If you've been here long enough, it seems to get better. Alternate take on that, I guess, would be that you've been here too long, but either way it tends to make dinners with Chinese friends more fun.
If you've been here long enough, it seems to get better. Alternate take on that, I guess, would be that you've been here too long, but either way it tends to make dinners with Chinese friends more fun.
Overall it's been going up for years. Given the local economy & the global economy and local needs and differential access to resources everywhere, how much should it be? This is not a smartass implied criticism - I don't know the answer - but a real question for discussion.
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I'm not a health foody but the few meals I've had here have been really good and, yeah, I'll be happy to go back alone to sample all the rest of them. It's also not a bad place from which to people-watch the street below.
A call for volunteers: Sprucing up a Kunming school for migrants kids
Posted by@vicar: OK, will be glad to hear about it. I'll be back early March.
A call for volunteers: Sprucing up a Kunming school for migrants kids
Posted byVery glad to hear of this. I won't be able to participate personally, as I'll be out of China at the time, but I encourage everybody else to (I hope that does't sound lame). Maybe there's some other way I can help out?
Migrant workers receive bricks in lieu of pay
Posted byThe workers should hold them liable with brickbats.
Migrant workers receive bricks in lieu of pay
Posted byYou pay your workers FIRST - only then do you look for money to pay other debts.
Migrant workers receive bricks in lieu of pay
Posted byAnother reason to allow ALL workers to become trade union members, with none of the bullshit about migrants from rural areas not really being 'workers' because their id cards say they are farmers. Much of china's economic 'success' has been built on the backs of such people - yeah, but...Whose success was that now?