by eric_b » Mon 16 Apr 2007, 01:39:36
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('auscanman', 'I') was very fotunate to be able to go to a screening of this movie at the University of Toronto. The producers had a Q & A session after. Apparently the 'guides' the Chinese government sent to travel with them prevented them from filming several even more shocking scenes, and curtailed a few others. The 'guides' were particularly uneasy at the e-junk recycling village, since recycling e-waste is officially illegal in China, and also at the scene showing the villagers on the Yangtze deconstructing their village and moving it to higher ground. The producers said they were hounded by locals at that town who were going on about how they had been cheated and lied to by the Chinese government, and wanted to get to say so on screen. By the sounds of it, their filming almost intitiated a riot!
I had wondered about this - how could these people sanguinely tear down their old residences without protest? They also mentioned this briefly when discussing Shanghai, using the example of the ancient women who refused to move from her house to allow more of those lovely highrises to go up.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')I particularly recommend taking cornucopians to see this movie. I would love to see the arguments they come up with against the many scenes of utter devastation. The consequences of the over 2 billion in China and India improving their standard of living even to a minor extent are going to be what takes us over the cliff IMO. Having lived in China as a young child (Shanghai from 1985-1987, when I was 3-5), I still remember the incredible number of people packed into that city (and that you could never be alone anywhere in that city at any time), and how it was still very crowded in all of the rural areas I went to. I think the memory of this is part of what caused me to be concerned with overpopulation and resource depletion as I got older. I can fully appreciate the devastation being caused as these 1.3 billion in China pursue 'the western dream'. Yet, when I try to explain to others that 1.3 billion people living a lifestyle that would use only 20% of the energy we do in the west would devastate the world... they simply can't grasp it.
I agree this movie is a 'must-see', especially for the POer. The population explosion is one of those issues that most people just don't seem to get. I really see it as the root cause of just about all the ills facing us, including PO. Unfortuantely the topic is taboo in the MSM as our entire economic foundation is based on 'growth', and most of the major ('mind control') religions are pro-growth. Things really are doomed by design at this point. It's everywhere you look now, China is just a wee bit ahead of the curve at this point. There's been a construction boom where I'm living - lots of cranes on the horizon, lots of condos and highrises going up. It really has ruined the character of the town, all the little open spaces that gave you some breathing room are gone.