One thing I noticed with a lot of old Chinese people is that their eyes get this greenish blueish color. When I first saw it I thought they were mixed or whatever but later I realized a lot of old people have it. It seems to come with old age. Never saw it anywhere before.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Baby come back to me, in my heart I still believe
It's a shame Al Gore is not running for office this time around. Right now when people are tired of cowboy tactics they only want somebody "president like" who is able to do the job. The reason people voted for GWB instead of him was probably becaused they were spoiled with Bill Clinton. It's the nature of mankind, we want chance and we want to try new things. Bush was the opposite to Clinton so he was chosen. People appreciated his simplicity, his good 'ol folk feeling, and guts. People got what they wanted and more. Al Gore has all the qualities a good president should have and they just don't seem to make them like him anymore; of all the candidates for '08 there seems to be no body who can match his caliber. Then again the next president in office needs to deal with one of the most difficult periods in US history in terms of Iraq. The next administration needs to pay for the mistakes of the current one and might even end up being blamed for them. I can see Al Gore smirking, sitting back in his couch, sipping scotch, looking at his nobel price and thinking: "Lets wait another four years".
I don't mean to disrespect George Bush because I like him too. He seems like he's got a nice heart but he probably got stuck at the wrong place at the wrong time. Maybe he never really wanted to be president, maybe he was just trying to live up to his dad's expectations. Maybe he would have been a lot happier to be a rancher and just deal with his cattle, his land and eat Laura's homemade blue berry pie and BBQ. Because unless the president knows a lot himself, unless he has a strong intellect and can make his own decisions, unless he can choose the best advisors and know their hidden agendas, he is likely to be an easy prey for those around him who want to take advantage of him. Bush has most likely been the victim of advisors who were either not informed themselves about the situation in Iraq or had an hidden pro-war, pro-arms industry, pro-oil industry agenda. No body expected that the current situation would come about. Had they known, keeping Saddam Hussein in power and trying to make friends with him would have been a far better option.
Saddam Hussein was the lid on a pandora's box and when he was gone the shit hit the fan. Iraq is not one country but three countries: Kurdistan, Sunni Iraq and Shia Iraq. These three countries hate each other. The Kurds want independence, the Shias hate the Sunnis for what they did during Saddam's rule and the Sunnis are fighting for their lives. The situation is made further more sensitive by the fact that Iraq is surrounded by neighbours who all have major stakes in Iraq. Iran supports the Shias, the Saudis support the Sunnis and the Turks dread Kurdish independence more than anything else. This means that when Iraq has problems the whole region will be destabilized. Given the natural resources in this region it is also fair to say it has a major impact on the whole world. The Russians and the Chinese also have stakes there and will support whoever they think benifit them the most. If the US withdraws its troops, the building will collapse and the dust that amounts as it implodes will spread a dark cloud around the whole world.
This is what we know now. A lot of us didn't know it at the time of the Iraqi invasion. A lot of us couldn't predict this would happen, then again we were not the people ine power who made the decision. The people who made the decision should carefully have studied the ethnic make-up of Iraq, the internal opposition and the risks of ousting Saddam Hussein from power. Yet somehow the intelligence failed to get through to the top and now we are in the situation we are in today. That is why the president needs to be informed, needs to have strong intellect and analytical thinking. Needs to be able to rely on himself and not on advisors who know a lot more than him.
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Finally back!
Blogspot finally works in China again and since it does I might as well drop by a quick update before it stops working again. Well, in June me and my girlfriend moved to Shanghai. We found a really nice flat right in the centre. We have about 20 shopping malls and three starbacks within 10 minutes walking distance (btw, ever since I came to China I learned how to appreciate starbucks).
Once we got here we both applied for jobs. I got a reply pretty quick from a "financial planning company" in Shanghai looking for "marketing executives". Well, that sounds great, I thought and went there. It was a group meeting where all the aspiring marketing executives met with one of the company's directors. It turned out that it was a financial planning company for expatriates in Shanghai helping out with offshore investments and retirement plants. Well, out of the 12 or so people that went there five of us were hired. It turned out that "marketing executive" meant telemarketer, i.e., your job would be to sit at the phone all day and call expats who really didn't want to hear from you and invite them to meet with one of the consultants. I still thought I'd give it a shot, at least it was something. The conditions were pretty bad though, the company would pay NOTHING for the first month and if they decided to hire you they would pay you 4000 RMB per month plus commission. What was even worse though was that everybody in the office had to wear very formal clothes, i.e. a shirt, tie and formal pants everyday despite the fact that we just stayed by the phone and never actually met any clients. This was really bad for me since I had to travel about one hour everyday to get to work and it was getting very hot outside. Everyday when I would get the office my shirt would be soaked in wet, it looked like I had just taken a shower with my clothes on.
Among the five of us who were hired at the same time there was me, an English girl, a French girl who spoke great English (probably the first and last one I met), a French guy who told me he did a lot of mushrooms and weed back home in France which is why he had to get away from all of that shit and a guy from a really small African country I and just about everyone had never heard of before (a small island between Madagascar and the mainland). In the team of marketing executives consisting of about 15 people in total, about half of them were French, there were a lot of guys from S-E Asia as well, a Turkish guy and the consultants were mainly American including the manager.
The first week we mainly had training consisting of us calling to different people in the office and pretending to make a pitch. It was a way to learn about how to deal with objections, how to make the sale etc. Everybody did pretty find apart from Mohammed, the African guy. His English was really bad and it was hard for him to understand what people were saying. He didn't really understand the company either or what it was about. He was also really nervous on the phone. The first time he made the practice pitch to another guy in the office he was like: "Hello, my name is Mohammed". The French guy on the phone replied, "Good morning". Mohammed said: "What?". The French guy said: "I said: good morning". Mohammed laughed nervously and asked us how to continue. In general I tried to help him a lot, especially because his assigned "coach" basically ignored him the whole time. I tried to show him how the computer system worked, how to make the pitch, what the company was about etc. and I felt he was improving. I seemed to be the only one who cared.
Anyway, during the week I was there I realized how difficult telemarketing was. A lot of people would just say: "No, I don't want to talk to you. NEVER CALL ME AGAIN" etc. It was especially bad as I was calling cold leads, i.e. people who were essentially never going to meet with us for sure and had already told us a hundred times. I still managed to get through to some people and got two meetings the first week which everybody thought was really special. Some people had been there for weeks and still had nothing. It was clear the climate was very rough at the work place and not like I was use to back home. During the first week two or three marketing executives quit. The next week I realized Mohammed was missing at the weekly Monday meeting. I asked where he was and they said he had been fired. At the same time the Turkish guy who had been there for four months was fired as well. About a third of the staff had left in a matter of a week. I realized they had probably only hired Mohammed to set an example for us, i.e. they're not afraid to fire us if we do bad. I felt really sorry for him and given the overall situation in the company I was thinking about quitting. At the same time I was offered to join a training program in the company I was writing a thesis about as well for seven weeks during the summer to which I accepted and quit my career in "finance".
More to come.
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