Liberal-oriented columns, commentary and archived articles on national and international news, politics, and the communication arts--with emphasis on China--by Joseph Bosco, author, journalist, director and actor; Professor of Drama and Communications at Beijing Foreign Studies University. 

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

A Horrific Anniversary and Forgettable Birthday (Redux)

I have been much distracted with a good life and making movies in China of late and have had little time to post to these pages; also a new semester at Beijing Foreign Studies University begins on Monday, my fourth year here at Beiwai. I must say that all is well and I am happy--but how can I feel so at the moment? In America, along the Louisiana and Mississippi Gulf Coast to be exact, this, the 29th day of August, 2007, is a day of remembered loss, pain, suffering, and emotions that have no adequate words of expression. Katrina, a storm with a Shakespearean name that was no lady to be tamed by man or government, changed everything back where I call home.

However, due to the vagaries of international time zones, the day of my birth--August 30--and Katrina's mean fury overlapped by some 12 hours, the anniversary of both are the same day for me and always will be. I have no reason to celebrate the former, whose number is not friendly to me now, and every reason to mourn and surely hate the latter. Yet, I feel something other in both matters. New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast are recovering; slowly, to be sure, but they are recovering. And, although the years now count all too rapidly towards the eventual fate of all living things and scares me no less than any of my kind, I am younger and more joyful in mind and soul than I have been in decades.

In just about a month, I and the reason for my fulsome happiness will be in New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast for a remarkable homecoming. And that is more than good.

Baby Joseph Allen Bosco, we are coming to meet and greet you!
 


11:59 PM / Editor / permalink    3 comments  



Thursday, August 16, 2007

Joy in August

Forget the fact that August is the month of my birth--I try to everyday! But do know that there is great joy in August for the Bosco and Mocklin families in New Orleans. The living proof in full color is below. God, I can't wait to see Baby Joseph come September 28--that is when we are finally scheduled to arrive in the Crescent City to spend the National Day Holiday week. Baby Joseph Allen Bosco is growing up so fast; I am missing too many things that happen only once.

All buckled up--let's went, Dad.


Uh Oooo.


Gotcha!


Hey, when's the ballgame start?


Night, night...


There is a whole lot more at Joseph Allen Bosco Dot Com
 


4:33 PM / Editor / permalink    0 comments  



Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Toys From China? Bad News!

Mattel on Tuesday recalled a total of 436,000 Chinese-made toys that had "impermissible levels of lead." The toys are die-cast vehicles featuring the Sarge character from the movie "Cars." Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

They look so neat and inviting up there to the man-child in all of us, don't they? Well, they are all being jerked back by Mattel--a fond name from my toy-playing youth, a handful of decades past. 436,000 of those little 'jeeps' are coming off the shelves. But they are only a fraction of the stupefying number of almost 19 million toys being recalled by the iconic giant of American play time. Why? Because, as you will read and mostly misinterpret, they were manufactured in China; my 'home' for 5 years now, with the hope and expectation of many more to come.

If you live here and love it as I do, right now your heart and mind is racing and roaring in a directionless anxious dread from something you are powerless to understand much less reckon with. How do you compartmentalize any of it enough to talk about it with people who know little about China; and a hundred times worse, with people already critical--at best--of China?

I know not. But I do know that all demons, fears, terrors and monsters of any and all stripes can only be dealt with by turning and meeting them face-to-face. That is why the photo from The New York Times is above, and the article it goes with is excerpted below. Read it and weep with me. Please.

So sadly, the people who really should read it and cry are at the moment working their minds feverishly to spin this god-awful punch in the national solar plexus into anything other than what it really is: A goddamn dirty, dirty result of the reality none of them wanted to face--economic booms of historical proportions come with real-time and forward-looking responsibilities as large and meaningful as the ever-expanding boom itself. (Although, frankly, it's far easier said than done; what nation has ever even tried it?)

In many ways, the continuing avalanche of tainted goods from China being discovered abroad, where the press is not controlled in the same manner as here, is worse than the three T's, the F-G and the C word combined in the beady eyes and growling gullets of the far too many China-haters walking this earth.

This must not stand if China is not to implode and plunge pell-mell into one of the greatest national failures of all times.

However, while everyone will see "China" in the headline and opening graph with the following gigantic numbers, almost all will overlook the reported fact that many millions of the toys recalled, though manufactured in China are being recalled due to specifications delivered from the west. Regardless, this fact should not mitigate the disaster to China inherent in this recall and the other quite recent evidence of malfeasance found in various goods "made in China."

This must not be 'spun' in any manner; it must be corrected. Here. In China.
Mattel Recalls 19 Million Toys Sent From China

By LOUISE STORY and DAVID BARBOZA
Published: August 15, 2007

Mattel, the world's largest toy company, yesterday announced the biggest recall in its history.

In a double-barreled announcement, the company said it was recalling 436,000 Chinese-made die-cast toy cars depicting the character Sarge from the animated film "Cars" because they are covered with lead paint.

At the same time, the toy maker said it was recalling 18.2 million other toys because their small, powerful magnets could harm children if swallowed. The magnetized toys were also made in China, but they followed a Mattel design specification.

About half of the toys in each recall were distributed in the United States.

Amid a wave of increasing safety concerns about products made in China, the recall threatened to set the toy industry on its heels--just as companies are beginning to ship toys to stores for the holiday shopping season, when half of all toy purchases are made.

Separately, laboratory tests have found that some Chinese-made vinyl baby bibs sold at Toys "R" Us stores appear to be contaminated with lead.

Industry analysts said Mattel's woes are part of a much larger problem.

"If I went down the shelves of Wal-Mart and tested everything, I’m going to find serious problems," said Sean McGowan, managing director and the toy analyst at Wedbush Morgan Securities. "The idea that Mattel--with its high standards--has a bigger problem than everybody else is laughable. If we don't see an increase of recalls in this industry, then it's a case of denial."

Even Mattel executives said repeatedly yesterday that the company may have more recalls.

"No system is perfect," Robert A. Eckert, Mattel's chairman and chief executive, said in a conference call. "There's no guarantee that we will not be here again."

Shares in Mattel dropped 57 cents, to $23, during regular trading, but rose the same amount after hours.

The mounting wave of safety concerns is forcing Mattel and other toy companies to reconsider long-held assumptions about the safety of their products. Mattel executives said yesterday that in the long run they are trying to shift more of their toy production into factories they own and operate--and away from Chinese contractors and sub-contractors.

"We do realize the need for increased vigilance, increased surveillance," said Jim Walter, senior vice president of worldwide quality assurance at Mattel, in an interview.

Still, the latest recall led to intensified calls from consumer advocates and politicians for stricter safety standards, as well as tougher penalties for companies.

"This summer alone has seen well over 13 million toy recalls, popular toys removed from our homes and our stores because they have been found to be extremely dangerous, in some cases lethal, to our children," said Senator Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, a member of the Senate commerce committee.

Senator Klobuchar said it was "increasingly clear" that the Consumer Product Safety Commission needed more financing and greater authority. The commerce committee held a hearing last month on the safety of goods made in China.

The lead-paint recall was Mattel's second in less than a month of lead-tainted toys made in China. Together, the recalls have thrust the maker of Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels cars into the heart of rising concern over products made in low-cost factories in China.

Last month's recall of toys with lead paint included some based on characters from "Sesame Street" and "Dora the Explorer."
Please continue reading at The New York Times.
 


5:58 PM / Editor / permalink    0 comments  




What a Trip!

A bit weary and jet-lagged, yes, but I am home in Beijing after one of the greatest trips of my life: London, Stratford-Upon-Avon and Oxford; four powerful and exciting plays; the National Gallery; The Tower of London; Westminster Abbey; the British History Museum; St. Paul's Cathedral; a boat ride down the Thames; and so much more!

Pictures will be available soon and I will post a few. But gotta get things organized in the 'office,' the house and my life at the moment.
 


4:41 PM / Editor / permalink    0 comments  




Just 'The Price of Doing Business in China?' No. It Must Stop. Now!

As many folks have observed and opined upon, I don't often criticize--at least, not too harshly--the hand that feeds me: The Central Government of China. In this case, I will let the headline above suffice--plus the editorial excerpted below from today's The New York Times.
Editorial
China, Unregulated

"That's the price of doing business," is the too-often-heard excuse from American companies that choose to overlook China's loose business ethics and tight, verging on strangling, political controls.

The high cost of such enabling was on display, once again, yesterday when Mattel announced that it is recalling millions of Chinese-made toys contaminated with lead paint or containing dangerously easy to swallow magnets. And that follows discoveries of Chinese toothpaste laced with industrial solvents and drug-contaminated seafood.

Concerned parents can simply stop buying toys made in China, although that could mean refusing to buy toys altogether given China's dominance of the worldwide toy industry. And it could still come to that.

It is definitely not in America's interest--economic, political or strategic--to erect a barricade against Chinese imports, which could spark a mutually destructive trade war. American businesses and the Bush administration must send a clear message to Beijing that it has to clean up its act or its export-led boom will falter.

What China needs is an effective and transparent regulatory system to enforce product safety standards. The United States and other countries can help with technical advice and warnings about what would happen if Beijing refuses to take it. But the dangers are too immediate to wait.
Please read the rest at The New York Times.
 


3:55 PM / Editor / permalink    0 comments  



Sunday, August 05, 2007

Gone To England

In a few hours we are flying off to England and the Shakespeare tour in London and Stratford-Upon-Avon we won as First Prize in the Third Chinese Universities Shakespeare Festival. I am excited. Most folks I know have already made the pilgrimage; and to me that is exactly what it is. Every writer for the past 400 years has only been fighting at best for 2nd place; Mr. Shakespeare is so far out in front that 400 years from now it will be the same. I don't think I will have much Internet time on the trip; so more about it when we return.
 


12:06 AM / Editor / permalink    0 comments  



Thursday, August 02, 2007

So You Say It's Preposterous That O. J. Simpson Could've Been 'Framed'?

"Nah, cops and prosecutors just don't do that sort of thing," you say or most likely believe whether you openly opine it or not. Oh, perhaps in the worst days of Jim Crow down south you will agree it might've happened. But that was (or still is) a regional aberration perpetrated by ignorant rednecks and has no relationship with the American criminal justice system as a whole, you say, right?

Folks, while the O.J. Simpson case unfortunately remains very much on my mind--yes, still crazy after all these years--the headline above this post is a teaser to attract your attention to a societal problem the ramifications of which should bring your freedom and justice loving blood to a fiercely roiling boil. Something that crime journalists know all too well--but seldom report, goddamn so many of them for their complicity in the horror!--has been substantiated through a study completed by a sociologist and criminologist of some repute and published as an Op-Ed piece in The New York Times.

It must be read; that's all I need to say. So, please do:

Op-Ed Contributor
The Presence of Malice

By RICHARD MORAN
Published: August 2, 2007

South Hadley, Mass.

LAST week, Judge Nancy Gertner of the Federal District Court in Boston awarded more than $100 million to four men whom the F.B.I. framed for the 1965 murder of Edward Deegan, a local gangster. It was compensation for the 30 years the men spent behind bars while agents withheld evidence that would have cleared them and put the real killer--a valuable F.B.I. informant, by the name of Vincent Flemmi--in prison.

Most coverage of the story described it as a bizarre exception in the history of law enforcement. Unfortunately, this kind of behavior by those whose sworn duty it is to uphold the law is all too common. In state courts, where most death sentences are handed down, it occurs regularly.

My recently completed study of the 124 exonerations of death row inmates in America from 1973 to 2007 indicated that 80, or about two-thirds, of their so-called wrongful convictions resulted not from good-faith mistakes or errors but from intentional, willful, malicious prosecutions by criminal justice personnel. (There were four cases in which a determination could not be made one way or another.)

Yet too often this behavior is not singled out and identified for what it is. When a prosecutor puts a witness on the stand whom he knows to be lying, or fails to turn over evidence favorable to the defense, or when a police officer manufactures or destroys evidence to further the likelihood of a conviction, then it is deceptive to term these conscious violations of the law--all of which I found in my research--as merely mistakes or errors.

Mistakes are good-faith errors--like taking the wrong exit off the highway, or dialing the wrong telephone number. There is no malice behind them. However, when officers of the court conspire to convict a defendant of first-degree murder and send him to death row, they are doing much more than making an innocent mistake or error. They are breaking the law.

Perhaps this explains why, even when a manifestly innocent man is about to be executed, a prosecutor can be dead set against reopening an old case. Since so many wrongful convictions result from official malicious behavior, prosecutors, policemen, witnesses or even jurors and judges could themselves face jail time for breaking the law in obtaining an unlawful conviction.

Strangely, our misunderstanding of the real cause underlying most wrongful convictions is compounded by the very people who work to uncover them. Although the term "wrongfully convicted" is technically correct, it also has the potential to be misleading. It leads to the false impression that most inmates ended up on death row because of good-faith mistakes or errors committed by an imperfect criminal justice system--not by malicious or unlawful behavior.

For this reason, we need to re-frame the argument and shift our language. If a death sentence is overturned because of malicious behavior, we should call it for what it is: an unlawful conviction, not a wrongful one.

In the interest of fairness, it is important to note that those who are exonerated are not necessarily innocent of the crimes that sent them to death row. They have simply had their death sentences set aside because of errors that led to convictions, usually involving the intentional violation of their constitutional right to a fair and impartial trial. Very seldom does the court go the next step and actually declare them innocent.

In addition, some of these unlawful convictions resulted from criminal justice officials trying to do the right thing. (A police officer, say, plants evidence on a defendant he is convinced is guilty, fearing that the defendant will escape punishment otherwise.) In cases like these, officers or prosecutors have been known to "frame a guilty man."

The malicious or even well-intentioned manipulation of murder cases by prosecutors and the police underscores why it's important to discard, once and for all, the nonsense that so-called wrongful convictions can be eliminated by introducing better forensic science into the courtroom.

Even if we limit death sentences to cases in which there is "conclusive scientific evidence" of guilt, as Mitt Romney, the presidential candidate and former governor of Massachusetts has proposed, we will still not eliminate the problem of wrongful convictions. The best trained and most honest forensic scientists can only examine the evidence presented to them; they cannot be expected to determine if that evidence has been planted, switched or withheld from the defense.

The cause of malicious unlawful convictions doesn't rest solely in the imperfect workings of our criminal justice system--if it did we might be able to remedy most of it. A crucial part of the problem rests in the hearts and souls of those whose job it is to uphold the law. That's why even the most careful strictures on death penalty cases could fail to prevent the execution of innocent people--and why we would do well to be more vigilant and specific in articulating the causes for overturning an unlawful conviction.

Richard Moran is a professor of sociology and criminology at Mount Holyoke College.

Illustration by Matt Rota

The New York Times
 


7:20 PM / Editor / permalink    2 comments  



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