August 27th 2008
Quote Of The Day: Win Or Die Edition
“To achieve Olympic glory for the motherland is the sacred mission assigned by the Communist Party central.” – Liu Peng, Chinese Sports Minister

C
hina, a country that doesn’t offer its citizens health care, job safety, environmental protection or retirement benefits anywhere near those of advanced nations, spent $41 billion on the Olympics, netting 51 gold medals for its efforts.
While the US won the most medals, China won more gold – a glorious accomplishment, but one that came at a huge price to the athletes. In an article that is anything but full of surprises, the LA Times tells us:
The only mother on China’s team, Xian Dongmei, told reporters after she won her gold medal in judo that she had not seen her 18-month-old daughter in one year, monitoring the girl’s growth only by webcam. Another gold medalist, weightlifter Cao Lei, was kept in such seclusion training for the Olympics that she wasn’t told her mother was dying. She found out only after she had missed the funeral.
Chen Ruolin, a 15-year-old diver, was ordered to skip dinner for one year to keep her body sharp as a razor slicing into the water. The girl weighs 66 pounds. …
“You have no control over your own life. Coaches are with you all the time. People are always watching you, the doctors, even the chefs in the cafeteria. You have no choice but to train so as not to let the others down,” gymnast Chen Yibing told Chinese reporters last week after winning a gold medal on the rings. He said he could count the amount of time he’d spent with his parents “by hours . . . very few hours.”
There are certainly more stories like these, that show China for what it is: A land where 1.3 billion people are all servants to the will of the state. The American athletes who come from a country where the state is (miraculously) still the servant of the people had a very different Olympic experience.
The contrast couldn’t be greater than between the Chinese and U.S. athletes. In their post-match interviews, the Americans rambled on about their parents, their siblings, their pets, their hobbies. They repeatedly used the word fun.
Behind the visual glory of the Olympics, the real China showed through. Proud, powerful, for sure – but with a massive population used to being forced to do whatever the state asks of them, and ready to sacrifice for the Party’s glory.
Thank God the goal here was merely Olympic gold. Think what they could do if the goal were something more globally significant. Like, oh, California.

The fear came first when Chinese soldiers took the nation’s flag from a group of 56 colorfully dressed children, each representing one of China’s ethnic groups (but woe be to the 55 who aren’t ethnic Chinese Han), and goose-stepped it with heartless precision to the flag pole.
The second fear overcame me at the end of what was the most beautiful segment of the show, when Confucians in exquisite flowing robes right out of Star Wars surrounded a field of moving Chinese type (the Chinese, not Guttenburg, invented moving type, we were told by the all-knowing Bob Costas). The geometric movements of the type were on so a vast scale – at least 500 separate type pieces by my calculation from the photo – and of such precision, as the pieces rose and fell to form moving ripples, the Great Wall, ocean waves, that I convinced myself and Incredible Wife that they just had to be mechanical and computer programmed.
Olympic gold medalist and outspoken Darfur activist Joey Cheek has had his visa revoked by the Chinese embassy, hours before the speedskating champion was set to fly to China. And he wasn’t even planning on wearing a mask when he got there.

The timing of the blockade was interesting. As the first of an anticipated 20,000 journalists descended on Beijing to cover the games, Amnesty International issued a report on how China’s miserable human rights record has gotten even worse with the Olympics. Journalists visiting China couldn’t access it, but the Beijingoists couldn’t stop people elsewhere around the globe from
The purpose of China’s efforts is not to protect the Chinese people from any threat, it is merely to spare the nation’s Communist rulers embarrassment on their home court. Behind the heavy-handed Olympic efforts is a much more sinister and far-flung machinery that monitors all Chinese communications from the Internet to the backyard fence that results in the arrest, imprisonment and frequent execution of anyone deemed to be an enemy of the state.

