What's new

How Chinese people see each other

lol very intersting.
I am from FuJian and FuJian province yes has many languages.Here is a green word where Forest coverage 63.1% areas according to 2009 .People are very friendly.we are not the richest people in China ,but we have the best enviroment in China.

Well Xiamen has changed a lot since I was last there, back in 92 we had to take motorcycles in to the village which was a 5 - 6 hour journey over the dirt roads (and thats a luxury). My relatives now pick me up in the cars and we can get there in 2 hours thru the new motorways. Fantastic :tup:
 
.
Well Xiamen has changed a lot since I was last there, back in 92 we had to take motorcycles in to the village which was a 5 - 6 hour journey over the dirt roads (and thats a luxury). My relatives now pick me up in the cars and we can get there in 2 hours thru the new motorways. Fantastic :tup:

I forgot that I have one final picture and it happens to be Xiamen.

xiamen.jpg

Xiamen, China
 
.
chinesefamily1.jpg

A typical Chinese family

Author: Kobo-Daishi
Date: 09-12-10 19:23

Dear all,

The following is a September article titled "As China Finds Bigger Place In World Affairs, Its Wealth Breeds Hostility" found at the Washington Post newspaper's web site:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/07/AR2010090707448.html

Most interesting bit from the article:

In Indonesia and other parts of Southeast Asia, ethnic Chinese businessmen have long been viewed with suspicion and are often targeted in times of turmoil. But the travails of their counterparts here in Kyrgyzstan and elsewhere represent a new phenomenon: They did not arrive generations ago when China was on its knees but came in the past decade as China boomed.

XXXXX

At the thread titled "It's Easier To Make Money In Africa Than China?" (found at the following link: The Colony - WITNESS - Al Jazeera English), Kobo wrote:

It's said that the ethnic Chinese control the economies of Southeast Asia.

It sure would be something if the same could be said one day about the Chinese of Africa. ;-)

XXXXX

Could we not also add Central Asia to the mix? ;-)

It sure would be something if the same could be said one day about the Chinese of Central Asia. ;-)

Chinese are not monolithic. They do not control anything outside of China. Chinese are individuals that work very hard.

The central unit of Chinese society is the family. It is not the government of China. The government is powerful and centralized because of the history of brutality by foreigners that invaded China in the past.

The central conception in the Chinese mind is: What can I do to improve the lives of my family?

Chinese are very different from World War II Germans. Chinese are not interested in controlling anything. They want to go on vacation with their families. Chinese celebrate Ancestor Day/Qingming Festival. They do not celebrate the Deutschland or its equivalent.
 
Last edited:
.
Just came back from NYC, i must have missed a lot recent developments here in the forum.


Martians 2,

Largely grown up in Northern Europe, with respect I have a different view in line of Chinese vs. WWII Germans, or vs. Germnas/Dutch in general for that matter.

I see that Chinese in general are stunningly silimilar to Germans ( and Dutch to a less extent).

Both are highly nationalistic/patriotic which, contrary to what mass media portray, is actually very positive word in my opinion.

Both are highly disciplined, highly intelligent and hard-working people. Chinese efficiency is almost strikingly similar to German efficiency. A slight difference here is that Chinese incline to take shortcuts form time to time whereas Germans (and Dutch) almost always follow the rules.

Both view , a bit arrogantly of course, their country as the center in both economics and culture of their neighboorhoods.

Germans' view on their next door Pols is almost the same as what Chinese think of Viets. Chinese' views on Koreans, for instance, is pretty much the same as how Germans think of Dutch.

Thus being on the either side of Eurasia, both have a sort of "Continental Mentality".

Germans like drink, with a couple of pork sausages; Average Chinese like drink as well (bai jiu, anyone?) , accompanied by some pork dishes; Dutch usually drink for drink's sake but sometimes also go with some pork meatballs... many similarities.
(German cusine however, is on the opposite side of scale of Chinese one.)

What mass media try to do is to put an extra spin on it, by saying Chinese therefore would most likely become nazis like WWII Germans, which is wrong of course.

The only big difference btw Chinese and German, though, is sophistication wherein an average German is much more "refined" and "elegant" than his Chinese counterpart, which is, IMO, largely due to different economic development phases of these two nations, hence a bit superficial than what I aforementioned nuances.

Back to the thread, being probably the only true Beijinger so far in the forum ( born there and had almost 2 years primary school education in the heart of Beijing) , I would say that the OP is largely true on what Beijingers view other provinces, particularly on Shanghainese who are "largely a bunch of tightass, heartless, small time merchants always trying to cheat a buck or two out of wallets of nearby honest peasants...", hahaha. :lol: At least that's what my friends and I would think of them (even though most of my families' ancestry could be traced back to Shanghai region), just for a good laugh, not with any mean or hostile intention of course.
 
Last edited:
.
http://goldnews.bullionvault.com/china_eme...rmany_060520084

"AT THE END of the Second World War, writes Chris Mayer for The Daily Reckoning, Germany was an "emerging market".

It was industrializing rapidly and producing brisk economic growth. Whereas today, Germany is a mature "developed market" that grows slowly if it grows at all.

China, on the other hand, is the new Germany today. The industrial dynamism that produced Germany's post-war success is moving to the East...piece by piece.

The Ruhr Valley was the heart of Germany's industrial might. For more than 200 years, the smokestacks in this northwest corner of Germany pounded out the steel and iron that would form the backbone of the nation's industry. And when the war drums rumbled, these factories supplied imperial Germany with its field guns, armored tanks and shells.

Prosperous communities grew up around these old blast furnaces and mills. People took pride in the stuff they could make with their hands. Tens of thousands found work in the factories of the Ruhr. Generations passed with the knowledge that their sons and daughters could make a life here and carry on the legacy of such a place.

For a long time, that was the way it went. But the winds of change patiently grind away at even the most impressive of advantages.

In the early 1990s, the industrious workers of Asia powered the mortar and pestle that would crush the Ruhr's traditional way of life. It was a slow process, but the endgame was not hard to see.

While the South Koreans became the most efficient producers of steel in the world, German workers were agitating for a 35-hour working week. While the Chinese worked all day in their mills and new factories sprouted up like spring peepers all through China, Germany increased taxes and expanded its bloated government programs.

By the turn of the millennium, no one could ignore the stark reality any longer. The mills and factories of the Ruhr started to close – forever. In his terrific book, China Shakes the World, James Kynge tells the story of ThyssenKrupp's steel mill in Dortmund, one of the largest in Germany.

The Germans called it the Phoenix, inspired by its rise from the ashes of bombing raids in World War II. But within a month of ThyssenKrupp closing the mill in 1998, a Chinese company bought it with the idea of disassembling the entire mill and taking it to China, near the mouth of the Yangtze River.

Soon after this Chinese company bought the mill, 1,000 Chinese workers arrived in Germany to begin the process of taking the plant apart and bringing it to China.

The Germans got an up-close lesson in why they could not compete. The Chinese worked seven days a week for 12 hours a day.

The Germans started to complain. So the Chinese, in deference to local law, took one day off. In the end, the Chinese dismantled the mill in less than one year – a full two years ahead of the time ThyssenKrupp initially thought it would take.

When the Chinese departed, they left the makeshift dormitories and kitchens they occupied for a year neat and clean. There was, however, a single pair of black boots left in one of the dormitories. The boots carried the brand name Phoenix, which was the same name of the plant the Chinese just took apart. The boots also carried the label "Made in China".

Kynge writes: "Nobody could tell, however, whether the single pair of forgotten boots was an oversight or an intentional pun."


Over 5,000 miles away, the Chinese rebuilt the steel mill exactly as it was in Germany. "Altogether," says Kynge, "275,000 tons of equipment had been shipped, along with 44 tons of documents that explained the intricacies of the reassembly process."

Doing all of this was still cheaper – by about 60% - than building a new mill. Plus, in China, the demand for steel was such that the mill could start producing steel immediately at full capacity.

As recently as 1975, China's entire output of steel could not match this one mill in Dortmund. Now, the Dortmund plant itself stands in China. And in Germany, you have a dying industrial city, unemployed steelworkers and the scarred earth where the mill once stood. Germany is thinking of turning the site into parkland and perhaps creating a lake and marina.

But as one burly steelworker says in Kynge's book: "Do we look like yachtsmen to you?"

This remarkable vignette captures, on many levels, how the game has changed. Comfortable workers in the factories and mills of America and Western Europe have no idea what they are up against. Even so, the nature of global competition keeps shifting. We tend to think of emerging markets, such as China, as occupying a place down on the food chain of the global economy. We tend to think of these places as sources for cheap labor and natural resources. But more and more, these emerging markets are home to world-class companies in all kinds of industries."
 
Last edited:
.
^^ a remarkable account!

Germany is the industrial heart of Western Europe; China is fastly becoming the one for East Asia. Thru out the years, Ive had many more german classmates, friends than I could have of Chinese ones here.

To me, a typical Chinese is 80% like a typical German, plus a bit more of down-to-earth non-dry humour, with probably 10% casual yet practical Italian flair ( to "cut conners" ? ) , and 10% Frenchmen-alike cultural arrogance (no matter how poor he is :lol: ) on top of it.

:cheers:
 
Last edited:
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom