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Why Scotto Has a problem with China.

  1. The peaceful Buddhist country of Tibet was invaded by Communist China in 1950. Since that time, over 1.2 million Tibetans have been killed, 6,000 monasteries have been destroyed, and thousands of Tibetans have been imprisoned.

  2. Forced abortion, sterilization of Tibetan women and the transfer of low income Chinese citizens into Tibet threaten the very survival of Tibetan culture. In some Tibetan provinces, Chinese settlers outnumber Tibetans--making them a minority in their own country.

  3. The Dalai Lama, Tibet's political and spiritual leader, fled Tibet in 1959. He escaped to India, where he lives now along with the rest of the Tibetan government in exile and over 100,000 Tibetan refugees. The Tibetans continue to resist Chinese rule peacefully and nonviolently. As Buddhists, they are devoted to the principles of nonviolence and compassion for all beings.

  4. In Tibet today, there is no freedom of speech, religion, or press and arbitrary arrests continue. There are currently over 700 political prisoners in Tibet. Statistics show that one out of ten Tibetans have been held in prisons or forced labor camps for periods of ten to twenty years. Current political prisoners include a young Fulbright scholar named Ngawang Chophel. The six-year old Panchen Lama (the second most important religious figure in Tibet), disappeared 5 years ago without a trace. It is presumed that he is either dead or being held by Chinese authorities.

  5. Most of the Tibetan plateau lies above 14,000 feet. Tibet is the source of five of Asia's greatest rivers, the life blood of 2 billion people. Since 1959, the Chinese have wreaked havoc on Tibet's fragile environment through extensive deforestation and open dumping of nuclear waste. Tibet's most sacred lake, the Yamdrok Tso, is currently being drained for a Chinese hydroelectric power plant.

  6. While the Chinese government claims that Tibet has always been a part of China, there is no historical evidence to support this. The two cultures are completely distinct. Their languages do not even come from the same root, and their food, dress, lifestyle, and religion have almost no relation whatsoever.

  7. Within China itself, massive human rights abuses continue. The Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989 is only one example of an atrocious human rights record. Some estimate there are as many as twenty million Chinese working in prison camps. Forced prison labor, arbitrary imprisonment, and the imposition of the death penalty for minor offenses continue.

  8. Despite all this, the world community has done little to pressure China to improve its human rights record. Major corporations from around the world continue to do business with China. Last year, despite continuing pressure, the United States renewed China's Most Favored Nation trading status. China represents such a potentially gigantic market that politicians are reluctant to impose any trade sanctions.

  9. Despite the assertion by the US government that the presence of US business in China will improve conditions there, things have only gotten worse. A 1995 State Department study showed that cases of human rights abuses were growing in China and Tibet.

  10. Time is running out for the people of Tibet. The time is now to take economic and political action against the human rights abuses being committed by the government of China.

Date: 2001-03-25 09:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blackhellkat.livejournal.com
I didn't know 100,000 Tibetan refugees lived in India...I thought a lot less than that escaped to Dharmsala? Hmmm. Yeah I'm sure Tibetan Buddhists are more concerns with their basic human rights at this moment! Good post.

Re:

Date: 2001-03-25 09:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
http://www.tibetanrefugeehealth.org/

actually, it's closer to 110,000...

Sad that a statue makes all sorts of news, but people seem to forget the folks themselves...

Thank you for your compliment!



Date: 2001-03-26 05:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] billijean.livejournal.com
I've considered before refusing to buy anything made in China... but was quickly overwhelmed by the enormity of the task. Almost everything you pick up says made in China on it. The other day I bought something. On the front was a big sticker: "Designed in Germany". On the back, a tiny sticker: "Made in China".
I'm curius about people's buying habits. Some of the restrictions I put on my purchases:
- no meat
- given a choice, I buy the produce that is Canadain or that travelled the least distance, even if it means buying apparently inferior stuff. Example: Canadian hot house tomatoes vs Field tomatoes from Spain. My concern: what did it cost in fossil fuels to get the Spanish tomatoes here?
- buy sea salt, not earth salt
- no Russian cotton
- no Nike (though I have an old pair of Nike shoes that just won't quit. I can't stand to throw out something in good working order, so I put them on every once in a while and feel rotten the whole time I'm wearing them.
Things on my list of changes to make:
- either start buying fair trade coffee, or stop drinking coffee
- buy more organic food (supply and cost is the problem here -last week: $4.50 for lettuce - bought the regular)
Okay... there was more, but I'm still working on my first cup of coffee (yes, grown and harvested by near-slaves :( ), So the mind is still foggy.
... maybe I'll post this in my journal. I want to know what restrictions other people put on their purchases. What about you, Scotto?

Date: 2001-03-26 10:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] burgundy.livejournal.com
I remember some guys at the poetry reading I go to - very Marxist, very "more radical and post-modern than thou." And they were complaining about the way China is treated re: Tibet, and going on about the good things China's brought to Tibet (?!) like modern medicine and stuff. And I so very much wanted to ask them if they thought the same applied to the colonization of the Americas - 'cause we tamed the savages, don't you know. But I didn't, 'cause I'm a wimp. It really pissed me off that these people would try to justify something so terrible in such a hypocritical way.

Hard to do... depends.

Date: 2001-03-26 10:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
I certainly try to buy from local business, anyhow... (although I admit a weakness for hawaiian coffee over floridian)...
I'm lucky that there's a local grower's group nearby... some organic, but some cheaper, too.

I try not to by anything made in china, but sometimes stuff sneaks past me, like the german engineered thing that tripped you up. No nikes. No Non-birkenstocks, really, lately.

Never buy from the gap... fortunately big and tall guy stores genereally sell made in usa stuff. :)

I'll have to make a bigger post about boycotts... my main point was that more people seem to be upset about a statue of a man that eschewed worldly goods, than 100k people trying to emulate him.

Re:

Date: 2001-03-26 10:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com

Yeah, it's another perspective. I'm all for progress the people *want*.

I'm not the type to preach, but if they get in my face about it, I'm happy to give them a calm and concise verbal smackdown.

I don't think they thought very hard about the arguement... burning monestaries, creating ghettoes, and tossing folks into prison labor camps doesn't sound like the best health care to me.

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