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Chinese teenager first tourist blacklisted for 'uncivilized behavior'


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Posted

Chinese teenager first tourist blacklisted for 'uncivilized behavior'

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Source: Internet

BEIJING, China - A Chinese teenager has become the first local tourist to be blacklisted for uncivilized behavior in the country after new rules kicked in last month to shame citizens who conduct themselves badly.

Eighteen-year-old Li Wenchun was seen climbing onto a statue depicting a female soldier of the Red Army - the predecessor of the People's Liberation Army - at a commemorative park for a photo late last month.

His antic was captured on camera by passers-by and posted on social media where he was heavily berated.

Li is to stay on the tourist blacklist for 10 years, said the China National Tourism Administration (CNTA) on Tuesday. This means he would be closely watched whenever he visits a tourist site in China during this period, The Beijing News reported.

Source: http://www.eturbonews.com/58729/chinese-teenager-first-tourist-blacklisted-uncivilized-behavior

-- eTN 2015-05-08

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Posted

I did stupider at that age.

We would have glued a rainbow wig on her, then cemented her into somebody's porch.

At the very least.

Posted

Gotta kind of wonder what kind of resources they are willing to expend to follow the youngster any time he goes to visit a tourist site. For the next 10 years no less.

Seems like a little fine and some hours of community service would have the same effect, and cost a lot less...

Posted

If you think they behave badly at home, you should see how they are perceived abroad.

Wow, how would we ever do that?

We'll have to live in a country like Thailand, I suppose.

Posted

I did stupider at that age...

Just not in a totalitarian country.

Well as you noted there is 'stupider', and in the Chinese teen's case, 'stupiderer'....

Posted

Let's see, Chinese fighting on planes and threatening to blow them up? No problem. Chinese opening the door to get some fresh air on a jet taxiing for take-off? No problem. Defecating all over a Thai temple? Don't worry. But pull a harmless stunt for a photo? Ten years on the watch list.

Posted

Let's see, Chinese fighting on planes and threatening to blow them up? No problem. Chinese opening the door to get some fresh air on a jet taxiing for take-off? No problem. Defecating all over a Thai temple? Don't worry. But pull a harmless stunt for a photo? Ten years on the watch list.

Plus anything else that may not be made public.

Posted

Gotta kind of wonder what kind of resources they are willing to expend to follow the youngster any time he goes to visit a tourist site. For the next 10 years no less.

Seems like a little fine and some hours of community service would have the same effect, and cost a lot less...

Yes, but that was a statue of a soldier for the Red Army....that's subversion. He's lucky he's not in jail for 10 years or a re-education camp.

Posted

Yes, but that was a statue of a soldier for the Red Army....that's subversion. He's lucky he's not in jail for 10 years or a re-education camp.

Nah. Wrong place, wrong time. The CCP has gotten their population all worked up about tourists behaving badly, especially overseas.

A year or two ago, the same action would have probably been laughed off on the blogosphere, with copycats out in force in every province.

But since the campaign to improve the international image of the Chinese based on the behavior of their tourists, they have completely lost their sense of humor about harmless pranks. And I don't mean carving initials into the pyramids, that's not harmless. This youngster's prank was.

Make him polish the statues for a few hours. That'll be a win-win...

Edit: 40 or 50 years ago, the guy would have been beaten to death. Again, wrong place, wrong time...

Posted

I did stupider at that age...

Just not in a totalitarian country.

lucky we were there was no facebook and mobile phones with cameras when we were young.

feel pity for nowadays youngsters - they can't do anything stupid or silly in their wild teenage years without it being monitored and documented until forever.

if there would have been facebook or mobile phone cams when I was young, maybe I would still be blacklisted even in my home country until today tongue.png

Posted

Kinda confusing at first glance / from the title in the email newsletter, as to whether he was blacklisted from China or Thailand

Having read more ok I see it's China, but blacklisting doesn't mean kicked out a country, just 'watched' at tourist spots. Ok then.

Posted

Watch list at tourist sites for ten years? On paper maybe. The reality in China is - the police and security guards will be too busy sleeping to be watching him. Besides, they won't even know he's there.

Posted

I am surprised China did not force him into mandatory military service for a number of years. After Tiananmen Square many University students I knew from that time (involved or not) were required to do military service for at least a year, then return to University.... to give them respect for the institution.... I would have thought the same would happen here.... maybe 3 years of mandatory service.

Posted

Watch list at tourist sites for ten years? On paper maybe. The reality in China is - the police and security guards will be too busy sleeping to be watching him. Besides, they won't even know he's there.

That's probably correct as they do all seem to look alike....

Posted

Of course western teenage tourists are faultless. Anyone who has ever been to Bali or the Jersey Shore or Australia's Gold Coast will confirm

Posted

If they'd had web cams, phone cams and FaceBook when I was a kid, I would have been locked up as a menace to society by the age of 10. cheesy.gif

I was thinking that the other day. Here's a Facebook post of mca drawing on a two skin bomber. Here's mca on a deserted supermarket car park getting his Ford Capri sideways in the snow. Here's mca at 6 am on a Sunday hitting 140 on his Fireblade on the M11 motorway etc.

Posted

Tourists can take a bad rap pretty much anywhere whether in their own country or abroad.

When I was in the Army ceremonial unit in Washington doing performances everywhere around and all of the time, we used to call the swarms of American tourists 'the animals.'

After a couple of thousand years of self-isolation the Chinese need to learn to interact with the world at large, in the globalized world in particular, and that starts at home in the present PRChina where there continues to be a cultural deficit of humor and social ease with one another.

The younger generations are changing China from within which means it's to the good that a couple of old faces get sat on by teenagers who've thrown out the old rules and the decrepit ways. The PRChina has a hundred times more rules of society than any place I'd been and every rule begins with "Don't".

I'll know the corner has been turned when a Chinese Spiderman climbs the Shanghai Tower and the revolution begins because the security police drag him off and away. wink.png

Posted

I like this guy.

Eighteen-year-old Li Wenchun was seen climbing onto a statue depicting a female soldier of the Red Army - the predecessor of the People's Liberation Army - at a commemorative park.

Agree with the politics of the country or not--this a representation of their army ---males & females who fought along side to defeat the Japanese invasion.

Would you all be writing how funny this act was if it was a western student sitting on the head of a lost British or American at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier ?

Maybe we can do a funny facebook pic next time that the Australians celebrate the slaughter of their solders at gallipoli. Get someone to sit on the head of their statue & make a funny sign....... it would be a hoot wouldn't it, & people like ev11chris Can post how he likes the guy.

Why do we feel we can make light of things that if done in the west would horrify us, But if done to Asians (from our perspective) is quite acceptable.

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