COVID Status China 20201226 as reported by “The Waijiao”

The following is a status update published on “The Waijiao” a foreigner related blog serving foreign teachers in China at www.thewaijiao.com:
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The Chinese mainland on Friday reported 20 newly confirmed COVID-19 cases, including eight locally transmitted cases and 12 arriving from outside the mainland, the National Health Commission said Saturday.

Six of the locally transmitted cases were reported in northeast China’s Liaoning Province, while two were reported in Beijing, the commission said in its daily report.

No new suspected cases or deaths related to the disease were reported Friday.

Twelve COVID-19 patients on the Chinese mainland were discharged from hospitals following recovery on Friday.

By the end of Friday, a total of 4,193 imported cases had been reported on the mainland. Among them, 3,919 had been discharged from hospitals following recovery, and 274 remained hospitalized. No deaths had been reported among the imported cases.

The total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases on the mainland reached 86,933 by Friday, including 328 patients still receiving treatment.

A total of 81,971 patients had been discharged following recovery on the mainland, and 4,634 had died as a result of the virus, according to the commission.

There were no suspected COVID-19 cases on the mainland on Friday, and 12,055 close contacts remained under medical observation.

Friday saw 19 asymptomatic cases newly reported, 17 of whom arrived from outside the mainland. No asymptomatic case was re-categorized as a confirmed case.

A total of 245 asymptomatic cases were under medical observation, of whom 202 arrived from outside the mainland.

By the end of Friday, 8,481 confirmed COVID-19 cases, including 136 deaths, had been reported in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR), 46 cases in the Macao SAR, and 780 cases, including seven deaths, in Taiwan.

A total of 7,317 COVID-19 patients in the Hong Kong SAR had been discharged from hospitals following recovery, 46 in the Macao SAR, and 640 in Taiwan.

Wudang Garage Sale Update – The Result

Self Portrait

Self portrait in my Salvation Army garb on break from my bell ringing duties.

[This post has been edited about 32 times in the past two months. ]

“Thank you for being here.” I kept being told.  It touched me. It was quite a trek to arrive in front of Oleson’s East grocery store in East Bay Township of Traverse City. That grocery store is across the street from the Township Hall where I was Supervisor for twelve years (80-92). We built that new hall and put a district library branch in the old one in the late 80s.  So it was like a big 30 year circle, participating as an elected official, then getting into private business, going to China ten years later, politics to real estate, then technology, then teaching in China, back and forth to the USA. I made up my mind to live in China, a semi-retired condition, blogging and tutoring the kids . It was a little later the pandemic hit, and I got kicked out of China. I also lost the room I had been renting for ten years due to pandemic fears. I came close to homeless 3 days before arrival “home”. I ended up staying in a vacant office, landing on the 24th of October. I am safe for now. Honestly, is anybody totally safe in the pandemic? I have been ringing the Salvation Army bell, raising money for them and myself ($10/hr.) at the same time.

More details of my experience with the COVID and China can be found at:
China COVID Memories

It was Tuesday, October 27 and I was newly back in the USA. China had ejected me abruptly and the hasty garage sale was over (see Garage Sale) It was almost a complete loss to me. Literally thousands of RMB (Chinese Dollars) were left in Guiyang in the apartment that I abandoned.  The “garage sale” wasn’t successful.  In fact, Guiyang People are still very cautious about moving around the city. Mainly, they don’t like to travel, but also they are afraid of getting out in public during a virus period. Even though Guizhou Province hasn’t recorded a locally transmitted virus since late March, everybody is still on their guard. People just don’t want to mix with strangers. Statistics, flawed as they may be, still indicate that COVID 19 is a threat to China, despite it’s success in containment.

I found the culture in my home town (Traverse City, MI)  to be very weird. It is almost as if people have given up. Just in the last six weeks, more masks have appeared. People seem to appreciate the danger more now, but still too many people take too many risks. Perhaps they are just resigned to the danger and just hope they survive. There was too much bad information early in the pandemic. An established culture is hard to change. Perhaps the Trump plan could still work out in the next four weeks, but I think we need a change in culture.

It seems such a shame because the mask is so easy to wear. I understand that rather than being scared all the time, some Americans have the attitude almost like “I can handle this and I’ll take my chances.”  Our Governor closed restaurants and bars, but kept the gyms open. Yesterday morning I went to a health club. Since most customers are young, they do not seem to worry (except maybe me).  I may be a bit foolish, but I kept the mask on, went early, and tried to maintain social distancing. . The pandemic was accelerating as of 11/17/2020. The restaurants and bars were closed. You could eat outdoors, but it was freezing most of the day. J&S Hamburger opened a tent and I was able to get my first real hamburger since being back in the States. In the tent it was breezy. I felt that between the wind and my Chinese N95 type mask, I felt relatively safe.

In Guiyang I moved around the city during a peak infection, but kept my sense and awareness. I didn’t catch anything. Here in the USA I study this culture and feel that promoting the discussion virus seems important. I try to see how this has gotten so out of hand. From what I have seen, it looks like the tourists and young people are driving this pandemic at this point. The tourists have pandemic fatigue, and this Trump led anti-mask culture has been major. Hopefully Biden messaging can help reverse this cultural direction.  Trump seems so foolish to me, but people still seem to follow him . . . especially the Republicans.

My Russian friend describes something similar us in Russia.  Mask rules are all around, but many are exposing the nose, maybe obeying the rules, but really missing the point of filtering the air.  It is an obstinance of not obeying the government because you don’t trust them. Perhaps you don’t like them. I suspect that a very significant part of this outbreak is driven by mistrust of the government and people disobeying even the simplest rules . . . just because they disagree. Maybe this applies to Russia and the USA.

Culture is so important. In China there was a very pro-government tone to everything. It was China against the evil virus.  Culture is very different in the USA. I was wearing my USA Flag T-shirt and an open jacket in the grocery store and the check-out lady went off on me. She talked about about how great Trump was and how patriotic we should all be.  So I didn’t pick up on it, but Trump doesn’t wear a mask most of the time. I think  that much of the potential of universal mask wearing is lost because it isn’t considered patriotic. So there are billions of virus particles circulating from those that refuse to wear masks. As the Chinese say, one small mouse turd can ruin the soup. (kind of like one rotten apple). If one person doesn’t wear a mask and he happens to be a super spreader, that is the result.

A simple example of how culture influences other people hit me in late February in Guiyang. I was shopping for veggies in the local market and I picked up a tomato to put it in the plastic bag. Now I had been wearing a mask religiously for almost a month. I couldn’t get the plastic bag open because my fingers were too dry. I looked both ways and then pulled my mask down. I then  touched my finger to my tongue. Then I could open the bag easily, but I immediately thought, “Oh my God! Am I gonna die now?”  I had contaminated my tongue. Everybody was saying “Wear the mask. Wear the mask. Wear the mask.” It is the peer group pressure and the culture of the place that was the bigger factor, not the logic of trying to avoid the virus. I looked around and when nobody was looking, When I thought the peer group wasn’t looking, I did the unthinkable. The power of the peer group (when it wasn’t watching) was more powerful than the simple logic of wanting to stay alive. The Republican peer group pressure has indeed been powerful in the USA,  overwhelming the logic of protecting each other with by wearing masks.

In my opinion, we need to change the culture in the USA. It isn’t about government leaders or policies so much as generating a positive culture. We all have the ability to change our culture every day. Don’t put that on the “politicians”. So perhaps the key to survival is a positive relationship, teamwork if you will, between each other and with our respective governments. Just be nice and supportive and it will change a culture. We all have that power, whether Chinese or American, or the world for that matter.

###### 12//20/2020
[ THE PRIOR PARAGRAPHS WERE LARGELY WRITTEN IN THE SIX WEEKS AFTER OCTOBER 29, 2020 ]

So that was the post from a month ago. As of today, the Sunday before Christmas, not so much has changed.  The “third wave” is real and more people believe it now. I am bell ringing for the Salvation Army now.  I just learned that my good college friend (70 year old Ken) has COVID. After two weeks of almost constant pain and bed time, he seems to have turned the corner. Hopefully his “after virus” ailments will be minimal.

It seems impossible to get into a discussion with an American about the election and the two political parties.  Somebody almost always interrupts you or disagrees with you, often in a hostile way and sometimes aggressively. Most people simply tune out after 30 seconds and say “I don’t want to talk about this”.  It just proves to me how successfully foreign governments and malice domestic have taken their toll on the American Spirit. It seems certain to me that when you have the country divided into roughly thirds: Dem, Rep, and Indy, that nothing good can happen. Democracy depends on consensus of representatives to secure legislation and respect for the executive authority in administration of the law. This process of government has been in force for well over 200 years in the USA, and it is enforced by  the authority of our court system. I see a much different culture (in both parties) today. In several respects the people in the two major political parties are almost identical. . .

THEY expect you to agree with THEM on all points or you are against THEM.
THEY are so sick of this subject THEY don’t want to discuss it.
THEY all agree it is somebody else’s responsibility for the troubles.
THEY don’t see the necessity of any change in their own behavior or attitudes.
THEY think somebody could get us back to “normal” if they just did the right thing.
THEY don’t see our future as dependent on a successful political system (POLITICS).
THEY don’t value good deeds or behavior in themselves but expect both from others.

So in answer to the friends that are worried about how I am doing, I can offer you the following: I have a little part time work as a Salvation Army Bell Ringer; have temporary housing; I wear a mask whenever I am near people; and I am probably OK. I seem to be suffering from some kind of reverse culture shock. It is either that, or I landed in some weird parallel universe and I haven’t found  the portal door (rabbit hole) that I came through to get here. . .

I often  think about my life in China and how much I enjoyed the people, scenery and the rich experiences.  Of course I don’t want to stay where I am not wanted and even though I have four years left on my ten year visa, I was required to leave China.  As an American I wasn’t allowed to cross the border anymore. This happened not long after Chinese students and many Chinese Nationals, with visas, were told they were no longer welcome in the USA. Perhaps there is a connection. I don’t blame them. I have been working with Chinese, for close to thirty years and have no ill feelings toward them or their culture. I have learned a lot. So I thought that living in China for fifteen years and working with their students and their projects might protect me a bit from the ill will that was building between China and the USA. For many years the two governments believed that working together was the key to prosperity for both countries. I helped the Oakland University China initiatives from the nineties onward. I visited China as a volunteer teacher in 2000. Oakland University’s Summer Institute has existed for 30 years and over that time they have probably trained 3000 middle school teachers in English. I crossed the Chinese border a good fifty times over the ensuing 20 years. These contacts share culture, friendship, and promote peace.  I published a blog about some of those experiences at www.tourguizhou.com. I hope the respective governments can find a way to work together in the future. What is happening now isn’t particularly helpful in my opinion.

It all starts and ends through the governments and I hope our leaders will be wise enough to restore conditions for sharing culture, working, and playing together in the future. If we learn to work and play together, sharing culture along the way, maybe we won’t have to fight each other like so many other countries with ambitious leadership.

When Nixon and Mao met to set up this cooperation, it was reported that Nixon said to Mao that “Our countries aren’t getting along right now”.  Mao was reported to have replied, “No. You and I aren’t getting along and our people are suffering.” I am starting a blog called “www.jaxteaparty.org” and I plan to work on this ambitious government problem in the USA. Maybe people and donors will come forward to help. My friends aren’t optimistic. I am a bit pumped up by the people who came up to me to put money in my SA Kettle. A lot of people said the same thing that one of my first donors said . . . “Thank you for being here.” Frankly, at nearly 70 years old, I am happy to be anywhere right now.

I had other options rather than coming back to the USA. Many people have asked me why I didn’t just go to a tropical climate to kick back, where COVID is controlled, —  the small tropical islands, or someplace in Southern Asia. No matter where you live, you consume the world’s resources. This is an important time in the USA. I had to come back. I am just not ready to stop contributing and not be productive. I like writing and teaching.

Why Teaching? Because its fun.

Practice Your English!

The 500

I’m afraid that my teaching days are over. We have a real bad problem in this world. Because I am deemed old, my work isn’t valued. Perhaps all that is left of my teaching is some writing. There are a lot of us old people that have a lot to give, and this resource is being wasted.

If you want these kinds of resources to be penned by me, you can support that effort through a donation to support this blog or the future.

 All help is appreciated during this difficult period:
Support this Blog

That Pesky Virus . . . Covid update 20200621

I recently had a Covid test, just being safe.  There was no line at the Medical College Hospital.  It took about five minutes. The results were available within 24 hours and  the total cost was less than 14 US dollars. The results are below:
It is troubling that in the USA I have heard of prices from $300 to $500 for tests that are not as efficient. I have heard of insurances that have  charged the US goverment  $2000 and more for such tests. Note that  there are two “genes” tested for which helps avoid false positives or false negatives.  Apparently both genes are present in the case of a positive Covid-19 test.  Because China is taking the virus seriously, and has scaled up both training and equipment,  there costs are significantly lower than in the USA.    As reported below, there has been a recent outbreak in Beijing, associated with one of Asia’s largest food markets.  I have confirmed from a Shanghai friend that Shanghai life is still relatively “normal” as is Guiyang.

In China there is a newsletter for foreign teachers, and here is their recent coverage on Beijing’s status. Taken from a Wechat Blog . . .

Beijing conducts mass testing
TheWaijiao 5 days ago

Beijing tightened measures to cope with the new cluster of local COVID-19 infections as the number of confirmed cases in the city rose to 79 from Thursday to Sunday and up to 100,000 social workers joined communities’ epidemic control work.

The capital reported 36 new patients with COVID-19 on Sunday, the majority of whom worked at or had been to Xinfadi wholesale market in Beijing’s southern Fengtai district. In addition to the confirmed cases, another seven are asymptomatic infections under medical observation.

Xu Hejian, a spokesman for the municipal government, said this outbreak is closely related to the Xinfadi market, and the government will employ the strictest investigation to find the source of the infection and curb the spread of the virus.

Nearly 8,000 people who run businesses or make purchases in Xinfadi had received nucleic acid tests by Sunday and have been transferred to isolation locations for centralized medical observation.

Up to 90,000 residents living in 21 communities near Xinfadi and Yuquandong-another market whose operations have been suspended due to the new COVID-19 infections in the capital-are receiving nucleic acid tests. All those communities are closed and under strict management.

Around 200,000 people had been to Xinfadi since May 30 based on a citywide data collection campaign. Those people will get nucleic acid tests and, meanwhile, must stay at home for self-observation.

“By 2 pm on Sunday, we had completed nucleic acid testing for 29,386 people who had visited the Xinfadi market in the past 14 days,” said Gao Xiaojun, a spokesman for the Beijing Health Commission. “Out of all the samples, 12,973 came negative and the rest are awaiting results.”

“Beijing will raise the prevention level of all communities by resuming temperature checks before entering and disinfection of public areas,” said Xu Ying, an official at the city’s antivirus leading work group. “Places for cultural events and entertainment will suspend operations,” Xu added.

He said that on Monday, nearly 100,000 social workers were mobilized in 7,120 communities and villages in Beijing to help fight COVID-19.

Just a little Earthquake: COVID update 20200609

This is photo is a recent picture of the New Zealand Primer Minister. New Zealand has been very unkind to the Covid-19 Virus. By explaining the risk and options to her countrymen she was able to enforce a lock-down that effectively destroyed all “safe havens” for the Covid-19 Virus in New Zealand. She was on TV talking about the Virus when an earthquake hit. She looked up and smiled as if to say “only a little earthquake”. There are times when I wish she was on our team in the USA.

In China, schools are beginning to open. China is another interesting situation, which seemed to be in denial during the first month of the infection, but once the decision was made to commit to a state of war with the Virus, there was a total “patriotic” commitment to “Fight the Virus”. We were all quarantined in a vigorously enforced quarantine, with neighborhood associations looking after all the residences. There were roadblocks and checkpoints all over Guiyang (where I am) and movement between cities was prohibited. The hard lock down was sustained for about six weeks and then a gradual easing of restrictions. On June 9, schools are opening slowly as government officials inspect the schools to make sure everybody is ready and knows their responsibility under the new system. We have been eating in restaurants for two months, masks are mostly worn on public transport, but for the most part aren’t required.  Severe traffic jams have returned as cars are back on the road and road construction routinely blocks lanes.

Won’t Eat Snakes and Bats

Considering all the Covid hoopla over the eating of snakes and bats, I have decided to ban snakes and bats from my diet, effective immediately. I think the evidence is pretty compelling that eating snakes and bats are bad for you  I have compiled all the  Covid information that I have posted to www.tourguizhou.com into one link:

Snakes and Bats 

This page has some poignant photos, commentary, links to a chronology of stories, and at the bottom there are a couple links to  videos related to the Covid situation.

Covid Update 20200512 — Not Gone, and Memories Remain.

Is that Covid Thingy Gone Yet?

These two friends know something is very wrong, and they have to watch out. Like the rest of us, they have no idea exactly what it is, if it is near, or exactly what they have to watch out for. One thing we know for sure is that we’ve got to keep our eyes open and watch out!

Here are the three iconic pictures on my hard drive that I remember when I think about my time here in China during the Covid-19 Lockdown:

This photo was taken on March 1, about one month into the lockdown. We were permitted to leave our housing developments once every other day to get groceries and supplies.  Only one person from a household was permitted to go out. We actually checked in and checked out with the security people at the main gate of our housing development.

This stairway is deserted.  It is part of the BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) system. There is a ring road (“Middle Ring Road”) circling the city. The express bus system has stations built in the median of the expressway, every three or four minutes in your bus trip. When you get off the bus, you go down the stairway, and then go through a pedestrian tunnel under the expressway to go to your destination.  This is a little used stairway, even in normal times, but the shopping center it serves was closed. It was nearly total privacy. I happened to go down the stairs because it was near my home and I had gone shopping on the opposite side of the city at the Metro grocery store (the biggest in town). I wanted to get around to the front of the couple to get a better angle, but I really felt self conscious about interrupting their privacy.

I imagine that I know the back story on these two lovers. Of course they are lovers. They are single people, living with their parents. They colluded with each other to leave their homes to go get groceries (there was no limit on how long you were permitted to go out). They met each other in the most deserted place they could think of, the BRT station stairway to the tunnel near a closed shopping center. Note that they respect each other’s health by leaving their masks on as they sit with locked arms, talking to each other.

This picture was taken February 15, a little over two weeks into the lockdown. Obviously it is in an elevator and you can see that there is plastic over the buttons. What about the Styrofoam and toothpicks? I didn’t get it either for a couple days until I got on the elevator and somebody grabbed a toothpick and pushed the elevator button.  The plastic just wasn’t safe enough. You were deemed safer if you pushed the button with a toothpick.  There was a paper cup, off camera, that you put the toothpick in after using it. We all read about a whole apartment building in Hong Kong that was contaminated by one sick person using the elevator buttons. Elevators feel pretty safe. For a few weeks the elevators seemed to always have fresh bleach on the floor. Not so much anymore.

This picture was taken March 27, almost eight weeks after lockdown. The leader of the police in my district (Poly Hot Springs) came by to check on me. He brought some extra masks. Eight weeks prior I had no masks and didn’t know where to find them. I called the Police and within an hour, Officer Wang brought me a mask.  This time he brought a couple of his assistants. I’m not sure why it took three police officers. Maybe if I was hard to handle he had some extra help. Anyway, I appreciated the attention. These police seemed a little more friendly than the ones I remember in the USA. By the way, the blury hand was that when I snapped the photo he was in the middle of a salute.

Actually, the fact that we exchanged photos came in quite handy a few days later when I got stopped at a checkpoint. I went into a residential area where I wasn’t on the listed of permitted persons. I was visiting my old apartment, which is now just used for storage. In the course of the investigation they called Officer Wang and the picture he took was delivered to the checkpoint by cell phone and it turned out to be very handy in identifying me.

This was taken on March 11 when I decided that I didn’t trust the masks that I had. It seems as if the air comes in and out beside the nose, and some of it doesn’t filter through the cloth.  Certainly if a mask takes care of 90 percent of the risk, it is better than nothing, but with some thought, I figured I could do better. I have sleep apnea, and at night I breath through a pressurized mask, with a tight seal around the nose. I cut up an old mask and tube and fabricated the mask and put it over the cloth mask. Now that really felt safe.  A pair of wrap around sun glasses prevented me from touching my eyes accidently (eyes are an entry point for virus) and I was good to go. Of course I looked odd, but as a foreigner, people stare at me anyway.

Except for the required masks on public transportation and in public stores, everything seems normal. Taxis and public transit requires a cell phone scan for access. That seems reasonable for contact tracing purposes. Restaurants are mask free after you sit down, but the schools are still not open. We hear that this should happen by the end of May.  The schools are a big deal because child care with working parents is a pervasive problem.
Finally, I got a photo from an English friend that is circulating in Britain, and I don’t know where else . . .

Recently I had pizza with an international group talking about Covid,
Dinner and Covid (Youtube)
http://Dinner and Covid (Youku)

 China and America are symbols
of Communism and Capitalism, sort of?
Communism!

The following links have something to do with Covid:

January Personal Impressions  20200131
Good News  20200226
Late February Update 20200226
March 29 Update  20200326
 Seventy Percent   20200410
Development of a Pandemic 20200413
Lockdown Over  20200428
Not Gone and Memories Remain  20200512
Just a Little Earthquake 20200604
That Pesky Virus 20200621

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lockdown is Over- Covid-19 Update 20200428

It seems that the lockdown for Guiyang is over. On April 24 I discovered that no cell phone scans or body heat checks were required upon entry to my apartment complex. More convincingly, the back door to the apartment complex was usable. Even though I had a combination to that door, the Chinese had wired the door shut so you couldn’t use the door.  Today, that wire has been removed and I can enter through the back door shortcut. I did get a cell phone scan in a taxi, and the face mask and cell phone scan is still required on the bus, but for all practical purposes, it is over.  It has been reported that, although Wuhan is clean, there are still lockdowns in Shanghai and Beijing, at least for some neighborhoods.  Chinese contact tracers are working full time on some returnees near the north border with Russia, and apparently there are a few other hot spots, but for me, its over.

For myself, I would mark the beginning of the lockdown at January 23 for Wuhan and January 30 for Guiyang.  It took a little less than three months to complete the task. Current status, we essentially have full access to the city, although face masks are still very prominent.  Many people though don’t wear them except for going into public buildings and public transportation. This would suggest 85 days total, but it seems more like 60 days. Traffic jams, shopping centers, and public parks all seemed available, but a little nervous about April first.  To the best of my knowledge, I think the movie theaters are still closed, and perhaps other unique high risk stuff, like spectator sports, but I am not sure.

It was interesting because I need two combinations to get into my apartment tower. The main gate needs a numberic combinatin, and then the door to my apartment tower also needs a combination.  I hadn’t used those for over sixty days and I had forgotten one of them.  For almost 3 months I had had an official “greeter”, neighborhood watch kind of a guy. These “greeters had heat guns and scan cards to make sure you had a temperature check before entering the apartment complex, plus a cell phone scan. Tonight I had to go find a greeter (security person) to help me figure out my apartment tower combination. For three months there had been enough security around that the left the doors open and they checked everybody. Tonight was different.

Dining outside is common, and people don’t wear masks. Traffic is still not as great as prior to the virus. Taxi driver complain that their business volume is about half of what it was prior. The Ma and Pa shop across the street has business at the same level as prior to the virus. The primary school are not certain about an opening date.  Middle school and high schools have a target opening date for just after the May holiday, May 3 or 4.  Normal working hours are expected to follow the school openings.  Perhaps the middle to end of May will see schools resume normal operation.

Apparent outbreaks in the future can change this schedule and local governments have the power to decide for themselves, however, these decisions must be consistant with Central Government will. Any outbreak is expected to create an extreme reaction from the local government. After three months of experience, Chinese people seem to agree that the Chinese government has been handling this properly, especially compared with other countries.

Seventy Percent Recovered — Covid-19 Update 20200410

This post has been five days in the making and still isn’t done.  The darn Iphone, that new model that is so “user friendly” has been fighting me on givng up the videos that really make this post come alive . . . I will add the video and photos later in the interest of time . . . jsp20200416.

My unscientific reckoning is that Guiyang has recovered to about 70%, of the economic activity prior to the outbreak.  The virus is about 99% destroyed. I believe that perhaps this is a fair proxy for the other areas in China. This 70% is my guess of the back to work people. Business is not good because a lot of people lost money.

About ten days ago I got caught in a traffic jam. I really do hate Guiyang trafic jams. This was the first one in about six weeks. It meant that people are getting back to work.  The theaters are closed, no concerts, large gatherings are prohibited, and to some extent, some restaurants are still closed. Schools are expected to begin opening next week. In fact there are two grades, for age 15 to 17 that are already open.  They are studying for the national exam..

A friend of mine has closed his restaurant and moved away because business was bad, even though it was legal to open.  Most people are still wearing their face masks. Of course in the the restaurants masks are not particularly useful.  I believe people are also still shy about going out to restaurants because they don’t want to get the virus. We have had little sign of the virus for weeks now. It is clear to me that a complete job of virus eradication can take place in six to eight weeks of intense effort. Then you must be on guard for hotspots. It probably isn’t possible in the USA. I have friends that are outraged that our Governor wants people to stop golfing until the the virus is under control.

There is confidence in the public that the virus is not a significant danger right now. There are people standing in groups in public places, some with masks and others, not. This video was taken about April 8.   Huaguo Yuan Shopping area They seem to have the confidence that the very strict methods for controlling the virus will work, and can be reimposed should there be a flairup. Every taxi, bus, or train has a cell phone scan to make sure contact tracing can be done should someone get sick.

On the Bus

Public buildings have the same kind of cell phone ID and location scanning. If someone gets sick, the government will trace the people that the sick person came in contact with. The video below was taken about a week ago and, about April 10 and shows the scanning process as well as the casual nature of the “Social Distancing” Chinese style.

I think that Wuhan was shut down on January 23 and Guiyang was shutdown about January 26.   About this time I got a phone call from the local police.  I didn’t know that they were police.  Usually when somebody calls me speaking Chinese I don’t understand what they are saying.  I just say in Chinese that  I am a foreigner and don’t understand what they are saying.  Then I hung up.  This person persisted and called me again.  This time she called me by my Chinese name.  So I decided that since only  the people with my Visa knew my Chinese name, I assumed they were police.I struggled through the Chinese and managed to talk to them about what they were thinking.  They have a list of all the foreigners living in Guiyang.  They called every one of us.  I checked with my friends and they all received a telephone calls like this.  A friend has a legal visa to live in China but he has not registered with the local police department. I don’t know if he got a call.

So the phone calls from the local police served several functions. They wanted to make sure that I was OK, that I was wearing a face mask, and to update their list as to where all the foreigners were living in Guiyang.  I confirmed my English and Cinese names, my phone number, my WeChat (similar to WhatsApp) address, my emergency contact, etc. I really didn’t know how to explain to the police that I didn’t have a good face mask. I was using a scarf at the time. As you would expect, all the stores were sold out of facemasks. I finally was able to ask them if they could get me a face mask. They said that they didn’t have any extra face masks. I decided to just contnue searching.  Of course that was rediculous. The last thing anybody wanted was a foreigner going from store to store, without a mask on, looking for a facemask. After I hung up, an  hour later a policeman showed up at my door and gave me facemask. That was a good solution.  He was the guy in charge of the neighborhood police, and I was able to meet him and get his WeChat address.  We took pictures of each other. We then saluted rather than shake hands at the end of the meeting.
As I write this on April 12, Guiyang seems pretty normal.  I am fairly well known in my neighborhood and I feel safe.  I’ve lived here for three years and people recognize me.  I think that’s because I’m very fat and very white, and have a big nose (Chinese often comment on how fat I am and what a big nose I have).  So I feel like it’s no problem for me.  I have seen some information about blacks who have been targeted as being Covid-19 carriers.  There has been some racist views online that has made it uncomfortable. In some cities blacks in particular, especially in Guangzhou there has been some trouble . . .  Nigerian blacks being evicted.  Hopefully this will diminish as the memory of the virus diminishes.  If it grows then I can see how whites could also be targeted.  It was particularly difficult when some of the Chinese were accusing the U.S.  of a bio-attack.  In response our leadership (the USA President)  labeled the virus the “W***n” virus, or the “Ch***se” virus. (Incidentally, sometimes the “bots” are set up to block inflamatory language on websites coming into China. I use *** because I don’t want this page to be blocked.)
There seem to be two impediments to a rapid return to prosperity right now.  Restaurants are open, but business is not so good. As my friend, the restaurant owner, pointed out, people lost a lot of money during the six to eight week shutdown. They just don’t have a lot of extra money for discretionary spending. The second block is a bit more difficult. the Chinese still have a very significant dependency on international trade for income.  As the borders around the world are closed and airlines shut down, China is losing a lot of income. Accordingly, a full recovery in China depends on an expansion in world trade, and recovery in its major trading partners. The world trade leader  is the USA, and the USA is still failing after three and a half months. World trade was falling prior to the Covid-19 due to the trade war. There is no coherent plan of attack on the virus.  This bodes ill for the future of the world economy, and the USA economy in particular.

On the trade front, if nobody knows if an American is sick with a virus, no American will be permitted to cross the border of a foreign country. This is a very, very uncomfortable situation for people trying to predict the future economic activity in America or China. Will the USA continue to be a trading nation? Three months ago the USA was the world’s largest economy and the world’s most active trading nation. Three months or three years from now, who knows when this situation will be resolved?

China is steadfast in fighting the virus. About a week ago I went  to my old residence, a factory. The factory has rooms for workers, and I rented two of them. When I moved into my new place, I left one room and saved the other for storage.  I have a friend with a lot of books that I stored for him and he pays the rent. My friend saved all his books for over 20 years and thinks he is going to return to China and use them, or maybe donate them to a worthy cause. (Ray’s Library ) I also have some of my stuff stored in there as well. I hope to use that room if I am told to leave China, currently scheduled for two months from now.  A week ago, when I went to check out the books and my stuff in storage, I was stopped at the Bazhai Road checkpoint. That checkpoiont is about 1/4 mile from my current residence. The security in China is still very diligent, protecting every neighborhood from any possible source of virus. They wanted to know who I was and what was my business there.  I told them that I was there to check my stuff that I had in storage.They called for backup and asked me to sit down. I refused.

This was my old neighborhood and people knew me. I had bought veggies and eggs at the old outdoor market I used to shop at. I had the eggs in my back pack.  I was afraid that if I sat down, then I would forget about the eggs and eventually lean back, crushing the eggs in my backpack. I was asked to wait and several times I was asked to sit down. I refused. I usually do what I am asked to do by the authorities, but this time I was a bit annoyed and was really worried about crushing the eggs. While I was waiiting for the beaurocracy to do it’s thing, My old student came by and just hung around. This was  three years ago that I lived in that the factory apartment and the landlord’s daughter had studied English with me. I didn’t recognize her with her mask, and she had grown from 14 to 16. She hung around and confirmed that I did indeed have an apartment in her neiighborhood. While we were waiting, my old landlord (her father) showed up and only stayed for a little while.  A little while later, the guy that used to sell me my drinking water came by and said “Hi”.

When the little boss from  the police showed up (the backup) he was talking on the phone for some time and then asked me if I wore glasses. I said yes, sometimes I do for reading, and I showed him  the glasses. He pulled up a cell phone photo of me wearing glasses, with the big boss of the police department.  The big boss remembered that he had a picture of me. They confirmed that I hadn’t gone anywhere outside of the neighborhood in the last 14 days and that I lived in the neighborhood. From then on, it was no problem.  My former student accompanied me throughout the neighborhood. I bought some beer from a tiny little grocery story next to my old apartment and of course the student carried the beer. I had brought the wrong key to the apartment and we had to talk to “Grandma” who I had left an extra key with. I got into the apartment and confirmed that everything was ok, and selected an old full lenght mirror that had been in storage. I was done.

Before leaving I surveyed Ray’s old library and asked my old student if she needed any English books. She said she already had too many English books, thanks but no thanks.  Then I noticed the algebra/trig book. It was an English/American math book. I asked her about her age and she was sixteen, just the right age for algebra and trig.

Back in the USA I had a very small robotics business and one of my friends was a Chinese native PhD, in the Oakland Univesity Engineering Department. He had told me that he was the “go to” guy when Chinese engineering students needed help with math. The Chinese that come to the USA are typically very good in math. The only problem is that they learned math in Chinese, rather than English. These kids have a terrible time transitioning between Chinese and English math. My PhD friend helps them with the transition.

Anyway, I asked my old student how her math was, and she said just so so. I told her that she needs another Algebra/Trig book at her age and I pointed out that an English math book might help her understand the math better also. Her English was pretty good. I told her that Ray wanted her to have the math/trig book, but if he asks for it back, then she must give it to him.  She was so happy. I hope it helps her. She might be another imported Chinese engineer. Heaven knows our STEM program in the USA could use a boost!

That was a small gesture of offering a math book to a young girl in a poor part of China.  A math book helps women in general, letting her know that she is important. It also helps the USA attract students, and even future scientists who speak English, I hope.  Perhaps this young Chinese girl can take the bit in her teeth and help turn around the USA brain drain. Articles about the H-1b American brain drain shows us just how fast national fortunes can turn around. Now, rather that attracting talent from around the world, the Trump administration seems to be doing its best to get rid of immigrants, no matter how much they might contribute to our economy in the West: