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How should we think about china population

发布时间: 2011-05-07 06:10 | 作者: admin

Joseph How should we think about china population

Joseph asks…

what is the population of china?

admin answers:

1,331,460,000 as of 2009, estimated to rise to 1,336,718,015 in 2011.

There are estimated 40,000,000 Chinese overseas.

Donna How should we think about china population

Donna asks…

If China is such a big and power country, then why did it lose both wars to Japan?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Sino-Japanese_War
of late 1800s
and then of course, World War II.

it doesn’t make sense to me, since China probably outnumbered Japan in terms of population like 10 to 1, yet the Japanese still won, despite their atrocities on the Chinese people…

admin answers:

China is like France pretty much, minus the pretty women.

Linda How should we think about china population

Linda asks…

I want to get the word out to china and japan about my christian webcast. How?

I know many speak english there, but I dont know how to get my video webcast out there to reach china and japan. I use myspace now, but is there any other way to reach this vast population?

admin answers:

See if Yahoo has an “answers” section for the country that interests you. Ask questions that refer to your webcast and invite them to visit your site. If its good, people will pass it on amongst themselves.

Lizzie How should we think about china population

Lizzie asks…

why is china so succesful in the olimpic games?

why is it that china has won so many medals, china always clasifies as the top 3 or atleast since 1996 why?? I need all the reason you can imagine, well explained and everything, I have to so a 1500 words essay obout this topic -why china is so succesful in the olimpic games, maybe economy, population I dont know please HELP

admin answers:

It is a fact that humans love sports, and that’s why all of us love to watch the olympics. Most of us love to participate in sports, and if we were to be given an opportunity to have the best coaches, most of us will gladly undergo the training.

To be successful, some basic criteria must be in place: 1) goals, objectives, aspiration of a nation to improve on sporting events; 2) adequate infrastructure and sporting facilities on a nationwide level to meet the prescribed goals/objectives/aspirations; 3) availability of world-class or top-notch coaches in the various sports identified for sporting excellence; 4) availability of potential pool of sportsmen/sportswomen to tap upon; 5) exposure to international competitions, especially on olympics or world championships level so that benchmarking is possible; 6) sufficient funds to fund the various programs to mold world-class athletes; 7) a population that keenly supports the diverse sports events;

From above, we note that China has been very successful in table-tennis and badminton for many decades because the facilities and space needed for these 2 sporting events are not demanding. Moreover, building upon her successes in these 2 sports, many top coaches/trainers are developed as a consequence.

As China becomes more affluent, the ability to put aside more funds to generate a wider interest in other areas of sports and the presence of more and more facilities sprouting all over the country to cater to the diverse needs of Chinese athletes will naturally produce many excellent budding sportsmen/sportswomen.

30 years ago, the priority of most Chinese might be bread-and-butter issues, and now, many Chinese are relatively well-off and many can even afford to play golf (which is still relatively expensive in China, costing more than US$100 for an 18-hole game). Furthermore, the successes of many olympics champions (with lucrative offers from advertising, movies, media) will encourage more and more young budding athletes to take up sports, as opposed to the past when the traditional mind-set was to be academically inclined.

Contrary to what many people like to think, China is a free country. Some of the top athletes migrated to other countries, because of the huge number of talents there, the opportunity to represent China is almost nil. For example, the top 3 table-tennis players in the world are Chinese, while the world number 6, 7 and 9 have resided in my country, and won the team’s silver medal. Similarly, we can find Chinese players and coaches in many countries, representing the countries they adopted. They are free to go anywhere in the world to make a decent living (or to participate in the sport they love so much).

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How should we think about china population

发布时间: 2011-05-07 05:10 | 作者: admin

Donald How should we think about china population

Donald asks…

Can an effeminate US & UK match a masculine China?

Because of their abortion practices, China‘s male population is steadily growing while her female population is steadily decreasing, (in ratio, at least). It is expected, within 20 years, that China‘s male to female ratio will be about 65/35, give or take. As China‘s male ratio increases, experts, logically, expect China‘s militant boldness, confidence, and strength to increase.

Simultaneously, the US and UK are steadily becoming effeminate. Much due to their respective “feminist movements”. Both nations, for the last 4 decades, have attempted to demasculinize men. Attempting to remove the natural aggresion in men. Assuming, this would improve society.

However, without the US and UK noticing, they both may be giving China a greater advantage. China can match both in technology. Yet, soon enough, will crush both in masculine, military power. China would destroy both in close-range combat. By numbers, and strength.

Would an effeminate US and UK be able to overcome a masculine China?

admin answers:

I don’t think “civilizing” men has anything to do with their ability to be aggressive in war. the feminist movement for good or bad, if anything affected perspective more than anything, it did nothing to lower the testosterone levels in men. Alterring ones social interractions does not change their physical strength nor their ability to fight aggressively.

Robert How should we think about china population

Robert asks…

China or India?

As you all may know, China and India appear to have the greatest potential amongst all the other nations of achieving superpower within the 21st century. Which country would you prefer and why? I would prefer India because it is a democratic nation, it is our important ally in Asia, and it does have a large english-speaking population.
China is not favorable because they are a communist. It is definitely not our ally. Their foreign policies are self-centered and they are not trustworthy.
I’ve asked this question before but I got too many dumb responses like, “China – because India will turn into Iraq,” or “China…Azian pride!” or “India is dangerous. China is safe.” PLEASE DO NOT ANSWER BASED ON PRECONCEIVED NOTIONS.
Use facts! I need intelligent answers.
I am not forcing you to agree with my views.
Just give me an intelligent answer. It seems like the people who answer ‘China‘ are not giving enough information as to why they’re supporting that country.
And just like any other American, I would prefer America myself. But this is only between India and China.
India is a democracy, not just in name.
Indians, just like us Americans, have the right to vote, speak, and do whatever they want.
Good answer, fire fighter.
Fishi, sorry, but your answer was the dumbest ever. You do realize that 40 years from now China is going to have a major recession because right now there population is peaking, they have a skewed population because of 1 child policy, right? Oh, you didn’t know that.
Please, don’t answer if you don’t have intellingent answers.

Also, there isn’t too much different in poverty between India and China.
India’s poverty is available for the whole world to see because they are a democracy. They won’t stop you from seeing their poverty. China‘s, however, is a different story. It’s a communist.

To people who have provided facts, regardless of who they’ve supported, thank you. They were interesting.

admin answers:

We depend on China for a lot of things other than consumer goods.

Richard How should we think about china population

Richard asks…

Math help appreciated just got home from hospital and missed school teacher refuses to help me catch up PLEASE?

In an attempt to reduce the growth of its population, China instituted a policy limiting a family to one child. Rural Chinese suggested revising the policy to limit families to one son. Assuming the suggested policy is adopted and that any birth is as likely to produce a boy as a girl, explain how to use simulation to answer the following:
a.What would the average family size be?
b.What would be the ratio of newborn boys to newborn girls?

admin answers:

A simulation would model families as follows:

Have each virtual family produce children
which are randomly chosen to be boys or girls,
and stopping when they have a boy.

Then count the total number of boys and girls,
and add to get total number of children.

Count the number of families of each size to get
average size.

So the possible families are:
B
G B
G G B
G G G B
… etc.

Here the results of mine:
502 B
233 GB (that’s almost 3/4 of the families with 1 or 2 children)
152 GGB (now we’re up to 89% of the families)
52 GGGB
36 GGGGB
13 GGGGGB
6 GGGGGGB
2 GGGGGGGB
2 GGGGGGGGB
1 GGGGGGGGGB
1 GGGGGGGGGGB (10 girls in this family!)
Total boys: 1000, girls 987,
and average family size 1.987

There is only a small bias towards boys in this case,
since the larger number of small families balances the
extra girls in the large families.

In practice, probably some families would stop after a certain
number of girls, even without a boy, which would help keep a balance
on the boys/girls ratio.

Other runs gave similar numbers:
1000 boys and 961 girls
1000 and 927
1000 and 1008

(there were always 1000 boys, since I used a sample of 1000 families,
and each gets exactly 1 boy)

Steven How should we think about china population

Steven asks…

Why is India poorer then China?

they are both smart in businesses, many educated people, one of the worlds leading countries in technology.
China biggest population in the world.
India second biggest population in the world.
share common religions and culture lifestyle.

However, i have visited India as i am indian myself born and bred in the UK. i have not been china. even though they are both really really next to each other that there are a few nepal people living in india and speak indian.

Though i do not know why India is poorer then China as india has one of the biggest slums in the world?
KitCat you dont even know so why you saying that

admin answers:

Sheer determination by the govt and the Chinese people to succeed at no matter what cost. What ever else may be said about the Communist, when they want things done, they get it done!
Unlike India, where I think democracy is actually a hinder in this aspect, where it causes a lot of squabbling and so much discussions and talk, that it’s hard to get things moving in the same directions, let alone a lightening fast speed. Different Indians in different parts of India have their own agendas, no?

Another reason would be the early start, notice China dominates in manufacturing? But it could not have been done without the overseas Chinese and the fact that China had Hong Kong and even to a certain extent, Taiwan (contrary to popular belief, Taiwanese and mainlanders get along fine) who were well-advanced city-states. These outside Chinese people brought connections/technology and know how back to the mainland and helped kick start the whole process.

Well that’s some of the reasons…

Maria How should we think about china population

Maria asks…

Why do countries like China and India have high populations?

admin answers:

I can’t speak for China but the main reason why India has so many children is due to the people in the lower-class areas seeing children as “economic assets” so to have many means that you will have many children looking after you in old age. As for China, I’m not too sure. I think it goes along the same path of the Farmers viewing their children as “economic assets”, but don’t quote me on that, it’s only an assumption.

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How should we think about great wall of china

发布时间: 2011-05-07 04:11 | 作者: admin

David How should we think about great wall of china

David asks…

when did the ancient Chinese build the great wall of china?

i have a project due tomorrow please help

admin answers:

The Great Wall of China was built over 2,000 years ago, by Qin Shi Huangdi, the first emperor of China during the Qin (Ch’in) Dynasty (221 B.C – 206 B.C.). In Chinese the wall is called “Wan-Li Qang-Qeng” which means 10,000-Li Long Wall (10,000 Li = about 5,000 km).

Laura How should we think about great wall of china

Laura asks…

great wall of china project for 2nd grader?

my 7 year old daughter has a united nations project that is due next month. her country is china.

we have decided to make the great wall of china out of sugar cubes, cardboard boxes,and paper mache

we’re going to make the wall out of the sugar cubes then paint them brown, the house parts of the wall out of cardboard boxes and paint them and then make the mountains out of chicken wire and paper mache.

what would be the best paint to use on the sugar cubes and what type of glue should be used to hold them in place? also, is chicken wire easy to use w/paper mache?

here is the picture we are going to use:

http://www.thetravelpeach.com/asia-vacations/great-wall-of-china.jpg

this will be a fun project for my daughter but I want to make sure it’s easy enough for her to complete mostly on her own..
lol-her school has a high standard curriculum as it’s a private school.

I wasn’t expecting her to do it all on her own-I’ll be there to help and it won’t be as eleborate as the picture.

she will help glue the cubes using craft glue then she can place the paper mache over the chicken wire. once it dries, I was planning on her spray painting it brown then using sponges to make the green spots of grass on them. we’ll also get some fake moss from the craft store for her to glue in some places.

admin answers:

For the mortar between your “bricks,” I would recommend white frosting. It should not melt or dissolve them. Any type of commercial glue might take too long to set up, might not adhere properly, or might cause your sugar cubes to do more than just wilt a little.

I would experiment with different paints. My first inclination would be to try tempera with a dry brush. You might also try spray paint, painting from a distance so that the paint goes on dry. If you did this, you could spread them out and paint them beforehand, using brown tinted frosting as your mortar.

I don’t know much about chicken wire. If you have a reliable hobby or train model store in your area, you might try asking them.

Michael How should we think about great wall of china

Michael asks…

what is the height of great wall of china?

admin answers:

as tall as me

George How should we think about great wall of china

George asks…

great wall of china project for 2nd grader?

my 7 year old daughter has a united nations project that is due next month. her country is china.

we have decided to make the great wall of china out of sugar cubes, cardboard boxes,and paper mache

we’re going to make the wall out of the sugar cubes then paint them brown, the house parts of the wall out of cardboard boxes and paint them and then make the mountains out of chicken wire and paper mache.

what would be the best paint to use on the sugar cubes and what type of glue should be used to hold them in place? also, is chicken wire easy to use w/paper mache?

here is the picture we are going to use:

http://www.thetravelpeach.com/asia-vacations/great-wall-of-china.jpg

this will be a fun project for my daughter but I want to make sure it’s easy enough for her to complete mostly on her own..

admin answers:

I second using acrylic paint. Not sure why the first answer was rude. She’s 7- you’re suppose to be helping. Sheesh.

Maria How should we think about great wall of china

Maria asks…

Great Wall of China? Essay help?

Great Wall of China? Essay help?
LOL so its not exactly an essay. But this is basically what I need your help with:
Imagine that you have been taken away from your family and forced to help build the Great Wall. Write an account of your daily life. Also, describe what you most wish for and what you most worry and wonder about.

Thanks to anyone who helped!

admin answers:

Well, many people died while working on the Great Wall. And they were buried under it. Several dynasties helped repair it, and during the Three Kingdoms Period, Cao Wei had to worry about Mongolians. But Idk if the Mongolians invaded China during the Three Kingdoms Period. I think the Jin dynasty had to worry about Mongolians.

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How should we think about china population

发布时间: 2011-05-07 03:10 | 作者: admin

Carol How should we think about china population

Carol asks…

What is your opinion on the One-Child Policy in China?

What are the pros and cons?
What is an alternative to control the population?
Yes, but there are limited resources. I’d suggest maybe expanding the country or buying land? Seems reasonable to me…

admin answers:

Yeah, no one’s gonna consent to having China take over some of their land. It would take full out war for China to expand, and they would be opposed by the US. It wouldn’t be a nice simple war like the Iraq war, though. It would be more like World War III.

There’s too many people in China. They desperately need to control population growth and the one-child policy does that. It’s not a nice thing to do, and people should be able to control their own fertility, but limiting the number of children a couple can have is better than having large numbers of people homeless and starving.

It’s not necessarily applied the way you see on television. Families can legally have more than one child in certain situations. (For example, rural Chinese are allowed to have more than one.) And the punishment for having more than one child illegally is that the subsequent children cannot receive any government services like health care and education, and the parents have to pay a fine. Wealthy families often have more than one child.

There are problems, though. The forced abortions that Amnesty International gets upset about are illegal, but local governments carry them out anyway. The federal government needs to monitor local governments better to make sure that the abortions no longer occur.

And there’s the boys versus girls problem. This isn’t caused by the one-child policy; countries that do not have such a policy still have problems with sex-selective abortions and large numbers of girls in orphanages. India, for example, also has a huge problem with couples aborting daughters. In countries where couples are not legally limited in the number of children they have, they can still only have the number of children they can afford.

It isn’t necessarily that these couples think that girls are worthless. What happens in the US when you get old and can no longer work? You retire, and collect a pension or Social Security, or you start withdrawing from your retirement account. In China and India, and other countries where people prefer boys, when you are too old to work, your sons take care of you.

So of course parents are going to prefer having a child who will take care of them.

China’s been doing a lot of work trying to get people to be happy with girls. There are retirement benefits for elderly people, which gets rid of the “who will take care of me?” problem. And they have instituted programs that highlight the benefits of daughters.

Sandy How should we think about china population

Sandy asks…

Which country has the highest percentage of it’s total population living overseas?

So far I’ve heard China, Russia, India etc due to their large numbers of people, however I was thinking maybe it could be a smaller area such as Phillipines, or Switzerland etc, or maybe a country that has a high percentage of people who travel (Sweeden, etc). Anyway put your suggestions down & why you think its them (if you don’t know). Cheers.

admin answers:

what an intelligent question!!
I have never thought of that before
so I really have no clue
but I enjoyed the question
& reading the answers
10 points should go to you for asking a sensible question

Maria How should we think about china population

Maria asks…

China: the most powerful country in the world??

I keep hearing peope saying China will go stronger, …most powerful country.. blah blah blah. But i’ve been to China and stayed there for 10 years and really it is a dump. Beggers everywhere, kids selling crap on the streets. Bribes, crimes, prostitustion. How do people predict what will happen to China? GDP? outputs? personally I think China will just self destruct due to it’s massive population.

admin answers:

China is going to become wealthier as a nation, but they are going to face some real big problems. Firstly, they are growing so fast that there economy is coming close to overheating.

Secondly, with all the trade surplus going on the currency hasn’t really appreciated against the dollar. This is going to give China problems with inflation and monetary policy.

Thirdly, the Chinese are getting a lot of stuff done, but they have no respect for the environment. They build to prove their point that they are becoming great, but they won’t realize the heavy destruction they are causing to their environment, and trust me it will catch up with them.

Fourthly, a country where the average person makes $4000 a year and has 1.3 billion people is real easy to show statistics. They can grow at 10 % a year, but if it is growing at that pace and assuming income is growing at the same pace, then the Chinese salary is going up at $400 a year. In Europe and the US, if the economies grow at 3% and the average person makes $40,000, then their income grew at $2000 for the year.

In conclusion, the Chinese have what’s coming to them. Once inflation hits and their economy overheats, investors will be looking for a cheaper source of labor, and guess what folks… We have the rest of Asia, plus nearly all of Africa. This is a battle for cheap labor and resource exploitation.

Richard How should we think about china population

Richard asks…

why are population control programs beneficial?

please state 3 reasons why population control programs such as China‘s “one child policy” is beneficial to society and the world..

admin answers:

They are beneficial in situations where overcrowding and/or limited resources abound, thereby threatening the well-being of a population.
NurseMom :)

Thomas How should we think about china population

Thomas asks…

Population Growth in Asia?

Asia is a very large continent that contains very diverse types of people and resources. One thing that is common to all countries of the region for the most part is exploding populations. To manage the problems that come with large populations, China and India have taken steps to curb population growth.

1.) What are the societal and environmental implications of huge population growth in a country?
2.) How much of a problem do you feel population growth is for the world? Why?
3.) What policies have India and China adopted to try to limit population growth?
4.) How successful have these countries been in achieving this goal?
5.) Do you feel the use of contraceptives is a useful way of helping to control population? Why or why not?
6.) What problems or issues have India and China faced when getting their populations to participate in the programs to limit population growth? How have the governments dealt with these issues?
7.) Having done research on this issue, how would you suggest that nations deal with exploding populations? Be sure to support your answers with facts and examples.

admin answers:

The rate of population growth in developing Asia has slowed down in the 1990s, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said Thursday.

The Manila-based bank said in a report that the average growth rate for developing Asia is now only 1.45% per annum.

”The populations of China and newly industrialized economies of Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan, which account for 40% of the region’s total, are expanding at below-average rates,” said the report titled Growth and Change in Asia and the Pacific — Key Indicators 2001.”

The bank attributes the general decline to rising levels of education, an increase in the number of working women, and greater focus on population control.

look up some more here

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0WDP/is_2001_Sept_17/ai_79197416

wish it helps you !!

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How should we think about china map

发布时间: 2011-05-07 02:10 | 作者: admin

Mary How should we think about china map

Mary asks…

Call Of Duty 4 Maps For PC… Not Winter Crash?

there are supposed to be 2 new levels for download for CoD4!!!

one is called China Town… i think… and i dont know the other one

i am not talking about winter crash!!!

does anyone know???

admin answers:

dunno

William How should we think about china map

William asks…

Who would win in a war? NATO vs. SCO = USA vs CHINA?

Look at the map & population of Iraq and overlay it on China. USA is in Iraq now for about 7 years & not even near to a solution. Can’t even beat Vietnam for more than 20 years & the Vietnamese were only wearing flipflops & inferior weaponry & cant win the war in Korea.

China shot down a US sattelite and US didnt even respond. ist because we know that arguing & making war with china can get our *** kick?

China has an active army of 2,250,000. With 342,956,265 males and 324,701,244 females standing by and they’re advancing in technology rapidly!

USA got NATO while China got the SCO, = , Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan & future members are Mongolia, India, Pakistan & Iran

We are billions of $ in debt to China & some say that China has the power to have the US economy collapse faster than the US can launch a nuke.
things = made in china.
do you think china would become a super power again after its dynasty periods?

Is the Sleeping giant awaken?

admin answers:

Like you alluded to, the real problem is the huge trading deficit we have with China, and the Economic sway they have.

We spend way more on our military than China does, so I would still give us a big advantage in a force on force war. But in the modern world, economic power is more important.

We need another Opium War or something to equal things out.

Lizzie How should we think about china map

Lizzie asks…

Why India show wrong map of kashmir ?

As some part of Kashmir is occupied by Pakistan(Azad Kashmir) & some part is occupied by China from then 50 years. Citizens of India are getting wrong information of our country map. Is it fair?

admin answers:

IF SOME PEOPLE OCCUPY PART OF YOUR HOUSE FORCE LY. THEY CANNOT BE THE OWNER. PROPERTY IT IS ALWAYS YOUR. IF YOU CANNOT GET IT VACATED IN YOUR LIFE YOU WILL TELL YOUR KIDS THAT THIS PROPERTY IS OUR AND THE OCCUPANT IS ILLEGAL.

Laura How should we think about china map

Laura asks…

Why India show wrong map of kashmir ?

As some part of Kashmir is occupied by Pakistan(Azad Kashmir) & some part is occupied by China from then 50 years. Citizens of India are getting wrong information of our country map. Is it fair?

admin answers:

Yes it is not fair, without trying to evict them.

Richard How should we think about china map

Richard asks…

What is this at google maps?

This article, The Strangest Sights on Google Earth draws attention to a rectangle near Yinchuan that is speculated to be a scale model of some disputed land between China and India, used for tank training. So then, what are these rectangles further north at +38° 25′ 14.69″, +106° 5′ 48.92″? How can I find out?

admin answers:

I looked at it in Google Earth, At first I thought it was an icy or scummed over pond, but there’s that dirt road running all the way around it. Then I went back and read the article so now I really doubt it’s that.
I did snapshot it though.

Google Earth Mystery

http://i299.photobucket.com/albums/mm291/reader111089/googleearthmystery2.jpg

http://i299.photobucket.com/albums/mm291/reader111089/googleearthmystery3.jpg

With all the blue I’d imagine it to be a coast line, but I’m not about to study every coast line in the world looking for one that matches. What I find interesting is the large complex above it. A mililtary base? An industrial complex? And upon closer inspection the darker areas appear to be pockmarked with something resembling craters, so an artillery range? Who knows….

Update: while looking aroud the area of your inquiry on Google Earth I found that someone had discovered all sorts of numbers and symbols carved in the desert, an example is at 38°14’45.97″N 105°55’58.29″E

http://i299.photobucket.com/albums/mm291/reader111089/googleearthmystery4.jpg

Your question is goon keep me up all night looking around the middle of nowhere in China, thanks a lot!!!

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How should we think about time in china

发布时间: 2011-05-07 01:10 | 作者: admin

Mark How should we think about time in china

Mark asks…

When was the last time you bought sth made in China and what was it?

admin answers:

Who knows.
Isn’t everything made in China?
It almost sounds like the name of a movie, “Made In China”.
LOL, I don’t know.

Betty How should we think about time in china

Betty asks…

there is a full moon today, do people in china also see a full moon during their night time?

admin answers:

Yes, the moon rotates around the earth every 27 or 28 days, but the earth does a complete rotation every day while the moon is orbiting slowly around it, so everyone sees the full moon on the same day.

Jenny How should we think about time in china

Jenny asks…

How was condition like in China during the pandemic of the plague?

We know extensively the casualty and condition of Europe in the Middle Ages when the plague struck. However, there is not much information about China, India, and the Middle East during the time of plague. Since the plague originated from Asia, did countries like China suffered less than Europe did?
Why is there nothing about the condition of Asia during the plague? Do they not keep records at the time or is the world is just too Euro-centric too care?

admin answers:

The above poster says

5 million Chinese died from the Plague in 1300s and also says “that is about one third of the Chinese population”

Obviously this person has no clue what he is saying. China’s population was NEVER 15 million people.

China’s population during the 1300s

Population
– 1393 est. 72,700,000
– 1400 est. 65,000,000¹
– 1600 est. 150,000,000¹
– 1644 est. 100,000,000

Chris How should we think about time in china

Chris asks…

Over time, what has been the water management philosophy in China?

a. Conquer nature
b. Using nature to control nature
c. War against nature
d. Ignore nature

admin answers:

a.

Three examples
– the Dujiangyan irrigation system, built over 2000 years ago, still used
– Three Gorges Dam, on the Yangtse
– The Grand Canal

Daniel How should we think about time in china

Daniel asks…

How do the Chinese explain these PROVEN atrocities?

1959-79:

Chinese oppression in Tibet results in the DEATHS of 1.2 million Tibetans, as well as the DESTRUCTION of 6,000 monasteries, temples and other historic buildings.

That was proved by independant observers based in Tibet at the time.

Tell me China. Is this another one of those western lies?

admin answers:

Im not an expert on chinese history but hope to research this more in the future.
My view is that the initial invasion of Tibet was not as brutal as what followed later during the cultural revolution which ravaged not only Tibet but China as well.
The Chinese have suffered as much as the Tibetans and yes there have been improvements and we hope that things will continue to improve.
One thing I dont like is how the tibetans in dhramashala seem to be very anti-chinese and always calling for boycott of chinese products and thinking only about free tibet and not realizing that that is never going to happen without a free china.
Whats really needed is FREE CHINA this will automatically bring freedom to Tibet.
I think nobody is denying what happend to the native americans but in tibet we are seeing it before our eyes NOW so its more real right now.
Moreover the himalayan region is the spiritual heritage of the whole world which is why its so important to us.

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How should we think about china population

发布时间: 2011-05-07 00:10 | 作者: admin

Chris How should we think about china population

Chris asks…

Why westerners overestimate China’s potential throughout history?

China was beaten up by Britain,and Japan 100years ago, made them aware it was not so formidable as they believed,
same thing can be said for present China. majority of them are still poor, its economy depends on export, and their population will be inbalanced in 20 years because of one child policy,
before they can taste the fruits of economic sucess, their economy will go into pieces. it cannot be a powerful developed country.

admin answers:

I don’t know how one can underestimate or overestimate the potential of some country, but when researchers at Goldman Sachs come with BRIC Report, they must have considered inputs from several sources.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BRIC_Economies

The growth in Western hemisphere has almost steepened. While Brazil, India, Russia and China have started growing their market just now. So obviously there’s lot of potential for growth.

They don’t say that western growth will stop, just that growth rate in these countries will be higher on a percentage basis.

David How should we think about china population

David asks…

After 10 years, which country will be most important? USA, China or India?

When the youth population of USA will be short by15%, China`s youth population will be short by 30%, and India`s population will be plus 20%. This is due to growth in aged population in these
countries.

admin answers:

INDIA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!AS IT WILL B THE HIGHEST POPULATED COUNTRY BY THEN

Laura How should we think about china population

Laura asks…

why does russia have a small population compared to india?

or to china or the united states if its so large of a country

admin answers:

compare to India, Russia has a small population, may due to emmigration to Europe and to North America, as suffered from the WWII, dictatorship of Stalin (some argued that he was a great leader), and with advanced technologies, mass reproduction of babies was cut to a minimum. Not much people live elsewhere want to immigrate to Russia, since it’s cold, and speaks Russian.

On the other hand, India doesn’t has much advanced technologies, so many families chose to mass reproduce the next generation, resulting in average 3 – 4 babies / family.

Joseph How should we think about china population

Joseph asks…

Why cant we do this here since China does it?

there are 160 crimes for which the death penalty is assigned in China…they also harvest the organs of excuted prisoners and sell them to support their military…..we could do that ehre and use the money for socialist type entitlement programs,…and reduce the prison population at the same time….thereby taking care of two of the liberals most cherished goals at once…so why not Mr Obama?

admin answers:

the biggest problem with liberals getting on board with this is that 90% of the prison population and therefore criminals are from liberal voter bases and groups…….they wont go for it….good idea though since only criminals need fear it

George How should we think about china population

George asks…

which of these 2 population limiting methods is more humane?

China‘s one child per family policy or Letting AIDS run it’s course(Nature’s way) in a community.
South Africa’s Thabo Mbek leans toward the natural way(evolution or extinction)

admin answers:

They are both pretty bad. I say drop the big one!

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How should we think about great wall of china

发布时间: 2011-05-06 23:10 | 作者: admin

 How should we think about great wall of china

Thumbs asks…

can the great wall of china be seen from the moon?

admin answers:

No, that is an urban legend. In fact, it can’t even be seen from earth orbit.

Mary How should we think about great wall of china

Mary asks…

History of Great wall of china ?

admin answers:

History
Great Wall of the Qin Dynasty
Great Wall of the Qin Dynasty
Great Wall of the Han Dynasty
Great Wall of the Han Dynasty
Great Wall of the Ming Dynasty
Great Wall of the Ming Dynasty
Map of the whole wall constructions
Map of the whole wall constructions

The Chinese were already familiar with the techniques of wall-building by the time of the Spring and Autumn Period, which began around the 7th century BC. During the Warring States Period from the 5th century BC to 221 BC, the states of Qi, Yan and Zhao all constructed extensive fortifications to defend their own borders. Built to withstand the attack of small arms such as swords and spears, these walls were made mostly by stamping earth and gravel between board frames. Qin Shi Huang conquered all opposing states and unified China in 221 BC, establishing the Qin Dynasty. Intending to impose centralized rule and prevent the resurgence of feudal lords, he ordered the destruction of the wall sections that divided his empire along the former state borders. To protect the empire against intrusions by the Xiongnu people from the north, he ordered the building of a new wall to connect the remaining fortifications along the empire’s new northern frontier. Transporting the large quantity of materials required for construction was difficult, so builders always tried to use local resources. Stones from the mountains were used over mountain ranges, while rammed earth was used for construction in the plains. There are no surviving historical records indicating the exact length and course of the Qin Dynasty walls. Most of the ancient walls have eroded away over the centuries, and very few sections remain today. Later, the Han, Sui, Northern and Jin dynasties all repaired, rebuilt, or expanded sections of the Great Wall at great cost to defend themselves against northern invaders.

The Great Wall concept was revived again during the Ming Dynasty following the Ming army’s defeat by the Oirats in the Battle of Tumu in 1449. The Ming had failed to gain a clear upper-hand over the Manchurian and Mongolian tribes after successive battles, and the long-drawn conflict was taking a toll on the empire. The Ming adopted a new strategy to keep the nomadic tribes out by constructing walls along the northern border of China. Acknowledging the Mongol control established in the Ordos Desert, the wall followed the desert’s southern edge instead of incorporating the bend of the Huang He.
Photograph of the Great Wall in 1907
Photograph of the Great Wall in 1907

Unlike the earlier Qin fortifications, the Ming construction was stronger and more elaborate due to the use of bricks and stone instead of rammed earth. As Mongol raids continued periodically over the years, the Ming devoted considerable resources to repair and reinforce the walls. Sections near the Ming capital of Beijing were especially strong.[7]

Towards the end of the Shun Dynasty, the Great Wall helped defend the empire against the Manchu invasions that began around 1600. Under the military command of Yuan Chonghuan, the Ming army held off the Manchus at the heavily fortified Shanhaiguan pass, preventing the Manchus from entering the Liaodong Peninsula and the Chinese heartland. The Manchus were finally able to cross the Great Wall in 1644, when the gates at Shanhaiguan were opened by Wu Sangui, a Ming border general who disliked the activities of rulers of the Shun Dynasty. The Manchus quickly seized Beijing, and defeated the newly founded Shun Dynasty and remaining Ming resistance, to establish the Qing Dynasty.

Under Qing rule, China’s borders extended beyond the walls and Mongolia was annexed into the empire, so construction and repairs on the Great Wall were discontinued. A counterpart wall to the Great Wall in the south was erected to protect and divide the Chinese from the ‘southern barbarians’ called Miao (meaning barbaric and nomadic).[8]

Notable areas
An area of the sections of the Great Wall at Jinshanling
An area of the sections of the Great Wall at Jinshanling

The following three sections are in Beijing municipality, which were renovated and which are regularly visited by modern tourists today.

* “North Pass” of Juyongguan pass, known as the Badaling. When used by the Chinese to protect their land, this section of the wall has had many guards to defend China’s capital [Beijing]. Made of stone and bricks from the hills, this portion of the Great Wall is 7.8 meters (25.6 ft) high and 5 meters (16.4 ft) wide.
* One of the most striking sections of the Ming Great Wall is where it climbs extremely steep slopes. It runs 11 kilometers (7 mi) long, ranges from 5 to 8 meters (16–26 ft) in height, and 6 meters (19.7 ft) across the bottom, narrowing up to 5 meters (16.4 ft) across the top. Wangjinglou is one of Jinshanling’s 67 watchtowers, 980 meters (3,215 ft) above sea level.
* South East of Jinshanling, is the Mutianyu Great Wall which winds along lofty, cragged mountains from the southeast to the northwest for approximately 2.25 kilometers (about 1.3 miles). It is connected with Juyongguan Pass to the west and Gubeikou to the east.
* 25 km west of the Liao Tian Ling stands of part of Great wall which is only 2~3 stories high. According to the records of Lin Tian, the wall was not only extremely short compared to others, but it appears to be silver. Archeologists explain that the wall appears to be silver because the stone they used were from Shan Xi, where many mines are found. The stone contains extremely high metal in it causing it to appear silver. However, due to years of decay of the Great Wall, it is hard to see the silver part of the wall today.

Another notable section lies near the eastern extremity of the wall, where the first pass of the Great Wall was built on the Shanhaiguan (known as the “Number One Pass Under Heaven”), the first mountain the Great Wall climbs. Jia Shan is also here, as is the Jiumenkou, which is the only portion of the wall that was built as a bridge. Shanhaiguan Great Wall is called the “Museum of the Construction of the Great Wall”, because of the Meng Jiang-Nu Temple, built during the Song Dynasty.

Daniel How should we think about great wall of china

Daniel asks…

Help?! Great wall of China report.?

Hey everyone, i am so late on a report about the great wall of china, i didnt even know we had it until today! its due on friday plz give me a report to hand in! heres some guidelines.

-at least 4 paragraphs

- lots of facts and biography

- something at least worth a A- if possible.

Thank you so much whoever gives a good one!!!

admin answers:

Here’s a site with general facts and history

http://www.travelchinaguide.com/china_great_wall/

Ruth How should we think about great wall of china

Ruth asks…

The great wall of china!?

Does any one know exactly were the great wall of china runs through.

Its for a school project and its due tomorrow!
Please anything would help!!

admin answers:

The Great Wall stretches over approximately 6,400 km (4,000 miles)[3] from Shanhaiguan in the east to Lop Nur in the west, along an arc that roughly delineates the southern edge of Inner Mongolia, but stretches to over 6,700 km (4,160 miles) in total.[4] At its peak, the Ming Wall was guarded by more than one million men.[5] It has been estimated that somewhere in the range of 2 to 3 million Chinese died as part of the centuries-long project of building the wall.[6]

Sandy How should we think about great wall of china

Sandy asks…

can someone tell me more about the Great Wall of China?

admin answers:

The Great Wall of China was built over 2,000 years ago, by Qin Shi Huangdi, the first emperor of China during the Qin (Ch’in) Dynasty (221 B.C – 206 B.C.). In Chinese the wall is called “Wan-Li Qang-Qeng” which means 10,000-Li Long Wall After subjugating and uniting China from seven Warring States, the emperor connected and extended four old fortification walls along the north of China that originated about 700 B.C. (over 2500 years ago). Armies were stationed along the wall as a first line of defense against the invading nomadic Hsiung Nu tribes north of China (the Huns). Signal fires from the Wall provided early warning of an attack.
The Great Wall is one of the largest building construction projects ever completed. It stretches across the mountains of northern China, winding north and northwest of Beijing. It is constructed of masonry, rocks and packed-earth. It was over 5,000 km long. Its thickness ranged from about 4.5 to 9 meters (15 to 30 feet) and was up to 7.5 meters (25 feet) tall.
During the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), the Great Wall was enlarged to 6,400 kilometers (4,000 miles) and renovated over a 200 year period, with watch-towers and cannons added.
The Great Wall can be seen from Earth orbit, but, contrary to legend, is not visible from the moon, according to astronauts Neil Armstrong, Jim Lovell, and Jim Irwin…..Hope this helps Kevin

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How should we think about china map

发布时间: 2011-05-06 22:10 | 作者: admin

James How should we think about china map

James asks…

Could someone please interpret this poem for me?

I need help understanding what it means. EACH LINE please!
(pretty much an interpretation)

thanks so much!

BALANCING CHINA by: Elizabeth Rees

Cups on our knees,
finally you ask me
what it was like to be free
on that side of the ocean.
Your voice gets lost
on the bob in a hope.
I imagine you as a young girl,
i hear your secrets.
These cups were my grandmother’s
you say, there’s a pattern of roses
in the family. We sip our tea.
I know the pattern.
Our dishes change hands,
those that don’t break.

and

RETURNING FROM EGYPT by: Elizabeth Rees

I always wanted to sit alone in a taxi
and calmly watch my life
return from the window,
knowing I had nothing
but foreign stories to pay the driver.
We didn’t speak. Clouds came;
I was enchanted by bridges and horns.
He delivered me to a man who guards doors

Who directed me to a man at a desk
who knew my name and gave me your key.
I walked through your empty rooms and
didn’t wonder where I was.
I touched a conch shell on the floor
and turned over the sea.
The wind fell through my ears.
We invented distance with our maps.

On the other side of the world
I met a woman who looked like you.
I asked if she believed in geography.
It’s rarely that simple, she answered.
Crawling through wrinkles and dust
in a paddock of stones, we kept climbing.
On the other side of the desert she said:
Soon it will not be matter
of the life or death, but just so many colors.

THANKS AGAIN!! 8) I’m a sophomore in highschool and i ONLY NEED THE SECOND POEM. “returning from egypt”

thanks again :) i really appreciate itt.

admin answers:

Tough assignment…in the first one, thing of the double meaning of “balancing china”…they are balancing “china cups”, but the references are directed about living in or near China (the country), and the “bob…hope” reference makes it sound like Korea or Viet Nam (Bob Hope, the comedian who went where the troops were in USO shows). The second one is similar in that it uses ordinary objects to represent concepts of distance and national origin. I’m not sure what your grade level is, but unless you discussed these in class, your teacher is a real tough cookie…these are not beginner poems.

Susan How should we think about china map

Susan asks…

Can all routers port forward?

My router is a rather … minority brand, relatively. It comes with the “package” provided by the ISP here in China. (Huawei HG255d). from what I’ve checked from most port forwarding guides, it just involves going to the router settings, and changing some things that should be intuitive.

For example…starting with the big slot that has “port” next to it.

When I enter my router though, there is an absence of practically everything that has to do with advanced settings. Even clicking “show advanced settings” did practically nothing.

Do all router have an ability to port forward? (I’m using transmission and even with its automatic port mapping the port is still closed, I have tried many)
transmission is also added to the exceptions list for OS x’s firewall

admin answers:

I used to use a router that was provided by my Internet Service Provider, they had their own firmware loaded to make it overly “user friendly” sadly it also lacked any sign that it could port forward – I looked around and while many mentioned that it may be possible to find a custom firmware to support this, I had no luck in finding it and neither did others. I just decided in the end to shell out on a moderately cheap Netgear.

So no, some routers won’t allow you to port forward, look into a custom firmware or perhaps buy a new one :) good luck!

George How should we think about china map

George asks…

The Fed NOW says that the economy will not recover for at least 5-6 years, are Obama and the dems listening?

excerpt…
the Fed confessed that the US economy may not recover for five or six years. Far from winding down emergency stimulus, the bank may need a fresh blast of bond purchases or quantitative easing.

Usually the dollar serves as a safe haven whenever the world takes fright, and there was plenty of sobering news from China and other quarters on Thursday. Not this time. The US itself has become the problem.

People thought the euro would break-up. Now we’re moving into a new phase because we’re hearing alarm bells of a US double dip.

Mr Bloom said a deep change is under way in investor psychology as funds and central banks respond to the blizzard of shocking US data and again focus on the fragility of an economy where public debt is surging towards 100pc of GDP, not helped by the malaise enveloping the Obama White House. “The Europeans have aired their dirty debt in public and taken some measures to address it, whilst the US has not,” he said.

The Fed minutes warned of “significant downside risks” and a possible slide into deflation, an admission that zero interest rates, $1.75 trillion of QE, and a fiscal deficit above 10pc of GDP have so far failed to lift the economy out of a structural slump.

“The Committee would need to consider whether further policy stimulus might become appropriate if the outlook were to worsen appreciably,” it said. The economy might not regain its “longer-run path” until 2016.

“The Fed is throwing in the towel,” said Gabriel Stein, of Lombard Street Research. “They are preparing to start QE again. This was predictable because the M3 broad money supply has been contracting for months.”

The Fed minutes amount to a policy thunderbolt, evidence of how quickly the recovery has lost steam. Just weeks ago the Fed was mapping out withdrawal of stimulus.

The signs of a deep and sudden slowdown in the US are becoming ever clearer as the “sugar rush” from the Obama fiscal stimulus wears off and the inventory boost fades. California, Illinois and other states are cutting spending, tightening US fiscal policy by 0.8pc of GDP.

The US workforce has shrunk by a 1m over the past two months as discouraged jobless give up the hunt. Retail sales have fallen for the past two months. New homes sales crashed to 300,000 in May after tax credits ran out, the lowest since records began in 1963. Mortgage applications have fallen by 42pc to 13-year low since April. Paul Dales at Capital Economics said the “shadow inventory” of unsold properties has risen to 7.8m. “The double dip in housing has begun,” he said.
END

Oh, and remember, DEFLATION NOW. HYPERINFLATION LATER. THIS IS WHAT GOVERNMENTS W/O COURAGE PRODUCE.

a good example would be Argentina post 2001; first they had deflation and then they devalued and purchased high speed printing presses to churn out pesos; shortly thereafter inflation started – at first a trickle and then within 2-3 years they got hit with 30 to 50% inflation. The US will be no different; the American confetti money will hyper-inflate probably starting in 2012; possibly even sooner

admin answers:

Check out my online postings: I’ve been predicting that our economy won’t recover until 2013 at the minimum, 2016 at the latest…

Back in 2008.

You know why? Because I take everything I see, extrapolate on a series of trends and current events and come up with a number that is more plausible in reality, than it is in fantasy.

Unlike the conservatives: Whom wanted an instant fix on everything within six months of Obama’s swearing-in.

Robert How should we think about china map

Robert asks…

A poem for Angel City lovers – One Day?

I’m so full right now
I can barely speak…
so Let’s try:

In one day

I traveled
so near.

This place I long to live.

It is mapped here
by a string
so deep
within the cracks
and crevices
that I can barely speak
so Let’s try:

In one day

I danced on a lotus in china
Tasted a Russian trio
Trekked through the shire in Mexico
and died in India…

In one day

you drop me
where I need to be
amongst pots of gold
where all is exposed
if you let it be
Angel city…

Contradictions
around every corner
in your being
you drop me
where I need to be
you take care of me
Angel city…

And there’s walking!
Alot of walking
with all your questions
and imperfections
driving through public
open airways
you sing to me
a beautiful growing
rubble of birth…
Reminding me this:

what turns me away
is my turning away…

Angel city
You drop me
where I need to be
and when I can’t see you
All I need to do is ask…

And you drop me
where I need to be.

I love you angel city… all in one day.
http://melaikpoetry.blogspot.com/

admin answers:

Nice !

Sandy How should we think about china map

Sandy asks…

china…………………………………………………………………………………?

am i crazy or does it look like lie a rooster on the map?

also does anyone else love boyd rice?

admin answers:

well it does China is affectionately called the big rooster by chinese.

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How should we think about china population

发布时间: 2011-05-06 21:10 | 作者: admin

Lisa How should we think about china population

Lisa asks…

If women make up over 50% of the population, why are they considered minorities?

Well, with the exception of the PR China who practices selective breeding.

Are women really so helpless that they need special status?
Cindi – they never were a minority by that definition.
Rocky Mountain – Eunuchs have no balls.

admin answers:

good question.

if over 50% – they sure are not in the minority anymore.

Maria How should we think about china population

Maria asks…

why Japan modernized so much faster than China did?

Japan was a smaller country with less population. how did they modernize faster than china? did they do something differently? or was it that china didn’t efficiently modernize ? any facts would be appreciated, thank you

admin answers:

Well Japan was kind of forced to modernize during the Meiji era for fear of being destroyed by the west. When the Black ships arrived from America it became obvious to their leaders that they could not simply live in tradition as they were before. Though Japanese leaders realized this change is hard and battles resulted as some did not want change and just wanted to cut off the country.

China took a different path. China was fairly divided and the leadership of China was not able to unite the people. China is much more diverse and is made up of many native ethnic people with lots of languages. They had been warring with other countries for such a long time as well. Communism is also a contributory factor to this.

John How should we think about china population

John asks…

Population, the biggest political issue ever? HOW will the expected population rise by 2050 be sustained?

I read an article written by a geography professor stating that a population rise to 9 million people on Earth could be expected by 2050. This is like adding 2 more CHINAS to Earth. How will this work out?

I am very curious..

admin answers:

Well, one of the most effective things we can do to counter over-population is support women’s rights and better, cheaper access to birth control and abortion, but few organizations seem to be doing that currently, since women’s issues (stupidly) usually go on the chopping block in times of tight finances. Historically, population has declined primarily in wealthy countries where women have equal rights (at least in the legal sphere, if not elsewhere), widespread access to birth control and safe abortions, and where they can not legally be coerced by men or their religions into NOT using birth control if they want to use it (as is extremely common in Africa, and is a problem which has contributed to the continued spread of AIDS). Women need an atmosphere where their bodies and choices are respected, where they are not controlled by men’s desires or patriarchal religious traditions, and where they have access to birth control and safe abortions, and populations would decrease drastically.

As you can see, in a world obsessed with religious stupidity of both the Christian and Muslim varieties, both of which institutionalize women’s inferiority, men feel that they are entitled to “ownership” over the women they marry (and all women in general) and can impregnate them as many times as they want in order to make themselves feel “adequate.” :/

Ruth How should we think about china population

Ruth asks…

Do you think that racism is started by the majority population 9 times out of 10?

Think about it. In America, majority of discrimination is blamed upon the Whites who are the majority. If you go to a country like China and your not Asian you will be discriminated by mostly Asians, the majority. So in a sense no matter where you go, if you’re the minority in that country, you will face racism at one point or another.

admin answers:

That is absolutely wrong. There are just as many racist minorities as there are white racists. In fact, many people ignore it when a minority says something racist against whites, but everyone reacts to a white doing something racist.

Lizzie How should we think about china population

Lizzie asks…

Geographically, what are some reasons China and India have the highest populations, if any?

I know that there is some poverty but I’m just curious whether or not geography contributes

admin answers:

There is no connection between geography and population control.

P.S: Varcan, you are an abhorrent, uncivilized, sub – human degenerate!! Have some respect man!

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