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