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China makes NYC look like the 3rd world

The new wave farmers

By Yang Lan

Idealistic entrepreneurs bring a different approach to traditional crops

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The Farmer 4 organization founders (from left) Chen Tongkui, Liu Jingwen, Zhao Yi and Zhong Wenbin at an event in Shanghai in September Photo: Courtesy of Chen Tongkui

Chinese parents used to tell their children to study hard, go to university, move to a city. "Otherwise you will have to stay at home and be farmers like us." Over the years millions of young Chinese did just that and studied, left their hometowns and went to work in cities. Migrant workers left their children and parents in countryside villages, and abandoned their homes and farmlands.

Today some young people are trying to reverse this pattern - they are leaving cities and heading to live and thrive in the countryside.

Five years ago, Chen Tongkui was a senior reporter working on the South Reviews magazine in Shanghai. Now he runs a teahouse in Shanghai and grows lychees in Hainan Province.

In September 2009, on assignment as a reporter, Chen visited the Tao-Mi Eco-Village in Taiwan. There he saw ways of rebuilding the community by developing agriculture, promoting tourism and improving the environment. Wanting to do something for his hometown, Boxue village, an antique village near a volcano in Hainan Province, Chen went home in November 2009.

Serious problemsChen believes that Chinese farmers face serious problems. On the one hand, food safety and contamination incidents have lowered public confidence in domestic produce. On the other hand, farmers are not earning much more annually despite a growth in production levels.

"Take the lychee gardens in our village as an example - with help from the government we solved the problem of irrigation. With the development of fresh food online retailers, sales have increased considerably. We had good results last year and this year. However, everyone in the village has now begun to grow lychees. In one or two years we will be oversupplied," said Chen.

To improve the quality of the lychees, Chen set strict rules for the lychee growers he works with in his village and fertilizer and herbicides are prohibited. He helps the growers reduce the need for herbicide by using plastic bags that wrap and enclose the lychees and prevent pests and pollution. With these techniques, the Boxue village lychees have won a reputation as delicious, safe and eco-friendly.

Selling their product also now involves sophisticated methods. Chen and his team use brand marketing, events and online promotions to boost the sales of the lychees. Most of the village lychees are sold through online retailers.

"We are not only helping the growers sell their products to the city, but we are also helping rebuild the community," Chen told the Global Times.

As he began growing and selling lychees, Chen started turning Boxue village into an eco-village. "First we built an eco-friendly hostel and called it the World of Bubinga. It attracts people from different countries and regions. They come and live in the hostel for days, or even months and bring their wisdom and experience to our little village."

Sharing experiencesIn June 2010, a group from the Tao-Mi Eco-Village visited Boxue village. They shared their experiences of building the eco-village and running hostels. Later on, the Boxue village growers visited Tao-Mi in Taiwan to study their community building and then a group of South Korean artists visited and villagers joined in some of their projects.

With the ideas and experience of some of these outsiders, the Boxue villagers started to adopt different approaches to the development of the village.

But Chen realized that it was not enough to build just one village and sell lychees. He felt that only when the majority of consumers and growers had reached conformity on food safety and health precautions could the distrust and conflicts be resolved. Only then would Chinese farmers regain their standing.

Alongside some partners last year Chen opened his Your Home teahouse in Shanghai. It is not making a profit and Chen doesn't see it making a profit this year or the next. But Chen and his friends did not plan for the teahouse to make them a fortune. They use it as a promotional platform, organizing events there like lychee tastings and nights where visitors can learn about organic food and eco-friendly agriculture. Some of their products cost more but many consumers are willing to spend extra to buy quality organic products and support eco-friendly producers.

Moving constantly between a farm life and a city life, Chen is trying to change both ends of the agricultural business. He is educating producers to adopt better and safer methods of cultivation and pushing the organic produce concept among city dwellers.

When five visitors to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region tasted some dried fruits in the home of a Kashgar farmer, one day they were struck by how fresh and delicious they were. But the local farmers they had been visiting had all complained about how their income had dropped as a result of falling sales.

The group decided there and then to do something to help the producers of this high-quality food and in March 2012 leader, Liu Jingwen, founded the Vizdan organization (in the Uyghur language "Vizdan" means right-minded).

Vizdan was set up to help the local farmers of Xinjiang sell their produce online and it has had unexpected assistance from other people of the area. Like Li Yumeng who now drives the team truck and has already logged more than 60,000 kilometers driving it through Xinjiang.

Until he was 6 years old Li was raised in Hami, Xinjiang, but then moved with his parents to Hefei in Anhui Province. He had settled in Guangzhou and had a steady job when he read about Vizdan on Sina Weibo. That changed his life. He decided he wanted to be a part of this scheme and joined the team as its lead driver in Xinjiang.

More than a driverHe is now much more than a driver - he often helps load the truck and is the Vizdan photographer, shooting pictures of the products and the farmers for marketing campaigns.

Li once dreamed of the white poplar trees that thrive in his part of Xinjiang along with the baked buns. Today he sees the trees every day and enjoys buns whenever he wants to. His parents were upset that he left his steady job but are supporting him in this new venture.

Nowadays Vizdan is helping more than 2,000 farmers in Xinjiang sell their produce and has increased their annual incomes by some 20 percent, according to a report in the China Youth Daily.

The website gongyi.net reports that Vizdan has created profiles of the farmers and each individual product. Its products have to be certified as organically grown and guaranteed as coming from the area stated and to be safe for consumers.

Like Liu Jingwen, Zhao Yi sells eco-friendly tea from Fujian, Taiwan and Zhejiang under his Earth & People brand. Unlike Liu, Zhao doesn't just buy tea from tea growers - he wants his growers to become part of the marketing campaigns. His growers have their names published on each packet of tea they produce. With every packet of tea sent to consumers comes a profile of the grower.

These teas have to have passed tests for heavy metal and pesticide residues administered by SGS, a leading international verification, testing and certification group.

Confident in his products Zhao welcomes visitors or inspection teams into his tea plantations at any time. "I want to change people's prejudices against farmers. By doing this I hope to help farmers regain their stature."

Three championsAt a recent meeting in June 2014 these three champions of new style farming met. The forum, Xin Nong Tang (the New Farmers Forum), was organized by Zhong Wenbin and it was here that Chen Tongkui, Zhao Yi and Liu Jingwen got to meet each other and exchange ideas.

Through its WeChat account, forums and conferences, the Xin Nong Tang forum has linked thousands of farmers around China. It collects information about products and helps farmers find business partners and sales channels. Its forums and conferences help farmers share ideas, methods and business models.

Aiming to become the best training platform in China for new farmers, Xin Nong Tang has already presented forums in Hangzhou, Beijing, Fujian, Sichuan and Shanghai which have attracted hundreds of farmers and people from the agricultural industry.

After talking to each other and exchanging ideas the four young entrepreneurs launched their own group, Farmer 4, and at a recent event in Shanghai where they told their stories and talked about their approaches to new farming, almost 1,000 people attended, keen to learn about the way they are bringing new life to the countryside. Other events will be presented in Beijing, Hangzhou and Shenzhen.

Chen said: "If you are doing the right thing, and you begin well you can change thousands of people in society. Then they will help you achieve your goal."
 
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The new wave farmers

By Yang Lan

Idealistic entrepreneurs bring a different approach to traditional crops

View attachment 118168
The Farmer 4 organization founders (from left) Chen Tongkui, Liu Jingwen, Zhao Yi and Zhong Wenbin at an event in Shanghai in September Photo: Courtesy of Chen Tongkui

Chinese parents used to tell their children to study hard, go to university, move to a city. "Otherwise you will have to stay at home and be farmers like us." Over the years millions of young Chinese did just that and studied, left their hometowns and went to work in cities. Migrant workers left their children and parents in countryside villages, and abandoned their homes and farmlands.

Today some young people are trying to reverse this pattern - they are leaving cities and heading to live and thrive in the countryside.

Five years ago, Chen Tongkui was a senior reporter working on the South Reviews magazine in Shanghai. Now he runs a teahouse in Shanghai and grows lychees in Hainan Province.

In September 2009, on assignment as a reporter, Chen visited the Tao-Mi Eco-Village in Taiwan. There he saw ways of rebuilding the community by developing agriculture, promoting tourism and improving the environment. Wanting to do something for his hometown, Boxue village, an antique village near a volcano in Hainan Province, Chen went home in November 2009.

Serious problemsChen believes that Chinese farmers face serious problems. On the one hand, food safety and contamination incidents have lowered public confidence in domestic produce. On the other hand, farmers are not earning much more annually despite a growth in production levels.

"Take the lychee gardens in our village as an example - with help from the government we solved the problem of irrigation. With the development of fresh food online retailers, sales have increased considerably. We had good results last year and this year. However, everyone in the village has now begun to grow lychees. In one or two years we will be oversupplied," said Chen.

To improve the quality of the lychees, Chen set strict rules for the lychee growers he works with in his village and fertilizer and herbicides are prohibited. He helps the growers reduce the need for herbicide by using plastic bags that wrap and enclose the lychees and prevent pests and pollution. With these techniques, the Boxue village lychees have won a reputation as delicious, safe and eco-friendly.

Selling their product also now involves sophisticated methods. Chen and his team use brand marketing, events and online promotions to boost the sales of the lychees. Most of the village lychees are sold through online retailers.

"We are not only helping the growers sell their products to the city, but we are also helping rebuild the community," Chen told the Global Times.

As he began growing and selling lychees, Chen started turning Boxue village into an eco-village. "First we built an eco-friendly hostel and called it the World of Bubinga. It attracts people from different countries and regions. They come and live in the hostel for days, or even months and bring their wisdom and experience to our little village."

Sharing experiencesIn June 2010, a group from the Tao-Mi Eco-Village visited Boxue village. They shared their experiences of building the eco-village and running hostels. Later on, the Boxue village growers visited Tao-Mi in Taiwan to study their community building and then a group of South Korean artists visited and villagers joined in some of their projects.

With the ideas and experience of some of these outsiders, the Boxue villagers started to adopt different approaches to the development of the village.

But Chen realized that it was not enough to build just one village and sell lychees. He felt that only when the majority of consumers and growers had reached conformity on food safety and health precautions could the distrust and conflicts be resolved. Only then would Chinese farmers regain their standing.

Alongside some partners last year Chen opened his Your Home teahouse in Shanghai. It is not making a profit and Chen doesn't see it making a profit this year or the next. But Chen and his friends did not plan for the teahouse to make them a fortune. They use it as a promotional platform, organizing events there like lychee tastings and nights where visitors can learn about organic food and eco-friendly agriculture. Some of their products cost more but many consumers are willing to spend extra to buy quality organic products and support eco-friendly producers.

Moving constantly between a farm life and a city life, Chen is trying to change both ends of the agricultural business. He is educating producers to adopt better and safer methods of cultivation and pushing the organic produce concept among city dwellers.

When five visitors to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region tasted some dried fruits in the home of a Kashgar farmer, one day they were struck by how fresh and delicious they were. But the local farmers they had been visiting had all complained about how their income had dropped as a result of falling sales.

The group decided there and then to do something to help the producers of this high-quality food and in March 2012 leader, Liu Jingwen, founded the Vizdan organization (in the Uyghur language "Vizdan" means right-minded).

Vizdan was set up to help the local farmers of Xinjiang sell their produce online and it has had unexpected assistance from other people of the area. Like Li Yumeng who now drives the team truck and has already logged more than 60,000 kilometers driving it through Xinjiang.

Until he was 6 years old Li was raised in Hami, Xinjiang, but then moved with his parents to Hefei in Anhui Province. He had settled in Guangzhou and had a steady job when he read about Vizdan on Sina Weibo. That changed his life. He decided he wanted to be a part of this scheme and joined the team as its lead driver in Xinjiang.

More than a driverHe is now much more than a driver - he often helps load the truck and is the Vizdan photographer, shooting pictures of the products and the farmers for marketing campaigns.

Li once dreamed of the white poplar trees that thrive in his part of Xinjiang along with the baked buns. Today he sees the trees every day and enjoys buns whenever he wants to. His parents were upset that he left his steady job but are supporting him in this new venture.

Nowadays Vizdan is helping more than 2,000 farmers in Xinjiang sell their produce and has increased their annual incomes by some 20 percent, according to a report in the China Youth Daily.

The website gongyi.net reports that Vizdan has created profiles of the farmers and each individual product. Its products have to be certified as organically grown and guaranteed as coming from the area stated and to be safe for consumers.

Like Liu Jingwen, Zhao Yi sells eco-friendly tea from Fujian, Taiwan and Zhejiang under his Earth & People brand. Unlike Liu, Zhao doesn't just buy tea from tea growers - he wants his growers to become part of the marketing campaigns. His growers have their names published on each packet of tea they produce. With every packet of tea sent to consumers comes a profile of the grower.

These teas have to have passed tests for heavy metal and pesticide residues administered by SGS, a leading international verification, testing and certification group.

Confident in his products Zhao welcomes visitors or inspection teams into his tea plantations at any time. "I want to change people's prejudices against farmers. By doing this I hope to help farmers regain their stature."

Three championsAt a recent meeting in June 2014 these three champions of new style farming met. The forum, Xin Nong Tang (the New Farmers Forum), was organized by Zhong Wenbin and it was here that Chen Tongkui, Zhao Yi and Liu Jingwen got to meet each other and exchange ideas.

Through its WeChat account, forums and conferences, the Xin Nong Tang forum has linked thousands of farmers around China. It collects information about products and helps farmers find business partners and sales channels. Its forums and conferences help farmers share ideas, methods and business models.

Aiming to become the best training platform in China for new farmers, Xin Nong Tang has already presented forums in Hangzhou, Beijing, Fujian, Sichuan and Shanghai which have attracted hundreds of farmers and people from the agricultural industry.

After talking to each other and exchanging ideas the four young entrepreneurs launched their own group, Farmer 4, and at a recent event in Shanghai where they told their stories and talked about their approaches to new farming, almost 1,000 people attended, keen to learn about the way they are bringing new life to the countryside. Other events will be presented in Beijing, Hangzhou and Shenzhen.

Chen said: "If you are doing the right thing, and you begin well you can change thousands of people in society. Then they will help you achieve your goal."
TLNR
 
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actually i thought the title might be a little offensive for Americans.yes,we chinese have achieved a lot. but it's not the reason that we laugh at others.i wonder if we could be some better examples of whom improve chinese national imagine
 
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There is always a downside to progress. Yet, you have to progress no matter what. China is no "Alice in Vietland."

Skyscraper offices bring both comfort and isolation to workers



Mu Yuqi, a 23-year-old college graduate, turned down a job offer from a bank in Shanghai. The reason was simple - he did not want to work in a skyscraper.

He said he does not have

acrophobia, or fear of heights, but he dislikes the sense of isolation brought on by working in a tall building. "I felt quite depressed when I worked there for an internship. Each time I looked outside, I could see only walls of other buildings," Mu said.

He also had to remember to bring his entrance card wherever he went, otherwise, it meant he would have a lot of trouble getting into the office. "I liked the building as a tourist attraction when I was in high school," Mu said, "but not now."

Mu chose to work for another bank branch in a lower building. But as Shanghai's population continues to rise amid China's fast urbanization, expansion into the sky remains a key solution to the problem of limited land supplies.

"With roughly 250 million people set to move into Chinese cities in the next decade or so, the pace of urban construction - including roads, railways and water infrastructure and cultural institutions, in addition to tall buildings - has outstripped any previous period in human history," according to a report by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, a nonprofit organization based in Chicago.

A skyscraper is more than just a giant building. It is a landmark, a symbol of prestige, object of a city's pride and a business hub. Tourists love to go to the top to get a panoramic view. City authorities applaud the expanding list of super-tall buildings that represent a city's ambition and potential.

But some tall buildings seem to have failed to consider human needs.

As I talked to people who worked in tall buildings in Lujiazui, which has arguably the highest density of skyscrapers in China, I heard a string of complaints: There is no communal space; people are disconnected from each other; there are not enough elevators; the food is too expensive; and there are no balconies where one can breathe in fresh air.

Architects said they believe better designs may improve the situation.

Developers and designers have been attempting to improve working conditions for those in super-tall buildings, and one focus is to create better communications - to link the building and the rest of the world and enable people inside to communicate more easily with one another, said Antony Wood, director of the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat.

In Hong Kong, many office buildings are connected by overpasses of various heights, a form that future cities may take - going vertical but being linked horizontally at many levels.

Some buildings also include communal spaces, greenbelts, balconies and other features that make people feel as if they are at ground level.
 
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Beijing introduces vintage buses to carry passengers back in time

Twelve vintage buses started service Sunday morning in Beijing, bringing passengers to iconic attractions downtown.

Starting near south Beijing's Yongdingmen gate tower, the 15-kilometer-long bus route stretched northward along the city's axis line, passing more than 20 scenic spots including the Temple of Heaven, the Tian'anmen Square, the Forbidden City, among others.

The buses run between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., costing 10 yuan (about 1.6 US dollars) for single journey, and 15 yuan (about 2.4 US dollars) for day trip.

Drivers are dressed in the Chinese Sun Yat-sen style uniform so as to give passengers a sense of nostalgia, while conductors are in blue overshirts which were embroidered with peony.

These buses were modelled after the trams that appeared in Beijing in 1924. They are painted red or green, with the floor of the carriage made of wood and the 28 seats covered with red leather.

Despite their antique appearance, the buses are powered with electricity and equipped with WiFi and air purification facilities.

According to a Mr. Liu with the Yintong investing group who oversaw production of the buses, the carriages are spacious to allow occasional performances such as cross-talks, and promotion of products from famous traditional brands.

Many old citizens in China's capital are quite fond of the trams, known to them as dangdang, with the sound of the bells drivers used as horns helping them recall days past.

The trams stopped service in 1966, 42 years after they were introduced.

Before the Olympics in 2008, the city revamped the historic shopping street at its heart and restored part of the tram services
plz... u just don't have to explain anything,just let them have sum self-mental-masturbation.otherwise they just can't face their pathetic life.just because of the tittle on this threat which said by an American.they just rushed in and play those silly anti-china games again.first,a crashed house pic from the earthquake,then sum news pics which were set to avoid the animals and ppl from the traffic accidents.and they made it sound like hell...chinese r homeless,and they work 20~24 hours a day blah blah blah.....talking like they are the Saviors(actually i think they might need sum psychiatric tests)..:lol::lol:don't u think it's just pretty funny.
 
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Without human capital and asset, it is indeed true that NY is technically a 3rd world state. LOL
 
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Firstly,China is still a developing country.Because the gap between the riches and poors is bigger.
Many forum members laugh at that Chinese is still poor compare to per capita GDP and monthly salary.Yes,it is true.Compare to this,we are still behind.But please remember that Chinese goods price is cheaper and we have a lot of choice to meet our request.Though the house price is higher in the city.But in a lot of foreign countries,even we have the same salary,you could not afford your goods.
Secondly,Shanghai,Beijing,Hongkong is a flourishing city in China with a lot of talents and properties there.But the details should be improved as education,medical treatment,sanitation,house price and unban infrastructure.
Thirdly,remember that China has a big amount of population and we are a communist country.A lot of western countries constrain us but we also creat our legend.A lot of countries has better resources than ours but I failed to see the development.You should consider the point carefully by yourself.

Our expanding speed is too fast and there must be a lot of problems inside.We need time to fix them and to be compatible.
As for your sarcastic statements,we will take it as kind of encourangement to develop us better.Anyways thanks.
 
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agree. Shanghai is a big trade hub long time ago. We also watched many movies about Shanghai early in 20th century.

This is another Shanghai shows some different life of Shanghai.

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Those people are not homeless. They have big and beautiful houses in their hometowns(rural areas). They came to big city to make big money. Recycling is a profitable job. These wasted containers are the goods they bought from others. Chinese people can work in a very harsh environment but that doesn't necessarily mean they are poor.
 
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Those people are not homeless. They have big and beautiful houses in their hometowns(rural areas). They came to big city to make big money. Recycling is a profitable job. These wasted containers are the goods they bought from others. Chinese people can work in a very harsh environment but that doesn't necessarily mean they are poor.

I never say about them, I said about Shanghai.
 
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I cannot believe the citizens of our 52nd state -- Canada -- could say such horrible things about their country -- the US. :cry:

wait until the liberals come in buddy and take back Tim hortons from burger king.
 
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Here is where you guys are really mistaken...

In many ways, NYC is an older city than Beijing or Shanghai. NYC is 'older' in the sense that it has all the modern conveniences that are widespread throughout, such as telephones, mass transit, automobiles, and so on, before the Asian cities like before WW II, for example. Or how about something for granted like cable TV or Internet access. Then when all these Asian cities are able to modernize, of course they would leap ahead of NYC because they are not physically constrained by established infrastructures.

This is nothing more than a desperate attempt for validation for China in anything, no matter how meaningless such as the opinion of a TV cook.
Also it is not the buildings alone. America has the human rights and civil liberties for all which is not present in any of the Asian countries. That is the power of America. Americans have big hearts and it is a fair country as compared to all Asian nations.
 
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The chef seem only focus on a look of an overnight trip.
The other difference, the citizen could bring the city authorities, even current president to court.
 
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wait until the liberals come in buddy and take back Tim hortons from burger king.
Pleeeeeeeeeease...:lol:

Puerto Rico is our 51st state. Canada is our 52nd. Mexico is our 53rd. It is inevitable that Cuba will be our 54th. We do not care if the US flag have only 50 stars. All of you are Yankees, whether you know it or not.
 
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Puerto Rico is our 51st state. Canada is our 52nd. Mexico is our 53rd. It is inevitable that Cuba will be our 54th. We do not care if the US flag have only 50 stars. All of you are Yankees, whether you know it or not.
I heard somewhere that the US should invade Central America and conquer everything down to Panama. That way you only have 140 miles of border to guard.
 
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