Author Topic: Living the American Dream in China  (Read 1616 times)

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Offline Robertt S

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Living the American Dream in China
« on: July 07, 2013, 02:04:10 pm »
Here is an interesting article I found today. It appears another great civilization has fallen victim to Western/American influence. 8)

http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/bestoftv/2013/07/04/pkg-jiang-china-american-dream.cnn.html

Jackson Hole, China (CNN) -- Looking for a weekend escape from the city, Annie Liu and her husband fell in love at first sight with a log home in Jackson Hole and bought it for less than $300,000.
Five years on, a weekly 90-minute drive from their downtown apartment to the house has long been the norm. They enjoy gardening, barbecuing or simply relaxing in their getaway surrounded by mountains -- but often shrouded in Beijing's infamous smog.
Yes, the couple's three-bedroom weekend home lies on the outskirts of the Chinese capital -- thousands of miles away from the original Jackson Hole valley in the U.S. state of Wyoming, which is known for its breathtaking natural beauty.
The Chinese Jackson Hole is more crowded, containing some 1,000 single-family houses inspired by rustic lodges in the American frontier. Still, wealthy locals are lured to this sprawling development by the promise of living in the "Wild West."
After driving past security guards in cowboy outfits patrolling "Route 66" on golf carts, Liu's husband Lu Jun pulled over their SUV at the end of a cul-de-sac one recent Sunday.
Opening the door to a world of Americana, Liu and Lu -- both lawyers in Beijing -- proudly displayed their fondness for the United States by adding personal touches to the built-in furniture and decoration that evoke the Old West. She studied and worked in Indianapolis for two years from 2003 to 2005, during which time he visited.
READ: Xi Jinping's 'Chinese dream' a fantasy?
Adorning the earthy-toned walls are colorful license plates from the U.S. states -- including Wyoming -- they have traveled to and a large framed copy of the American Declaration of Independence.
"We want more freedom," said Liu, 40, pointing to the framed copy she bought in Florida. "This is a milestone -- (we hang it here) partially for the history, partially for our profession."
"Many people have been to the United States and enjoy the environment there," Lu, 55, added. "Those who haven't think this place is authentic America and they like it."
That's proven to be a great selling point for developer Liu Xiangyang since he -- with the help of an American designer -- launched the Jackson Hole project a decade ago. He has sold almost all the houses, and seen the property value double over the years with the bigger homes now fetching $1 million each. Official data shows that a typical urban resident in China earned less than $4,000 in 2012.
Annie Liu -- who is not related to the developer -- and her husband feel pleased about their purchase as early believers, and bought a second, bigger house here last year. They say other homeowners share their appreciation for the American culture and values that are reflected in the architecture and setting, despite frequent news reports on rising tensions between the two nations.
"We like the States and we like the lifestyle," Liu said. "Let the governments worry about the things that should be worried about by them."
Her sentiment echoes the most recent results of an annual survey on Chinese people's attitude towards the United States by the Pew Research Center, a Washington-based think tank.
Although the Pew study finds Chinese public perceptions of the United States becoming less favorable in 2012, it notes: "There is one constant: richer, younger, more educated, and urban Chinese all express a more positive view of (the soft power) aspects of America's image. And this also holds true for overall ratings of the U.S."
  We like the States and we like the lifestyle. Let the governments worry about the things that should be worried about by them.
Annie Liu  Developer Liu is a fan of the United States as well, overseeing construction for the next phase on his 70-square-kilometer lot -- the size of 13,000 American football fields. His plans include 2,000 townhouses mimicking the feel of Mendocino, a scenic coastal town in northern California, and a winery that he says will rival Napa Valley in ten years.
In between sipping wine and chatting with residents at a lunch gathering on site, the 51-year-old businessman from the central Henan province reflects on his corporate mission.
"For those who can afford to buy houses here, they have enough money," he explained. "They want spiritual fulfillment."
For that, the developer has built a brand new church in the center of his town -- next to a row of small shops, bars and cafes -- serving residents like Annie Liu, who embraced Christianity as a graduate student in the United States.
"This is an 'American' community so it's a necessary element here," said Liu as she walked out of the soon-to-open Jackson Hole church.
Although she misses the natural beauty and cultural diversity of the United States, Liu says she never hesitated about returning to the motherland because of her and her husband's career aspirations and their roots.
Now comfortably settled at work and home back in China, where the Communist leadership is proclaiming national revival as the ultimate Chinese Dream, Liu feels she hasn't completely abandoned the American Dream -- as she and her fellow residents in this fictional U.S. town pursue their freedom and happiness every weekend.

Vince G

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #1 on: July 07, 2013, 02:16:43 pm »
Nothing as funny as a chinese John Wayne... Have a seat pilgrim

Offline Pineau

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #2 on: February 06, 2014, 12:19:47 am »
You ex-pats. What do you think of the health care in China?
How do you get health insurance? Buy it locally or from back home?
My experiences with health care in China was not great. But I didn't die !
The waiting, The open doctors office door, the dirty conditions a lot of procedures that are foreign to me. And I had to pay out of pocket because my health care insurance stopped at the US border.
Don’t give up when you still have something to give. Nothing is really over until the moment you stop trying.
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Offline Philip

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #3 on: February 06, 2014, 07:57:50 pm »
Gerry,
living in Chongqing, I get health insurance from my school. There is an English-speaking Global Doctor in town, so if the GP there can't help me, he can help me to negotiate the local hospital system. If I need an operation, , the GP suggests I plan a holiday in Hong Kong, or Singapore. Then I go to the local hospital for an obligatory first opinion, which is likely to be conservative and risk-averse. Then I have the surgery done in HK or Singapore or Thailand.
This is exactly what happened in December. I had a torn meniscus in my knee, making walking uncomfortable. The Chinese "specialist" prescribed Glucosamine pills (I was already taking them), I went to Hong Kong on my holidays, and had a 2nd opinion, plus arthroscopy to cut the torn meniscus. Great surgeon, nice hospital, insurance covered everything.
My wife had our baby in a private hospital here in Chongqing. She is not covered by my insurance, but the experience was fine. The hospital was clean, it wasn't too expensive, though they have some funny ideas about foreigners!

Offline Martin

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #4 on: February 06, 2014, 11:19:58 pm »
though they have some funny ideas about foreigners!

Can you be a little bit more specific?

Offline Philip

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #5 on: February 07, 2014, 12:02:31 am »
Because I was the first foreigner they had encountered, they expected my wife to give birth to some alien creature. I had to reassure them that the child would be human! ;D
Specifically, they were lining up some expensive blood transfusions to save the baby from my alien blood type. Actually, because there are so few Chinese people with Rhesus negative blood, even the doctors are not trained to deal with it, and have no understanding of the risks associated with it. I tried to explain that seeing as I have Type O negative blood and my wife has Type O positive blood, this represented no risk to the baby, no matter what his blood type was. The reverse situation may have been a problem, but we definitely weren't. The doctors didn't believe my medical info., and insisted I agree to a blood transfer for my wife after the birth. I refused, so they made me sign a disclaimer saying that I had refused to take their advice, which I was happy to do.
If you think of the usual staring at foreigners, that intensifies when you are about to have a mixed baby, and you get some strange questions from medical and non-medical staff alike, ranging from the size of his genitals to whether he would be able to eat Chinese food! After the baby was born, the questions and comments just grew, from how to darken my son's hair to why did he walk so early? The last question was easy to answer, because we let him fall over - there weren't a thousand relatives waiting to catch him.

Offline maxx

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #6 on: February 07, 2014, 01:34:02 am »
Martin & Phillip I have to deal with the same things when we take the kids to China. We almost blocked the traffic in Zhuhai one day. Because me and two of my boys were standing out front of a drug store. Everybody and there sister and cousins wanted to see the kids. It got so bad there for a while my mother in law wouldn't go with us. If I was going. Or if we were bringing the kids. Because we always bring the croweds. Chinese people are just fixated with mixed race kids. I thought one time a Indian woman and her man were going to run off with the oldest boy.

Phillip I think you will be amazed at how fast the kids learn. Tristan my 6 year old didn't go to pre school. He is now in Kindergarten. Next year he is going to second grade. So he is going to skip the first grade. I had a parent teacher conference with Tristan's teacher, The other day. She said that he was so far ahead of his classmates that. She has nothing left to teach him at the Kindergarten level. He has started bringing home his times tables. To learn them. He has got to Zero to three figured out so far. It wont be long to he figures the rest out.


Conner is in pre school he is also the head of his class. He will do one more year of advanced pre school. Then he will go to kindergarten. And from Kindergarten he will probably skip the first grade and go right into second grade. Conner insisted on starting school when he was three years old.

When your boy reaches about 3 years old get him a abcmouse.com account. It runs me 9.00 U.S dollars a month. Your boy will be the best student in the class. After a couple of weeks. We let Tristan and Conner play on it about 2 hours a day. And they both have just ran to the head of there classes. Also some free sites for kids are starfall, and abcya.

Offline Willy The Londoner

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #7 on: February 07, 2014, 09:04:12 pm »
I looked in at abcmouse.com  that certainly makes learning for kids exciting. 

I think for members here with kids then that is probably one of the best pieces of advice I have read especially for them.

 I have recommended it to our our niece here and even the two year old is fascinated with it and his vocabulary was only a couple of words to date.  I think maybe the free months trial will be extended!

Makes me realise what I have missed in not having kids myself. But in that respect I hope I was doing them a favour by not producing any.  My mother had a gene passed from her father and she passed it to me but now that particular line will end with me.

Willy









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Now in my 12th year living here,

Offline Pineau

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #8 on: February 10, 2014, 03:43:05 pm »
Hey Willy.
It must be a horrible gene if you don't want it pass on. I used to think that way. I am short, overweight and prone to heart, liver, digestive and back problems. All inherited traits from mom and dad. But you never know. One of those genes could be the savior of the race someday. Those genes have been around for ages and ages. They make YOU unique and they may have helped your ancestors fight off a virus that had tuned-in on "normal" genes and was laying waste a continent of people with "normal" genetic make up. Everyone has a weird gene or two. It is what helps our species survive the daily onslaught of germs and viruses.

You know that the average life span of someone with sickle cell disease is 42 years. Clearly not a good Gene to have yourself,  but it is the sickle cell that allowed people in the sub tropics to fight and survive malaria. Who knows that gene may come in handy again in the distant future.

There were few survivors of the plague in Europe but there were some. There were some that were infected but recovered. No one knew why until recently. It is a mutant Gene. If both parents have it then you can survive but If only one parent has it, you may or may not survive. Cool right?  Well guess what? They have discovered that the very same gene helps people survive AIDS. If both parents carry it then you will survive.    http://genetics.thetech.org/original_news/news13

So that has been our strategy over the millennium that has helped us survive. Maybe someday we will have drugs to cure everything but till then... Mix our genes, good bad and run of the mill. You'll pass on something that will confuse the germs and viruses that are constantly looking for the secret combination to turn us into their food store. 

So Willy, unless it is a truly horrible gene, maybe you should go freeze your genes in-case we need them in the future.


PS: I am doing my part. I have 5 children, 18 grand children and 3 great grand children. ( I think this is where it goes exponential). I have a load of bad genes but I do have a longevity gene that keeps the folk on moms side kicking until near 100 years. That's worth passing on.
« Last Edit: February 10, 2014, 09:00:12 pm by Pineau »
Don’t give up when you still have something to give. Nothing is really over until the moment you stop trying.
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Offline David E

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Re: Living the American Dream in China
« Reply #9 on: February 10, 2014, 05:16:25 pm »
If you consider the latest "Eve -out-of-Africa" theory that has Geneticists fascinated, it is becoming clear that studies of the female Mitochondrial gene (passed only via the female line, that everybody on the planet has a common ancestor...that is the "Eve" from Africa and she lived about 300,000 years ago. All of our genes are variations on that one Woman !!

Over the miullenia, genes have been recessive (damaging) dominant (beneficial) or just plain non-survival (extinction.)

What has always got me puzzled is the current hysteria over same-sex relationships...is it Nature (genetic) or Nurture (situational/cultural) that leads to Men and women needing same sex partners ??

What nobody from the Gay Scientific Community has ever answered in any satisfactory way is:

If the homosexuality state is Genetic...then how does it ever get passed on ?? because same sex couples can never have a child that is a true genetic mixture of both of them, so if the homosexuality is a natural state (Genetic), then the Gene would be a recesive gene and quickly lead to extinction .............

Arguealbly, a homosexual Man can still Father a child (!!!!!!!!) and pass on his gene...but that rather defeats the definition, doesn't it ??

A homosexiual female couple could never be in a position to pass on the gene except for artificial insemination via donor sperm...and that would also eventually be recessive.

Just me rambling folks...only a little relevance to the OP....but maybe somebody has a view/explanation about all this   ;D ;D ;D