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How American and Chinese values shaped the coronavirus response

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    Helen Walters: Huang,
    it's so good to see you.
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    Thank you for joining us.
    How's your 2020 been?
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    Huang Hung: My 2020
    started totally normal.
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    In January, I went to Paris,
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    did my interview
    for the fashion week there,
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    came back to Beijing on January 22nd,
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    and finding things a little bit tense
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    because there were a lot of rumors.
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    Having lived through SARS,
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    I wasn't that concerned.
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    And on the 23rd, I had a friend of mine
    from New York come to my house
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    who had a flu,
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    and we had dinner together,
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    and another friend who came,
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    who left the next day for Australia
    for vacation on an airplane.
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    So we were not taking this
    terribly seriously
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    until there was a lockdown.
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    HW: And we've seen that echo
    around the world.
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    I think still some people find it hard
    to understand the magnitude
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    of some of the measures that China took.
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    I mean -- what else are we missing
    about China's response in all of this?
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    HH: You know, historically,
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    we're just two very different countries
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    in terms of culture and history.
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    I mean, these are two completely different
    human experiences for its people.
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    So, for China,
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    when the lockdown happens,
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    people are OK.
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    People are OK with it,
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    because they think that's what
    a good parent should do.
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    You know, if a kid gets sick,
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    you put him in the other room,
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    and you lock him up and make sure
    that the other kids don't get sick.
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    And they expect that
    out of the government.
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    But when it is outside of China,
    from America, it becomes a huge issue
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    of the right political thing to do
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    and whether it's infringing
    on personal freedom.
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    So the issues that you have to deal with
    in a democratic society
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    are issues that one does not
    have to deal with in China.
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    I have to say that
    there's a word in Chinese
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    that doesn't exist in any other language,
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    and the word is called "guāi."
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    It is what you call a kid
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    who listens to his or her parents.
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    So I think, as a people,
    we are very "guāi."
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    We have this sort of authoritarian figure
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    that Chinese always look up to,
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    and they do expect the government
    to actually take the actions,
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    and they will deal with it.
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    However much suffering there is,
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    they feel that, OK, if big brother says
    that this has to be done,
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    then it must be done.
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    And that really defines China
    as a separate mentality,
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    Chinese has a separate mentality,
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    as, say, people in Europe and America.
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    HW: That sense
    of collective responsibility
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    sometimes feels a little absent
    from this culture.
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    At the same time, there are,
    I think, valid concerns
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    around surveillance
    and data privacy, things like that.
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    What is the balance here,
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    and what is the right trade-off
    between surveillance and freedom?
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    HH: I think in the internet age,
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    it is somewhere between China and the US.
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    I think when you take
    individual freedom
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    versus collective safety,
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    there has to be a balance somewhere there.
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    With surveillance, the head of Baidu,
    Robin Li, once said
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    the Chinese people are quite willing
    to give up certain individual rights
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    in exchange for convenience.
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    Actually, he was completely criticized
    on Chinese social media,
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    but I think he is right.
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    Chinese people are willing
    to give up certain rights.
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    For example, we have ...
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    Chinese mostly are very proud
    of the payment system we have,
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    which is you can go anywhere
    just with your iPhone
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    and pay for everything,
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    and all they do is face-scan.
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    I think that probably
    freaks Americans out.
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    You know, China right now,
    we're still under semi-lockdown,
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    so if you go anywhere,
    there's an app where you scan
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    and you input your mobile phone number,
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    and the app will tell the guard
    at the entrance of the mall, for example,
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    where you have been for the past 14 days.
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    Now, when I told that to an American,
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    she was horrified,
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    and she thought it was
    such an invasion of privacy.
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    On the other hand,
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    as someone who is Chinese
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    and has lived in China
    for the past 20 years,
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    although I understand
    that American mentality,
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    I still find I'm Chinese enough
    to think, "I don't mind this,
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    and I am better, I feel safer
    entering the mall
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    because everybody has been scanned,"
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    whereas, I think individual freedom
    as an abstract concept
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    in a pandemic like this
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    is actually really meaningless.
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    So I think the West really needs
    to move a step towards the East
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    and to think about
    the collective as a whole
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    rather than only think
    about oneself as an individual.
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    HW: The rise of antagonistic rhetoric
    between the US and China
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    is obviously troubling,
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    and the thing is,
    the countries are interlinked
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    whether people understand
    global supply chains or not.
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    Where do you think we head next?
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    HH: You know, this is the most
    horrifying thing that came out of this,
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    the kind of nationalistic sentiments
    on both sides in this pandemic.
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    Because I'm an optimist,
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    I think what will come out of this
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    is that both sides will realize
    that this is a fight
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    that the entire human race
    has to do together and not apart.
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    Despite the rhetoric,
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    the global economy has grown
    to such an integration
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    that decoupling will be
    extremely costly and painful
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    for both the United States and China.
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    HW: It's also been interesting to me
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    to see the criticism that China
    has received quite vocally.
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    For instance, they've been criticized
    for downplaying the death toll,
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    arguably,
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    also for trying to demonize Dr. Li,
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    the Wuhan doctor who first
    raised the alarm about the coronavirus.
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    I just saw a report
    in "The New York Times"
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    that Weibo users have been posting
    repeatedly on the last post of Dr. Li
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    and using this as kind of
    a living memorial to him,
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    chatting to him.
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    There's something like
    870,000 comments and growing
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    on that last post.
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    Do you see a change in the media?
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    Do you see a change in the approach
    to Chinese leadership
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    that actually could lead to China
    swinging perhaps more to the center,
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    just as perhaps America needs
    to swing more towards a Chinese model?
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    HH: Unfortunately, not really,
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    because I think there is a way
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    between authoritarian governments
    and its people to communicate.
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    The night that Dr. Li died,
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    when it was announced that he died,
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    the Chinese social media just blew up.
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    Even though he was
    unjustly treated as a whistleblower,
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    he still went to work in the hospital
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    and tried to save lives as a doctor,
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    and then he died
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    because he contracted the disease.
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    So there was anger, frustration,
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    and all of that came out
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    in kind of commemorating a figure
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    that they feel that
    the government had wronged.
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    The verdict
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    and sort of the official voice on:
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    "Who is Dr. Li?
    Is he a good guy or a bad guy?"
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    completely changed 180 degrees.
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    He went from a doctor who misbehaved
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    to the hero who warned the people.
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    So under authoritarian government,
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    they still are very aware
    of public opinion,
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    but, on the other hand,
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    when people complain
    and when they commemorate Dr. Li,
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    do they really want to change the system?
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    And my answer is no,
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    because they don't like
    that particular decision,
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    but they don't want to change the system.
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    And one of the reasons is because
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    they have never, ever
    known another system.
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    This is the system they know how to work.
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    HW: What is wok-throwing, Huang?
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    HH: Oh, wok-throwing is when
    you blame somebody else.
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    Basically, someone who is responsible
    in a slang Chinese
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    is someone who carries a black wok.
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    You are made to be the scapegoat
    for something that is bad.
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    So basically, Trump started
    calling it the "Chinese virus,"
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    the "Wuhan virus,"
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    and trying to blame the entire
    coronavirus pandemic
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    on the Chinese.
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    And then the Chinese, I think,
    threw the wok back at the Americans.
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    So it was a very funny joke
    on Chinese social media,
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    that wok-throwing.
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    There's a wok-throwing gymnastics
    aerobics exercise video that went viral.
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    HW: But tell us, Huang:
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    You're also doing dances on TikTok, right?
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    HH: Oh, of course.
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    I'm doing a lot of wok-throwing
    aerobics on TikTok.
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    HW: I mean, a potential silver lining
    of all of this is that it has laid bare
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    some of the inequities,
    inequalities in the system,
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    some of the broken
    structures that we have,
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    and if we're smart, we can rebuild better.
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    HH: Yes. I think one of
    the silver linings of this pandemic
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    is that we do realize
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    that the human race
    has to do something together
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    rather than to be distinguished
    by our race, by the color of our skin
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    or by our nationality;
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    that this virus obviously
    is not discriminating against anyone,
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    whether you are rich or poor,
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    important or not important
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    or whatever skin color
    or nationality you are.
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    So it is a time to be together,
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    rather than to try to pull the world apart
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    and crawl back to our own
    nationalistic shells.
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    HW: It's a beautiful sentiment.
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    Huang Hung, thank you so much
    for joining us from Beijing.
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    Stay well, please.
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    HH: Thank you, Helen,
    and you stay well as well.
Title:
How American and Chinese values shaped the coronavirus response
Speaker:
Huang Hung
Description:

To combat COVID-19, countries have enforced city-wide shutdowns, stay-at-home orders and mask mandates -- but the reaction (and adherence) to these rules has differed markedly in the East and West. In conversation with TED's head of curation Helen Walters, writer and publisher Huang Hung sheds light on how Chinese and American cultural values shaped their responses to the outbreak -- and provides perspective on why everyone needs to come together to end the pandemic. (Recorded April 16, 2020)

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:44

English subtitles

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