Am I really posting everything I can on Ai Weiwei's disappearance, yes it seems like it. Here is Ai Weiwei and Qingming. Here are a few articles trying to take in the disappearances from a wider perspective. Both are very good. Really there is not much to say on the issue. Anyone who has seen or read enough can perceive that the powers that be in China are afraid. There are so many issues which keep them up at night.
Often I was asked pointed questions about what I thought about the CCP by young Chinese people while I was living there.
I suspected that they were trying to bait me, to get me into an argument, in which they could stand up and defend China's honor against the ignorant American who dares come to China to criticize it. I always made it my policy (for good or for ill) to sidestep the question, to deflect it, to answer truthfully and yet to avoid falling into any rhetorical or logical traps.
Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts
Thursday, April 7, 2011
"Please, anyone who knows the whereabouts of the above, contact the family"
Ai Weiwei, male, 53 years old. On April 3, 2011 around 8:30, at Beijing Capital International Airport, before boarding a flight to Hong Kong, he was taken away by three men. More than fifty hours later, present whereabouts remains unknown.This was a missing person sign written and signed by Weiwei's family (I copied the photo and translation from Evan Osnos' great New Yorker blog Letter from China.)
Please, anyone who knows the whereabouts of the above, contact the family
Labels:
Ai Weiwei,
blogs,
Evan Osnos,
Global Times,
James Fallows
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

