meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
From Our Own Correspondent

China's New Rules for Society

From Our Own Correspondent

BBC

News, News Commentary

4.41.3K Ratings

🗓️ 23 September 2021

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Chinese government is, as ever, staying busy by devising new regulations. It's unleashed a raft of regulatory changes on everything from the limits on how much debt property developers are allowed to build up, to changes in the tax code and the breaking up of tech giants. But the Communist Party has also launched a series of rather paternalistic moves, reaching right into family homes, with measures designed to tackle perceived problems of laziness, or even what the state calls “spiritual pollution.” As Stephen McDonell reports from Beijing, it’s as if there is nowhere that the Party doesn’t know best - and no aspect of life where it’s not prepared to take charge.

The French government has expressed its fury after the decision by Australia to scrap a contract to buy French submarines. Canberra chose instead to enter a nuclear security pact for the Indo-Pacific with the US and the UK. “We’ve been stabbed in the back!” is how the French foreign minister put it – and off the record you can imagine that the comments were even stronger. Hugh Schofield has been following the events and says there is nothing confected about French outrage.

When it was part of the Soviet Union, Lithuania played host to stocks of nuclear missiles – huge ICBMs, which could have destroyed cities around the world. Back then, Lithuania’s geography gave it great strategic importance. When it became fully independent in 1991, it found itself a rather small nation, of about three and a half million people, and with of lesser international interest. And yet, Lithuania has been rather punching above its weight lately - particularly in recent disputes with China and Belarus. On a recent visit to a small Lithuanian village, Sadakat Kadri, found relics of the country’s past, with important lessons for the present.

When the Spanish conquistadors first landed in the Americas they brought new and terrifying beasts with them – from ships’ rats to warhorses – not to mention lethal human diseases. But there was one sort of creature the indigenous Americans DID recognise on the European ships: the dogs. Dogs had already been tamed and kept by humans all over the continent for thousands of years. And they’re still there – maybe not the original breeds, but thriving wherever there are people. In fact, in Chile, Jane Chambers has found them hard to avoid…

People who’d love a career in the arts end up doing other things to earn a living – just think of all those aspiring actors waiting tables in restaurants or would-be novelists working away in offices. But some do manage to break through against the odds – and it helps to have a globe-trotting life story as well as a deep well of inspiration at home to draw from. The painter Kojo Marfo has rocketed to fame after years spent working away from his home town in Ghana. Andy Jones has been exploring his career - and how he went from butcher's assistant to art world sensation.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts

0:05.2

Today, even the French struggle to find diplomatic language after an international

0:10.6

row over submarines. In Lithuania, there are relics of a nuclear standoff still lurking

0:16.6

in a fairy tale forest, and reminders everywhere of just how fast a global crisis can erupt.

0:23.8

We run a little wild with the scrappy, scrappy, but beloved stray dogs of Chile, and meet

0:30.1

an artist from Ghana who went from boredom in a butcher shop to global fame as a painter.

0:37.2

First to China, where the government is, as ever, staying busy by devising new regulations.

0:43.7

Everywhere there's dramatic change in the rule books. From the limits on how much debt,

0:48.8

offered deed developers are allowed to build up to changes in the tax code and the breaking

0:53.5

up of tech giants, the state is ever vigilant, always looking for a loophole to close.

1:00.0

But the Communist Party has also launched a series of rather paternalistic moves,

1:05.0

reaching right into family homes, with measures designed to tackle perceived problems of laziness,

1:12.0

or even what the government calls spiritual pollution. As Stephen McDonald says in Beijing,

1:18.4

it is if there's nowhere that the party doesn't know best, and no aspect of life where it's not prepared

1:24.3

to take charge. When the announcement came, it didn't really shock people like you might have

1:30.0

expected. Chinese regulators said that those they described as sissy-looking boys were to be dropped

1:36.5

from television programs. It was yet another decision by the Communist Party designed to mold

1:42.0

behavior. They've been coming thick and fast. Billy Wick has gone by recently,

1:47.3

without a major policy shift arriving out of the blue, including strict guidelines about how the

1:53.2

population should spend its free time. The decision to ban a feminine man from people's view

1:59.6

sounds like a throwback to a more intolerant era, and has prompted great criticism on social media.

2:05.7

The Chinese government has been accused of sexual discrimination and fanning hatred towards

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from BBC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of BBC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.