Thursday, February 25, 2010

My anti-smoking rant


The problem about travelling in China is, of course, the Chinese—yes, those incessantly smoking, spitting, littering, loudly talking, pinky fingernail growing people who inhabit this country. Okay, I could ignore the spitting, step over the trash, put on my earphones to block out the chatter and look the other way when confronted with those ugly, yellow fingernails, but I can’t very well stop breathing. Yet smokers are everywhere in China, lighting up whenever they wish—on the streets, in parks, restaurants, hotel rooms, shopping malls, train stations, even on buses.

I had a hellish time on a recent trip traveling on a cramped bus from Changsha to Shauguan in Guangdong. The trip was over five hours, with frustrating traffic jams caused by many road accidents along the way (bad Chinese drivers?) And people were constantly smoking. In a crowded bus with all the windows closed. At one point, as the guy in front of me lit up, I abruptly stood up and reached over to open the window beside him. “Hey, I’ve got a kid here,” he protested. Indeed, he was carrying a baby in his arms, who must be no more than four or five months old. “Then why are you still smoking?” I snapped. As a compromise, he kept the window open a crack, but finished his cigarette. He did not smoke again for the rest of the trip. But it’s incredible that this guy, a new father, was worried about a blast of cold, fresh air harming his child, yet completely indifferent to the second hand smoke he was blowing in his baby’s face every few minutes. Is he that stupid and ignorant?

Then I thought, maybe this is some kind of conspiracy—I mean, with its vast resources and its influential propaganda machine, surely the Chinese government could be doing a lot more to curb smoking, enforce no smoking laws (if they existed: there are no smoking signs in most public facilities, which people blithely ignore without consequences), educate people about the harmful effects of smoking, increase cigarette prices (at less than 5 yuan a pack, Chinese cigarettes are among the cheapest in the world), all of which have proven to be effective in reducing smoking in the rest of the world. So why hasn’t it? The answer has to be money. Assuming that about half of the adult male population and 5% of the female smoke, there are approximately 350 million smokers in China (according to WHO estimates), and if each smoke a pack a day at 5 yuan a pack, we’re talking about a 1.75 billion yuan a day industry, all of which state owned, which means that unlike in most countries where the government only earn a tax on tobacco sales, the Chinese state gets all of the 1.75 billion yuan a day in revenue.

Because health care has to be paid for by the individual in China, and most of the harmful effects of smoking do not show up until middle age, past the prime for most of the low-skilled workers who make up the labor force, the social costs of smoking is, for the government (as opposed to the smokers’ families), minimal. So the government can sit back and enjoy the financial bonanza that 350 million tobacco addicts bring. You can forget about Colombian cartels, Golden Triangle warlords, the Talibans, the Chinese government is the single largest drug pusher on the planet today. By creating an environment that makes it easy and socially acceptable to smoke (look at the fine examples that long tome smokers such as Mao and Deng have set), and by making tobacco affordable and readily available, China has the largest smoking population of any country in the world. According to statistics, half of the 350 million people will die preventable, premature deaths as a result of their addiction, more than the population of Japan and South Korea combined. And this does not include all the victims of second hand smoke that they bring down with them. Do I smell a class action negligence suit?

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

小城之春



這個新年去了四川跟編劇見面,順道做資料搜集,看看中國小城的風貌。

我住在編劇玉來的家,他母親每天弄的飯都很好吃。我還去了他親戚在農村的家,吃了兩頓豐富的農家飯--從沒吃過那麼鮮甜的青菜!那幾天的天氣很冷,屋內沒暖氣,睡覺時要蓋三張被。

回程時經湖南長沙到粵北的韶關,再坐五小時長途巴士回深圳。很有趣和難忘的一個旅程,也很累!

Monday, February 22, 2010

環保葬禮

新年流流,讓我講一個吉利的課題。
到了這個年紀,可以說是嗰頭近--也就是說預計壽命減現在歲數的數字比現在歲數小,所以開始要想一下死後臭皮襄的安排。一直以為火葬是必然之選,也是大部分身處地少人多的香港的人的選擇。但想深一層,火葬需要大量燃料(約180公升氣油,可以駕車一來一回香港與北京),還排放黑煙,而土葬花費高而且佔用太多地,最環保的方法是把屍體用可分解材料(或環保棺材包好),然後葬在樹林。
這方法在外地已開始流行,英國已有10%的死者採用環保葬禮。通常一間承辦公司會買下一塊樹林給安葬之用,地方不用很大(若每人分隔一米,一塊一平方公里的地已可安葬一百萬人),若在香港實行,很多不合住人的山地也可這樣利用。葬在這塊地等於資助保育樹林,當然不立墓碑,可以立一小塊牌紀念。不過我會選擇不做記認,只需埋了後種一棵樹,以後要紀念我只需在森林裡走走,在大樹下乘涼。
現在環保葬禮在外國才剛起步,香港社會比外國落後至少2-30年,對於葬禮這種中國習俗更可能根深蒂固,希望到我死之日可以實行環保葬禮吧!

Thursday, February 11, 2010

近期喜歡的廣告

最近很喜歡這廣告,creative一般,但executiion一流,casting、演出、分鏡都恰到好處,不知是那間廣告公司作品?