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Reflections on a Wandering Life.....

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Click to see larger image.
This is Shanghai. I took this picture last night looking toward the buildings on the South side of the Huang Pu river from the 6th floor veranda of the Captain Youth Hostel in an old colonial building right off the Bund. I think you could safely call this a typical Shanghai scene. I talked to a couple guys from Denmark who commented on the contrast between Shanghai and Copenhagen, which has some pretty rigid height restrictions for buildings. I have just been in Tokyo, so this scene doesn't really awe me in that way. What is most impressive to me is the phenomenal change in a country where the kind of business that made this commercial development possible used be regarded as downright immoral. This is the richness of capitalism in a "socialist" society. The next World Exposition (2010) will be here in Shanghai, so one can expect business development to increase.

This is also Shanghai. I took this picture this morning from my dorm window in the youth hostel. The contrast to last night's scene couldn't be more profound. Yet, this scene also is typical. This is China. Land of contrasts. And perhaps no city in China epitomizes this contrast like Shanghai. A rich and prosperous city fueled by the labor of poor people who come to the city from the countryside looking for any means of bettering their condition."No small part of the nocturnal street scene in Shanghai is contributed by the ladies whose commodity is love, cash and carry.

Thibet Road between Avenue Eddie the Seventh and Nanking Road is practically infested with these charming ladies from the earliest sign of twilight until three and four in the morning. From one A.M. on, the region around Kiukiang Road and on over to Peking Road from Nanking Road is the hunting ground of the damsels and hunting ground it is. The weak of resistance are the prey of sometimes two and three of the gals who work in a concerted onslaught, grasping the victim firmly by the clothing and doing their best to work him into a doorway or other place where they can compromise him to the extent that he loses face if he doesn't accede."
This is a description of Shanghai from the 1930's. Last night, I took a stroll down Nanjing Road, and was propositioned so many times, I lost count. Nanjing Road surely looks a lot different now than it did then, except along the Bund, where many of the old buildings are still standing. Somehow, though, it seems still to be haunted by the same demons. The bottom line is that China has lots and lots of very poor people, who have little hope of bettering themselves. They resort to means of earning money that most decent people would not approve of. But that's only half the story. For prostitution to thrive, you have to have a customer base. I noticed the same thing when I was in the trucking industry. Prostitution thrives not just because of women, but because of the unprincipled men who keep them in business.

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