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Apr 12

The Olympic torch has been paraded through the streets of Buenos Aires, Argentina, on the latest leg of its troubled world tour.

Chinese residents of the city turned out to celebrate their country’s forthcoming hosting of the Beijing Olympics.

But, as in London, Paris and San Francisco, the Olympic flame also drew dozens of protesters onto the streets, calling for a “Free Tibet” and condemning human rights abuses in China.

Supporters of the Falun Gong spiritual movement, which is banned in China, carried their own “human rights torch” demanding an end to what they said was persecution.

Supporters of the Beijing Olympics were determined to make their own views heard amid the wide coverage of the protests, in some cases obscuring rival banners with their own.

Meanwhile the torch continued on its course, being carried down the River Plate canal by the Argentine rower Santiago Fernandez.

And many observers were determined just to enjoy the day, waving their Chinese flags in front of the Argentine capital’s iconic obelisk.

source: BBC

More:
Free Tibet, wait, where is Tibet?
we are all losers!
Dalai Lama or Dalai Liar ?
China Design: The Image and Look for the Beijing 2008 Olympic Torch Relay

written by Pinewood Design \\ tags: , , , ,

Apr 12

Free Tibet, wait, where is Tibet?

These losers have nothing better to do
with their time than complain and protest about
anything. Anything. Doesn’t matter, as long as
it’s something. Instead of going out on a Friday
night with friends to dinner or the bar to watch a
baseball game, these anti-social losers are out
protesting things they know nothing about. They
could care less how much extra this costs their
city in police/riot cop OT. They do want
anarchy… which is funny b/c if we were in a
state of anarchy, their sissy a$$es would be the
first ones to die. LOL
Posted 13 hours ago by “jeffreyd82(R) United States

 More:
In pictures: Argentine torch relay
Free Tibet, wait, where is Tibet?
we are all losers!
Dalai Lama or Dalai Liar ?
China Design: The Image and Look for the Beijing 2008 Olympic Torch Relay

written by Pinewood Design \\ tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Apr 10

read this on internet, think i should post it here:

we are all losers!

In Ancient Greece, a truce (εκεχειρία, which literally means “holding of hands”) was announced before and during each of the Olympic festivals, to allow visitors to travel safely to Olympia.

However, today’s Olympic games become more and more an opportunity to escalate conflicts in order to attract attention. Since last month, riots in Tibet has killed dozens of ordinary people and ruined the life of thousands. Then unprofessional journalism used false photos to agitate boycott. Finally, activists jumped into the relay parade, tried to grab the torch and forced the torch to extinguish.

Now all the Free Tibet supporters in Europe and North America can hail their victory, because they achieved their purpose to raise their cause to the spotlight and overshadow the Olympic festival.

No winner, we are all losers! The whole world lost a great chance to enhance communication and friendship.

The old scar between Han Chinese and Tibetan is torn out again with more blood, the dialogue between Chinese government and Dalai Lama becomes a more remote possibility, the loosening media control in China may be re-tightened, the misunderstanding between the Westerners and Chinese is deepening, the humiliation
and anger of China may fertilize offensive nationalism in a rising super power.

If no miracle appears, our children may remember the 2008 Olympics as the source of numerous long-lasting conflicts.

It is so sad to see this conflict grows more and more beyond control. It has by far exceeded the real Tibet problem.

None of the protests really cares about the benefits of Tibetan people, since these protests only lead to more hatred and more oppressive policy in Tibet. They even do not care about Dalai Lama, whose non-violence, non-independence and non-boycott appeals are submerged by frenzy and fanaticism.

However, we believe in miracle. We still have 120 days to go until the opening. If we can promote rational discussion instead of partial agitation, if we can create a friendly atmosphere for dialogues instead of making it more unlikely by hostility, if we can talk more about the real life of Tibet instead of abstract slogans, if we can simply let the Olympic torch spread all over the world and appreciate the moment of peace, we may be remembered by our children as the constructor of a peaceful world.

http://peaceintibet.com webmaster, April. 08, 2008, In New York 

written by Pinewood Design \\ tags: , , , , ,

Apr 10

He is not a liar?

Dalai Liar claimed that ‘more than 1.2 million Tibetans are dead as a result of the Chinese occupation.’

But the official 1953 census - six years before the Chinese crackdown -recorded the entire population residing in Tibet at 1,274,000.33 Other census counts put the all ethnic Tibetan population within China at about two million. If the Chinese killed 1.2 million in the early 1960s then whole cities and huge portions of the countryside, indeed almost all of Tibet, would have been depopulated, transformed into a killing field dotted with death camps and mass graves - of which we have not seen evidence. The thinly distributed Chinese military force in Tibet was not big enough to round up, hunt down, and exterminate that many people even if it had spent all its time doing nothing else.—-From Michael Parenti “Friendly Feudalism: the Tibet Myth”

Dalai Liar claimed ‘cultural genocide’

92-94% of ethnic Tibetans speak Tibetan, Instruction in primary school is pretty universally in Tibetan. Chinese is bilingual from secondary school onward. All middle schools in the TAR also teach Tibetan. In Lhasa there are about equal time given to Chinese, Tibetan, and English.”
There is also an upsurge of the performing arts, poetry and painting by Tibetans, which many visitors to Tibet today cannot fail to notice, all of which are encouraged and funded by Beijing, though of course the growing tourist market also plays an important role in encouraging Tibetans to continue practicing their traditional arts and crafts, albeit, in a commodified form. Importantly, Sautman, has observed surprisingly “few aspects of Chinese culture in Tibet, but there are many aspects of Western culture, such as jeans, disco music, etc.”
—-  Barry Sautman, Associate Professor of Social Science at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
“the processes of cultural change in religion, the arts, language, migration and various other aspects” which are rightly attributed “mainly to Westernised modernity.”
—- Tony. Colin Mackerras, Professor Emeritus of International Business and Asian Studies at Griffith University, Australia
“Rather than finding Tibetan tradition being destroyed by Chinese rule and the influx of people, goods and ideas from the modern world, …I witnessed firsthand the importance of Kawa Karpo and the ritual cosmos in the lives of the Tibetans of Deqin county: it has not been diminished. Tibetans’ enduring perception of the landscape as a ritual cosmos cannot be termed a static reality of tradition, but more a dynamic cultural process, as they are continually renegotiating and redefining their beliefs in light of new social and economic realities.”
—- Tyler Denison’s conclusions in his study, Reaffirmation of ‘Ritual Cosmos’: Tibetan Perceptions of Landscape and Socio-Economic Development in Southwest China
by the way, most Tibetans, if you ever get a chance to visit Tibet and to converse with the Tibetan locals, will tell you that they are not “forced” to learn Chinese, but rather, do so keenly, and on the expectation that being fluent in both Chinese and English will help to empower themselves by broadening their future employment opportunities.

Dalai Liar claimed: China Sinocize Tibet by increasing the ethnic ratio of Han to Tibetan


We all know chinese “one child policy”, why are all Tibetan families permitted to have up to three children, and are only fined small amounts of money if they exceed this number? Tibetan families in Tibet average 3.8 children, larger than Tibetan families in India. In fact, the population of Tibet in 1959 was only about 1.19 million. Today however, the population of Greater Tibet is 7.3 million, of which, according to the 2000 census, 6 million are ethnic Tibetans. If we consider the Tibet Autonomous Region only, then according to the census conducted in 2000, as referred to in Wikipedia, “there were 2,616,300 people in Tibet, with Tibetans totalling 2,411,100 or 92.2% of the current regional population. The census also revealed that the Tibetan’s average lifespan has increased to 68 due to the improving standard of living and access to medical services.” In 1950 the average lifespan was only 35, and “infant mortality has dropped from 43% in 1950 to 0.661% in 2000.”And, Tibet has the most harsh natural condition in the world, do u think people really want move in?
“the PRC organized only a few thousand people to go to Tibet as cadres. Most serve only 3 years and then return to China. Those who move on their own to the Tibet Autonomous Region usually return to China in a few years. They come for a while, find the cities of Tibet too expensive, and then return to China. Some of the 72,000 Chinese who maintain their in Tibet don’t really live there. Pensions are higher if your household is registered in Tibet.”

He does abhor violence. Back to 1950, The Tibetan society under Dalai Lama is a theocracy, was in slavery. they can dig out serfs eye, chop their hand, kill slave for punishment, Dalai’s entertainment is watching dog and slave fighting…..human sacrifice, drums made by human skin, Dalai’s Skull ring……. he left all those things in The Potala Palace and now lives in the lap of luxury doesnt mean he abhors violence now.http://newschecker.blogspot.com/2007/10/dalai-lama-hero-in-western-world.html

He stopped asking for complete independence decades ago, and now insists on genuine autonomy.


Dalai liar not a monk, he is a politician, politician lies. he abhors violence? he must be he abhors himself as well. He was life long separatist , he only pronounce against Tibetan independence after 1988. and I have to say, he is a very clever politician, he know how and when to change his political tactic. Nice try, unfortunately, not working.

President George W Bush has urged China to “begin a dialogue” with Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.
The US House of Representatives has overwhelmingly passed a motion condemning China’s “extreme” response to protests in Tibet.
“begin a dialogue” with the Dalai Liar?  after this olympic farce, dialogue will never happen, how old Dalai? 72 ? China now bides its time, waiting for this old Dalai Lama to die, then it will select a new Dalai Lama, one educated within and loyal to China.

More:
In pictures: Argentine torch relay
Free Tibet, wait, where is Tibet?
we are all losers!
Dalai Lama or Dalai Liar ?
China Design: The Image and Look for the Beijing 2008 Olympic Torch Relay

written by Pinewood Design \\ tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Mar 24

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The image and look of the Beijing Olympic torch relay was released at the Beijing Olympic Media Center.

The Torch Relay Graphic of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

The Torch Relay Graphic

 

Torch Design

 


         A general view of the torch          3D animation

The Beijing Olympic Torch boasts strong Chinese characteristics, and showcases Chinese design and technical capabilities. It embodies the concepts of a Green Olympics, a High-tech Olympics and the People’s Olympics.

The Key Facts about the Torch

The torch is 72 centimetres high, weighs 985 grams and is made of aluminium. The torch is of a curved surface form, with etching and anodizing being used during its production. A torch can usually keep burning for approximately 15 minutes in conditions where the flame is 25 to 30 centimetres high in a windless environment. The torch has been produced to withstand winds of up to 65 kilometres per hour and to stay alight in rain up to 50mm an hour. The flame can be identified and photographed in sunshine and areas of extreme brightness. The fuel is propane which is in accordance with environmental guidelines. The material of its form is recyclable.

The Artistic and Technical Features of the Torch

The torch of the Beijing Olympic Games has a very strong Chinese flavour. It demonstrates the artistic and technical level of China. It also conveys the message of a Green Olympics, a High-tech Olympics and the People’s Olympics. The shape of the paper scroll and the lucky clouds graphic, expresses the idea of harmony. Its stable burning technique and adaptability to the environment have reached a new technical level. The torch of the Beijing Olympic Games is designed, researched and produced in China. BOCOG owns all intellectual property rights.

The Fuel for the Torch

Under the concept of a Green Olympics, environmental protection was a key element listed in the invitation documents to the design companies, by BOCOG. The fuel of the torch is propane, which is a common fuel which also comes with a low price. It is composed of carbon and hydrogen. No material, except carbon dioxide and water remain after the burning, eliminating any risk of pollution.

The Burning System

Its stable burning technique and adaptability to the environment have reached a new technical level. It can stay alight in severe weather conditions such as strong wind, rain, snow, hail, etc. The flame can also be identified in sunshine and areas of extreme brightness so as to satisfy the requirements of capturing photographic images and video footage.

The obverse side
The obverse side
The middle part
The middle part
The upper part
The upper part
The lower part
The lower part

The Design Timelines

2005 August            BOCOG developed the design concepts and requirements of the torch.

2005 December       BOCOG recruited potential torch designs from the design society. In total, BOCOG received 388 pieces of works.

2006 June-August    BOCOG selected the structural designer and the burning system designer.

2007 January          Beijing Olympic Torch was approved by IOC

 

Lantern Design

The lantern

The Torch Relay lantern will be used to store the Olympic flame. Its main purposes will be to receive the Olympic flame kindled in Olympia, to light the Olympic torch and to exhibit the sacred flame.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) requires the flame remain lit during the entire course of the Torch Relay in order to protect the sanctity of the Olympic flame and the purity of the Torch Relay. If the torch flame should be extinguished, it must be relit using the mother flame stored in the lantern. This is to ensure that the flame used to light the Olympic cauldron at the Opening Ceremony comes from the sacred Olympic flame kindled in Olympia.

The inspiration for the original design of the Beijing Olympic Torch Relay lantern comes from the traditional lanterns used inside ancient Chinese palaces. The silver luster of the lantern coupled with crystal-clear glass serve as a foil to the flame and communicates the Olympic flame’s sanctity and purity.

 

Cauldron Design

The Cauldron

The Olympic cauldron plays a major role in the Olympic Torch Relay. The lighting of the Olympic cauldron symbolizes the end of the Olympic Torch Relay and the beginning of the Olympic celebration.The Beijing Olympic cauldron is based on the concept of a “round heaven and square earth” and takes after a typical cauldron from the Chinese Bronze Age. The cauldron shares with the torch and lantern the design element of the “lucky cloud.”

The 56 “lucky clouds” hollowed out of the curved plate of the Olympic cauldron symbolize well wishes to the world from the 56 ethnic groups in China. The base of the cauldron has four legs with eight faces, symbolizing that the Beijing Olympic Games welcomes friends from all directions across the world. The Olympic cauldron stands 130 centimeters high, symbolizing the 130-day duration of the Beijing Olympic Torch Relay. The cauldron plate is 29 centimeters deep, symbolizing the 29th Olympiad. The cauldron post is 112 centimeters tall, symbolizing the 112 years that have passed between the staging of the first modern Olympic Games in 1896 and the 2008 Olympic Games.

Torch Stand Design

The Torch Stand

The torch stand is used to display and support the torch, and its design borrows from the architectural styles of the Han and Tang dynasties. The base design of the torch stand shows “lucky clouds” drifting away, as if gently calling out to the torch.

 

Uniform Design

Design of the torchbearer uniform for the Torch Relay
uniforms for the Torch Relay

Design of the escort runner uniform for the Torch Relay
escort runner uniform

Design of the escort staff uniform for the Torch Relay
escort staff uniform

 

The Convoy

Convoy

 

Aircraft

The Aircraft

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written by Pinewood Design \\ tags: , , , , , ,

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