Wednesday 27 October 2021

Athletics nationals cancelled

We just heard that the athletics national competition that was to be held in mid-December has been cancelled because of Covid.

This was a combined competition put on by the New Zealand Secondary Schools Athletics Association and Athletics New Zealand.

Mulan had registered to compete, in both the long jump and triple jump, in the school junior girls and the club under 16.  We had planned that she and I would drive down to New Plymouth together, with Mama and Miya staying home.

It's disappointing, though expected and the right decision.

Mulan has still got another year in this grade, so here's hoping it goes ahead next year and Mulan can be competitive for a good placing.

Sunday 24 October 2021

Athletics photo shoot

Ten days ago we had a (socially distanced) photo shoot for advertising Takapuna Athletics Club.

The club committee organised about a dozen or so families to each have a five-minute session with Athletics New Zealand Team Photographer Alisha Lovrich.

It was also a great opportunity to get rid of some of the rust, since it's been six months since we did any of this.

If we look good enough, our photos may be spread around advertising Taka Athletics, Auckland Athletics, NZ Athletics or Alisha's business.

In our five minutes, Miya did high jump:

Mulan did hurdles and long jump:


And we all had a run together:

Sunday 17 October 2021

Wang Huning -- behind the scenes power in China

This is a fascinating article about Wang Huning, one of the behind-the-scenes political influencers in China.

Born in 1955, family connections and poor health meant that Wang didn't have to do labouring work in the countryside, as many of his peers had to during the cultural revolution.  Instead he studied at an elite school.

When universities reopened in 1978 the article tells us he scored so well on his entrance exam that he was admitted directly to a master's programme in international politics at Fudan University, skipping his bachelor's degree.

Interestingly, Wang was a younger (by four years) schoolmate of Mama's Uncle at Fudan University.  Mama tells me that Uncle sat the university entrance exam in 1977 (after having been sent to do labouring work in the countryside of Hainan Island).  Before receiving the results of their exam, students had to nominate their preferred university.  Uncle, living as he was at Zhongshan University in Guangzhou, applied for the English programme there as his first choice.  Contacts in the university department said that Uncle would have been approved, but his name wasn't on the list of candidates.  Instead, when the results came out he was surprised that he had been admitted to the politics department at Fudan.  It appears that Fudan had special access to the student exam results and had picked students based on their results regardless of their own choices and that of other university departments.  Uncle started his bachelor's degree at Fudan at the beginning of 1978 (Mama thinks Uncle was in the academic year ahead of Wang, who likely started mid-1978).

Wang was a full Professor by the time he was 30, and in 1988 spent six months in the US as a visiting scholar.  Before this visit he had been hopeful that liberalism could be good for China, but his observations of the US changed that.  He returned to China an opponent of liberalism, and his 1991 book America Against America was a tough critique of US society.

Similarly, Mama's Uncle spent time in the US and came away hating it.  After completing his bachelor's degree and while teaching at Zhongshan University, Uncle was offered a scholarship to do a PhD at Harvard University, which he started in 1982.  Struggling in the US, Uncle didn't complete his studies and instead returned to China.  Later, he completed an MA in Hong Kong before getting his PhD from Oxford University.

Mama's recollection is that the family became aware of Wang when he was promoted to full Professor, as it was an impressive achievement in someone so young.

In 1993, Wang was spotted by Jiang Zemin, and headhunted away from academia.  Within a couple of years he was given a leadership position in the Chinese Communist Party Central Policy Research Office.

Unfortunately, Mama's Uncle was not so politically astute/lucky, and ended up in prison for 11 years, ostensibly because he revealed too much in his research publications on Korea.  When Mulan was young she and Mama used to visit Uncle every month in prison, before he was finally released in 2011.

Since the mid-90s, Wang has been a key influencer behind the scenes for the past three Chinese leaders -- Jiang Zemin, Hu Jintao and Xi Jinping.  He has led a secretive life, cutting ties with his previous university career and no longer publishing or speaking publicly.

I don't know much more about Wang than what is in this article, so take what you will of what I write.  I may have misunderstood Wang's outlook.  Nonetheless, a couple of quick very general thoughts occur to me:

1.  The story suggests that it was the visit to the US that changed Wang's attitude on liberalism.  If this is the case, then Wang represents a very common Chinese attitude of over-focusing on the larger political powers when evaluating political theories/models.  That is, for many Chinese it is either China or the US.

Clearly, Wang had a bad experience in the US.  But I wonder what Wang, China, and the world would be like today if instead of visiting China he had have visited New Zealand or a Scandinavian country.  While New Zealand is far from perfect, its version of liberalism is very different from that of the US, and hence does not have some of the problems that the US has (and that Wang correctly identified).  If Wang had have studied and experienced a social democracy like New Zealand, instead of the US, would he have been so strongly critical of liberalism?

2.  Without directly mentioning it, the article suggests that Wang is a Hobbesian.  That is, he sees human nature as inherently bad, and consequently the only way to minimise the excesses that result is to have a powerful leader to resolve people's conflicts and maintain society.

Like Wang, Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) lived though politically/socially turbulent times, and in particular experienced the English Civil War.  Hobbes' Leviathan (1651) is his argument for a supreme ruler, justified by a social contract and assuming a pessimistic view of human nature.

The Hobbesian approach is most plausible if one is participating in a tragically broken society (such as a civil war or cultural revolution).  In those (unusual) social extremities, any strong leader, regardless of their decisions, is the lesser of two evils.  It is also an understandable psychological reaction to desire order amongst all that chaos.

If this is the case for Wang, who experienced the horrors of the Chinese cultural revolution, it is understandable that he has been working behind the scenes in China to strengthen the Chinese leadership.  For example, it fits if it is Wang who has worked to end the time limit for Chinese leadership, allowing Xi Jinping to continue as leader for more than two terms.  (He has also developed a more subtle and sophisticated form of power than what Mao had, including education, economics, information, technology and public approval.)

But once again there is the possible mistake of either/or thinking.  In moderate, normal societies, it is not either all-against-all Hobbesian chaos or authoritarian control.  Other political options are available and present.  Similarly, human nature is complicated, having both altruistic and selfish parts.

A more serious problem is that the Hobbesian approach fails to adequately acknowledge the danger of leaders with absolute power.  It assumes that any leader, regardless of what they do, is going to be better than the alternative.

But, even if, right now, Xi (with Wang) is overall not too bad for China, there is no guarantee that the next Chinese leader will serve China (and the world) well.  Giving Xi more power also means giving future Chinese leaders more power, and who knows what they may be like.  Do we really want to give any future Mao, Stalin, Hitler or Trump in China more power?

The Hobbesian pessimistic view of human nature may also be challenged.  For example, last year I reviewed Rutger Bregman's book Humankind.  As I have repeatedly said since I lived in China, if we have a pessimistic outlook on life, and if we distrust those around us, then we create a society that reflects that.  But if we have an optimistic outlook on life, and assume the best of people, then we create a society that is better for us all.  I see today's China as having been created by people who have a pessimistic outlook on life, and it may be that Wang is one of those people. 

When I reviewed Cixin Liu's The Three-Body Problem in 2018 I also addressed this aspect of Chinese culture.

Saturday 16 October 2021

Another lockdown project completed

We've just finished another Covid lockdown project.

This one was pretty small -- just freshening up the hall.  The first step was to rip off the loose wallpaper, which had bubbled out when, about ten years ago, we had a leak in the hot water cylinder.

Next, the biggest part was fixing the hole in the gib board (which Mulan fell through) and then plastering the gaps.

The final step of painting was easily done.

Monday 4 October 2021

Lockdown project - garden

Another Covid lockdown meant another Covid lockdown project.

One of our projects this lockdown was to finally finish our main garden.

When we bought our house back in August 2007, the previous owners had made things look good for the short term but had planted far too many trees for the long term.

While we rented it out for the next seven years (while we were living in China) the trees grew out of control.  By March 2012 it was getting pretty wild.

When we moved in, in December 2014, it was a slow process to tame the jungle.  (Unfortunately we don't seem to have any photos.)

We started by clearing a small patch for the veggie garden.  By November 2015 we'd cleared the remaining bushes/weeds and removed two large olive trees.  

It was time for the largest tree removal, with over 20 palms getting the chop.

A busy life meant things got abandoned, and by June 2019 it was a dumping ground for dirt and greenery.


Not much had changed by October 2020.

So it was time for another tree removal session, with several more getting cut.

In April this year we got in a skip bin and removed four cubic metres of stones/shells/dirt.  By August the weeds were growing again.

In September, as soon as we moved from Covid Level 4 to Level 3 lockdown, we got two cubic metres of soil delivered.

We ordered click-and-collect plants, and yesterday we finished popping them in.  The near half is the flowery stuff, while the far half is the veggie stuff.

All we need is a blue sky sunny day to have the final photo shoot.  (And finish painting the house.)

UPDATE: A month later our garden is looking like this:

Sunday 3 October 2021

Netflix

We've joined the modern age.  On Tuesday we subscribed to Netflix.

As I said before, for the past couple of years Mulan and I have watched movies and TV series together (often at mealtimes).

Up until now it has been free movies, on YouTube, TVNZ, TV3, etc.  For a while we were subscribed to a free (with ads) Chinese movie website, until it (mysteriously) disappeared.

But we've been scraping the bottom of the barrel lately.  Last week we watched Indiana Jones and Ghostbusters on TV3.  Neither has aged well, and the main characters in both are sleazy creeps.  The biggest positive was that Mulan learnt a couple of pop culture references.

We decided it was time to pay.  We looked at the various options, and thought Netflix looked the best (for now).  Our subscription is the most basic, for one viewing at a time only; it's like the olden days when we had only one TV.  Already we've had times when two people have tried to log in on different devices and watch at the same time.

Mama binge-watched Bridgerton.  She concluded that it was a silly soap, but still had to keep watching to see what happened!

So far I've watched the start of a few series.

Mulan and I together watched the beginning of Star Trek: The Next Generation.  My memory is that TNG and Deep Space Nine are the best in the Star Trek universe, so I wanted to see if they still held up with time.

I think TNG did.  Ignore the basic special effects and initially wooden acting.  TNG at its best is good storytelling with thought-provoking ideas.  Mulan suggested we continue with it.

The first episode of TNG (as I'm sure you know!) is where humanity is put on trial for its savage and barbaric nature.  The main characters had to try to argue that humanity has evolved and is no longer violently uncivilised.

(The next two episodes are first about a mysterious disease being passed around the spaceship and then about collecting a vaccine.  So topical in the Covid-world.  Why did the characters not practice the basics of social distancing and contact tracing that we Covid-veterans all know so well now?!)

Then I watched the first episode of The Witcher.  The opening scene has a man (who turns out to be the witcher) fighting a large spider-thing in a swampy forest.  I didn't know who I should be supporting.  The man, because he looked human?  Or the spider-thing, because clearly the swampy forest is the natural habitat of spider-things, and the man appeared the violent invader?

Sadly, the man survived and the spider-thing did not.

It turns out the man has a strict code of honour.  He only kills monsters for money.  He doesn't kill humans for money.  But he kills humans when he antagonises them into attacking him.  Or something like that.  He's good at killing.  But the first episode suggests that the man will soon have events thrust upon him in which his self-certainty will be challenged.

I'm not going to watch any more.  It seems like empty violence-porn to me (with a bit of gratuitous nudity-porn thrown in, too).  If the Star Trek judge had have watched The Witcher he would've immediately found humanity guilty; Star Trek would've ended after one episode.

Mulan and I also watched The Good Place.  It's another excellent keeper, and we'll continue watching it.

Finally, I tried out Star Trek: Discovery.  Special effects and action dominate, while the storytelling is simplistic.  I won't bother continuing with it.

We're also looking forward to watching more Miyazaki's movies.  Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind is my favourite.

At this rate we'll stay subscribed to Netflix for a long time to come.