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The Political Scene | The New Yorker

What the Beijing Olympics Reveal About China

The Political Scene | The New Yorker

The New Yorker

President, Barack, News, Politics, Wnyc, Obama, Lizza, Washington, Wickenden

4.33.9K Ratings

🗓️ 10 February 2022

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing are often referred to as China’s “coming-out party”—presenting China to foreign visitors as a political, economic, and cultural superpower, committed to the rule of law and human rights. Fourteen years later, Xi Jinping, China’s paramount leader, is using the Winter Olympics to make a different statement. Last week’s opening ceremonies projected a message of Chinese unity and strength at a time when the country’s relationship with the West is more antagonistic than it’s been in decades. Several Western nations, including the U.S., staged diplomatic boycotts to protest China’s human-rights violations, citing its persecution of Uyghurs in the province of Xinjiang. Evan Osnos joins Dorothy Wickenden to discuss what the 2022 Beijing Olympics tell us about China’s rising authoritarianism and its vision of the future.

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Transcript

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This is the political scene, a weekly conversation with New Yorker writers. Bay. Things people love.

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This is the political scene, a weekly conversation with New Yorker writers and guests about politics. It's Thursday, February 10th. I'm Dorothy Wickenden, executive editor of The New Yorker.

1:27.1

Oh! The 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing are often referred to as China's coming-out party.

1:39.4

350,000 foreigners visited Beijing for those games and found an overhauled transportation system,

1:47.3

a spectacular new art complex, and masses of recently constructed skyscrapers.

1:53.6

The opening ceremonies featured 15,000 performers in a four-hour spectacle that's rumored

2:00.2

to have cost more than a hundred million

2:02.2

U.S. dollars.

2:04.2

The Chinese government was telegraphing its political, economic, and cultural power and

2:09.6

promised a commitment to the rule of law and human rights.

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