<HTML><HEAD>
<META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
<META content="MSHTML 6.00.2900.2912" name=GENERATOR></HEAD>
<BODY style="MARGIN: 4px 4px 1px; FONT: 10pt Tahoma">
<DIV>Interestingly, my colleague Wei-shuien Ng and I talked to the author after he heard our paper on cars in china (see <A href="http://www.embarq.wri.org">www.embarq.wri.org</A> and scroll down to the first piece on China).. - that 120 million cars in china just don't fit, period. He capture a lot of what I have been saying, then apologized at the last minute that it had all been cut (he phoned me in Turkey two weeks ago to get some sound bites). In the end the last few paragraphs sort of capture that kind of wall the Chinese are heading for.</DIV>
<DIV>In short, what good is the thrill of owning a car when all you can do is crash into the driver in front of you?</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Lee</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>>>> johnson.craig@gmail.com 07/04/06 8:41 PM >>><BR>here is a very interesting though lengthy article about car ownership<BR>in China that appeared in the NY times on Sunday.<BR><U><A href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/02/magazine/02china.html">http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/02/magazine/02china.html</A></U> <BR><BR>particularly vexing to me while reading the article is the importance<BR>of "status" that has surrounded and aided the automobile boom in<BR>china.<BR><BR>It seems to me that practicality and convenience are not necessarily<BR>the main draw of owning a car, instead it is the status of owning and<BR>driving a car.<BR><BR><BR>Craig Johnson<BR><BR>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------<BR><BR>July 2, 2006<BR>Capitalist Roaders<BR>By TED CONOVER<BR>Zhu Jihong cannot wait to get started on his holiday road trip. At 6<BR>a.m. on Saturday, the first day of the October National Day week (one<BR>of three annual Golden Weeks in China, intended to promote internal<BR>tourism and ensure that workers take some time off), Zhu has parked<BR>his brand-new Hyundai Tucson S.U.V., with its limited-edition package<BR>of extras like walnut trim and chrome step-bar, in front of my hotel<BR>in downtown Beijing. He is half an hour early, but he is in a hurry.<BR>He cannot believe I'm not ready.<BR><BR>Li Lu, a friend who is coming along as my interpreter, has found me in<BR>the hotel restaurant. She was rousted even earlier than I, at her<BR>apartment a couple of miles away, and calculates that Zhu, to make it<BR>into Beijing from his home on the city's outskirts, must have gotten<BR>up at 4. She adds that she's a bit concerned: she helped me book a<BR>spot on this car trip and had assumed that the driver whose car we<BR>shared would be a person of, well, culture. But Zhu, she says, is "not<BR>educated."<BR><BR>"What do you mean?" I ask as we leave the hotel's revolving glass<BR>doors and come upon Zhu.<BR><BR>Zhu is nicely dressed, in the dark slacks, leather loafers and knit<BR>shirt of many Chinese businessmen. Cigarette in one hand, hair<BR>recently cut and wavy on top, Zhu, in his 40's, has a somewhat<BR>dashing, youthful air. Before Li Lu and I are out the revolving door,<BR>he is at the back of the Hyundai, making room for my knapsack and<BR>pointing me in the direction of the leather passenger seat. He stops<BR>to shake my hand only after I pause and offer mine. Li Lu is our<BR>intermediary and tries to effect the introduction I'm after, but Zhu<BR>is not one for formalities; he gives a tiny nod, then circles the car,<BR>hawks noisily and spits by his door, climbs in and turns the key. Li<BR>Lu, from the back seat, gives me a look that says: See? What did I<BR>tell you?<BR><BR>But as the car fills with smoke from his cigarette and the CB radio<BR>battles for supremacy with operatic Red Army tunes on the CD player, I<BR>don't much mind Zhu's manners (which, Li Lu explains, reflect the<BR>factory owner's peasant background) because we're off on an adventure<BR>and Zhu's excitement is infectious. Our trip is a seven-day excursion<BR>from Beijing to Hubei Province in Central China, including stops at<BR>the Three Gorges Dam and a mountainous forest preserve called<BR>Shennongjia, fabled home to a race of giant hairy ape-men. And though<BR>the trendy enterprise we are part of is known as a "self-driving<BR>tour," we are not going alone: a dozen carfuls of other people have<BR>signed on with the tour, organized by the Beijing Target Auto Club,<BR>one of the for-profit driving clubs that are sprouting all over China.<BR><BR>Zhu is ready for a long day at the wheel our destination, Nanyang,<BR>is more than 500 miles away but it's going to be even longer than he<BR>thinks. Our rendezvous with the other cars at the Zhuozhou rest stop,<BR>normally an hour away, will be delayed four hours, as thick fog closes<BR>the expressway. Heavy rain will fall, and our early start will count<BR>for little by midday as the highways swell with holiday traffic. There<BR>will be wrecks, like the fatal one-car rollover we'll pass on a bridge<BR>around midnight, an upside-down Beijing-plated Mitsubishi. The hotel's<BR>dinner will be waiting for us at 1 a.m., and we'll all be happy to see<BR>our rooms. But right now Zhu is pouring himself tea from a thermos and<BR>telling Li Lu how rich he is and how lucky we are to be in his car.<BR><BR>"He says he is an excellent driver and we will go very fast," she<BR>reports wearily.<BR><BR><BR><BR><BR>The figures behind China's car boom are stunning. Total miles of<BR>highway in the country: at least 23,000, more than double what existed<BR>in 2001, and second now only to the United States. Number of passenger<BR>cars on the road: about 6 million in 2000 and about 20 million today.<BR>Car sales are up 54 percent in the first three months of 2006,<BR>compared with the same period a year ago; every day, 1,000 new cars<BR>(and 500 used ones) are sold in Beijing. The astronomic growth of<BR>China's car-manufacturing industry will soon hit home for Americans<BR>and Europeans as dirt-cheap Chinese automobiles start showing up for<BR>sale here over the next two or three years. (Think basic passenger car<BR>for $10,000, luxury S.U.V. for $19,000.)<BR><BR>But of course the story is not only about construction and production;<BR>car culture is taking root in China, and in many ways it looks like<BR>ours. City drivers, stuck in ever-growing jams, listen to traffic<BR>radio. They buy auto magazines with titles like The King of Cars,<BR>AutoStyle, China Auto Pictorial, Friends of Cars, Whaam ("The Car <BR>The Street The Travel The Racing"). Two dozen titles now compete<BR>for space in kiosks. The McDonald's Corporation said last month that<BR>it expects half of its new outlets in China to be drive-throughs.<BR>Whole zones of major cities, like the Asian Games Village area in<BR>Beijing, have been given over to car lots and showrooms.<BR><BR>In other ways, though, the Chinese are still figuring cars out and<BR>doing things their way. Take the phrase used to describe our<BR>expedition: "self-driving trip." It is called self-driving to contrast<BR>it with the more customary idea of driving in China: that someone else<BR>drives you. Until recently, everyone important enough to own a car was<BR>also important enough to have his or her own driver. Traditions grew<BR>up around this, like the chauffeur joining his boss at the table for<BR>meals while on duty something still commonly seen.<BR><BR>But those practices are growing fusty. What are new and explosively<BR>popular are car clubs some organized around the idea of travel, like<BR>the Beijing Target Auto Club, and others organized around the idea of.<BR>. .well, simply fun. The Beijing VW Polo Club, for example, has an<BR>active Web site and hundreds of youthful members. (The Polo is a VW<BR>model popular in Europe and Latin America and now manufactured in<BR>China as well.) Club members meet regularly to learn about<BR>maintenance, deliver toys to orphans and take weekend pleasure drives<BR>reminiscent of America in the 30's and 40's. To celebrate the 2008<BR>Beijing Olympics, four-dozen members recently turned up in a giant<BR>parking lot to form the Olympic logo with their compact, candy-colored<BR>cars, each circle a different hue. Single members have found mates in<BR>the club, and at least one of their weddings featured an all-Polo<BR>procession through the streets of Beijing.<BR><BR>In the West, cars can still excite, but the family car soon becomes<BR>part of the furniture. In China, however, it's nothing of the sort. Li<BR>Anding, author of two books on the car in China and the country's<BR>leading automotive journalist, told me why when he invited me to join<BR>some of his industry pals for dinner in Beijing. "The desire for cars<BR>here is as strong as in America, but here the desire was repressed for<BR>half a century," he began. All private cars were confiscated shortly<BR>after the Communists came into power in 1949, supposedly because they<BR>were symbols of the capitalist lifestyle. Having a car became the<BR>exclusive privilege of party officials.<BR><BR>Across the table, Li Anding's colleague Li Tiezheng explained that<BR>"people my age loved Russian movies. They gave us the idea we should<BR>all own a car, and we all wondered why we couldn't." Li Tiezheng<BR>bought his first car a Polish-made Fiat when private ownership was<BR>finally permitted in the mid-1990's. But the stigma against ownership<BR>was still huge. "The pressure was so great, I couldn't tell anyone. I<BR>lied that I had borrowed it."<BR><BR>That didn't last long. By 2000, enough regulations had been removed,<BR>and enough people were making money, that car ownership became a<BR>reality for many Chinese for the first time. Li Anding, born in 1949,<BR>the year the Communists came to power, said he was still astonished at<BR>the change: "When I started writing about cars, I never expected to<BR>see private cars in China in my generation, much less some of the<BR>world's fanciest cars, being driven every day."<BR><BR>As the men around the table listened to Li's history and added to it,<BR>there was a palpable sense of pride. This wasn't simply progress on<BR>the level of a convenience analogous, say, to your neighborhood<BR>moving from dial-up to high-speed Internet. To them it was China<BR>finally entering the world stage and participating fully in human<BR>progress. It had the additional meaning of something long denied that<BR>could finally be acquired, like a wrong being rectified. Over and over<BR>again, the group described car ownership with a term I would never<BR>have thought to use:<BR><BR>"Once China opened up and Chinese people could see the other side of<BR>the world and know how people lived there, you could no longer limit<BR>the right to buy cars."<BR><BR>"This right is something that has been ours all along."<BR><BR>"Driving is our right."<BR><BR><BR><BR><BR>When Li Lu noticed the sign for the Zhuozhou Service Area of the<BR>Jingshi Expressway, Zhu Jihong was on one of his favorite subjects:<BR>destinations. He had done self-driving to Mongolia and Manchuria, he<BR>said, to Xinjiang and to Xi'an and the Silk Road. He made a round trip<BR>to Tibet fantastic! and was considering one to Hong Kong. The main<BR>problem with our current itinerary, in his opinion, was that it was<BR>too short: "A week isn't long enough to really feel like you've been<BR>away." His wife was less and less interested in these odysseys,<BR>preferring, lately, to stay home and mind the hotel and restaurant he<BR>had bought near his hometown outside Beijing. And his son, oddly<BR>enough, wasn't interested in driving at all.<BR><BR>Li Lu interrupted Zhu and made sure he noticed this was where we<BR>were to pull off and finally meet the group. Though it was early<BR>afternoon now and Zhu had been driving for hours, he barely looked<BR>tired. I thought to peek at the odometer of his two-month-old Hyundai<BR>as he slowed; it showed 7,700 kilometers, or nearly 4,800 miles. That<BR>was an annual rate of nearly 30,000 miles, and most of them would be<BR>pleasure driving.<BR><BR>Though the parking lot was the first time most members of the trip had<BR>seen one another, they had been talking for hours: each driver, before<BR>today, had stopped by the Beijing Target Auto Club office to pick up a<BR>CB radio and rooftop antenna. The rendezvous was on one side of the<BR>lot, and in the middle of the group was a vehicle with the biggest<BR>antenna of all, a thickly bumpered, sticker-plastered, red-flagged<BR>Chinese-made four-by-four belonging to the president of the Target<BR>club, Zhao Xiangjie.<BR><BR>Zhao and his truck were decked out for safari: he was wearing a khaki<BR>utility vest with many zippers, busily meeting members of the group as<BR>they arrived. Across the lot, a self-driving group from Guangzhou was<BR>similarly mustered, easy to spot by the big stickers with numbers on<BR>everyone's side doors and rear windows. And this, it turned out, was<BR>Zhao's next duty, to adorn each vehicle with its numbers. My driver,<BR>Zhu, accepted his with great ceremony, cleaning his doors first to<BR>ensure good adhesion, making sure the number decals were straight and<BR>even. If one theme here was safari, another was road rally, the decals<BR>suggesting that everyone was part of a speedy team.<BR><BR>Though most are organized around the idea of trips, Chinese car clubs<BR>come in many flavors. Some are run by dealers (like a Honda dealership<BR>in Guangzhou), and others (like the VW Polo Club in Beijing) are<BR>nonprofit and organized around a particular model. At least one is the<BR>offshoot of an outdoor-recreational-gear manufacturer. Many are just<BR>for four-wheel-drive vehicles and aim to go to the back of beyond.<BR>Travel agencies sponsor some; others are run for and by motorcyclists.<BR><BR>One of Zhao Xiangjie's advantages, at the Beijing Target Auto Club, is<BR>good connections in officialdom. He has worked as a composer,<BR>filmmaker and official celebration organizer; he knows important<BR>people and has succeeded in getting them to steer big commissions his<BR>way. His auto-club offices are in the government-run Olympics Center.<BR>In a speech he gave to the 2005 Auto Clubs and Fans C.E.O. Forum, I<BR>heard him assert that more government involvement was needed if<BR>automobile-related industries like the clubs were to develop in an<BR>optimal fashion. I sensed that he wouldn't mind being China's first<BR>under secretary of car clubs.<BR><BR>But an alternate strategy may have more momentum. Back in Beijing, a<BR>young man named Chen Ming helps run what appears to be the largest<BR>self-driving organization in China: the auto-club arm of Beijing<BR>traffic radio FM 103.9. His employees, around 100 of them, occupy a<BR>floor and a half of a midsize office building. Chen Ming has high<BR>volume and a rapidly growing business. Linking an auto club to traffic<BR>radio seems inspired. Members pay $27 a year and receive benefits that<BR>include group insurance rates, gasoline rebates, "auto rescue" within<BR>Beijing's Fifth Ring Road, free rental cars if a repair takes more<BR>than three days, et cetera. Chen got his start in the business as<BR>Zhao's protégé he was assistant manager of the Beijing Target Auto<BR>Club and when I spoke with him in Beijing, he shared his belief that<BR>Zhao's approach, his eagerness to stay involved with the government,<BR>is outdated.<BR><BR>Maybe half of the vehicles in our group were S.U.V.'s and the rest<BR>were passenger cars, almost all with foreign labels Toyota,<BR>Volkswagen, Mitsubishi, Citroën not the cheaper Chinese models that<BR>made up the majority of cars on the road, the Fotons, Geelys, Cherys,<BR>JAC's. (More than 40 local brands are currently manufactured in<BR>China.) One of the foreign cars caught my eye: a flashy white Volvo<BR>S80, driven by a man who was also a distinctive dresser. With his<BR>white leather loafers, tight jeans, white belt with a big silver<BR>buckle and white shirt ("Verdace," read the logo), Fan Li, a<BR>television producer, cut an intriguing figure. He was accompanied on<BR>this trip by his pretty 24-year-old daughter, Fan Longyin, who was<BR>recently back from film school in France. Longyin was quickly becoming<BR>friends with Jia Lin, a single female reporter for The Beijing Youth<BR>Daily, who was in her 30's. Jia wore a tan leather jacket with a<BR>winged glossy-lip logo on the back that said "Flying Kiss." Like me,<BR>Jia came without a car, but it looked as if she would start riding<BR>with the Fans.<BR><BR>And then there was the attractive young family in the white Volkswagen<BR>Passat, the Chens: Xiaohong (who uses the name Peter with English<BR>speakers), the personable information-technology executive; his wife,<BR>Yin Aiqin, an electric power consultant; and their 4-year-old<BR>daughter, Yen Yi Yi, whom, I would soon learn, was already taking<BR>voice lessons at home from a member of the Beijing Opera.<BR><BR>More nerdy but genial were the bespectacled Wangs, in their Citroën<BR>Xsara: she ran part of the back office of Air China; he worked for an<BR>international freight firm. They, too, had an unattached passenger who<BR>shared the driving and expenses. He was the urbane Zhou Yan, a partner<BR>in China's third-largest law firm.<BR><BR>And then there were the businessmen. Organized by a cement-plant<BR>owner, Li Xingjie, these 10 or 11 guys from the same Beijing suburb,<BR>Fangshan, rode in S.U.V.'s and tended to stick to themselves. Some of<BR>them owned coal-processing plants, which meant they were rich.<BR><BR>Soon all 11 cars were bedecked with numbers and the club logo. Pit<BR>stops and snack purchases were completed; the service area looked a<BR>bit like one on an American toll road, though there was no<BR>landscaping, the simple restaurant was not a fast-food franchise and<BR>the convenience store was not as elaborately stocked as in the States.<BR>The gas station state-run Sinopec filled Zhu's Hyundai for about<BR>$1.85 a gallon, and I paid in cash, gas and tolls being my<BR>contribution to expenses. (Sinopec stations only recently began<BR>accepting credit cards.) Everyone piled back in their cars, and we hit<BR>the road. We would reconvene for dinner.<BR><BR><BR><BR><BR>China's first modern expressway, the Guangzhou-Shenzhen Superhighway,<BR>was built in the early 1990's by the Hong Kong tycoon Gordon Y.S. Wu.<BR>Wu studied civil engineering at Princeton in the mid-50's, when<BR>construction was beginning on the U.S. Interstate Highway System. At<BR>the same time, the New Jersey Turnpike was being widened from four<BR>lanes to many lanes, and Wu has said it inspired him. (His powerful<BR>firm, Hopewell Holdings, is named after a town near Princeton.) Though<BR>Wu ran short of money and the ambitious project had to be rescued by<BR>the Chinese government, the toll-road model of highway development<BR>caught on.<BR><BR>Wu's Guangzhou-Shenzhen Superhighway was the beginning of an<BR>infrastructure binge that seems to be only picking up steam: the<BR>government recently announced a target of 53,000 freeway miles by<BR>2035. (The U.S. Interstate Highway System, 50 years old last week,<BR>presently comprises about 46,000 miles of roads.) Some new roads,<BR>especially in the less-developed western parts of the nation, are<BR>nearly empty: China is encouraging road construction ahead of<BR>industrial development and population settlement, assuming those will<BR>follow.<BR><BR>The goal, of course, is not simply to replicate the boom of coastal<BR>areas, where the majority of the country's population now lives.<BR>China's larger aim is to consolidate the nation. Its version of<BR>Manifest Destiny the "great development of the West" or "Go West"<BR>policy begun in January 2000 envisions far-western territories, like<BR>Tibet and the fuel-rich province Xinjiang (the name translates as "New<BR>Frontier"), fully integrated, ethnically and economically, with the<BR>rest of the country. It seems quite likely that, similar to the case<BR>with American history, local indigenous cultures stand to lose along<BR>the way. What the United States gained (and lost) with the Pony<BR>Express, covered wagons and steam trains, China may achieve with roads<BR>and automobiles.<BR><BR>If highways in China's west are so far awaiting traffic, easterners<BR>have the opposite concern. As we headed south from Shijiazhuang toward<BR>Zhengzhou, the roads packed with vacationers and truck traffic, Zhu<BR>jostled for position with all the other people who were late getting<BR>where they were going. His style of driving helped me understand<BR>better why China, with 2.6 percent of the world's vehicles, had 21<BR>percent of its road fatalities (in 2002, the most recent year for<BR>which figures are available).<BR><BR>Of course, there must be many reasons. The large number of new drivers<BR>is one; few of today's Chinese drivers grew up driving, and<BR>road-safety awareness seems low. Many roads are probably dangerous <BR>though not, I would venture to say, the beautiful new expressway we<BR>were on. It was like an American Interstate, only sleeker: the<BR>guardrails were angular and attractive, not fat and ugly, and in the<BR>divider strip there was typically a well-pruned hedge, high enough to<BR>protect drivers from the glare of beams from opposing traffic at<BR>night. Beyond the guardrails, grassy embankments sloped down to buffer<BR>areas carefully planted with a single species of tree, often poplar.<BR>The road surface was perfectly smooth, transitions even, signage<BR>sparse but clear. Periodically we saw orange-suited workers<BR>hand-pruning the center hedge or sweeping the wide shoulder with old<BR>handmade brooms. There was never a maintenance truck nearby; wherever<BR>they came from, they apparently walked.<BR><BR>It was the sweepers I worried about. Officially, there were two lanes<BR>of travel in each direction. But each side also had a shoulder, and on<BR>this expressway, at least, the shoulder was exactly as wide as the<BR>travel lanes. Thus Zhu and others (despite signs asserting that it was<BR>forbidden) used the shoulder as the passing lane. Occasionally, of<BR>course, a sweeper would loom, or a disabled vehicle, and Zhu would<BR>slam on the brakes and veer into the truck lane. Once past the<BR>obstacle, he would floor it and swerve back out, brake once again,<BR>swerve, honk it was almost like being in a video game, except that<BR>video games end or you can walk away. We, on the other hand, had a<BR>long way to go.<BR><BR>"Li Lu, does Mr. Zhu know that more Chinese die on the road every day<BR>than died here during the entire SARS epidemic?" I asked her. She<BR>translated. Zhu looked at me and laughed. "I think he didn't<BR>understand," she said. We consulted, and soon Li Lu announced from the<BR>back seat that we both really wished he would slow down a bit. Zhu<BR>looked at me sidelong and then, if anything, speeded up.<BR><BR>he next morning Zhu was tired, finally, and asked if I wanted to<BR>drive. I hesitated for a moment. I had researched the issue and was<BR>fairly certain that foreign tourists were forbidden to drive between<BR>cities in China. Most Chinese, however, seem never to have considered<BR>the possibility of foreigners behind the wheel, and from the<BR>beginning, Zhao asked whether I would be willing to help with the<BR>driving. Far be it from me to shirk this responsibility. So I said<BR>sure and climbed into the driver's seat.<BR><BR>This day's driving was different from the previous day's. As we moved<BR>farther from the coast and its expressways, we spent more time on<BR>national highways, which generally are two-lane and pass through a lot<BR>of towns. Everyone in the club stuck pretty close together, and there<BR>was a lot of chatting over the radio. Our leader, Zhao, began by<BR>apologizing for yesterday's overlong drive. Even if there hadn't been<BR>a highway closure due to fog, slowness due to rain and holiday<BR>congestion, it was too long a drive for the first day, and he was<BR>sorry. But he was also upbeat and sounded excited about getting to<BR>Three Gorges Dam that afternoon. He moderated the CB chat that<BR>followed, prompting each car's occupants to take turns introducing<BR>themselves. Some told a joke, some sang a song. Fan, in the white<BR>Volvo, put on an Elvis Presley CD and held his mike to the speaker,<BR>playing "Love Me Tender" in honor of me, Elvis's countryman. As we<BR>passed through one village an hour past breakfast, a clamor rose for a<BR>pit stop.<BR><BR>The men had little trouble finding places to relieve themselves near<BR>the edge of town, but women were in more of a bind. China's car<BR>culture not to mention consumer culture has not yet reached the<BR>countryside, and there was no restaurant nearby, no fast-food joint,<BR>no gas station/convenience store. Chen Yin Aiqin, her daughter at her<BR>side, knocked tentatively on the door of a farmhouse and was soon<BR>welcomed inside and ushered to the latrine out back. Afterward, before<BR>their car pulled away, she dashed back to the farmer's door with a<BR>small box of chocolate from Beijing.<BR><BR>The lack of infrastructure for touring drivers is one reason that<BR>these organized self-driving tours are so popular. Besides having<BR>planned in advance (through arrangements with local travel agents)<BR>where we would stop to eat and sleep every day, Zhao had an expert<BR>mechanic in his four-by-four: repair garages were few and far between,<BR>and one of the Beijingers' main fears was breaking down far from home,<BR>with nobody trustworthy nearby to help.<BR><BR>The national roads, while more interesting to drive than the<BR>expressways, were also more nerve-racking. There were considerable<BR>numbers of people on bicycles, on foot and on small tractors; there<BR>were crossroads; and least expected by me, there were many places<BR>where I had to swerve toward the middle of the road because of farmers<BR>having appropriated a strip of pavement along the edge for drying<BR>their grain, usually corn. Sometimes the grain was laid out on blue<BR>tarps; other times the drying zone was outlined by rocks or boards;<BR>more than once, traffic slowed because of it. I had heard of Chinese<BR>farmers sometimes laying their wheat across the road so that passing<BR>vehicles would thresh it for them. But there was something aggressive<BR>about this appropriation of the highway.<BR><BR>The suggestion of rural hostility toward traffic and the number of<BR>people using the road for walking put me in mind of the famous "BMW<BR>Case," which received a lot of media attention two years before. A<BR>rich woman in a BMW, probably traveling on a road like this, was<BR>bumped by a farmer transporting his onion cart to market. Enraged, she<BR>struck the farmer and then revved her car and drove into the crowd.<BR>The peasant's wife was killed, but despite widespread outrage, China's<BR>Lizzie Grubman received only a suspended sentence.<BR><BR>BMW's seemed to be a sort of class-divide lightning rod. Recently, the<BR>number of kidnappings for ransom has shot up in China the government<BR>reported 3,863 abductions in 2004, higher than the 3,000 a year<BR>reported on average in Colombia, the previous world leader. "In one<BR>case," according to The China Daily, "police searching the apartment<BR>of kidnappers in Guangdong Province found a list of all BMW owners in<BR>the city that appeared to have come from state vehicle registration<BR>rolls."<BR><BR>I was hoping to needle Zhu a bit, and so I asked him, if he was so<BR>rich, why didn't he have a BMW?<BR><BR>"Bad value," he said, explaining that while many foreign carmakers had<BR>plants in China and produced high-quality cars at a reasonable price,<BR>BMW's were all imported, with huge taxes added on. And indeed, this is<BR>true: tariffs and taxes add about 50 percent to the price of imported<BR>cars, making them high-status items. If you want to be really<BR>ostentatious, you do what rich guys like coal-mine operators from<BR>Shaanxi Province increasingly do and come into the city to buy a<BR>Hummer those cost upward of $200,000. But Zhu thought that was<BR>ridiculous. The Volkswagen Passat he kept at home for his wife to<BR>drive was made in China, he said, as were growing numbers of other<BR>excellent foreign-designed cars, all of them produced under joint<BR>ventures with Chinese companies (some state-owned or -controlled), an<BR>arrangement the government hoped would encourage the growth of a<BR>domestic car industry. "Like my Hyundai," Zhu said proudly, putting<BR>his cigarette in his mouth so he could pat the dashboard. "Made in<BR>Beijing."<BR><BR><BR><BR><BR>Not long after lunch, we started seeing signs for the Three Gorges Dam<BR>and accessed the site through tunnels along an expensively built<BR>mountainside road. Security was tight, with numerous guard posts,<BR>cameras and warning signs, and I was happy to swap seats with Zhu as<BR>we pulled into a roadside waiting area just before an official came<BR>by to collect every driver's license. A guide boarded our leader's car<BR>and, over the radio, began a running commentary. I asked Zhu, between<BR>her remarks, what he thought of my driving.<BR><BR>"He says you are a good driver, but he has some advice," Li Lu<BR>reported. "He says to improve, you must be more brave!"<BR><BR>Three Gorges Dam, one of the largest construction projects in history,<BR>seemed a fitting first attraction for our trip, evoking superlatives<BR>in this land of superlatives. It has cost an estimated $75 billion so<BR>far (including corruption and relocation costs); it will require more<BR>than a million people to be relocated; it would generate more<BR>hydroelectric power than any dam ever had; and it spans the Yangtze,<BR>the third-longest river in the world. The reservoir began filling up<BR>in 2003 and has six years left to go; it presents a huge military<BR>target.<BR><BR>Like so much in China, the scale is almost too large to fathom. The<BR>30-odd people in our group parked and then boarded buses that took us<BR>up to a visitor center above the dam; we peeked at a model dam indoors<BR>and then, like scores of others, scrambled around the viewpoint,<BR>taking lots of pictures. Fan turned out to have a serious interest in<BR>photography: his daughter posed, posed and posed again as her father<BR>assumed an exaggerated wide stance with his heavy Nikon digital<BR>camera. Others focused on the astonishing dam, proudly making sure I<BR>got a good look, witnesses to a great change who were, themselves,<BR>harbingers of a change.<BR><BR><BR><BR><BR>Zhu was back at the wheel the next day as we drove from the Three<BR>Gorges area to Hongping, a town deep in Hubei Province and the<BR>jumping-off point for visits to Shennongjia, the forest reserve where<BR>everyone hoped to see a yeti.<BR><BR>His Hyundai had a six-CD changer in the dash, and among the titles in<BR>it were "The Relax Music of Automobiles," which turned out to be<BR>instrumental versions of the love songs of Deng Lijun, the Taiwanese<BR>pop singer of the 1970's. What Zhu really loved, however, was the<BR>old-time music on "The Red Sun: A Collection of Military Songs, Volume<BR>II." He played the CD again and again. The soaring, triumphalist music<BR>evoked bygone days, and I expressed surprise that a modern business<BR>guy like him loved the old socialist music so much. Zhu responded that<BR>it was the music he grew up with. He had worked on a farm, he<BR>confirmed. His grandfather became rich, but the Communists took it all<BR>away.<BR><BR>"Don't you dislike Mao for that?" I asked. He looked at me full on<BR>when Li Lu translated the question and then, at 60 miles per hour,<BR>turned sideways in his seat to show me the pin on his left lapel. It<BR>was a dime-size brass relief bust of the Great Helmsman himself.<BR>Steering with his knees, he put his chin to his chest, unpinned it and<BR>handed it to me as a gift.<BR><BR>"Many people still admire Mao very much," Li Lu explained. "They know<BR>he made mistakes, but they also think he did much good. He got rid of<BR>the Kuomintang. He brought China together. He is still a very big<BR>hero, like a god to some."<BR><BR>Fan, the television producer, I had noticed, was also in the<BR>worshipful camp. He had the leader's portrait, in Lucite, affixed to<BR>the top of the dashboard of his Volvo so that he could not see<BR>anything through the windshield without Mao appearing in his<BR>peripheral vision. After I asked about that and complimented him on<BR>the DVD screens built into the back of the front seats (for rear-seat<BR>passengers), Fan invited me into the Volvo for the better part of a<BR>morning's drive. Longyin, his daughter, took a seat in the back, along<BR>with Jia Lin, the reporter, and offered some background on her father.<BR>"My parents both suffered a lot in the Cultural Revolution," she<BR>began. Fan interrupted impatiently.<BR><BR>"Oh!" Longyin said. "My father is saying: 'There is no such thing as a<BR>perfect person. Everybody makes mistakes. Mao saved many people, but<BR>to do it he had to sacrifice his son, his wife, his whole family <BR>everything. Now he's gone, but I want to go back to that time, when<BR>people shared everything."'<BR><BR>But do you really want to share everything? I asked Fan. Wouldn't<BR>sharing equally mean that a privileged few wouldn't be able to own new<BR>Volvos?<BR><BR>"I think now is a necessary period," Fan said, as his daughter<BR>translated. "We have to advance."<BR><BR>"Capitalism is something we've been waiting to try for a long time,"<BR>Longyin said, quickly adding: "Personally, I hate the whole Mao thing.<BR>I think it's weird. I don't miss the sound of those old days at all."<BR>She did miss France, however, and her French boyfriend. She said she<BR>hoped to play a part in the growth of the Chinese film industry,<BR>perhaps by becoming an actors' agent. And some time in the next two or<BR>three months, she hoped to get a driver's license.<BR><BR>was pleased to get to Hongping. The mountain hamlet was shrouded in<BR>mist, and the air was cool. Steep hillsides covered with deciduous<BR>trees rose on either side, and a creek ran through town, reminiscent<BR>of Vermont. We arrived at our hotel early in the afternoon, a nice<BR>change. It was three stars, clean, basic, but without a restaurant,<BR>elevator or easy parking, and soon we were checking out. "Beijingers<BR>are very picky," Li Lu told me. They didn't like it, and so Zhao had<BR>to find another. The new place seemed only incrementally better to me,<BR>but others were satisfied by the change. At dinner, Zhao was back to<BR>apologizing profusely for his poor judgment. But the men, anyway, were<BR>more interested in getting soused, and the error was soon forgiven.<BR><BR>When everyone rolled out of the restaurant, vendors were on the<BR>sidewalk, and Fan made us and them laugh with his uncanny shrill<BR>imitation of an older woman who had been hawking a melon. Zhou and<BR>others had heard there was a "cultural promotion" a show featuring<BR>local ethnic talent on the edge of town and proposed we attend en<BR>masse. Zhu demurred, asserting that a strip club would be more fun, if<BR>only one could be found. We walked there without him, arriving early<BR>and securing a row <BR></DIV></BODY></HTML>