Why Xi changed his rocket men

Daily Dispatch

...and floods in Beijing, the Patriotic Education Law, and more | August 1, 2023

Dear reader:

On July 21, 2012, torrential rains caused flash floods in Beijing. The death toll reached 79, with many victims perishing in their cars, unable to open their doors or windows as they floated down streets that had become rivers.

The city seems to have improved its drainage systems since then. More rain has been dumped on the city since Saturday than during the 2012 flood โ€” an average of 261 mm or 10.27 inches of rainfall between Saturday night and Tuesday morning local time compared to the average of 170 mm or 6.7 inches in 2012, but the death toll looks to be much lower: There are 11 fatalities so far and 27 people still missing, whereas in 2012, the final toll reached 79.

What has also changed is the information environment. The 2012 flood was a shocking disaster for Chinaโ€™s capital, and led to much soul searching on the internet and in the news media, as you can see from this note on it I wrote from Beijing back then. Thatโ€™s not going to happen in 2023.

Thanks to the many subscribers who answered my questions about the use of Chinese characters and pinyin in our newsletters. You overwhelmingly responded in favor of keeping our current style of using simplified characters by default but complex characters for people from Taiwan and Hong Kong, and including tone-marked pinyin.

Our Word of the Day is the Peopleโ€™s Liberation Army Rocket Force (ไธญๅ›ฝไบบๆฐ‘่งฃๆ”พๅ†›็ซ็ฎญๅ†› zhลngguรณ rรฉnmรญn jiฤ›fร ngjลซn huว’jiร n jลซn).

ย 

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