Monday, April 07, 2008

周末的祈祷法会见闻


从藏人朋友那里打听到周末有个公开祈祷,纪念高原危机死难者,同时抗议天朝。一算日子正值某农历传统节日,心想随喜度度亡也好。问过本地的几个小将有无兴趣,都遁了。于是一人前往。

正好赶上农贸市场开集,人来人往。还好雪山狮子旗远处就能认出来。左后跟教会的摊子相临,前面对着大麻党的宣传(图上黑底绿叶的旗子),右边是奥巴马的粉丝。

看见50-60人在广场上那里晃悠,僧袍、藏袍、便装、嘻皮打扮的都有。俺帮着整了一下计算机(播放揭露TG真相的DVD用)。活动的主要组织者里有附近的一个藏传佛教寺院,他们的一干僧俗信众有带念珠的,披哈达的,捧法螺的。估计可能也从镇上的西藏纪念品店借了不少道具。

两个棚子正面是对天朝的抗议,四周帖了HHDL的声明,同时挂了不少中枪死者血淋淋的照片,俺没仔细看,光暗念了一句阿弥陀佛----死了人不敢否定,咋死的就不好说了。況且天朝拖拉机进城那回,俺被电视上反复播放的共和国卫士就义照吓着了,至今还有PTSD的毛病。

隐约听见附近一个叫喊皈依耶稣的來跟主持喇嘛聊,最后喇嘛问您要不要跟我们祈祷一下,对方支支吾吾地遁了:-)。

活动开始,先是简述西藏问题历史。中间提到CIA在藏区寻找铀矿的时候,听众苦笑。然后从六字真言开始念咒,外加英藏两种文字祈祷死者早日转生净土。然后大家坐下来,正式唱经。




供奉的的对象为莲花生上师(Padmasambhava/Guru Rinpoche)和佛母益西措佳(Yeshe Tsogyal)。前者为佛教传入西藏的始祖,也是宁玛派的教祖,相传是在西域乌昌国(Oddiyana)的莲花中化生。他也是藏传佛教中搞双修著名的,两位最知名的佛母为曼达拉娃(Mandarava)和益西措佳。前者原为公主,其父闻听震怒,命令将莲师烧死。然而烈火被变成了湖水,莲师重新在湖中的莲花上出现。

也可能是缘分,这几个月俺正在慢慢地啃英文版的益西措佳传。(部分中译本在此A, B)。她原为藏王赤松德赞的王妃,16岁出家跟莲师修行,最后达到了和他等同的成就。莲师手持的三叉戟就是她的代表。

那天的气温也就刚在零上,阴沉沉的下着小雨。盘腿坐了几十分钟后感觉暴冷,脑子和嘴也慢慢地有点跟不上经文了。于是遥想益西措佳在雪山裸体苦修,近想欧美小將们冰天雪地里反藏独游行散传单,作为自我激励。旁边坐了俩虔诚信众,捧着经卷很用心地念,其中一個还兼吹法螺(法鼓等其他乐器在前面),藏文的发音比俺熟练多了。唱到一半上供,唱完后分享祭品,这个跟耶酥同学的晚餐原理差不多。

等回家已经是哆哆嗦嗦,赶快冲了二十分钟的热水澡,可能是佛祖保佑,没感冒。

Monday, August 27, 2007

The Great Trade US-China Trade War



Yep, there is a war going on...

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Why technology is not the solution



Because, unless the underlying social factors are taken care of, the technology to be developed will be the wrong kind of technology, and benefits only the powerful group that f***ed up in the first place.

To curb global warming and find alternative energy after peak oil, for example, the "scientific" solutions are biofuel, wind power and (sometimes) nuclear. Some pundits have even talked about increasing energy efficiency. But was there any mentioning of using less energy? G-d forbid, to keep the social economic system going, the total consumption gotta grow, grow and grow without limit!

So far, biofuel has jacked up the price of beer in Germany, pork in China, and caused the average US grocery bill to grow by $47. You bet that it's a bigger hit on the poor.

Meanwhile, major public subsidy goes to business interests (agricultural, energy), supposed to be "seed money" for R&D. Should their research succeed, don't even think for a moment that it benefits the public. Just look at what happened in semiconductors and pharmaceuticals. As soon as a publicly-funded research shows profitability, it's transferred to private companies which vows to recover cost and reap that many more times in profit.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Alternative theory of avian flu, and possibly SARS



The Institute of Science in Society (ISIS) has an interesting article speculating on bird flu. They suggest modern style intensive poultry farming, genetic engineering, plus environmental pollution by dioxin and maybe Agent Orange are to be blamed, rather than backyard chickens and migratory birds.

When one thinks about it, folks around the world have lived, and continue to live closely with their domestic fowls in unwholesome conditions. That is not necessarily a good idea -- it's unpleasant and may spread diseases e.g. psittacosis. Before the existence of genetic engineering and industrial pollution, animals living close to humans can contribute to the creation of pretty lethal human epidemic, such as rodents and fleas to the bubonic plague. Migratory birds may carry pathogens around, too.

Still, why avian flu now and why in SE Asia in particular? There's no proof that recent changes such as industrial pollution and industrial animal farming are innocent. If fact, it not impossible that they are the real cause of the spread of avian flu. It's just a matter of economic and political power: the agribusiness behemoth gets a subsidy, while small farmers in Vietnam see their flock destroyed (sometimes without compensation), and wild migratory birds get blamed more as they are not represented in human societies at all.

This reminds me of the SARS breakout in 2002-03, because a lot of similar factors apply, and the media also blamed it on traditional small-scale animal farming. The origin place, Guangdong Province, was the earliest center of export manufacturing in China, therefore is considerably polluted. Huge animal farms may not be many there. Yet in place of them there are a large number of migrant workers who are poorly paid (hence poorly fed), living in crowded dormitories, and often the first victims of the aforementioned pollution. Viola, you got the incubator going. It's just a matter of when something deadly comes out. As Louis Pasteur allegedly said: "the microbe is nothing, the terrain is all"...

Chinese toothpaste with diethylene glycol



David Barboza of NYT has just published another expose on toxic toothpaste from China:

"But Ms. Shi and other toothpaste makers in this region said that diethylene glycol had been used in toothpaste in China for years and that producers believed it was not very harmful."

That just sounds like his theme from the last installment melamine-in gluten case: -- tragedies caused by unscrupulous and ignorant manufacturers. What he neglected to mention is that diethylene glycol is allowed in toothpaste, at least inside China. Here is a study from China concluding its "safety" in toothpaste.

The word safety was put in quote because I tend to agree with Mr. Barboza and question the Chinese study. Suppose teenagers and older people, after brushing and rinsing, do not ingest a lot of diethylene glycol. That doesn't mean individual cases of over ingestion is impossible, especially for younger children. There is just not much sense in using a toxic substance when other less dangerous polyglycols can be substituted for retaining moisture in toothpaste. In addition, according to research databases it seems China is the only country allowing this, which makes it even more suspicious.

I am all for challenging this practice the the above reasons. Yet compared to the melamine case there are two major differences:


  1. Legal (if very questionable) vs. illegal additive;
  2. Openly listed as an ingredient vs. undeclared adulteration.


Finally, I have to give Barboza credit for mentioning what I think is the root cause, although he chose not to highlight it:

“You know, if you’re in the export market, the margins are small, so people use the substitute,”...“Even one percent or half a percent price difference can matter to people here.”

Friday, May 04, 2007

What is Amilorine?



Short answer: it doesn't exist.

Long explanation: At last count there are 904 hits of "amilorine" on Google. However, there's absolutely no mentioning of it in any major scientific databases, e.g. SciFinder, Web of Science. Well, there is one find on Google Scholar. Those folks said another group studied "amilorine-sensitive channels". The group they cited, it turns out, was talking about "amiloride-sensitive channel" instead. So that only one was probably a typo.

Back in 2002, somebody did a research on the propagation of citation errors in science, and estimated that about 20% folks cite articles without reading the original. Guess the percentage is higher in online news...

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Poisoned bread and the media circus



The 2007 pet food crisis is still going strong. It looks more like a human interest (media, governments, corporations) story than pure food contamination incident. (Not that I have any trust in food safety in China, or don't have my own cats to worry about.)

The intrinsic risk of large-scale, centralized food processing


First, there is no way to make food 100% safe. Unless apples are banned from human consumption, eventually a bad one will turn up as human food somewhere. Whether it is eaten out of hand, used in an apple pie, or mixed with 10,000 other apples in a plant to produce apple sauce, however, greately changes the scale of contamination.

More decentralized food production and processing is probably not mucher safer per batch, and even less so by quantity (need to make many more smaller batches to fill the same quantity). Yet it is a lot more robust, i.e. when contamination occurs the scale will be much smaller. This is the difference between the 1996 Odwalla juice recall (one brand, recall complated in 48 hours) and the great spinach recall (most of the brands were under suspicion, and it took the FDA weeks to sort out which is actually affected).

Corporate free lunch



One prominent suggestion is tightening customs inspection. Since when did the US customs (or customs of any country) become the chief quality control agency, and is supposed to pinpoint exotic contaminations? As long as the white powery stuff imported is not heroin, their work is done.

According to ChemNutra, melamine (assuming that's the real deal) is "simply not on the radar screen for food ingredient suppliers". That's tough. But it seems pretty reasonable that whose making a profit in this business ought to shoulder the most responsibility. They don't call it "business risk" for no reason!

Another puzzle: Reportedly, the adulteration in the gluten is so high that "visible crystals" can be seen in the finished pet food. Well, shouldn't that ring a bell at Menu Foods, whether melamine was on the chemical radar or not?

Media circus



The suspicion on gluten from China emerged as early as March 30, when FDA halted import of wheat gluten from the suspected seller. A full month passed without much media discussion on food safety in China. Then, over the weekend of Apr. 29-30, huge expose came out on International Herald Tribune and New York Times, screaming about widespread melamine use in China. Now, almost all mainstream media outlets have picked it up (try searching for the price of melamine, and all you get is this s**t). While the FDA has to request special visa to get into China, these major newspapers already have staff inside the country, and can hire local freelancers if necessary. On Dec 5 last year, NYT even reported a Chinese domestic case of fake lard. Now that US food (at least pet food) supply is at stake, why did it take them so long to report?

Besides melamine, there is another chemical suspect called cyanuric acid. The mainstream media kindly explains it as "a chemical used in pool chlorination". I did some research and guess what? It turns out this stuff is also fed to cattles in the US(not to milk cows due to regulation). I can see why the reporter's reasoning though: a "pool chorination chemical" in fluffy's dinner sounds a lot more sinister than "cattle dietary supplement". Plus Archer Daniels Midland may not want consumers to know that, either.

ChemNutra's only business appears to be importing "nutritional and pharmaceutical chemicals" from China to the US. Meanwhile NYT claims melamine spiking of feed is widespread and an "open secret" in China. Putting these together, at least one party is lying because

  • If ChemNutra is telling the truth (that they are taken in by an exotic chemical in feed), then melamine use in adulteration is not common in China. But NYT would be lying.
  • If NYT is telling the truth, then ChemNutra (as a specialized importer from China) is being negligent. What's the point of using an importer who has no clue about a common kind of adulteration in the supplying country?


Silence from China



There is a news blackout on this inside China right now, and the PRC government is making as little comment as possible. I doubt they did this to protect a few small peddlers of gluten, or for a more sinister purpose such as a planned poisoning of US food supply. The most obvious explanation is that any public yielding to FDA will foster domestic demand of food safety. To clean up the food supply, a lot of stones have to be turned over. The "miraculous" 9% annual GDP growth then is likely to end. Without that miraculous growth, a lot of other issues will be open for discussion, such as pollution and corruption...

Considering the low level of food safety in China, and how much time passed without a major contamination in the US from imported food from China, in a sense the FDA is doing a pretty good job. If import keeps going, however, one day you'll hit the lottery.

My pet theories



  1. Someone in China -- either direct exporters like Xuzhou Anying, their suppliers or an individual insider one of the companies -- intentionally adulterated gluten. Due to ChemNutra's negligence, the contaminated batch reached to Menu Foods. Menu Foods could have checked the ingredients better but chose not to, either, for cost purposes.
  2. ChemNutra may knew about the adulteration but pretends it didn't. Why not? For all they knew melamine is not particularily toxic. Should s**t hits the fan, they could always point a finger at the Chinese supplier.
  3. Menu Foods may knew about it too, but figure they can afford it. A brand label has a lot more stake in this scandal, because there are a lot of other brands for consumers to choose from (i.e. the market is fragmented). But Menu Foods is just a nameless contracted manufacturer, and the largest one in north America (they produce for 17 of the top 20 retailers, 5 of the top 6 brandeds). That's a monopoly situation. After this thing's over, I'll bet that brand labels will keep using Menu Foods, because they have the scale of production and low cost (which is goes down with increasing scale) to outbid smaller producers.


To be continued...

Friday, March 18, 2005

China Further Cracks Down on Free Speech






According to Washington Times today:


Beijing, China, Mar. 18 (UPI) -- China's most popular online chat room, hosted by Beijing's Tsinghua University, has been closed to non-students to limit the exchange of ideas on the Internet. Operators of the chat room at the Shuimu Tsinghua website (www.smth.org) posted a message saying that non-students would no longer be able to log on, the South China Morning Post reported Friday. The university is China's foremost for science and technology, and the chat room has become famous for its intellectual debate and social commentary, as well as updates on information technology. Its popularity is comparable to that of Beijing University chat room, which had 30,000 users before it was shut in September. New rules from the Ministry of Information Industry go into effect Sunday, and will hold chat room operators liable for any "objectionable content" on their sites. All Tsinghua users were required to register under their true identities by Tuesday of this week. The Ministry of Education has issued a circular on strengthening "political thought" at universities, and the Communist Party's Propaganda Department has increased its monitoring of cyberspace for subversive trends, the report said. As a result, Weblog portals have discouraged their users from discussing political or sensitive topics.


Here is a link to Wikipedia on this event, written in Chinese:


2005年中华人民共和国教育部下达文件,要求各高校的BBS必须向实名制下校内交流平台改造,BBS水木清华站被要求作为典型来实施。为此,清华大学决定BBS水木清华站从开放型的BBS向校内型的BBS转型,并于2005年3月16日起开始执行。

3月16日下午BBS水木清华站站务委员会发布了《致水木清华站全站用户的一封公开信》,阐明了他们对校外用户的看法:“BBS 水木清华站过去十年的历史表明,在良好的用户群体氛围,优秀的学术、信息类版面建设,和有效、严格的站内管理条件下,校外用户既不会是干扰站内管理的因素、也不会是导致各类不稳定因素的源泉。相反,一个充分开放、严格管理的校外用户群体,对于水木清华站的活力和质量、进而对于彰显清华大学的学术声誉,都有着巨大的贡献。”并且他们进一步声明:“校外用户是BBS水木清华站极其重要的一个活力源泉。无论过去和未来,在任何情况下,BBS水木清华站都不会忘记广大的校外用户。”与此同时,不少BBS水木清华站的校外用户开始发现无法正常访问,并且站点的进站画面上写明:“从即日起,BBS水木清华站由开放型转为校内型,限制校外IP使用”。

3月17日众多高校BBS(包括北大未名BBS、西交兵马俑BBS等)也相继关闭了校外用户的访问权限。

3月18日清华大学的学生组织了抗议活动,不少人通过折纸鹤的方式表达了他们的哀思。

这个事件表明中华人民共和国政府进一步加强了他们的网络管制。





One user on MITBBS thus expresses his/her feelings:

他们封锁反动网站的时候我不说话,因为我不喜欢那里的观点。
他们封锁色情网站的时候我也不说话,因为我可以在街头随意买到A片。
他们删除攻击政府的言论的时候我还不说话,因为我对政治没有兴趣。
他们说,要实行论坛ID实名制,只有校内的IP才可以登陆,我想说话,TMD已经说不了


This is an adaption of the famous poem of Martin Niemöller. Translated roughly--

First they came for the "counterrevolutionary websites"
and I did not speak out
because I didn't like their opnions

Then they came for the adult webiste
and I didn't speak out
because I could get those videos from street vendors

Then they deleted posts criticizing the government
and I didn't speak out
because I had no interest in politics

Then they say only campus people using their real name can post there
I want to speak up
but now have no fucking voice ...