Why is Everything in CHINA FALLING APART?

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  • čas přidán 18. 11. 2016
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    Before you come to China, you might have an idea that it will be ancient tea houses, tight alley ways full of culture and history, or people living the same way they did hundereds of years ago.
    You'd be wrong.
    China is changing, and sometimes too fast. So Winston and I delve into something that we find a little disappointing sometimes, and that is the lack of maintanence in China.
    If you go to most old areas, you can almost see the history pouring out from the ancient buildings and temples, but they are almost never maintained. This problem is to the point where we are having a difficult time finding anything that is more than 50 years old, simply because it is all collapsed.
    This isn't limited to old things either. Chinese people have had an issue with maintenance with most things for a long time.
    Hop on and find out more!
    Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @dogdriver70
    @dogdriver70 Před 5 lety +719

    this is what happens when the souls of the people have been crushed. nobody gives AF

    • @rubenromero793
      @rubenromero793 Před 4 lety +16

      Very true China has a very dishonest deciet in thier country history feel bad for thier people's

    • @billcat1840
      @billcat1840 Před 4 lety +21

      This is what the "useful idiots " in our country want.

    • @lunafringe10
      @lunafringe10 Před 4 lety +1

      everything will change now, thank the lord, with black lives matter. Nirvana appearing on the horizon, once more,

    • @fishofgold6553
      @fishofgold6553 Před 4 lety +1

      +sam .t
      Agreed. The Chinese people must now form a DEEP connection with their past through their COMMUNIST roots. What is good for the souls of the people? It is to bask in the GLORY of the SUPREME leadership of the CCP and the many blessings it grants.

    • @dogdriver70
      @dogdriver70 Před 4 lety +1

      @@fishofgold6553 yes, only by purifying their thoughts in accordance with the best political orthodoxy can they achieve happiness

  • @Charlesmeng4
    @Charlesmeng4 Před 4 lety +430

    My 7 years of expatriate experiences in Beijing told me that China, in spite of the 2nd largest economy, is actually a very poor and uncivilized country in general.

    • @Chaudapeau
      @Chaudapeau Před 3 lety +4

      where are you from ? can you define "civilization" ?

    • @kaine382
      @kaine382 Před 3 lety +3

      Do you think an uncivilized country would be able to send Rovers to mars like they did?

    • @thiendo1260
      @thiendo1260 Před 3 lety +43

      @@kaine382 civilize can be use to describe many aspect of a nation or culture. Just because one is technologically advanced doesn’t it a civilize one. For example, the Soviet sent people to space but they also sent people to gulag or execute dissidents. Those actions were clearly barbaric

    • @Saikocide
      @Saikocide Před 3 lety +33

      @@kaine382 The soviets sent the first lander on venus, launched the first satellite and almost won the space race. now look at what they are now

    • @AlfaGiuliaQV
      @AlfaGiuliaQV Před 3 lety +15

      @@kaine382 Absolutely, it all depends on what you put your money into.

  • @OmarDelawar
    @OmarDelawar Před 3 lety +410

    "When everybody owns everything, nobody will take care of anything."
    ~ Plato

    • @SeruraRenge11
      @SeruraRenge11 Před 3 lety +21

      While a true statement in itself, in China it's simply false that everybody owns everything. Only the party owns everything and no one else.

    • @europaeuropa5763
      @europaeuropa5763 Před 3 lety

      @Pedro Watson nice second account Ahmed

    • @angelikaskoroszyn8495
      @angelikaskoroszyn8495 Před 3 lety +7

      Eh, it's not like that. My father told me once why during communist regime everyone stole from factories. The overall idea of communism (and to a certain point socialism) is that workers own their workplace. They can decide in which direction it should go, what to procude, how, etc. In this way there're no factory owners (or CEOs in modern reality) who are both too incopetent and greedy to be able to manage properly their factory / company
      And tbh it's not difficult to see how this mixture of incompetency and greed makes capitalism less efficient
      The problem is that under Soviets factory workers didn't really own the factories. They belonged to the state and party members had all the control
      People didn't think that factories belonged to everyone - they thought they belonged to nobody. That's a very important difference

    • @OmarDelawar
      @OmarDelawar Před 3 lety +12

      @@angelikaskoroszyn8495 Whether something belongs to everyone or no one is the same exact thing. It’s like saying the earth belongs to us all or nobody. Plato’s famous quote applies regardless. People will not take care of anything whether everybody owns everything or nobody owns anything. The outcome is exactly the same.

    • @SeruraRenge11
      @SeruraRenge11 Před 3 lety +1

      @@OmarDelawar That's not the case for either here, it's that one person owns everything. But they also don't give a shit about the state it's in because it's more important that they control it than anything else.

  • @martinjarvis4900
    @martinjarvis4900 Před 4 lety +276

    I have had the misfortune of working with chinese contractors. Probably some of the worst standards in the world

    • @jmainard9290
      @jmainard9290 Před 4 lety +32

      One time I heard a joke.
      There was a wreck.... a bicycle hit a car
      The bike didn't have any damage while the car in really bad shape.
      That when I found out, the bike made in Germany and the car made in china

    • @dianedong1062
      @dianedong1062 Před 3 lety +7

      I can belive that. I've spent several years living in China, and the building standards here are pretty sketchy.

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před 3 lety +3

      Standards? What's that word?

    • @truxton1000
      @truxton1000 Před 3 lety +8

      Well in China it dosent matter, it`s more about the speed. Maybe the mindset which was ruined by the many years of communism before they got the possibility of private ownership, well since the state own all the land I’m not sure...

    • @theshermantanker7043
      @theshermantanker7043 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jmainard9290 German engineering amiwright

  • @user-ld7lw1hx6s
    @user-ld7lw1hx6s Před 6 lety +1991

    As a Chinese, I appreciate your criticisms. They are validly made. I am also very sad that Chinese don't respect history and don't try to preserve historic buildings but instead destroy everything old. We have a long way to go...I don't know if ever we can be ever as good as Japan, in economic and cultural development. I hope your criticism can be seen by more Chinese people. Don't mind those hatred comments by narrow-minded Chinese nationalists

    • @CaptainViral84
      @CaptainViral84 Před 6 lety +133

      reason why every thing that is old in china is being destroyed because the communist party don't want reminders of the past so they can stay in control

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo Před 6 lety +64

      if only more people could be this open minded, this kind of stuff wouldn't get to be an issue in the first place.

    • @hikayuinoue5366
      @hikayuinoue5366 Před 6 lety +144

      欧阳若理 I'm Japanese and Every country has problems and we have it too in Japan! China is china,u dnt need to be like japan! I hope our countries work together instead of arguing! Peace "

    • @TrollHiddenCave
      @TrollHiddenCave Před 6 lety +14

      Im glad you understand were sad to see the loss of such impressive history, Isis is fucking scum for destroying relics , there literally trying to incite a holly war, some one should tell them were no longer a Nation under God. ..

    • @drakashrakenburgproduction5369
      @drakashrakenburgproduction5369 Před 6 lety +28

      Great to see Chinese and Japanese get along

  • @MiaSonoma
    @MiaSonoma Před 5 lety +749

    Lol, I lived in an apartment in San Francisco that was owned by an old chinese woman - zero maintenance done since the 60's.

    • @rangergxi
      @rangergxi Před 4 lety +137

      To be fair, San-Francisco is a shithole where nobody maintains stuff.

    • @thereviewer4173
      @thereviewer4173 Před 4 lety +32

      432423429482
      New York City is worse.

    • @YeTheGOATNoCap
      @YeTheGOATNoCap Před 4 lety +46

      San Fran sucks I have family there that is renting a shoebox for 2800 a month.

    • @mariamendoncs6788
      @mariamendoncs6788 Před 4 lety

      For Real eh?!

    • @godzilladestroyscities1757
      @godzilladestroyscities1757 Před 4 lety +23

      There's a house near mine that an old Chinese lady owns. She rents it out. She won't pay for a god damn thing to fix it.

  • @kevinstevens8910
    @kevinstevens8910 Před 4 lety +115

    I wonder who was in charge of maintenance of China's bio technology laboratories.

  • @socialmoth4974
    @socialmoth4974 Před 4 lety +65

    I sold my 100 year old house a couple of years ago and had upgraded it with central air, as well as many other things. It was lovely and was full of charm. It's a shame when people don't maintain their property.

    • @boondocker7964
      @boondocker7964 Před 4 lety +5

      Bet you made it comfortable, eh? Nothing like home.

    • @xenxander
      @xenxander Před 2 lety +4

      It's not theirs, that's the problem. The government owns it.

    • @socialmoth4974
      @socialmoth4974 Před 2 lety +2

      @@xenxander So then why do they pay ridiculous sums of money to "purchase" homes that they don't actually own? From what I've heard, it's the best way to invest their money and they're expecting to profit from the purchase. If they don't actually own the property, how can they return a profit?

    • @Chinaziland
      @Chinaziland Před 2 lety +1

      I hardly think any chn houses built after 49’ could stand more than 1/2 century

    • @murder1625
      @murder1625 Před 2 lety

      @@socialmoth4974 they will figured out them self or dissaper

  • @geopietro
    @geopietro Před 6 lety +530

    I get the sense that these guys are being objective in reporting what they see and are not China haters or detractors. They choose to live in China and have Chinese wives. Their observations are unique and important. Insights from this channel are hard to find in the West. Keep up the good work.

    • @ppumpkin3282
      @ppumpkin3282 Před 5 lety +13

      I am sure there are places in China where the concrete is mixed well. It's important not draw conclusions to the whole. When I visited Eastern Europe in the early 1980's a lot of places were crumbling from disrepair. I assume it's much better today.
      It Connecticut where I live there are a lot of houses with crumbling foundations because the stone mixed in the concrete cam from a quarry with the mineral-pyrrhotite-which causes the slow deterioration of concrete foundations when exposed to oxygen and water. At the time the homes were built, no one understood this. Now there are lots of homes with crumbling foundations that the owners can sell, insure, or mortgage.
      Mixing concrete is more complicated than most people realize. The Hoover Dam would have taken 125 years to cure, if the engineers just poured concrete straight. They had to lay pipes to vent the heat created by the curing.
      I had summer job once for the State Department of Public Works. The Civil Engineers would bring in core samples from all the projects in the state. I would have to apply different tests to make sure the concrete was ok before the project could proceed to the next step. Also tested all the stuff they mixed into concrete. I had to pour a sample of mixing aggregate into a series of ten sieves, and then determine how much of each type of aggregate there was.

    • @iNeverSimp
      @iNeverSimp Před 5 lety +1

      Lol sure

    • @brzinger6
      @brzinger6 Před 5 lety +9

      Kung Laos your grammar is crumbling worse than those buildings are.

    • @Lue1337
      @Lue1337 Před 5 lety +5

      @@kunglaos4679 wow, you are so brain washed it makes me want to puke

    • @xmarkx71
      @xmarkx71 Před 5 lety +3

      Kung Laos SIGH...........same old same old, very depressing. God bless you man, may he find a crack in your soul and then open up your mind and give you a heart.

  • @jimivey6462
    @jimivey6462 Před 6 lety +676

    My fear is that the Chinese government is going to make these guys disappear.

    • @3seven5seven1nine9
      @3seven5seven1nine9 Před 6 lety +4

      Chadwicked B what

    • @benjamin7.544
      @benjamin7.544 Před 5 lety +45

      they've been doing this for years...one is British and the other is American...who wants to make them disappear...no one mate and of cause they're married to Chinese...don't be negative mate...they doing a great job so you and me can learn the true reality of China.

    • @TuatagaloaTeo
      @TuatagaloaTeo Před 5 lety +35

      @@benjamin7.544 he sounds South African

    • @markrobertmurphysr
      @markrobertmurphysr Před 5 lety +1

      WUDNT LONG AHGO ; NAT GEO WUSNT EVEN ALLOWED TO FILM...THER

    • @alexharris8565
      @alexharris8565 Před 5 lety +6

      hope not, crossed my mind as well

  • @_keerp
    @_keerp Před 3 lety +27

    It reminds me of how it is here in Eastern Europe with my apartment building. We keep trying to get repairs done for the courtyard and stairwell, but since it is collectively owned we have to vote on that stuff, and the old people who grew up in the Soviet times always vote against any repair work, it's infuriating.

    • @Yobott
      @Yobott Před rokem +3

      but why, is that engrained culture? what is logically derived from that

  • @peterread705
    @peterread705 Před 4 lety +46

    A chinese tradesman I met on site in Australian told me ‘you Australians are clever’. When I asked why he said because you build your own homes, fix your cars etc.
    He said they can only do one thing, in his case it was plastering, and so had to pay for everything including ding maintenance.

    • @thebeautifulones5436
      @thebeautifulones5436 Před 3 lety +1

      I've heard Chinese call Australians, meaning traditional British Australians stupid.

    • @ConCon75
      @ConCon75 Před 3 lety +5

      @@thebeautifulones5436 "traditional British" what the fuck are you talking about?

    • @mrsmith1097
      @mrsmith1097 Před 2 lety

      @@ConCon75 I think he means the mainstream Aus culture

  • @joefromravenna
    @joefromravenna Před 5 lety +226

    When we lived in commie Czechoslovakia we left the exterior look shabby for self defense. We painted, but it wasn’t made to look great, because it was easier to avoid getting people jealous and risk a break-in or vandalism.

    • @user-et8vm9cc3t
      @user-et8vm9cc3t Před 4 lety +24

      So people are jealous bastards there as well? So that's really some commie mindset. Bulgarians are like that as well.

    • @ConCon75
      @ConCon75 Před 3 lety

      Ok that's true

    • @ConCon75
      @ConCon75 Před 3 lety +2

      @Igor Hašlík because almost all of these comments are made my American or British fascists pretending to be somebody else because they haven't got girlfriends.

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 Před 3 lety +15

      @@ConCon75 oh please keep calling everything you disagree fascist, see where that gets you, theres only so many times you can cry wolf until people stop believing.

    • @ConCon75
      @ConCon75 Před 3 lety

      @@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 I call fascists fascists, you just cry about everything repeat already refuted lies and call everything communism or call people snowflakea

  • @Muttleytech
    @Muttleytech Před 6 lety +201

    Now I can see where my Chinese friend is coming from when he asks me why I spend so much time repairing and renovating my house. This brings some clarity into better understanding him. Interesting points of view.

    • @user-ld4jc9je3o
      @user-ld4jc9je3o Před 5 lety +4

      Mutleytech This place in the video is just a left wild village... Only some old people still lives there and there're no jobs at all... Young people all went to bigger palaces where they can earn money

    • @genli5603
      @genli5603 Před 5 lety +29

      My Chinese in-laws have been here (USA) 35 years and just now figured out maintenance. Lol.
      I have had SO MANY conversations with them about why we buy such “old houses”. It finally sank in and they got new flooring and a roof and are going to renovate their kitchen.

    • @vinnidavinci3932
      @vinnidavinci3932 Před 5 lety +4

      @@user-ld4jc9je3o So China dont take care of old people?

    • @user-ld4jc9je3o
      @user-ld4jc9je3o Před 5 lety +6

      Vinni Davinci
      Chinese people are known to care for the elders, but most Chinese people would like to die where they were originally from, and some just isn't used to city life. Also, living in cities is much more expensive and complicated than living in the small village.

    • @vinnidavinci3932
      @vinnidavinci3932 Před 5 lety +7

      @@user-ld4jc9je3o Why not take care of the villages too?

  • @jasonkauppinen3475
    @jasonkauppinen3475 Před 4 lety +257

    Looks like the perfect way to build a class 4 virology lab.... eh?

    • @fishofgold6553
      @fishofgold6553 Před 4 lety +24

      Just simple carelessness may have brought the world's economy to halt...wow.

    • @OscarCortesV
      @OscarCortesV Před 3 lety +3

      Indeed

    • @dknowles60
      @dknowles60 Před 3 lety +1

      @@fishofgold6553 only because we could not handle a .06 death rate

    • @DaughterofGod-777
      @DaughterofGod-777 Před 3 lety +4

      That lab was actually built for China by the naive French! It was supposed to be a “collaboration”, as usual. Collaboration with Chinese = Your work getting stolen. That’s all it is. The Chicoms kicked the French out of the lab once the French finished helping them build it and teaching them the complex systems behind running a lab.

    • @dknowles60
      @dknowles60 Před 3 lety

      @@DaughterofGod-777 ditto

  • @NaYawkr
    @NaYawkr Před 4 lety +54

    The 3 Gorges Dam was erected using the same 'Quality ' construction.

    • @k3th.b.w122
      @k3th.b.w122 Před 4 lety +4

      I’m surprised is has lasted this long with the floods 🤔🤭

    • @johnm4541
      @johnm4541 Před 4 lety +2

      @@k3th.b.w122 We will know if it was built badly by August 17th when the water deluge from 160 KM away reach the Three Gorges Dam with a vengence.

  • @jimmygangster
    @jimmygangster Před 6 lety +428

    So these people went through the trouble and took the time out of their days to hold a meeting to see who would replace a light bulb that would cost less than $3 to replace, and left it for 7 years... I can't... I just can't...

    • @theskeptic2010
      @theskeptic2010 Před 6 lety +14

      What we would do here in the USA is go buy the bulb and put it in, then charge the HOA for your time and labor, or just deduct it off of your rent if you are a renter.

    • @Maddinhpws
      @Maddinhpws Před 6 lety +8

      It simply doesn't annoy them enough. I had a similar thing. The lightbulb in the washing machine basement of my apartment building here broke. I personally wasn't annoyed enough in the few times I was washing to replace it. Some day it simply was replaced and yeah, it is cool.

    • @greenwoodorganics4681
      @greenwoodorganics4681 Před 5 lety +72

      I think in the west, we respect someone who takes responsibility. If you're the one who says, right, I'll just fix it myself and foot the $3 bill, people think you're a good person. In China if you step forward and say you'll do it, people sneer and think you're a fool/feel like they're above you because you're giving them something for free.

    • @jasonl8326
      @jasonl8326 Před 5 lety +38

      @@greenwoodorganics4681 Yeah, I don't think we have much to worry about if we ever go to war with China. Self-sacrifice doesn't seem to compute with these folks.

    • @Kaizerzydeco1
      @Kaizerzydeco1 Před 5 lety +4

      Sounds like Montreal.

  • @williammorrison6311
    @williammorrison6311 Před 5 lety +130

    I lived in Suzhou during most of 2010, did an apartment search shortly after arriving there. I can confirm that most of the relatively new buildings I saw were crumbling due to poor quality cement.

    • @SaharanKnight
      @SaharanKnight Před rokem

      Yes, when the cement to sand mixture is like less than 1 to 4, sometimes much worse, you get cement and brick mortar which crumbles. This I have seen in Africa, but somewhat understandable there when a bag of cement costs maybe 20 dollars or more due to transport and customs and often price fixing as well. But in central Africa where I lived, the people often do maintain their houses to some degree and often get friends to lend a hand in plastering, etc.

  • @darius1988
    @darius1988 Před 3 lety +6

    I'm Lithuanian, and you know what, while we were part of Soviet Union - it was same here. When everybody owns everything, no one gives AF about anything. Now we are 30+ years independent again and things start to get good again, mentality fixes itself, slowly :)

  • @Demons972
    @Demons972 Před 4 lety +182

    This people destroyed their own cultural heritage during the "cultural revolution"
    what else can you expect?

    • @dann2607
      @dann2607 Před 4 lety +17

      Chinese Communist is a parasite!they will slowly eat your country.

    • @sys9208
      @sys9208 Před 4 lety +1

      Dude do you even know anything?

    • @skeetrix5577
      @skeetrix5577 Před 4 lety +19

      @@sys9208 hey guys found the commie

    • @Demons972
      @Demons972 Před 4 lety +5

      @@skeetrix5577 hahaha for real.

    • @skeetrix5577
      @skeetrix5577 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Demons972 gotta call it like I see it no apologies

  • @serhioromano
    @serhioromano Před 7 lety +138

    I can understand those people. I was raised in USSR. We had almost the same mentality. This is kind of collective mind. The idea of Communism is that everything is not yours it is everyone's. Idea is good but it worked completely opposite. I mean the part that everything i snot yours worked well. But part that it is yours as part of everyone had never worked.
    So if there is a public square? and it needs to be cleaned, government forced people to go there special day all of them and clean it up. Even your own apartment where you leave is not yours. It is government's but it is given to you to leave because you are part of everyone's idea.
    So in USSR there were no private anything. Everything you have is everyone's.
    This creates mentality that if you are not forced you do not care about anything. Because all factories and all land and all farm in a country is yours as a Communism party, but in fact you own nothing, so naturally you do not care, because hard of the man naturally is capitalistic.

    • @whiteman995
      @whiteman995 Před 7 lety +5

      That is not he case in China, they own their own businesses they own their own factories their own houses apartments land, government pays workers to clean the streets the parks people hire workers to clean their building just like a great nation should. You people with your antiquated and biased views of China are the problem go visit and see for yourself, I lived there almost a decade, traveled to many different cities and small towns.
      And was never asked to see my ID Passport other than when I was entering or leaving the country. There are no thought police going around & you rarely see any police stopping cars asking for ID or carrying guns.

    • @serhioromano
      @serhioromano Před 7 lety +9

      White Man Now yes they do own. But way of thinking is still old. It will take some time until they learn new living standards.

    • @NikiBechusWTF
      @NikiBechusWTF Před 7 lety

      White Man

    • @DavidInSydney1
      @DavidInSydney1 Před 7 lety +6

      Yes Sergey Romanov I agree. Communism has turned out to be, time and time again, an inhuman catastrophe.
      I wonder if it’s not a disease of capitalism. Capitalism creates enormous wealth, that wealth creates a lot of the idle rich; certain unhappy members of the idle rich with much time on their hands dream of a classless utopia. They succeed in one weakened country after another and end up, through the worst violence, creating totalitarian slave societies.
      A disaster for those countries and the people in them. Again and again.
      I think (and hope) Russia will rise again and it’s people will live in the rich and civilised country they have deserved for so long.

    • @serhioromano
      @serhioromano Před 7 lety +2

      DavidInSydney1 I believe that western society came out of Christianity. Those principles got to foundation of so called western values. USA inherited it with migrants from Europe. Even more strongly because the oppression of Christians by Catholic church was the reason the left to US that time. Although it was not yet USA as we know.
      My point is that Communism is fighting faith. It is not acceptable if you believe in God to the point of in-prison person who resist publicly deny God's existence.
      So this kind of society left without guidance from above. Their values lowers to animal like. What can happen with society that believes that we are product of evolution where first low is that strongest survives? What is the purpose of our existence then? To survive as strongest?
      And the pity fact that though Russia is not a Communism any more. it continue fight with religion. I think you know new lows in Russia where you cannot tell anyone about Jesus. Or you will get fine for the first time and finally prison again.

  • @jonathonsimon7770
    @jonathonsimon7770 Před 7 lety +451

    I just watched this channel for the first time. I see a number of people in the comments saying these guys are attacking Chinese culture. I can only tell you that I did not get that impression. The hosts gave me the feeling that they are not saying these things to "trash" the Chine, but more from the perspective of their disappointment - and that they wished it could be better. Its similar to when your child does something inappropriate - you dont love them any less, but you may tell them that you are genuinely disappointed with their behavior. These guys have been in China for at least 10 years, and apparently have established families there. They are part of the culture, and believe they are just giving an honest account of some of the countries challenges. Like others have pointed out, this is totally different from a channel like China Uncensored whos goal is to say and do anything necessary to embarrass the Chinese government. I relish this unique look (pros and cons) at the real China.

    • @alessioskomneos655
      @alessioskomneos655 Před 7 lety +11

      because you are not chinese and you have prejudice/stereotype that all china made stuff as crappy thus you accepting everything he said as a truth without even trying to verifying it.You must try to skeptical and ask yourself, is it true EVERYTHING in China FALLING APART? or is it over generalization and exagerration.?

    • @xm447
      @xm447 Před 7 lety +4

      22 二球 well said.

    • @firstatheist
      @firstatheist Před 7 lety +20

      Your logic is flawed. Whether one is ethnically Chinese or not is irrelevant to one's ability to recognize poor infrastructure. China is not "falling apart" however, it does have a poorly regulated construction industry. This is due to fact that bribery and corruption are integrated into the bureaucracy.

    • @karlp8484
      @karlp8484 Před 7 lety +5

      Totally agree, it helps everyone if there's an open and honest vlog in country, and it;s entertaining!

    • @RealNovgorod
      @RealNovgorod Před 7 lety +4

      I also don't think they have an attacking attitude and they cover some very interesting topics. Still, generalizing like that might leave a wrong impression. China is huge and as such shows enormous contrasts between different areas and sub-cultures. The mega-cities are very well maintained, by no means worse than big western cities (well, except for the air quality in Beijing, of course), but it's extremely different in rural areas, such as the one they showed here, almost like a time travel...

  • @michaelpecarichhealth2366
    @michaelpecarichhealth2366 Před 3 lety +12

    When I lived in Jinan, a pedestrian overpass was being built outside of my residence. It started to rust within three weeks of the start of construction - rusting a great deal upon completion.

  • @fluffyhead6377
    @fluffyhead6377 Před 4 lety +12

    In Britain we like to build quality without even being told to, there is no way I would sign my name on a finished product without knowing for sure it will last years and won’t kill anyone.

    • @fluffyhead6377
      @fluffyhead6377 Před 2 lety +2

      @Amy Callis The government brought great shame to Britain with the great housing crisis, those politicians are not British, they don’t work for the people when they are lining their own pockets and shipping in unskilled labourers from across the world, I have always sought to make quality when I work along with many other proud British men across the country,
      RIP to the people that died that day.

    • @bertibear1300
      @bertibear1300 Před 2 lety

      @@fluffyhead6377 Yes, the recent governments have destroyed our nation.

  • @44theshadow49
    @44theshadow49 Před 7 lety +90

    I'm Chinese. I get my people pretty well. cleaning shit up is not a strong suit of Chinese culture as a whole.
    As for the temples, after Mao ZeDong turned the "Republic of China" into the Peoples Republic of China, religion was to an extent purged through beating up religious people and social stigmas. So religion in China only becomes relevant when it is necessary, such as Chinese holidays.
    buildings in the countryside are shit because outside of urban centers, the geography and lack of wealth in the area doesn't promote good infrastructure. The same can be said for any country that has large swaths of land with nothing to do with. i live in America, and rural towns and the like are run down. If there is no cash flowing into the area, there is no incentive to make anything pretty. Same can be said for Russia, where all cash flow is centered around Moscow.( which is a beautiful city btw). However, outside of Moscow, its practically desolate.
    Finally, the issue with China once again lies with Mao and his distribution of land to the people. It spread people way too thin, and prevented proper urban centers form popping up in places that needed money. As such, when Deng XiaoPing introduced a capitalist economic system, Rural areas with little to no development stayed that way. "I've got my concrete hut over here on my land, why would I build a building for you guys?"
    edit: I realized something. Socialist nations that attempted cultural elimination are generally shit at maintaining old stuff. Look at japan. they never had a cultural purge like Mao or Stalin did, and those countries old stuff kind of went to shit. The difference in China is that China has yet to have a "Cultural appreciation revival" era.

    • @Satchmoeddie
      @Satchmoeddie Před 7 lety +9

      Same scene in rural America my brother. Take a ride with me up I-25 between Santa Fe & Denver. I can show you abandoned power plants, majestically palatial abandoned breweries, and factories with gorgeous brickwork, and ornate architectural detail work, that are falling to pieces. The railroad is even still using mechanical signals from 95 years ago. Next we can go back east where things are 100-300 years older, and then finish up with a tour of some Indian reservations. Cleaning up shit, and keeping the animals penned up is not a high priority out there either, but they are nice hard working people.

    • @Maxid1
      @Maxid1 Před 7 lety +5

      Seth B Take a ride through Detroit if you want to see the American urban apocalypse.

    • @eddymoney5349
      @eddymoney5349 Před 7 lety +3

      Normandy SR3 maybe he doesn't give a shit about about ethnicity and he forges his own path.

    • @AbsurdlyAwkward
      @AbsurdlyAwkward Před 7 lety +1

      the best kind

    • @kennywang746
      @kennywang746 Před 7 lety +2

      44theshadow It still not really make any sense, In order to demonstrate prejudice and racism from other people against Chinese, you call yourself exactly what they call us. It's like a black people calls himself nword in the public

  • @dimitri1946
    @dimitri1946 Před 7 lety +147

    Producers of this video have a warped idea of what "a long time" is. Probably because they are young and have no memory of the Cultural Revolution and Mao's destruction of the his country. Why don't the Chinese care about their structures and allow them to fall apart? Well, according to this video it's because "they just don't care!" Got it? --- Well, not quite. The short answer is an economic one. "The people" don't care because they don't own any of the real property in a legally defensible way. Why should they care when their civic awareness teaches them that what they think they own actually belongs to them by government edict and can be taken away from them in minutes? It's a fucking socialist/marxist one party country, a Workers Paradise where nobody "owns" anything, including their personhood. Under the circumstances "Why care?".

    • @xcx_m6682
      @xcx_m6682 Před 7 lety

      Dimitri Ledkovsky probs

    • @oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo
      @oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo Před 7 lety +4

      Dimitri Ledkovsky it made me think about how surprised I was when I visited the us from Spain on Americans having charities and caring so much for others on a personal level. And it dawned on me, that's a what socialism generates, egoism.

    • @hershelbucksbaumrhinostein5241
      @hershelbucksbaumrhinostein5241 Před 7 lety +9

      People own property today in China. I lived in east Asia for ten years, this is just the way they are. No need for complicated theories.

    • @PewLaserBeams
      @PewLaserBeams Před 7 lety +14

      china is far from being socialist\marxist, private property is a thing in china, china is pretty much a capitalist society with one party regime, 30 years maybe that was the case, and what happens is that people have the mentality of not caring much because of the past where their houses and cars here owned by the governemnt and that mentality carried on.

    • @java20009
      @java20009 Před 7 lety +6

      Most people in China own the house , but they DO NOT OWN THE LAND.

  • @user-cz2ue8ti1l
    @user-cz2ue8ti1l Před 4 lety +10

    I'm a Taiwanese, but my mother is from WuHan,I've been there at least ten times,and I can tell you that WuHan is a prosperous city for sure,but if you were in a place that is 5 km away from WuHan,you will be in a rural area where cows and goats walking on the street

    • @SaharanKnight
      @SaharanKnight Před rokem

      So cows and goats are not fenced off? It is understandable that some cannot afford to have fences.

  • @nicketten1232
    @nicketten1232 Před 4 lety +11

    I worked in China for a few months getting call canters together in 2011 and I wish I watched this first. I spent all my time painting and fixing things.

  • @SharonShamikoLee
    @SharonShamikoLee Před 5 lety +59

    I was there 15 years ago and this video is 2016. It is still the same way. Even the sophisticated modern buildings, the bathroom door and flush breaks off. It is SOOOOOOO bad.

  • @billchow747
    @billchow747 Před 7 lety +83

    The Chinese Mainlander mindset of undervaluing old stuff began (in 1966-76) during the Cultural Revolution. Mao preached against the "Four Olds": old superstition, old habits, old customs, old religion. Red Guards roamed all over the country destroying traditional architectures, churches, temples & antique artifacts.
    On the other hand, Chinese in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Oversea still value traditional Chinese culture. We also repair and maintain cultural antiques diligently. There are also many more well-kept temples and churches in Taiwan & Hong Kong, since many of us are still devout Buddhists, Taoists or Christians; whereas most Mainlanders are now Atheists, because Communism promotes Atheism.
    Even in our written language, Chinese in Hong Kong and Taiwan still use Traditional Chinese characters whereas Chinese on the Mainland now use (new) simplified Chinese characters.

    • @edwardharley9
      @edwardharley9 Před 6 lety +3

      Good for you. Mr. Chow... I love Taiwan. Love to go there.....

    • @gilbertzxc8118
      @gilbertzxc8118 Před 6 lety

      首先我很抱歉我懒得用英文回复你,我并不是不会英文。我只想说一句话,我们中国人民并不是因为共产党推行无神论所以中国人民不信神,香港人、台湾人、大陆人其实都不是信佛教,我们有共同的根源,我们信一个中国古代的道教,作为新世纪的年轻人,我认为道教是非常人性的,佛教并不是我们普遍的信仰,请纠正。

    • @tibfulv
      @tibfulv Před 6 lety +3

      Figures it was Communism. Exactly that kind of mindset. No respect for anything.

    • @1GTX1
      @1GTX1 Před 6 lety +1

      In my town in Serbia only last year they renovated old beautiful building in the center of the city, but that is only one building, also i saw few old communist building that were renovated, it's amazing what some paint and nice roofs can do.

  • @easyjdier
    @easyjdier Před 4 lety +34

    Hey, ADV China Guys! This is the second of your videos I've watched. Thanks for the wonderful RARE look into today's China the CCP doesn't want people to see! Wonderful stuff, and yes, you two are pretty cool.
    In 1988 I was laying a deck down on a house in the middle of a mudflat that had been beautiful Northern Virginia hardwood forest just a few months before. They bulldozed about 150 acres and left not even a single tree standing. I looked around me and grossed out. I made a decision that day NOT to be a cog in this wheel of natural destruction any more. I remember very clearly deciding that I wasn't going to be a part of new construction going forward. I was ashamed I was making my living adding to the destruction and decided that day to quit that job and dedicate myself exclusively to keeping our existing housing stock in good repair and livable. Most carpenters don't want to touch rehab, because it is dirtier and harder. But I went the next 20 years doing just that, usually taking small 1940's and 50's houses, blowing out a wall or two and adding on massive additions and upgrades, thereby dragging the old house into the 21 Century. I became really good at it, and I'm proud that that is what I did.I also made permanent friends with several customers. My godson's and daughter's parents were customers whose 1880's farm house I did a big addition on. That's something a man can be proud of.
    In this video you guys have highlighted exactly what grossed me out- irresponsible growth! Thanks! And- Carry on! Have fun! (I'm going to go ahead and subscribe. You two are interesting.)

    • @SheepWaveMeByeBye
      @SheepWaveMeByeBye Před 3 lety +2

      I'd wish more builders were like you. That industry seems to have a serious "slash and burn"-mentality. Tear down, build shit, get paid and leave immediately. It's such a pity.

    • @terryl858
      @terryl858 Před 3 lety

      Does china have any birds never seen one on your r8

    • @terryl858
      @terryl858 Před 3 lety

      Does china have any birds never seen one on your r8

    • @wintersbattleofbands1144
      @wintersbattleofbands1144 Před rokem

      Adding a humongous addition is still new construction. It's sick how big of a house people think they need.

  • @opensesame8888
    @opensesame8888 Před 4 lety +30

    I once rented a room on the second floor at a Chinese owned house in Toronto. The ceiling was badly damaged due to rain drainage plus poor construction and the Chinese owner told me he would fix it when I went to look at the room. But he never even tried to fix it during my rented period. I think he was never actually thinking of fixing it but pretended so that I would move in that room. Also there were rats coming from downstairs through the holes under the kitchen and we the tenants freaked out and sealed them. Then the swarms of flies came from the downstairs backyard to the second floor often. The Chinese owner didn't even try to fix problems so we had to do everything on our own.

    • @DDRjason
      @DDRjason Před 3 lety +2

      Reminds me of a story my dad once told me from his friend.
      Almost the same situation but the tenant not only fixed the problem but improved the walls and got rid of the visible mould around the place and fixed a few other things around the unit like tearing off the mouldy carpet and sanding off the wooden floor underneath etc.
      Chinese owner came to inspect one time and saw that they improved the apartment. The family was expecting compensation from it but instead the owner said he's increasing the rent cuz it looked better now and since they didn't have proper contract that's protected by realestate laws. They didn't win in the end.

    • @nocensorship8092
      @nocensorship8092 Před 2 lety

      Just don't pay the rent then, your fault if you let them walk all over you, there are legal actions you can take. I don't know the precise laws but typically you can send a letter warning your landlord to fix the property, if he doesn't comply you can stop paying rent and use the rent savings to repair for it yourself and deduct them.

  • @tomleadbitter7165
    @tomleadbitter7165 Před 5 lety +184

    I'm Scottish and have lived in China for about 10 years, with my Chinese wife. I value your videos, thank you. This one in particular fascinated me, because this neglect, for want of a better word, drives me totally insane. I just can't get my head around it. It is apparent even within households, particularly those which house older people. Light fittings loose, bulbs needing replacing, wallpaper and tiles hanging off. I just don't get it and, as much as it pains me to say this, i can't put it down to anything but a lack of pride. Poor workmanship coupled with years of neglect and you've shown us perfectly what results. Such a shame. Thanks for your efforts; informative and very helpful, although one did raise my blood pressure, especially when i think of the heritage sites and ancient buildings of home. Have a safe and happy Christmas. (I know it's early.)

    • @MiaogisTeas
      @MiaogisTeas Před 5 lety +5

      I feel your pain, friend. Seeing the heritage buildings left to rot - or intentionally dismantled - makes me sick to my stomach. My favourite bugbear is seeing what clearly used to be either a carved stone stele or lintel with carved characters used for mundane or irreverent purposes. Watching old films of the cultural revolution really is eye opening.

    • @wolfen26
      @wolfen26 Před 5 lety

      Is there any old films you can recommend? I like watching historical documentaries. @@MiaogisTeas

    • @scottgoodson5132
      @scottgoodson5132 Před 5 lety +6

      At world heritage sites in China, where other countries have an interest in them being preserved, the Chinese government goes to great lengths to protect them (Longmen Grottoes, for example). Other than those, nobody gives a shit. One day, educated young Chinese will mourn the loss of historical sites, traditional Chinese architecture, etc. Until then, China seems content to knock it all down, to make way for yet another block of god-awful, shitty apartment buildings, which are being built everywhere, at breakneck speed. It’s shameful.

    • @Rishi123456789
      @Rishi123456789 Před 4 lety +2

      "with my Chinese wife."
      Burn the rice, pay the price.

    • @mvvagner
      @mvvagner Před 4 lety +3

      There's plenty of pride... just for the wrong things

  • @DiHandley
    @DiHandley Před 7 lety +40

    Thousands upon thousands of Chinese are now moving to Australia. When they get here they either buying existing houses, or build new ones. Normally two storey. In either case they don't maintain the gardens or buildings. I don't know why this is the case, but they certainly aren't house proud. Weird.

    • @williamallman299
      @williamallman299 Před 7 lety +8

      I've lived in China for almost two months now, and my bride-to-be said something the other day that may shed some light on that. Basically, it was "don't look for extra work". In other words, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

    • @lookoutforchris
      @lookoutforchris Před 7 lety +10

      William Allman that shows a fundamental lack of understanding about what maintenance is and why it is important. No society can advance if they completely neglect maintenance of their infrastructure and important assets.

    • @immortal2893
      @immortal2893 Před 7 lety +1

      gran torino? lol

    • @williamallman299
      @williamallman299 Před 7 lety +4

      lookoutforchris " No society can advance if they completely neglect maintenance of their infrastructure and important assets." Oh, you mean like the hundreds of bridges in the US that are falling apart?

    • @jojomanstyle
      @jojomanstyle Před 7 lety

      i hope they are not as unhyginic as some of those other asians

  • @DKanon
    @DKanon Před 2 lety +4

    I found this very interesting. I live in Texas. Awhile back, I rented a brand new home that was leased by a management company but was owned as an investment by a very nice Chinese couple.
    Shortly after I moved in, they fired the management company and decided to maintain everything themselves.
    After several years, things started to need repair but the couple never wanted to fix anything. In fact the only things they repaired were the things that might cause sever damage (like a leaking water pipe) , or the home owners association forced them to fix.
    When they did fix something they would replace items with lower cost lower quality items or do shoddy repairs.
    They would try to repair things themselves that they had no idea what they were doing with predictable results.
    The house is now 10 years old and I moved after a few years. I happened to drive by the house recently and was shocked at how run down the place looks from the outside ... dead shrubs, overgrown trees, etc.
    Clearly they bought it as an investment and have treated it as an asset to be used up and at some point discarded.
    This is a house, with proper maintenance, that should last at least 50 years, but I don't think that is in the cards.

  • @ccmyart
    @ccmyart Před 4 lety +4

    The strangest thing is, when they move to Canada and other countries, they take that mentality with them. They buy property here and still they don't maintain it properly.

  • @MrEroshan
    @MrEroshan Před 7 lety +36

    My wife is from Changchun, her apartment was in a community setting. Everything that was a public space was very dirty and unkempt. I asked her why no one would clean the three story stairwell, she said it was not their responsibility. I told her to get me a broom and I would clean it. She told me the neighbors wouldn't like that. I honestly don't understand their culture.

    • @FuZhixiang
      @FuZhixiang Před 7 lety +4

      You got bad neighbours, so you met two miserable cases. If they were good, they would clean the stairs willingly and appraise your help if you cleaned for them.

    • @wildbikerbill6530
      @wildbikerbill6530 Před 7 lety +2

      "...I told her to get me a broom and I would clean it. She told me the neighbors wouldn't like that...."
      If you don't mind my asking, why would the neighbors not like it? Why would they care?

    • @rosecityrower
      @rosecityrower Před 7 lety +15

      A culture of neglect can only exist as long as everyone is complicit. When a person rejects that culture and tries to fix something or clean, when others don't you are implying that those other people's actions are wrong and it then becomes a slight to their "face". It is an act that shows you disprove of their choices and culture.

    • @MrEroshan
      @MrEroshan Před 7 lety +2

      *****
      Pretty much what PortlandPhil just said.

    • @buttmasterassgrinder2.020
      @buttmasterassgrinder2.020 Před 7 lety +1

      well u sould take that broom and clean that filt like a real american men/or any real men

  • @tkmyr
    @tkmyr Před 5 lety +117

    Regarding your exchange about Japanese temples towards the end of this video. For the larger ones, the temples maintain forests of trees of the same wood so that when it is time to renovate or repair, they are ready.

    • @DaBoomDude
      @DaBoomDude Před 2 lety +3

      This also goes back to the fact that theyve had so many fires - most of the temples in japan are reproductions with original style materials - i actually think theres like one original temple left in japan - most of them were burnt down and rebuilt.

  • @pigleyjr
    @pigleyjr Před 4 lety +5

    that elevator situation reminds me of when none of my suite mates wanted to send a complaint for the broken light in our dorm bathroom and we showered in the dark for months. in my defense i always sent the complaints and just wanted to see how long they could hold out before they'd take the initiative

  • @jackfrost2146
    @jackfrost2146 Před 4 lety +48

    China---One of the few countries where their food barks at you....

    • @Frankie13074
      @Frankie13074 Před 3 lety +1

      that's a pretty dark joke buddy, i hate how they eat innocent dogs for businesses

    • @jackfrost2146
      @jackfrost2146 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Frankie13074 It's not meant to be a "joke." Just a way of pointing out the hideous practices in China and other Asian countries.

    • @Frankie13074
      @Frankie13074 Před 3 lety

      @@jackfrost2146 i appreciate that, if it is a joke it is a good one anyways

    • @LauraLin_
      @LauraLin_ Před 3 lety

      So you're vegan right?

    • @jackfrost2146
      @jackfrost2146 Před 3 lety +1

      @@LauraLin_ So you eat dogs right? (after boiling them alive).

  • @Hotshotter3000
    @Hotshotter3000 Před 7 lety +724

    Never seen this side of China before. These videos are fascinating.

    • @rejncu
      @rejncu Před 7 lety +24

      Hotshotter3000 becouse nobody wants u to see this

    • @johngui8084
      @johngui8084 Před 7 lety +25

      I lived in China for 14 years, and I never seen these before.

    • @dontjudgemebymyname.4282
      @dontjudgemebymyname.4282 Před 7 lety +16

      +rejncu Specially Chinese communist government.

    • @Hotshotter3000
      @Hotshotter3000 Před 7 lety +19

      Don't judge me by my name. Yeah, I also heard that mass murder (especially stabbings, but shootings DO happen) are a major problem in China, but they cover up almost all of them and we only get to hear about a few that's happening there.

    • @ericp1139
      @ericp1139 Před 7 lety +17

      Because these are rural/blighted areas. When you think of America, you think of Hollywood or Manhattan. You don't think of Detroit.

  • @allwinds3786
    @allwinds3786 Před 7 lety +119

    when taking with people take off your helmet. people are more likely to talk when they see your eyes. that's just basic courtesy

    • @leloodallasmultipass
      @leloodallasmultipass Před 7 lety +41

      haha. a white face is the same as a helmet. good luck with that.

    • @xm447
      @xm447 Před 7 lety +1

      Donald Schneider true. Wish they knew that word.

    • @allwinds3786
      @allwinds3786 Před 7 lety +12

      Courtesy is lost, my mother told me to be polite, if you are wearing sunglasses and want to talk with a stranger take them off, so much is communicated with the eyes.

    • @xm447
      @xm447 Před 7 lety +7

      Donald Schneider exactly. Finger crossed they will see your comments and learn how to treat the locals with a bit respect next time. Imagine they do that in their own countries...

    • @leloodallasmultipass
      @leloodallasmultipass Před 7 lety +11

      Donald Schneider Have you ever been to China? Whatever you've learned, forget it. There are more of them than there are of just about any other culture. Your mother's teachings don't apply and you may have been mislead, given your minority status;)
      I should add that you are not going to be acting like a Chinese person, but rather as a foreigner in a foreign land. It's not what you think.

  • @markmjb5869
    @markmjb5869 Před 4 lety

    The quality of your video's is very good and informative, thanks guys.

  • @JR-hc6ur
    @JR-hc6ur Před 2 lety +1

    This is the video that I first saw these two dudes in. I don't know why it ended up in my feed back in 2018. I have no regrets about following them ever since...

  • @roncooper8666
    @roncooper8666 Před 5 lety +41

    I'm an old guy in California and I just want you guys to know how glad I am to have discovered your YT channels - First serpentZA then ADVChina and C-Milk. I really enjoy living vicariously thru your young eyes in a land I'll never visit. Keep 'em coming, guys!

    • @skeetrix5577
      @skeetrix5577 Před 4 lety

      @Alex Mercer lol wow what a fucking idiot

  • @jezlanejl
    @jezlanejl Před 6 lety +127

    Over 70years old? Cool? The Church at the end of my road was built in 746ad. Thats not un-ordinary in England. We still have ships that were built in 1860 tied up in the harbour.

    • @DerAngriff
      @DerAngriff Před 6 lety +39

      The speed of the demographic change in the UK will see such cares for your history evaporate. That church will one day be a mosque or disused rubble. These things can only exist because a culture understood its value. That cultural continuity is being disrupted. A 100 years from now, China will still be Chinese. You'll be a run down euro backwater populated by inbred imbeciles. Yep, but tune into the BBC TV to continue to let you know how awesome you once were.

    • @garyprice464
      @garyprice464 Před 6 lety +5

      Wow just fucking wow

    • @Sam_Guevenne
      @Sam_Guevenne Před 6 lety +8

      you should go to egypt the mortuary temple of queen Hatshepsut is thousands of years old and it still looks prestine and in ethiopia there are churches that are 800 years old that look better than any building in that village it's such a shame chinese architecture is beautiful

    • @Sam_Guevenne
      @Sam_Guevenne Před 6 lety +12

      i have a feeling you mister DerAngriff is mad at the world because you're mom and dad are also your aunt and uncle and perhaps even cousins which would make you your own second cousin

    • @MsMesem
      @MsMesem Před 6 lety +4

      Sadly I have noticed that British children are not taught to appreciate and value the history in places and buildings that surround them. The churches ARE being turned into apartments or mosques. It is upsetting to see and identify that no one is doing anything to turn this tide of ignorance. It is also blatantly declared by Remain voters who value nothing of their forefathers.

  • @alexp3752
    @alexp3752 Před 4 lety +1

    In years past, I was an executive vice president for an Asia-based airline. The shocking lack of quality and craftsmanship can be tied to numerous factors. As an illustration, examine countries with the finest quality products in the world, Germany and Switzerland. You can sense the quality when you first arrive, and rarely are you ever disappointed. It all begins at an early age, and is in fact cultural. Both Germany and Switzerland have embraced what I term, "A Culture of Quality", and that cannot be duplicated elsewhere unless it begins at an early age, and is consistently reinforced throughout the society, regardless of cost.

  • @sticky59
    @sticky59 Před 3 lety

    Very interesting stuff.Thanks for the video guys.

  • @sunhuatom
    @sunhuatom Před 7 lety +311

    Because everybody knows that nothing in China will ever last, so why should we spend any money for maintenance!! We have a history of over 3000 years, yet you can rarely see any houses that are over 100 years old. I've been in Canada for a period of time, guess what? 1 century houses in Canada are everywhere and they look better than 20 years buildings in China.
    Want to know the reason? It has nothing to do with Chinese culture or tradition. This can be easily told by simply compare China mainland with Taiwan or Singapore.
    The very reason is that our dear communist party is trying to blur the boundaries between private domain and public domain since the beginning, so that the government can always take advantage of people. Real estate for example, it suppose to be private property, but the government did a tricky thing so that one can only own any real estate for maximum 70 years. After that the government can basically take back the property "legally". As a result, buying a house in China is more like renting it from the government, so why would people bother about making it looks nicer.
    Moreover, our government did similar "tricks" everywhere. Basically, we have the strictest laws in the world, so that one has to break some to live an average life (And this is especially true for entrepreneurs). However, the trick is that government is the one who enforces the laws. In the end, they can legally put anyone in jail as they wish.

    • @ADVChina
      @ADVChina  Před 7 lety +49

      +Hu Sun very good insight

    • @richardsandwell2285
      @richardsandwell2285 Před 7 lety +8

      That's terrible for you all, the UK governments of the past have been so corrupt. But at least even they are not that bad. You seem to have good honourable people though, the businesses I have dealt with in China are fantastic, they are so helpful and reliable..

    • @sunhuatom
      @sunhuatom Před 7 lety +43

      I'd say any people who have business outside China are decent and wise people, and willing to honor their words.
      Inside China, it is typical "Bad money drives out good".
      There are plenty of honorable people, but they are either brain washed, or are living a struggling life.
      It may sound that my opinion is very aggressive. I was not like this 10 years ago. At that time I was a typical young Chinese who would cheer when 911 happens, and who would support war against Taiwan, and thought living in western is like hell. Well, as time pass by I realized those ideas are horrible and stupid.

    • @gyxtc
      @gyxtc Před 7 lety +8

      Watch out dude, Chinese special agents are hunting you arse down right now! LOL. Jokes aside I think what you said about ordinary people have to break the law to make a decent living is kinda biased/not true. The time limit on private properties is true although I don't think that's why people are not maintaining them...

    • @kylefenrick7842
      @kylefenrick7842 Před 7 lety +2

      but there are a billion people there, why not just get rid of the people causing the problems?

  • @JasmineJu
    @JasmineJu Před 7 lety +43

    The Chinese are more concerned with building than maintaining, when building start looking old, they're just torn down and rebuilt.

    • @basteagui
      @basteagui Před 7 lety

      lol

    • @YTofuable
      @YTofuable Před 7 lety +6

      LOL, but running out of gas ≠ broken down, and I'm sure Chinese know that difference. Nice try XD

    • @bokjay
      @bokjay Před 7 lety +4

      Exactly the same in the Middle East, big budgets for projects but once built there is little or no maintenance. In fact the only people who "know" about things having to be maintained are the Parks Depts. They at least keep cutting the grass.

    • @JayNohh
      @JayNohh Před 7 lety

      But why not clean or keep up on things while the building still exists? If I go to a restaurant one day and then return again a few days later, I'm gonna hope they've cleaned the restrooms at least once within that time frame.

    • @bitelaserkhalif
      @bitelaserkhalif Před 7 lety

      John Bok go to dubai and you will see unused supercars

  • @blimolhm2790
    @blimolhm2790 Před rokem +2

    Love this vid even after all these years

  • @lillyofboca
    @lillyofboca Před 4 lety +1

    Very interesting. I really enjoyed the tour. The temple - you would think they would keep up their place of worship. Thanks again!

  • @romlyn99
    @romlyn99 Před 6 lety +43

    It is a shame... and you are right about the maintenance ethic in Japan - and the thing about Japan - they never went through a cultural revolution and were not stripped of their sacred religious beliefs. So in Japan Shinto and Buddhism are conflicting religions - but in almost all Japanese homes they have a shrine for both. So there is a sacredness that permeates every aspect of life. So the temples scattered all around the place are deemed to be the place of gods (shinto) or places or worship (buddhism) so it is very rare to see badly maintained temples... and another thing to mention about Japan - cleanliness is seen as holy. So at the entrance of the temples are stone tubs for washing your hands and face. And this feeling of cleanliness washes out of the temple into daily life. And every moment of the day people clean up. You go to a restaurant you get a wet towel (oshibori) to wash your hands before eating.
    And the biggest reason for having great looking temples - many are run like a business. So every time you go to a shrine or temple you have a coin box in front of the altar. People throw small coins in the box for good luck or to get favor of the gods. So Meiji Jingu in Tokyo is the most popular place to visit. It gets so many small coins that it pulls in millions of yen each day. In the back rooms of the temple they have a stock trading room that trades with all the major investment banks. So maintaining the temple is good for business.
    So if you started a trend - to bring the gods back into the temples and have full time priest businessmen - you want good luck - come to the good luck temple - throw a small coin for good luck. You want a baby - go to the baby temple - throw a small coin for getting pregnant. That's basically what happens in Japan.

  • @ifoundthistoday
    @ifoundthistoday Před 4 lety +507

    thanks ... I'm never going to China ... thanks for the warning

    • @zootsoot2006
      @zootsoot2006 Před 4 lety +30

      Visit once, and never go back.

    • @DaleSteadman
      @DaleSteadman Před 4 lety +22

      Spend you money else where.

    • @lienkyolwage1528
      @lienkyolwage1528 Před 4 lety +1

      Do you prefer anc or.juju

    • @yangerjamir0906
      @yangerjamir0906 Před 4 lety +64

      Why not? You should especially visit Wuhan. Heard they have great bat soup there.

    • @lienkyolwage1528
      @lienkyolwage1528 Před 4 lety +4

      @@yangerjamir0906 yes great soap and virus glad read bybel china non beleivers.i sent my son to.china my biggest.mistake

  • @TechToWatch
    @TechToWatch Před 4 lety +2

    In Portugal and India I was really struck by how really beautiful, old buildings were just left empty and exposed to the weather. In Lisbon it seemed likely that property was being kept in the expectation of a rise in property prices, but the windows were not sealed up, just broken glass and the roofs had often had too many winters and summers and had gaping holes or caved in. Some had even the floors collapsed. And these were really beautiful building, some were former palaces with a documented history, just being allowed to rot and collapse.

  • @nathanhamer8987
    @nathanhamer8987 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey guys, what is a "milk-dog"?
    Love the vids. Keep up the good work 🙂👍

  • @MikeMessiah
    @MikeMessiah Před 7 lety +231

    You know what, this sounds a lot like India. I think this has to do with overpopulated societies. *If its not mine, its not my problem*

    • @blackopsrocks
      @blackopsrocks Před 7 lety +27

      Japan is far more densely populated, yet...this is NOT how they are.

    • @oopswrongplanet7309
      @oopswrongplanet7309 Před 7 lety +5

      Tristan Wolff Excellent point

    • @blackopsrocks
      @blackopsrocks Před 7 lety +9

      It comes down to society and traditions. Hate to say it and I'm sure many have heard it but etiquette training and traditional values would go a long ways.

    • @JayNohh
      @JayNohh Před 7 lety

      +Tristan Wolff Exactly!

    • @JayNohh
      @JayNohh Před 7 lety +2

      And irregardless of whether something else is your own problem, even from a selfish standpoint I don't see why each place that is kept by anyone or belongs to anyone would still not be kept, especially businesses or places that wanna keep people in and benefit themselves in that way. I'm not encouraging a selfish mentality, I'm just saying I don't see why each place or person wouldn't wanna keep up on their own. They still gotta live or operate in it.

  • @gecsus
    @gecsus Před 7 lety +21

    I am an American Expat living in Xi'an for 4 years now, and I love it here. I don't know where you guys are, but Xian is replacing old buildings as fast as they can. You might be a little more considerate when making wildly general statements. The old building of 40 plus years were made in a different era. So please, stop the gross misrepresentations. There are problems with maintenance but it isn't "Everywhere you go in China nothing is maintained", That is just wrong.

    • @ddesign63
      @ddesign63 Před 7 lety +4

      gecsus I'm 1/2 Chinese-American, born in San Francisco. I am also married to a Chinese woman from Harbin. I don't think these guys are unfair in their assessment. I have traveled throughout china for over a decade. Now living in Brooklyn NY on the edge Chinatown 8th avenue. Let me tell you.., these guys are spot on target with their statements and understanding of the Chinese culture. Until education takes place inside china, this will forever be the case. It occurred here in Chinatown and even my own home. I am the one that maintains and organizes our home. Chinese culture may build wealth. But it does not buy class nor intelligence. Even the students that come here to attend Universities rarely make the mental and cultural adjustments. Only offspring born into a new society are able to somewhat adjust. It's a real shame as the Chinese are not a bothersome people but the stubborn ignorance is rock solid!!!

    • @gecsus
      @gecsus Před 7 lety +4

      ddesign63 I guess my perspective is limited. I grew up near San Francisco, My Mother was born there. I am also married to a Chinese woman (locally born) and I have had a small school for children that I taught the benefits of respect, cooperation and combined efforts. I found them quite intelligent and very receptive. One of my students is now living in the U.S. and attending a Christian High School in Idaho. She is doing very well.
      I didn't say some of the things being said were not true. What I said was blanket statements tend to give impressions that are inaccurate.
      The Chinese people are not less intelligent, so on this we disagree. Some areas that remain uneducated are lacking growth due to a lack of mental stimulation, on that I will agree.
      In general, the people here in Xi'an are warm, generous and friendly. I have many Chinese friends and we enjoy each others company.
      I am working with groups of young adults at one of the Universities and they are very quick to absorb the differences in culture and apply them. I don't know that the Chinese course materials produce equivalent results, and I suspect they do not.
      Thanks for your input though. I appreciate it.

    • @ddesign63
      @ddesign63 Před 7 lety

      gecsus totally agree with you on intelligence. Perhaps I should have chosen my words better. That being said, what I find in my daily dealings with Chinese from china here in NYC, their is a huge lack of willingness for openness, self reflections, honesty, integrity and I could go on and on. That is with many but certainly NOT ALL. The beliefs and habits are so ridged in the community. But this dates back centuries as the Chinese refused trade with Europe and considered China the center of the world. Hence the name Zhongjuo. As china rebuilds its exterior image, it is also in need of rebuilding the openness of outside knowledge, consideration, possibilities, creativity and becoming a overall well rounded society. Not to say that America is better or not in the midst of its own decline. But china is many many years from mentally rebuilding as far as I can see.

    • @qingchuan8671
      @qingchuan8671 Před 7 lety +4

      It's just clickbait title.

    • @gecsus
      @gecsus Před 7 lety +3

      ddesign63 Yes, Central Kingdom. They are private and reclusive because part of the culture is to use every avenue of making your life better. That may include using or taking of something someone else has and you do not. So they tend to be guarded. It is a double sided sword. They are very responsible for their own lives, yet they are so guarded as to become heartless and selfish in the extreme and do themselves and their culture a disservice as a result.
      If they ever start working together for a common cause... the world better watch out.

  • @Zoofactory
    @Zoofactory Před 3 lety

    These videos are helpful. Thank You.

  • @Gandeloft
    @Gandeloft Před 2 lety

    I love this channel. I like the personalities of the two of you. I hope to go on an adventure like that myself one day.

  • @gontsaru
    @gontsaru Před 6 lety +490

    This is the result of Communism. A similarly a thing in Russia and other post-Communist countries, although to a lesser extent.

    • @friendlylaser
      @friendlylaser Před 6 lety +35

      Can confirm about Russia. General mindset is "what belongs to community belongs to nobody and especially not to me". It's not gone so far as in China, and slowly turning around, especially in big cities, but generally communal property isn't appreciated by people. At least for the last decade or so personal space starts to slowly crawl to apartment buildings staircases and corridors, but sadly not to the outside. Also, people in general doesn't give a damn about aesthetic of the streets. Even if local government will install something nice it will be brutally vandalized in days. I even saw streetlight pole bent around itself by somebody. Still can't imagine why someone want to destroy landscape so badly.

    • @ClockworksOfGL
      @ClockworksOfGL Před 6 lety +10

      gontsaru - Can confirm. There’s a Russian guy at my place that does basically nothing for the building, unless cornered. He wouldn’t even take his trash barrel out. It’s a completely different mentality over there. I can see why Russia, Ukraine, etc. are basket cases. Being “clever” is more important than being “intelligent and responsible “.

    • @gontsaru
      @gontsaru Před 6 lety +9

      Bryan Noga I think you are somewhat exaggerating with your "basket case" diagnosis. Especially in Russia things are changing for the better rather fast. In 10-15 years a generation will take over the politics and economy which has grown in post-Soviet Russia, and those are people with a different mentality. There will be a natural and steady process towards more democracy and liberalism as a result of that.

    • @cristic767
      @cristic767 Před 6 lety +10

      Romania, the same. People don't give a f. if there is not their own property.
      (former) Communism! :(
      Still in the behaviour of people, even 28 years have passed since the Revolution.

    • @BorisKnoT
      @BorisKnoT Před 6 lety +8

      Same problem in Serbia, ex Yugoslavia. Not as bad as China but similar to othe eastern Europe countries.

  • @1LSWilliam
    @1LSWilliam Před 6 lety +71

    Where there is no private property there is no obligation of self-interest to care for anything. You failed to make the obvious remark.

    • @wuddude1599
      @wuddude1599 Před 5 lety

      China allows private property and private ownership of businesses. I bought some e-cigs from a private shop in Beijing. Guess where they were made? LOL! One of the streets we were on it seemed like every other shop was a music store.

    • @POLARISFPV
      @POLARISFPV Před 5 lety +3

      Something that belongs to no one is cared for by nobody.

    • @anunderestimate
      @anunderestimate Před 5 lety

      Yeah, like Earth.

  • @cacamoto5395
    @cacamoto5395 Před 3 lety

    I'm obsessed with your channel

  • @richwhippersnapper
    @richwhippersnapper Před 3 lety +8

    The landscape reminds me a lot of Peru, albeit their architecture and quality of home construction is much superior than China's and they do an excellent job maintaining it.

  • @SpaztallicA
    @SpaztallicA Před 6 lety +201

    China never used to be like that. This is the result of an entire nation being stripped of pride and culture, having any responsibility replaced with a bleak, cold and ruthless regime devoted to communism. people mind their own, and only their own business because it was the safest thing to do for years, and rising death tolls deprived people of empathy. mass starvation, censorship, and executions change nations for years. the most heartwarming yet perhaps also the saddest thing is that despite being obviously worked like computers, the teenagers I met in china were incredibly bright, enthusiastic and welcoming, a hopeful bunch dwelling in front of a depressing backdrop. shanghai is still pretty cool though.

    • @minutesagoedited9761
      @minutesagoedited9761 Před 5 lety +13

      "an entire nation being stripped of pride and culture" seems to be occurring world wide these days. Wonder the 'source' of all of this is.

    • @786otto
      @786otto Před 5 lety +5

      Really? They just chip and greedy.

    • @TheBakuganmaster99
      @TheBakuganmaster99 Před 5 lety +1

      Wow, sounds like every post colonial country ever.

    • @citrusblast4372
      @citrusblast4372 Před 5 lety +5

      @@minutesagoedited9761 globalism

    • @thecombodeluxe3109
      @thecombodeluxe3109 Před 5 lety +2

      @@TheBakuganmaster99 Yeah, no. Most post colonial countries became greater, and eventually became free again.

  • @JohnSmith-fd1ql
    @JohnSmith-fd1ql Před 5 lety +67

    I was married to a mainland communist Chinese woman . She would take the cloths out of the washer before it drained to reuse the dirty water. Let me repeat , I was married.

    • @stefanavic6630
      @stefanavic6630 Před 5 lety +43

      @Patrick Kazan Shit comment mate. Low.

    • @hognuts1469
      @hognuts1469 Před 5 lety +24

      @Patrick Kazan probably because there's nasty people from your country to do it with . Fix the gross practices in your country first.

    • @TheHaters112
      @TheHaters112 Před 5 lety +30

      @Patrick Kazan We also have white men helping impoverished children worldwide. Coloured people don't give a damn.

    • @KnightofAntiquity
      @KnightofAntiquity Před 5 lety +4

      That makes no sense. How small was this washing machine?

    • @MrMedville56
      @MrMedville56 Před 4 lety +4

      @Patrick Kazan A lefty white racist? P.o.s.

  • @jiminauburn5073
    @jiminauburn5073 Před 2 lety

    That picture of your old home that you got from your inlaws looks exactly like the one that my inlaws used to have. 5 stores, no elevator. Bars on the balconies like that to prevent people from climbing up and getting in. They eventually moved in their late 70s to a new building that is around 30 stories and has an elevator.

  • @michaeleric418
    @michaeleric418 Před 4 lety +8

    Really enjoy these video's,seeing behind the facades and seeing the real China.Good work gentlemen.

  • @morganyu3838
    @morganyu3838 Před 6 lety +137

    Seen videos on LiveLeak of people in car accidents in China. People - even a kid in one - in pain in the road with literally _nobody_ helping them. Everyone just standing around waiting for, I guess in their view, the people responsible for them - the emergency services. In the West people with no training will at least comfort and console a stranger in pain before the ambulance arrives. But in China - there is a weird disconnect between people. Attitudes like that are absent of empathy.

    • @SarsTheSecond
      @SarsTheSecond Před 5 lety +13

      I have seen that in Westarn countries. Some guy is having a seisure and nobody helps. Just walking by.

    • @thehavoccompany-a3
      @thehavoccompany-a3 Před 5 lety +11

      @@SarsTheSecond It's much more rare to see in 1st world countries like the US, UK, and those in the EU, at least for the most part (some major cities like Detroit aren't much better). In China, its seems to be a regular occurrence.

    • @yaiburanakul8505
      @yaiburanakul8505 Před 5 lety +10

      Yes, it is apathy that the people simply grew up around. The US had definitely become more apathetic itself of people who look like they can use help but often they don’t get it because others are too uncaring or too afraid to get involved or meet the person. I think it is a value that was ingrained in them from childhood. And, what we don’t use, we lose. What we don’t practice, we forget. What we don’t do, we don’t ever become better at IT. All it requires is a desire to change for the better, but fear and a lack of vision keep their culture less developed. It is interesting because Chinese culture used to be highly developed and refined in many ways.

    • @nicolle2126
      @nicolle2126 Před 5 lety +11

      Zhenpeng Zhao How would you even know an ambulance will arrive if no one cares enough to call one? If you see someone in pain, you don't move them of course but you also have to make sure that help is on the way or that proper first aid is applied until then

    • @jamesz5816
      @jamesz5816 Před 5 lety

      What makes you think the rest of the people don't care? Making a phone call is just one move. Someone in the crowd definitely had made a phone call. And by your professional experiences, what kind of first aid should be given by the crowd who had no knowledge or equipment ?

  • @NotTheWheel
    @NotTheWheel Před 7 lety +40

    Why is everything in China falling apart? Well...
    It was made in China.
    badumtish!

    • @nazdhillon994
      @nazdhillon994 Před 7 lety +1

      NotTheWheel
      But I don't see my iPhone 7 falling apart.....

    • @gatolee9774
      @gatolee9774 Před 7 lety

      durga durga there is no objection when it comes to anciant enginering the problem is the capitalism ideologis and strategies like planned obsolesens. that chinese people are adopting.

    • @gatolee9774
      @gatolee9774 Před 7 lety

      durga durga people should treasure there heritage.

    • @i_nameless_i-jgsdf
      @i_nameless_i-jgsdf Před 7 lety

      are you funny now fucking clown ?

    • @danielrodriguez248
      @danielrodriguez248 Před 7 lety

      NotTheWheel every thing made in china falls apart especially the shit imported here from China which is mostly everything

  • @nathanpender3353
    @nathanpender3353 Před 2 lety

    Excellent information and coverage I like this video makes me feel like I'm riding the motorcycle

  • @Unsensitive
    @Unsensitive Před 2 lety +1

    A few Chinese boys moved in next to me here in the US.
    My wife commented about their expensive cars, which I pointed out we're poorly maintained (broken fender on one, missing light on the other, the 3rd was pristine, but had temp tags still)
    Within 3 days, liter all over outside, and they just piled their trash outside the dumpster, vs in it... Which was empty.
    I recalled this video from years ago to send to my wife, to giver her perspective.
    Luckily, we're out of here in a month or two, once our house repairs are completed.

  • @aaronvenema
    @aaronvenema Před 5 lety +18

    I've been in China a year now. You guys do a really good job showing people what China is really like. Keep up your good work! Looking forward to ADV Media

  • @CCPvirus141
    @CCPvirus141 Před 7 lety +117

    Can't believe how different China and Japan are in terms of mind set and the people.

    • @hexazalea1793
      @hexazalea1793 Před 6 lety +7

      Well you know. They hate each other and have little in common..... Also china has communism.

    • @INTERSTATE-35-WARRIOR
      @INTERSTATE-35-WARRIOR Před 6 lety

      Promotedddddddddddddd

    • @mornax
      @mornax Před 6 lety +2

      Japan's homeowners have an anti-upkeep culture as well. It's a bit different though because the idea is to buy new or rebuild after one generation.

    • @DukeJames
      @DukeJames Před 6 lety +1

      It's really stark.

    • @stewacide
      @stewacide Před 6 lety +3

      I read somewhere that in Japan the average home is torn down and rebuilt after 20 years because of the (presumably Asian) bias against maintaining things

  • @Karl_Kampfwagen
    @Karl_Kampfwagen Před 4 lety +1

    That part with the elevator light is classic... 🤣💀

  • @GathererThompson
    @GathererThompson Před 3 lety +3

    Do you guys occasionally give the 'I Remember You' guy a few bucks? 😂 It's a jam!

  • @Rj-tz5kb
    @Rj-tz5kb Před 5 lety +255

    Next time take of your helmet when you ask something to a stranger, it will help them being more open and honoust.

    • @MrBoreray
      @MrBoreray Před 4 lety +29

      Yes,as soon as I saw this part I was saying out loud 'take your f***ing helmets off and let the man know who he's talking to'

    • @djimanufacture7682
      @djimanufacture7682 Před 4 lety +20

      No problem.
      Just tell them you are from government

    • @zootsoot2006
      @zootsoot2006 Před 4 lety +28

      Nope, wouldn't help. Chinese people know nothing. 99% of the time Chinese people's answers are 没有 and 不知道

    • @rubenromero793
      @rubenromero793 Před 4 lety +14

      That's the problem thier country has a long history of being dishonest and deceitful always lie to thier own folks and foreigners time has come to become independent from China all together period

    • @djimanufacture7682
      @djimanufacture7682 Před 4 lety +1

      @@zootsoot2006 wo pu Che tao

  • @ryanedmonds2244
    @ryanedmonds2244 Před 5 lety +48

    That was a super well put together video. informative too

  • @justcurious40
    @justcurious40 Před 4 lety

    Awesome details

  • @kayrico8367
    @kayrico8367 Před 4 lety

    I think these videos are made with all of the best intentions. They really want to see things improve.

  • @michaela.segarra461
    @michaela.segarra461 Před 5 lety +170

    Thank you for saving me money now I can safely say that I can take china off my bucket list of places to visit.

    • @gregwarner3753
      @gregwarner3753 Před 4 lety +7

      It was never high on mine so thanks anyway.

    • @nicholasbyram296
      @nicholasbyram296 Před 4 lety +11

      You don't have to cancel your trip to Disney World just because there are trailer parks in Orlando.

    • @MrHotstepper89
      @MrHotstepper89 Před 4 lety +16

      Nicholas Byram China makes trailer parks look like 5star accommodation!! What an absolute backwards shithole

    • @rubenromero793
      @rubenromero793 Před 4 lety

      Bingo

    • @kevinconnor6921
      @kevinconnor6921 Před 4 lety

      Michael A. Segarra no bat wing soup for you

  • @Jeeco1986
    @Jeeco1986 Před 5 lety +104

    I am from Hong Kong and yes I have the same feeling as you guys every time I go there, such a sham !!!

  • @LTHuddonDesignOfficial
    @LTHuddonDesignOfficial Před 4 lety +1

    Very interesting!

  • @conservativemike3768
    @conservativemike3768 Před 4 lety

    Excellent video!

  • @jonathanhurley4055
    @jonathanhurley4055 Před 6 lety +13

    My first trip to Phuket Thailand (I live in North Thailand now in a house I bought), I noticed perhaps HUNDREDS of buildings newly constructed abandoned in the midst of building. Jungle overtaking the entire lot. After seeing so many with no activity, I asked my girlfriend (later wife) WTF was all this in Phuket, a MAJOR tourist destination. She really wasn't someone who paid attention to these kinds of things, and was quite taken aback that I had a curiosity about it. After a little detective work, and a LOT of blank stares, here is my report (lol)! There was a period in the recent past where Thailand was called the Tiger of Asia, with a booming economy, not unlike the USA's around the same time. Then.....pffft....the money stopped flowing, the projects were abandoned. The way it worked was the builder/developer got so much cash upfront, they stopped spending on it the micro-second there was a hiccup. Well, that hic-cup turned into a meltdown, and to this day , there are these unfinished (sometimes 4 and 5 floors or more) massive buildings everywhere. And I mean EVERY FREAKING WHERE!. Also, I see the same signs of neglect where ever I look. The exterior of buildings really take a beating here in Thailand, so you would think there would be some maintenance fund somewhere. You would be thinking wrong. Another thing that just made my head swim was the great number of black co-ax wires strung on the light posts where the power lines are also attached. Sometimes, there were so many I could NOT count them all..even after taking a photo, and going home blowing it up and counting. Again, detective Jonathan hit the streets with a curiosity, and was met with....something a few notches below indifference. Not to be denied, I fingered it out. Everytime a new company that offered cable TV came along, or antenna and cable ...they strung up their wires. Some got the bright idea of changing company names, and doing it all over again. Getting paid BIG money to put the lines up, then....change their name again. Get a "new" license, and string up a bunch of lines. Hundreds of Thais got filthy rich....I mean WAY rich doing this. It was through corruption they got rich doing this. Some are still being "hunted". So fortunes were made, then, once the fortune was safely sitting in gold in some Singaporean bank, they would just abandon it, not spend a PENNY on upkeep. So you see just enough of these black wires to block the sun. I still shake my head. I was a lineman for a cable tv biz way back when, and each business had its reserved spot on the pole. And once you stopped service, your old lines were removed. A business had to put up deconstruction bond before stringing up wires. You never had more than 3 or 4 local cable businesses at any given time. Just shimmy up the pole to your line, do your repair work, and down you go, finito.So, just sometimes only 2 or 3 wires. I still am just amazed at the attitude. There are so many wires on some of these poles the very structural integrity is threatened. Now, it is antenna dishes EVERYWHERE! Ah, developing Asia. But, I think China takes the prize. Building entire cities...entire huge shopping malls, expansive roads to nowhere. Not a tenant in sight. Not a resident to be seen. No cars, no motorcycles on the broad avenues in these brand new cities. Sheesh...

    • @jiancao1523
      @jiancao1523 Před 4 lety +4

      jonathan hurley when I walk under these black wires, I always scare of falling on me any minutes.

    • @SaharanKnight
      @SaharanKnight Před rokem

      And back then, Newsweek and Time were waxing eloquent about the miracle in Thailand, I remember. I think that they talked about a couple other SE Asian countries as well. Economic writers waxing eloquent seemingly without ever having lived in such countries! What arrogance and stupidity and lust for opportunity!

  • @justsumguy2u
    @justsumguy2u Před 7 lety +27

    The Japanese would be appalled, as they are the exact opposite. There, everyone takes pride in their property, and pitching in is actually expected.

    • @leons2004
      @leons2004 Před 7 lety +1

      justsomeguytoyou Same in like every other country.

    • @justsumguy2u
      @justsumguy2u Před 7 lety +8

      No, the Japanese are fanatical about it. Here in the US, you can find shit houses, people that don't take care of their things, and people that don't like to help others--not in Japan, because it's ingrained in their culture and their values.

    • @leons2004
      @leons2004 Před 7 lety +1

      justsomeguytoyou Yea its called black neighborhoods.

    • @leons2004
      @leons2004 Před 7 lety +3

      justsomeguytoyou Yes there are many neglected parts of society, but you are telling me that there is no part of Japan that is a shit hole?

    • @justsumguy2u
      @justsumguy2u Před 7 lety +1

      No, they don't have slums--they take too much pride in their country to allow that.

  • @jennaeveliina313
    @jennaeveliina313 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Winston said he visted some Temples in Japan, i understand that this is a old video already so it might not be easy to remember, but is there any footage uploaded from that trip? Id love to see that. I really like these older videos you two filmed, im once again going through these..😊

  • @fic15
    @fic15 Před 3 lety +4

    Yo i'm just gonna say that its damn awesome to ride motorcycles around town, speak with your friend via Bluetooth speakers. Great idea, enjoy you guys

  • @Davewriter1701
    @Davewriter1701 Před 5 lety +10

    I had once worked on a project in Barbados. It was an installation for the electrical system for a new TV studio. The building was put up by a Chinese company - using Chinese labor.
    I was trying to put expanding bolts into the ceiling, which would support the weight for the lighting system.
    Only the concrete was cheaply done!
    I'd be drilling into the slab, only to suddenly hit pockets of sand! Nothing that could ever be "Load Bearing."
    When I would ask, or try to complain, I'd get a confused look... followed by the Contractor walking away from me. Between what the Contractor wanted - and my employer wanting to get me back so I could do other jobs. It all held up when the Contractor signed off.
    But I bet that it has since fell from the sky!

  • @litesp
    @litesp Před 6 lety +17

    I'm 2nd gen Chinese American and can't stand the neglect that my immigrant wife and in-laws from China treat my kitchen and bathrooms. I run around cleaning up after them because they just can't be bothered. Back in China, they don't maintain but just replace things when they become filthy or break down. It is often cheaper in China to replace things than take care of them.

    • @ADVChina
      @ADVChina  Před 6 lety +6

      Yeah, we hate it!

    • @GLOBALALLIANCE
      @GLOBALALLIANCE Před 6 lety

      Why don’t you get yourself a ABC or white woman instead? If you can’t stand your Chinese wife and her family.

    • @crazyjohnhoward
      @crazyjohnhoward Před 2 lety

      @@GLOBALALLIANCE he is a loser who couldn't date or marry someone from America and retort to a mail-order bride

  • @pscully1969
    @pscully1969 Před 4 lety

    Great channel you have here, as well as your own respective channels. I learned a lot so far, and several stereotypes and myths I heard about have been dismissed. I am interested in the Far East, and always willing to learn both the positives and the negatives. Keep up the good work!

  • @urglefloggahthethird1202
    @urglefloggahthethird1202 Před 2 lety +3

    Having lived in China for more than a decade it is interesting to see other people picking up on this as well. I originally thought this was very much a Sichuan thing, but from what I've learned over the years it is actually nation wide.
    Close to where I live there was this great old temple sitting at an intersection that was originally on the outskirts of town, but has since been swallowed up by the sprawl. It had some fantastic statuary, very nice wall murals and it was overall just a place that gave off a peaceful vibe and atmosphere. It was left to rot before being demolished and across the intersection they built this new place out of poor quality concrete covered in gaudy red and gold paint that has about as much soul and atmosphere as a strobe light. Pathetic.
    The vehicle thing is also interesting. An American friend of mine bought a second hand petrol scooter shortly after coming here, and not being one to take pointless risks took it to a local garage for a bit of an overhaul and a maintenance. The owner of the garage could not wrap his head around the concept, and the dialogue went something like this:
    Garage owner: but if i look for faults and issues i might find some...!
    My mate: Yes, and if you do make a note of them, then tell me what they are and the cost of fixing them and I will decide what is urgent and needs fixing right away.
    GO: But I can't do that! I might find problems!
    Mate: yes, that's the whole point.'
    GO: ?????????
    Needless to say there was no business done in that particular place.

    • @SaharanKnight
      @SaharanKnight Před rokem +1

      In the part of Africa where I lived a conversation about a scooter repair would go a bit differently -- at least for an owner who has an idea of prices.
      Owner: So I want your lowest price, okay? Do me your best work but give me a good price.
      Street mechanic : I will do it all for 30 dollars.
      Owner : Okay, that's good, not much more than the price of the parts. (Wow!)
      Mechanic : You want brand-new parts, okay, but they come at a good price from Nigeria.
      Owner : Hmm, I said I want the best work, but I need original Japanese parts.
      Mechanic : "Original" parts will be sooo expensive for you, man. No, you don't want that. Let me do this quickly for you -- I'll do it right now for 28 dollars, you'll have it done in a minute..
      So some Africans seem to be quite short-sighted about repairs, yet there are some excellent street mechanics who are ready to repair anything and do it quickly. So Africans whom I have known definitely have a more practical mentality than those Chinese discussed here -- yet not as practical as maybe the Japanese!

  • @AdNG1
    @AdNG1 Před 6 lety +37

    Have mercy you guess truly understand the Chinese mind. Only some of my Chinese family would admit this. But this is true.

  • @seanb3516
    @seanb3516 Před 7 lety +15

    I noticed an Asian friend of mine had not removed the scratch protector plastic from a brand new laptop. Her parents spent so much money to get a fantastic display on the laptop and then left the cloudy plastic protector on it. I even tried to explain that they could remove that plastic and place a protector layer on the laptop display that would allow them to enjoy what they paid extra for. But alas, nope. The original cloudy plastic stays in place. Definitely a culture shift from our own. The interesting thing was how comfortable they were doing it their way and how little they considered a different approach. To be fair there could be things I do that would weird them out culturally speaking.

    • @mannyfernandez7028
      @mannyfernandez7028 Před 7 lety +1

      Sean Nanoman have you seen somebody walking barefoot while holding their shoes coz its too expensive to walk with them on?yes ive seen one when i was in surabaya indonesia.

    • @joeisawesome540
      @joeisawesome540 Před 7 lety +2

      and you listen to everyone else's advice? it is not so much a culture "shift" as people have different quirks due to their upbringing. Im sure you are set in ways that others find strange too.

    • @leegenix
      @leegenix Před 7 lety +3

      I know that feeling too well. It's a sign of growing up and being poor. It stays with you as you get older. Personally, I wear shoes until they fall apart and no longer are repairable. It's being frugal and getting your moneys worth.

    • @seanb3516
      @seanb3516 Před 7 lety +4

      Wait, leaving the cloudy protective shipping plastic layer on the display is not strange? By any reasonable perspective? I don't get it.

    • @Gacha-Man
      @Gacha-Man Před 7 lety +1

      +Sean Nanoman You're a jackass.

  • @andywolan
    @andywolan Před 4 lety

    I was wondering about that when I was in China. Thanks for the insight.

  • @trayvon4484
    @trayvon4484 Před 3 lety

    great video

  • @chingizakniyazov1693
    @chingizakniyazov1693 Před 6 lety +116

    SO, true, spent 9 years in China...thats the mentality, not all, but mostly

    • @DukeJames
      @DukeJames Před 6 lety

      Do you think it will change soon?

    • @jsonkody
      @jsonkody Před 6 lety +2

      in these circumstances it will take several generations ..

    • @sharsasuke01
      @sharsasuke01 Před 6 lety

      What work did you do there?

    • @user-ui2zj6fl1r
      @user-ui2zj6fl1r Před 5 lety

      such a idiot.speaking something not true make you happy

  • @galadis123
    @galadis123 Před 5 lety +3

    is anyone else binge watching these? these videos are so interesting to me! THANKS ADVChina!

  • @TheDeluche
    @TheDeluche Před 3 lety +1

    This is the same issue with what’s happening in Sydney. Large sky rise apartment buildings are being constructed by contracted Chinese companies for cheap. Because Australia’s regulations aren’t as tight as they should be, a lot of corners are cut and now some sky rises are starting to form large cracks in the concrete supports. There’s a sky rise in Olympic park recently built that is now deemed unsafe and people who paid hundreds of thousand and even millions can’t live in or rent their property.

  • @kevinohara2221
    @kevinohara2221 Před 4 lety

    Very cool and insightful motorcycle tour! Are there any governmental restrictions on the content you can post?