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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
08.08.2008
Beijing's Dashed Hopes for a Brighter Day


As China gears up to host this year's Olympic Games, we asked Beijing-based journalist Christina Larson to file a series of dispatches giving us an on-the-ground perspective. She will be posting them here on The Plank over the next few weeks:

This is how day dawned in the Olympic city.  

The streets had been swept immaculate by midnight cleaners, the red flags unfurled. It was quiet outside, with few cars on the road. (Many Beijingers had the day off.) Yet the sky was blanketed in grey haze. Whether from weather or smog, the effect was the same. You could see strain on the faces of passersby. This was the big day. And yet, something was amiss, anxious. It didn't feel like the big day. The government had promised to bring blue skies--with new traffic regulations, factory closures, and machines to seed the clouds with mercury and ward off rain.

The point isn't really about the air quality. It's about expectations. On most days, Beijingers have contented themselves to live with a veil of smog, as the price of rapid development that has made many lives far more comfortable. But today was supposed to be different. 

The Opening Ceremony kicked off tonight after the sun had set, the day's grey skies hidden. Perhaps a new rain, or sudden wind, will clear the air before tomorrow comes.

This moment, this half-deflated feeling, won't define the Games. There will be many other memories. But indeed it is a moment. 

--Christina Larson

 (Photo Credits: Christina Larson)

Posted: Friday, August 08, 2008 6:27 PM with 10 comment(s)

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The Plank said:

As Beijing gears up to host this year's Olympic Games, we asked Perry Link, professor emeritus of

August 8, 2008 6:37 PM

nbarry said:

What are you trying to do?  Get all these journalists expelled?

August 8, 2008 6:45 PM

cspencef said:

Anyway, we'll presume tnr.com is being blocked at the Olympic media center...

August 8, 2008 7:45 PM

blackton said:

I always thought the Chinese should have chosen Kunming or some other city that is far less polluted (granted, in China that doesn't leave much). Dalian or Qingdao would also have sufficed.

nbarry, this won't get anyone expelled. When I go to China I post as I please and say what I want. The Chinese don't care about TNR and it was never blocked in China. In fact, you can say pretty much anything to anybody but you just can't do it with banners or protest signs or in a public platform. People have misconceptions about China. There is more freedom of speech than people imagine but it is very, very localized.

August 8, 2008 7:52 PM

nbarry said:

Journalists are a public platform, the Olympics are anything but localized, and the Politburo has shown itself as the commencement of the games approached to be very, very nervous.

August 8, 2008 9:19 PM

AaronBBrown said:

The opening Olympic ceremonies in Beijing were phenomenal, and through them China seems to be sending some clear messages to the world as well.

August 8, 2008 9:40 PM

CraigMcGil said:

In what way is the smog the price of prosperity. The health costs of smog far outway the cost of putting good scrubbers on your coal plants. The smog is bad government policy, not a necessary cost of development.

August 9, 2008 12:32 AM

scire said:

I remember as a teenager in Beijing picking my nose and my boogers were black. And the way the light from the sun was muted as it refracted  through a sandy haze. And all the coal dust in the air.

This was way before Chinese capitalism. When most people wore blue uniforms and nobody except high up communist officials had cars. And bicycles were the main mode of transportation.

The pollution pre-dates the prosperity.

August 9, 2008 1:09 AM

nbarry said:

Yes, the Chinese despots are sending a clear message to the rest of the world, the same one, in fact, that Hitler sent 72 years ago. What did P.T. Barnum say is born every minute?

August 9, 2008 2:08 AM

ChillyOne said:

What scire said.

I was in China for 2 weeks in '88, and it was thoroughly depressing. Everything, EVERYTHING was grey. The air, the buildings, the vehicles, the bicycles, the people, even the uniforms the workers wore were a grey-blue. The army uniforms were the dullest shade of green that I'm not sure you could really call it green. Hell, the Great Wall was the largest grey thing I've ever seen. The only color to invade the otherwise black and white existence was red. Red flags, red stars, red sicles (sp?); but it was not a happy bright red. Reminded me of my childhood - you damn well better be happy about being pummeled into submission.

What I came to beleive was that it was not the pollution (coal at the time) that made everything dull and dirty - it was the mood. So pervasive was and is the abuse of the individual, all that's left is the dead grey machine.

August 10, 2008 12:41 PM