The trouble at Grindr
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Dear Access member,
She Loves Tech is partnering with The China Project to host the U.S. round of the worldโs largest tech startup competition for women on August 5. You can read more about the New York pitch event here. Tickets can be purchased here.ย
โJeremy Goldkorn and team
1. The trouble at Grindr and the techno-trade war
Ryan Mac of BuzzFeed has the inside story into the troubles that have mounted for the popular gay dating app Grindr since it was bought by Kunlun Group. These range from a Facebook post in which the president of Grindr, Scott Chen, wrote that marriage should be โbetween a man and a womanโ to its shelved IPO as a result of greater government scrutiny into its Chinese owner.ย
Read the whole thing when you have some time: Grindr had dreams of making the world better for queer people. Then a Chinese gaming company bought it.
Other news from and related to the U.S.-China techno-trade war:ย
โWeโre hearing from CEOs that more and more supply chains are moving out of China right now,โ BlackRock chairman and CEO Larry Fink told CNBC. โPeople are not waiting, companies are not waiting to see what the outcome is.โ
โCanadiansโ attitudes toward China and Huawei have worsened substantially in recent months, with more than two-thirds now rejecting closer ties with Beijing, and a similar proportion wanting Huawei banned from Canadian 5G networks, according to a surveyโ cited by the South China Morning Post. The poll conducted in early July โalso found increasing support for Canadaโs handling of the case of Mรจng Wวnzhลu ๅญๆ่.โย
Gulfstream may suffer in China: โGeneral Dynamics, and its subsidiary Gulfstream Aerospace, as well as Honeywell and Oshkosh Corporation, were named in an article posted on the official WeChat channels of both the Peopleโs Daily and state broadcaster CCTV on Sunday, criticizing their involvement in the sale of tanks and missiles to Taiwan,โ reports the South China Morning Post.ย
No progress in trade talks: โChina and the United States remain divided over which negotiating text to base their revived trade talks on, with Washington demanding a longer document be used that lists earlier promises made by Beijing,โ says the South China Morning Post.
โChina is keeping all its economic policy tools within reach as the trade war with the United States gets longer and costlier, but still sees more aggressive action like interest rate cuts as a last resort should the dispute get uglier,โ according to Reuters.
โThe speed with which U.S. political leaders of all stripes have united behind the idea of a โnew cold warโ is something that takes my breath away,โ writes Edward Luce of the Financial Times (paywall).ย
Eighteen months ago the phrase was dismissed as fringe scaremongering. Today it is consensus. Even if Donald Trump were not US president, and someone less nationalistic than Xi Jinping were running China, it is very hard to see what, or who, is going to prevent this great power rivalry from dominating the 21st century.ย
2. Unease in Hong Kong and Taiwan, disquiet in Beijing
These are interesting times on Chinaโs peripheries:
โHong Kongโs embattled leader will not be making further concessions to the cityโs protesters, two of her top advisers said, as the government digs in despite several large demonstrations over the past month and more planned for Sunday and the coming weeks,โ reports the New York Times (porous paywall).
โTaiwanโs government has said it will provide assistance to Hong Kong protesters seeking sanctuary, after local media reported dozens of activists involved in an unprecedented storming of the cityโs parliament had fled to the island,โ according to the Guardian.ย
โTaiwanโs president is expected to transit in the U.S. on Friday โ for the second time in as many weeks โ as she returns from visiting diplomatic allies in the Caribbean,โ says CNBC. โThe move is sure to make China angry.โ
โA growing number of Taiwanese are willing to go to war to defend their country in the event of a Chinese invasion, according to the results of a survey released Friday by the government-funded Taiwan Foundation for Democracy,โ according to Focus Taiwan.ย
3. Can virtual reality treat Chinaโs mental health problems?ย
The Scientific American reports:
Virtual reality is touted as having the potential to transform how doctors diagnose and treat a number of mental illnesses, and the front lines of this revolution may be forming in China.
Cognitive Leap, an international VR company that focuses on mental health, specifically concentrates on this issue. The companyโs CEO Jack Chen says the limited number of mental health providers in China โ combined with a history of viewing some mentally ill people as criminals โ exacerbates a situation in which trust is low and stigma is high. Technology, on the other hand, enjoys a greater level of confidence. โThe VR system is viewed as very scientific and has zero stigma,โ Chen says. โItโs such a pleasant and fun thing to do.โ
4. Crackdown on private schools and foreign teachersย
Caixin reports (paywall):
Less than a week after seven foreign teachers were detained in eastern China, three Chinese agents were sentenced to prison for arranging kindergarten teaching jobs for unqualified foreigners, a Beijing court ruled Tuesdayโฆ
Police arrested the three women in late 2017 for helping several foreigners, including two Ukrainian citizens, enter the Chinese mainland on student or business visas obtained with fabricated information. Working with a foreign contact, the three women helped foreigners obtain long-term visas and positions as English teachers at kindergartens in Beijing, even though their native language was Russian, according to court documents detailing the ruling.
Privately operated day care centers, schools, training centers, and English class providers in China have long been infamous for such sketchy behavior: One African-American friend of mine in Beijing who spoke perfect standard American English used to joke that it was easier for a blonde Russian without a word of the language to get an English-teaching job than it was for him.ย
Racism and hiring cheaper, unqualified teachers just because they look foreign are only two of the problems associated with the private education industry in China, so itโs hardly surprising that the government is now cracking down.ย
Anyone thinking of working for a commercial school in China should do their due diligence, as the authorities are coming after schools with everything theyโve got from drug tests for teachers to scrutiny of visa paperwork, teacher qualifications, and business registrations.ย ย
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Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact me anytime at jeremy@thechinaproject.com.ย
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:
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The Trump administration is trying to strong-arm the U.K. on Huawei, reportedly telling British officials that if they donโt fall in with the American line on the Chinese technology company, there wonโt be a post-Brexit trade deal.ย
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But the Trump administration canโt even decide its own line on Huawei, and that indecision is part of whatโs holding up trade talks, the Wall Street Journal reported.ย
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China is not desperate for a trade deal, several respected analysts said this week. Meanwhile, an article published in several American newspapers warns of Americaโs overreliance on pharmaceuticals made in China, and calls on the U.S. to consider medicine a โstrategic asset.โ Also, dronemaker DJI has lost a U.S. collaborator in Cape, a California-based startup, which cited security concerns as a reason to break off its work with its Chinese connection.ย
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Russia and Saudi Arabia were among the 37 states that expressed support for Chinaโs ethnic policies in Xinjiang as a successful โcounter-terrorism and deradicalizationโ program, in a direct response to the earlier letter from 22 countries condemning Chinaโs policies in Xinjiang. Meanwhile, the U.S. government appears to be forming a line on the internment camps in Xinjiang.ย
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Shanghai is getting serious about garbage sorting and recycling, with a first-in-the-nation program that began on July 1 that requires companies and government organizations to sort waste into four categories. Shanghai residents are still struggling to understand the garbage-sorting rules.ย
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Trump-supporting billionaire and Facebook investor Peter Thiel alleged that Chinese spies had infiltrated Google. Despite the lack of any evidence presented for the assertion, Donald Trump promised to โtake a look.โย
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Google has โterminatedโ its censored search engine project, Google executive Karan Bhatia said. There are still at least five different areas in which Google works in China: artificial intelligence research, cloud computing, hardware, app development, and advertising.ย
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Chinese scientists in Canada are under scrutiny, as Dr. Xiangguo Qiu, her husband, Keding Cheng, and an unidentified number of her students from China were escorted out of Canadaโs National Microbiology Lab (NML) in Winnipeg. The atmosphere of suddenly heightened scrutiny carries similarities to the sinophobic trends in the U.S., where more Chinese scientists continue to be harassed and leave for China.ย
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Scientists at Peking University have developed a gene-editing technique that, they say, greatly improves on the current industry standard of CRISPR-Cas13.ย
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Researchers have nearly eradicated an invasive mosquito species from two islands in Guangzhou, in an experiment that could have major implications for the global fight against malaria.ย
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The Kuomintang presidential primary nomination in Taiwan was won by Han Kuo-yu (้ๅ็ Hรกn Guรณyรบ), a China-friendly populist, who beat out Foxconn founder Terry Gou (้ญๅฐ้ Guล Tรกimรญng) and will face off against President Tsai Ing-wen (่ก่ฑๆ Cร i Yฤซngwรฉn) in 2020. As the election ramps up, so do Chinese military operations close to the Taiwan Strait: the next few months will be bumpy.ย
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China arrested another Canadian, this time on drug charges. The arrest, notably announced directly by the Chinese Foreign Ministry, is the latest act of retaliation against the arrest of Huawei CFO Mรจng Wวnzhลu ๅญๆ่ in Vancouver last December.ย
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Senior Party leader Wฤng Yรกng ๆฑชๆด now leads Xinjiang policy, as he was announced to be the new head of the Central Committeeโs Xinjiang Work Coordination Small Group.ย
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Economic growth continues to slow, as the official second-quarter growth data reached the lowest level in nearly three decades.ย
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Iran is offering a visa waiver program to Chinese tourists, in a bid to attract up to one million Chinese people to pump up the local economy, as it has been hit badly by U.S. sanctions.ย
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Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ faces tough choices in how to deal with Hong Kong and the trade war with the U.S., while a backlash against Beijing among developed countries continues to gather steam, respected political analysts said this week.ย
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Watches with tracking chips were given to nearly 17,000 primary school students in Guangzhou. The watches connect to Beidou, Chinaโs homegrown version of GPS.ย
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China might abolish mailing addresses in favor of a geolocation code, according to recent reports. The codes are intended to be short and easy to remember, and will enable โgeographical precisionโ and โallow couriers to identify both the recipient and intended delivery address for any parcel.โย
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China has issued its first set of regulations for commercial rocket companies, many of which are similar to those required of American rivals.ย
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The first Zulu-Chinese textbook and Zulu-English-Mandarin dictionary were recently published.ย
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Chinese jump back over firewall
Why I go out of my way to log back into the Chinese internet / Inkstone
Tianyu M. Fang uses a VPN to get back inside the Chinese internet: โI just want access to Tencent Video, where I can watch my familyโs favorite Chinese TV shows.โ -
Biotech: Half of top 10 IPOs from China
China has big presence in top 10 biotech IPOs this year / BioSpace
โFive of the IPOs are from companies based in China, and oneโฆoperates in both the U.S. and China.โ -
Huawei in Europe
Nearly 60 percent of Huaweiโs 50 5G contracts are from Europe / SCMP
โHuawei, the worldโs largest telecommunications equipment vendor, said more than half of the contracts it has signed so far to supply next-generation 5G gear are with European operators.โย -
Tencentโs biggest shareholder
Nasper’s delayed internet assets float to go ahead in September / Reuters
South African ecommerce giant Naspers said on Friday the delayed multi-billion euro listing of its international internet assets, including its over 30 percent stake in China’s Tencent, will go ahead on September 11.
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Black beauty products in Guangzhou
Reclaiming the business of black beauty in Guangzhou / RADII China
Alexandria Williams describes the Beauty Exchange Center in Guangzhou, where vendors โprimarily deal in the business of fake hair (jiวfว, ๅๅ) in the form of hair extensions, wigs and weaves,โ which African entrepreneurs buy and take home on โnew, affordable flights between China and countries in Africa, such as the newly introduced Rwanda-Guangzhou route.โ -
Stealth tech breakthrough
Chinese scientists hail โincredibleโ stealth breakthrough that may blind military radar systems / SCMP
Chinese scientists have achieved a series of breakthroughs in stealth materials technology that they claim can make fighter jets and other weaponry lighter, cheaper to build and less vulnerable to radar detection.
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Government supports electronic gaming industry
The unusual courtship of China’s esports queen / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
As the economy slows, Beijing is coming out in support for competitive gaming, and municipalities are taking the hint, setting up funds to support โesport professionals [who] can make triple the national average salary, according to the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security.โ
SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย
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Space exploration
The next Neil Armstrong may be Chinese as Moon race intensifies / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
Fifty years after Neil Armstrong took his one small step, thereโs a renewed race to put human beings back on the moon โ โ and the next one to land there may send greetings back to Earth in Chinese.
China, which didnโt have a space exploration program when Apollo 11 landed in the Sea of Tranquility on July 20, 1969, is planning a series of missions to match that achievement. China could have its own astronauts walking on the moonโs surface and working in a research station at its south pole sometime in the 2030s.
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Private and public health care in Hong Kong
Chinese University medical faculty hires top Hong Kong doctor who left patient halfway through surgery in 2017 for private practice / SCMP
A top liver surgeon who was embroiled in a controversy two years ago for leaving a patient halfway through an operation to perform another scheduled procedure at a private hospital has been hired by the Chinese University of Hong Kongโs medical faculty.
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Belt and Road bumps
China’s Belt and Road leaves Kenya with a railroad to nowhere / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โBeijing is withholding the $4.9 billion needed to finish the project, once a flagship for Xi Jinpingโs Belt and Road initiative.โ -
The detention of Yรกng Hรฉngjลซn ๆจๆๅ
Beijing and Canberra trade barbs over detained Australian citizen / AFP
China and Australia clashed on Friday over the detention of an Australian-Chinese writer who is held in Beijing on national security grounds โ the latest source of tension between the two countries.
Canberra said it was โdeeply disappointedโ with the criminal detention of Australian author and democracy advocate Yang Jun, who was detained in January after making a rare return to China from the United States.
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Saudi Arabia and the Xinjiang internment camps
Saudi Arabia defends letter backing China’s Xinjiang policy / Reuters
Saudi Arabia on Thursday defended signing a letter along with 36 other countries in support of Chinaโs policies in its western region of Xinjiang, where the United Nations says at least one million ethnic Uyghurs and other Muslims have been detainedโฆ
When asked about Saudiโs support for the letter, Saudi U.N. Ambassador Abdallah Al-Mouallimi told reporters in New York that the โletter talks about Chinaโs developmental work, thatโs all it talks about, it does not address anything else.โ
โNobody can be more concerned about the status of Muslims anywhere in the world than Saudi Arabia,โ he said. โWhat we have said in that letter is that we support the developmental policies of China that have lifted people out of poverty.โ
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The mayor of Prague stands up to Beijing
China cancels Prague orchestra tour amid Taiwan row with mayor / Telegraph
โA China tour by Pragueโs Philharmonic Orchestra has been canceled and the city zooโs long-held dreams of hosting a panda shattered in an escalating feud between a maverick Czech mayor and Beijing.โ -
Gas plant explosion in Henan
Huge blast rocks gas plant in China, casualties unknown / CNA
โA huge explosion ripped through a gas plant in central China on Friday (July 19), shattering windows and doors of buildings in a 3km radius, state media said. The number of casualties was not immediately known following the blast in Sanmenxia city in Henan Province.โ -
Crackdown on Early Rain church
Prosecutors in China’s Sichuan pin ‘illegal business” charge on Early Rain pastor / Radio Free Asiaย
Authorities in the southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan are investigating Early Rain Covenant Church pastor Wรกng Yรญ ็ๆก on charges of “incitement to subvert state power” and “illegal business activities.” Wang, who founded the church, was detained by police in Sichuan’s provincial capital Chengdu on December 14, 2018 on suspicion of “incitement to subvert state power,” alongside dozens of church members.ย
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Obituary
Jerome Chโen obituary / The Guardian
The early life of the historian Jerome Chโen (้ๅฟ่ฎฉ Chรฉn Zhรฌrร ng), who has died aged 99, ran in parallel with the upheavals in modern China that he went on to document. Once dynastic rule collapsed after 1911, the warlord period (1916-28) was followed by the Japanese invasion (1931-45) and the civil war.
By the end of the civil war, in 1949, the Communist party was triumphant and Jerome was studying in London. He stayed abroad, and spent the rest of his life working out, as a historian, how it was that the decades he had lived in China had led to the Communist conquest.
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Enforcing filial piety
Be good to your parents or else, warns county in Shaanxi / Sixth Tone
In a sharply worded notice Wednesday, Xunyang County police in Shaanxi province said that law enforcement officials, along with the local courts and prosecutors, will punish any โdisobedient and unfilial behaviors.โ The move, according to the notice, is aimed at โpromoting traditional Chinese virtues and safeguarding the rights of the elderly.โ
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Racism, misogyny, and foreign privilege at Shandong University
Translation: Cyber-abuse after โstudy buddyโ controversy / China Digital Times
Chinese students at Shandong University, under fire on the Chinese internet for allegedly arranging Chinese girlfriends for overseas students, are becoming the target of online abuse.ย ย -
Murder in America
Yingying Zhang murder: anger in China as U.S. killer of scholar spared death penalty / The Guardian
Brendt Christensen, who was found guilty of murdering Chinese scholar Zhฤng Yรญngyวng ็ซ ่น้ขlast month, โhas been spared the death penalty and sentenced to life in prison in Illinois for kidnapping and killing of a 26-year-old scholar from China.โ
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
โThe Kidโ: A childhood artifact from Bruce Leeโs pre-kung-fu days
The 46th anniversary of Bruce Leeโs death is tomorrow. While fans fondly remember his late-career kung fu movies that made him famous in the U.S., he has several credits from earlier that deserve a closer look.ย
Chinese Corner: Theyโre coming for Chinese schoolchildrenโs brains
Chinese Corner is Jiayun Fengโs review of interesting nonfiction on the Chinese internet. This week: Chinese schools are embracing brainwave-detecting headbands, a history of rock and roll in China, the whistleblower buried under a playground for 16 years, and the mysterious couple and murder of a nine-year-old girl.
China vs. the U.S. Treasury: Why Beijing wonโt use the โnuclear optionโ of selling American debt
China is Americaโs largest foreign creditor, holding $1.1 trillion in U.S. Treasury bonds. Why won’t China “weaponize” these holdings, even with the trade war in its second year? We explain, plus give context on the related issue of Chinese currency depreciation.ย
The man behind the Terracotta Army
Kaiser Kuo writes: For the Xi’an traveler, do a little reading about the emperor who commissioned the Terracotta Warriors, a monument to his massive ego.ย
Baidu: โWhatโs your problem?โ
Chinese search engine giant Baidu, which has been a hot mess for the last few years, continues to find ways to shoot itself in the foot. The latest example involves a now-fired editor at Baidu News who “hijacked” the account of a bereaved father who had just lost his daughter, and posted a message that was roundly derided by the Chinese public.
We want more better (read: patriotic) films
The head of the China Film Administration, the top regulator of the countryโs film industry, said China lacks “high-quality content” on the big screen, specifically, โblockbusters with Chinese characteristicsโ that have the potential of โrejuvenating national spirit and displaying Chinese peopleโs feelings for home and country.โ
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Podcast: An update on the Hong Kong protests
This week, we speak again with Antony Dapiran, a corporate lawyer in Hong Kong and the author of City of Protest: A Recent History of Dissent in Hong Kong, to catch up on the fast-moving events in the former British colony.ย
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Subscribe to the Sinica Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.ย
ChinaEconTalk: A Global History of Maoism
This week, in part one of a special two-part edition of ChinaEconTalk, Jordan interviews Professor Julia Lovell, author of the recently published book on Maoโs international legacy entitled Maoism: A Global History.ย
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Subscribe to ChinaEconTalk on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed straight into your favorite podcast app.
Middle Earth: Center stage in China: Live performancesย ย
Beijing has a vibrant comedy and theater scene. In this episode, Aladin interviews some of Beijingโs emerging live performers to discuss what happens on the stage โ and behind the scenes.ย ย
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Subscribe to Middle Earth on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: Huawei press event
This week: Chinaโs exports, blockchain entrepreneur Justin Sun, Huaweiโs press event last week, a Chinese real estate company getting into education, and more.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.ย