of the author alone, and do not represent the position of the Global Times.
Posted in: Twocents-Opinion -
6
Lee Kuan Yew, the founder of independent Singapore died this morning, aged 91.
by fulltimestudent inoverview of his life, from china central tv america:.
http://www.cctv-america.com/2015/03/22/singapores-founding-pm-lee-kuan-yew-dies-at-91.
-
fulltimestudent
I chose cctv-america for the irony.
Some argue that the Brits 'parachuted' LKY into Singapore to help them (the Brits) in their military struggle with Malaysian communists. (known as the Malaya emergency), it is now an almost forgotten sector of the cold war.
Australian Avro Lincoln bomber dropping 500lb bombs on
communist rebels in the Malayan jungle (c. 1950)
Whether that is true or not true, LKY jailed lots of left wingers in his first years in office. It didn't stop the insurrection though,
The Wikipedia entry comments:
The Malayan Emergency (Malay: Darurat) was a Malayan guerrilla war fought betweenCommonwealth armed forces and the Malayan National Liberation Army (MNLA), the military arm of the Malayan Communist Party (MCP), from 1948–60.
The Malayan Emergency was the colonial government's term for the conflict. The MNLA termed it the Anti-British National Liberation War.[2] The rubber plantations and tin mining industries had pushed for the use of the term "emergency" since their losses would not have been covered by Lloyd's insurers if it had been termed a "war".[3]
Despite the communists' defeat in 1960, communist leader Chin Peng renewed the insurgency in 1967; it lasted until 1989, and became known as the Communist Insurgency War (Second Malayan Emergency). Although Australian and British armed forces had fully withdrawn from Malaya (by then known as Peninsular Malaysia) years earlier, the insurgency still failed.So where's the irony? Simply that LKY's People's Action Party and its program for building Singapore to its present prosperity became a model for Deng Xiaoping's program in The People's Republic of China, once the Communist Party of China rejected Mao Zedong's socialist policies.
Lee's PAP and Deng's CPC are like peas in a pod.
-
6
Lee Kuan Yew, the founder of independent Singapore died this morning, aged 91.
by fulltimestudent inoverview of his life, from china central tv america:.
http://www.cctv-america.com/2015/03/22/singapores-founding-pm-lee-kuan-yew-dies-at-91.
-
fulltimestudent
Overview of his life, from China Central TV America:
http://www.cctv-america.com/2015/03/22/singapores-founding-pm-lee-kuan-yew-dies-at-91
-
7
Filigree artistry - retaining ancient skills in China
by fulltimestudent infiligree inlay, one of the eight traditional arts and crafts of beijing, includes complex techniques.
in 2008, the state council of china officially designated filigree inlay art as an intangible cultural heritage of china.. yao yingchun, a representative (skill) inheritor has devoted himself to this traditional art since he was 17. for the past 50 years, he has spent most of his time on the craft.
yao still works full time in a filigree museum teaching new artists and young apprentices.
-
fulltimestudent
prologos: is there a video of work in progress?
I've found this,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dqt15TAxauo
and, this.
-
7
Filigree artistry - retaining ancient skills in China
by fulltimestudent infiligree inlay, one of the eight traditional arts and crafts of beijing, includes complex techniques.
in 2008, the state council of china officially designated filigree inlay art as an intangible cultural heritage of china.. yao yingchun, a representative (skill) inheritor has devoted himself to this traditional art since he was 17. for the past 50 years, he has spent most of his time on the craft.
yao still works full time in a filigree museum teaching new artists and young apprentices.
-
fulltimestudent
The image below shows master craftsmanYao Yingchun, with the biggest filigree inlay artwork in the world, now held at a museum in Guangdong province. This example of their artistic skill piece is 5.2 meters long and 2 meters high. Its decorated with more than 30,000 pieces of jade and gems and combines 7 craft techniques.
The images appeared in the China Daily on March 10, 2015.All Photographs by Xinhua
Link: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/culture/art/2015-03/10/content_19764478.htm
-
7
Filigree artistry - retaining ancient skills in China
by fulltimestudent infiligree inlay, one of the eight traditional arts and crafts of beijing, includes complex techniques.
in 2008, the state council of china officially designated filigree inlay art as an intangible cultural heritage of china.. yao yingchun, a representative (skill) inheritor has devoted himself to this traditional art since he was 17. for the past 50 years, he has spent most of his time on the craft.
yao still works full time in a filigree museum teaching new artists and young apprentices.
-
fulltimestudent
Apprentices must make sure every detail of a filigree inlay artwork is perfect. [Photo by Xinhua]
-
7
Filigree artistry - retaining ancient skills in China
by fulltimestudent infiligree inlay, one of the eight traditional arts and crafts of beijing, includes complex techniques.
in 2008, the state council of china officially designated filigree inlay art as an intangible cultural heritage of china.. yao yingchun, a representative (skill) inheritor has devoted himself to this traditional art since he was 17. for the past 50 years, he has spent most of his time on the craft.
yao still works full time in a filigree museum teaching new artists and young apprentices.
-
fulltimestudent
An apprentice works on an item of filigree:
-
7
Filigree artistry - retaining ancient skills in China
by fulltimestudent infiligree inlay, one of the eight traditional arts and crafts of beijing, includes complex techniques.
in 2008, the state council of china officially designated filigree inlay art as an intangible cultural heritage of china.. yao yingchun, a representative (skill) inheritor has devoted himself to this traditional art since he was 17. for the past 50 years, he has spent most of his time on the craft.
yao still works full time in a filigree museum teaching new artists and young apprentices.
-
fulltimestudent
Filigree inlay, one of the eight traditional arts and crafts of Beijing, includes complex techniques. In 2008, the state council of China officially designated filigree inlay art as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of China.
Yao Yingchun, a representative (skill) inheritor has devoted himself to this traditional art since he was 17. For the past 50 years, he has spent most of his time on the craft. Yao still works full time in a filigree museum teaching new artists and young apprentices. It takes decades to train a craftsman and Yao currently has more than 30 apprentices.
Some of their work is illustrated here:
At an exhibition opened in Paris on March. 5, exquisite filigree inlay work by Yao and his colleagues was featured. A masterpiece of filigree inlay, a ruyi, or ceremonial scepter, took about 3 months to produce and is a feature of the exhibition.
-
29
I'm bemused - Vladimir Putin as a Christian Warrior - Do Russians see him as a fighter for Jesus?
by fulltimestudent ini accidentally came across this youtube video, "why the west fears putin.
" curious, i watched it.
you may find it interesting also.
-
fulltimestudent
And, just maybe you should watch this one: The difference between Obama and Putin, which takes the current contretemps to a whole different place: