After my failed – clearly - attempt
of explaining voting the American way, I asked him about the Chinese President
and how they are voted into office. Of course, I use “voted” loosely. Basically
he says that if Male A is a war hero then the country will love and take care
of Male B (Male A’s son) and eventually condition him to become the President.
There really isn’t a second candidate. When the ballots come out there is Male B
who the whole country has gotten to know over the years and maybe random Male
Z, but everyone chooses Male B because they know him.
And then our conversation switched
dramatically to pirating. Not the “Yo Ho Ho and a Bottle of Rum” kind of
pirating, but the illegal copying of music, movies, software, etc. kind.
Apparently there is a lot of pirating in China and it is socially accepted, tolerated,
and even endorsed. Technically the government doesn’t like it, but apparently
because there are so many people, and consequently so many computers, for them
to watch, most pirating is available online with no consequence. He laughed –
laughed! – when I said that you could be put in jail or fined for it here. He
says most everyone in China has pirated everything. He says no one uses
Microsoft Word, because the “off-brand,” pirated material is so heavily
available that it would be foolish to pay for it when you could get it for free
so easily. I countered with the fact that here it is called stealing. He basically
insinuated that it is there too, but no one cares. It’s free, so why care.
This is
where we started getting into the money/credit discussion. One reason I think
we are so serious about pirating is that thing that is being pirated someone
invested their time into it and came up with the idea out of their own head and
from their own work. Because America tries to connect success with merit, it is
very important here to note what success came out of your hard work. Here we
like to say, this person invented this and that person invented that. In China, it
is more about blending and creating a better society as a whole. Because it
does nothing for your status to have created this thing or that or to have
achieved this goal or that, there is less of a seriousness at watching the thievery
of pirated objects.
Sounds like you have a great partner! You’d be surprised how much pirating still goes on in the United States. The difference between here and China is our government has taken a strong, open stance against illegally downloading copyrighted content. Did you feel awkaward talking about politics with him? I had a brief, similar experience with my partner, who is from Saudi Arabia and it was even more awkward than I anticipated. Haha, I definitely marked that down a topic to NOT revisit.
ReplyDeleteIt's really interesting to see the differences in the Chinese and American voting system. There always tends to be this stigma that Americans see Chinese as not letting their people vote, but by the sound of it, the people generally believe they have the right to choose, and they seem to stick to tradition in general and with what and who they know.
ReplyDeleteYes, I read somewhere that one of the biggest debates out there about pirating is what to do about it internationally. Less Americans pirate American goods, and even those who do pirate through sites like PirateBay, which are located internationally. It's weird though that they don't feel the least bit guilty, even when asked if they consider it stealing.
Intellectual copyright is still something that isn't recognized universally, mostly because it isn't really tangible. While someone can steal a computer and be put in jail, someone could steal a manuscript and get away with it. It is a very Western idea.