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Telling China's true story

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Telling China's true story

Telling China's true story|Comment|chinadaily.com.cn
For almost 25 years I've been going to China and working to facilitate communication between China and the world. With my long-time business partner, Adam Zhu, I began to tell China's story as a matter of frustration, when, during the mid-1990s as the country was changing, most Westerners still imagined China as the commune-like monolith of the 1950s and 1960s. Telling the true story of China has always been important. Today it is essential.

It was the financial crisis of 2008-2009 that catalyzed enhanced realization by China's leaders that in order to protect the country, they had to augment engagement with the world. China's integration into the global economy meant that the country could no longer retreat behind its borders. Fundamentals had shifted. China's image affects the sales of its products and the support of its policies (for example, outbound M&A).

The first principle of effective communication is that your audience must be listening. You may have relevant, informative, even compelling, material, but if the other side is not paying attention, you will make no impact.

When is the world listening to China? I've participated in two types of situations when China has the world's ear. The first are positive occasions, when a major event involving China commands world attention. The best recent example was Vice-President Xi Jinping's visit to the US in February 2012, which garnered some of the best-ever coverage of China in the ever-skeptical American media. Another will be the 18th CPC National Congress in the fall.

However, the way of the world is such that positive occasions are rare, and they cannot be easily manufactured, so that the second and more frequent type of situation occurs when there is trouble. When China reduced its 2012 growth-rate target to 7.5 percent, less than the 8 percent target of prior years, world stock markets collapsed. I was a contrarian, explaining that markets should have risen because lower growth meant that China was serious about redressing economic and social imbalances and effecting industrial transformation, as well as controlling inflation and recognizing economic turbulence, thus stabilizing future growth.

Two explosive cases were the scandal involving Politburo member Bo Xilai and the saga of blind activist Chen Guangcheng. The world was riveted. In the former, I explained how China's senior leadership really works, distinguishing the system from the dictatorial stereotype of foreign assumption. In the latter, I described the increasing sophistication of Chinese diplomacy. In both, as rumors swirled, I tried to discern fact and provide insight.

A current project is a documentary series on China's domestic issues that I am writing and hosting. Produced by Shanghai Media Group (ICS) and to be broadcast on PBS stations in the US and other foreign networks as well as on SMG/ICS and CCTV (internationally), the series will air just prior to the coming Party congress.

Called China's Challenges, the series shows the historic transformation in economic development, and the Chinese people's under-appreciated leap in personal and social freedoms; but it emphasizes, as its title suggests, matters of serious internal concern. The series subtitle is What China's New Leaders Face, and the subtext is that China recognizes its problems and is unafraid to expose them to the world. This may sound paradoxical, but because almost every literate person on earth knows (and even exaggerates) China's success in developing its industry and infrastructure, China's image is burnished by showing its people and their difficulties.

China's Challenges has five episodes: economy (Where is China's Economy Going?); social issues (healthcare, housing, education, retirement - Are the Chinese People Happy?); innovation and science (China Can Produce. Can China Create?); political reform (Are the Chinese People "Real" Citizens?); and values (What do the Chinese People Believe In?).

The stories depict China's achievements, but not in an aloof, sanitized, self-satisfied way. Rather, our young SMG/ICS directors seek out meaningful, edgy stories that spotlight real-life worries and thus personify China's responsibility to improve the quality of life of its citizens.

I ask almost every person I interview - migrant workers, teachers, students, scientists, scholars, businesspeople, entrepreneurs, doctors, patients, renters, netizens, clergy/monks, children, senior-citizens, officials, ministers - one blunt question. "If China's new leaders would ask you what policies you recommend, what specifically would you tell them?"

Almost everyone has an answer and they do not hesitate to speak out boldly. It is blazingly clear that the Chinese people no longer fear to advise their leaders and to do so publicly. This alone may fracture stereotypes. Furthermore, while China's Challenges does not address the "China threat" theory, the very fact that China is so fixated on its domestic affairs evinces that China has neither the desire nor the resources to "dominate the world".

When I debate critics who bash China for all its problems, my natural instinct is to balance their imbalanced criticism by praising China for all its accomplishments. But that, I remind myself, would be a mistake. My task is to tell the whole story, problems and accomplishments. Moreover, "balance" is not my goal. I seek truth, as best I discern it. If I were telling China's true story during the "cultural revolution" (1966-76) I would not have been "balanced" - the decade was horrific as ideological madness ruined the country.

On occasion, I am attacked for presenting a too-rosy image of China. It is a charge I reject. Regarding my biography of former president Jiang Zemin, I challenge my critics to name a problem that I do not discuss. They cannot. I always deal with China's problems - economic fragility, social conflicts, political struggles, human rights, corruption - some of which are resistant to solution - but I do so constructively in the context and sweep of current realities, the multi-faceted flow of events and the multi-layered conduct of leadership. Thus China's problems occupy a lower percentage of my content than that of my more caustic colleagues. To those who stress only China's problems, it might seem that I downplay them. I do not. China's endemic and intractable problems fill my narratives, but they do not consume them. The problems that China's critics expose are indeed real (largely), but China is more complex than they are willing to allow, so that the simplistic pictures they draw are often distortions.

Finally, telling China's true story to the world is not unidirectional. Information flows in both directions. By understanding what it takes for the world to appreciate China is to make China more sensitive to the views of the world - a process that will enable China's leaders to adjust their policies for the well-being of the Chinese people and for the betterment of all people.

International communication is vital as the largest population on earth continues the greatest transformation in history.

Dr. Robert Lawrence Kuhn, chairman of The Kuhn Foundation, is an international corporate strategist and investment banker. He is the author of The Man Who Changed China: The Life and Legacy of Jiang Zemin and How China's Leaders Think (China's new leaders). Dr. Kuhn is a regular commentator on China (BBC, Bloomberg, CCTV, CNBC, Euronews). The views expressed in the article do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.
 
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Too long......

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Short version?
 
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Too long......
Short version?
:lol:Yeah. Yeah. here's the short and compressed version for trolls like u....,

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if u don't have any constructive comment to post , stay away from threads...
 
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:lol:Yeah. Yeah. here's the short and compressed version for trolls like u....,

troll-spray.jpeg

if u don't have any constructive comment to post , stay away from threads...
Got to agree with S10 on this.
Dude seriously that post is huge you could try highlighting or summarizing.
 
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it took me 10 minutes```it is a good article`````those ignorant indians should read this
 
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And? ......How about human rights and the total lack of democracy?
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read the whole article, stop being such a stupid simpleton```human rights are a vague thing, and democracy is a word used to control gullible people like you````because in terms of basic human rights, China is far ahead of sorry India, apart from wasting times of tossing useless papers to elect on criminal instead of others

and India democracy? ``lol``what do 60% starving Indians want the most?```let me tell you kid, its enough food and cheap priced food```but do your high caste owner even care about it? lol, the title of 'world most poor' and rocketing inflation of food prices are proves of how your high caste owner treats nomarl indians like dirts
 
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And? ......How about human rights and the total lack of democracy?
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Don't worry. As the author said, they are all covered but readers are not consummed with them.

The biggest problem with Indian friends on this and other forums is that some of you are obsessively CONSUMMED with Chinese democracy/human rights problems, even though you have fake democracy and worse human rights. Thus, you will never know a true China.
 
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Don't worry. As the author said, they are all covered but readers are not consummed with them.

The biggest problem with Indian friends on this and other forums is that some of you are obsessively CONSUMMED with Chinese democracy/human rights problems, even though you have fake democracy and worse human rights. Thus, you will never know a true China.
You seems to have PhD in "Indian Democracy and Human Rights Violations". I think you are obsessed with India. :smokin:
 
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And? ......How about human rights and the total lack of democracy?
zero-2.gif

Quick! this guy qualify for the TROLL SPRAY!!! Psssst... hope he die :partay:

You seems to have PhD in "Indian Democracy and Human Rights Violations". I think you are obsessed with India. :smokin:

Indians here are even more incredible than him, almost everyone here is an "Chinese Experts". Incredible Indians! LOLOL.
 
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You seems to have PhD in "Indian Democracy and Human Rights Violations". I think you are obsessed with India. :smokin:
only someone has been to India would know the reality of India's so called 'democracy' and 'incredibleness'```

every single experience of travelling to india stresses me the reality of India is at the bottom of social development and very primitive.

I do not know what are to left for these call-center guys to defend``?

Some 'ignorant Indian' only posted it.. quit trolling
more lilkely that India OP just saw the title and didnt even bother to read through the whole article... because the title suits the normal China bashing articles' styles, but the REALITY is its rather a peice of work of picturing how ignorant and gullible people consume negative (only) Chinese news..and asserted as 'reality'

and it seems white wannabe Indians following the description very well....see so far we have quite few reality hurt indians start dancing around as clowns as always
 
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