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Monthly Archives: June 2020
Reasons to be cheerful: despite what we see on the news, things are getting better all the time – Prospect Magazine
Posted: June 6, 2020 at 4:42 pm
A still from the 1963 film of William Goldings Lord of the Flies Two Arts/Cd/Kobal/Shutterstock
If you want to be seen as a profound thinker, just remember the principle: dark is deep. You must take a dim view of human nature and see its prospects as dismal. There may be more money to be made writing upbeat self-help books promising easy happiness, but you will never be taken seriously in self-consciously intellectual circles unless you are unremittingly gloomy or, as such intellectuals see it, unflinchingly realistic.
Think of the fate of Steven Pinker. Once widely admired as one of the worlds leading psychologists, he is now ridiculed by cognoscenti for his belief that weve never had it so goodthat more human progress remains possible, even likely. Meanwhile, the stature of the likes of Nassim Nicholas Taleb and John Gray, neither of whom I believe has ever been photographed smiling, grows every time they dismiss his data as either wrong or irrelevant.
The Dutch historian Rutger Bregman has emerged as the youthful leader of the rebellion against the doomsters and gloomsters. His first book, Utopia for Realists, argued that with a universal basic income, a 15-hour working week and open borders, we could build a fair and flourishing world. It was a huge bestseller, praised by the likes of the Green MP Caroline Lucas, who said it adds to a growing list of compelling accounts in favour of radically restructuring our economy. But the sober mainstream was unmoved: journalist Will Hutton dismissed his three key proposals as pie in the sky.
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Listen to Rutger Bregman discuss Humankind with Prospects Sameer Rahim
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The sequel, Humankind, is an attempt to challenge the basic premise on which the more pessimistic orthodoxy rests: that human nature is essentially rotten to the core and that only the constraints of civilised society keep us in check. Veneer theory, as the Dutch primatologist Frans de Waal calls it, asserts that underneath the pacific and pro-social cover of civilisation lies humankinds festering heart of darkness.
Bregmans tone is chirpy, but he does not attempt to make the impossible case that the human heart is all sweetness and light. His view is simply that we have a powerful preference for our good side, one that is hard to override. We may not be wholly good, but we are mostly good.
His takedown of veneer theory is compelling. Meticulously sifting the evidence, he finds that the most pessimistic views of human nature are not backed up by the facts. Indeed, some are solely backed by fiction. William Goldings novel Lord of the Flies is routinely cited as if it somehow proved that if left to themselves children would inevitably descend into barbarism. Oddly, people rarely talk about the only historical example of a similar case. In 1965, six boys from a boarding school in Tonga were shipwrecked for 15 months on an island, Ata, now classified as uninhabitable. They ended up co-operating, innovating and improvisingand they survived in good physical and psychological shape.
Numerous other myths of essential human depravity are ruthlessly dismantled. If you think war unleashes the inner murderer in ordinary men, consider the growing weight of evidence that it is hard to make soldiers kill, and that most of them dont even try. One study by the sociologist Randall Collins found that in modern warfare only 13 to 18 per cent of soldiers in combat fired at all. The military has good reason to keep such truths quiet and foster instead the myth of the fearless warrior. The 1914 Christmas truces along the western front so disturbed the generals that they went to great efforts to make sure they werent repeated.
Then there is the oft-repeated story of Kitty Genovese, a New Yorker murdered in 1964 on the stairs of her own apartment building. The legend is that 38 witnesses stood by and did nothing, even as the assailant returned twice to inflict more wounds. This became the classic illustration of the bystander effect, the tendency to walk by on the other side, especially when others are doing the same.
The problem is the true story of that murder: most of the neighbours didnt hear or see anything, and several had in fact called the police, who did nothing. One drunk neighbour notoriously did not intervene, but he had an understandable reason: he was a gay man afraid of drawing the attention of the police at a time when homosexuality was illegal. Yet he did notify a neighbour who bravely went to the stairwell to try to help. Genovese died in her arms.
Six boys were shipwrecked on an island. They ended up co-operating, innovating and improvising
This one misreported anecdote and several dodgy lab experiments turned the bystander effect into a widely accepted fact of human behaviour rather than a dubious hypothesis. When a Danish psychologist, Marie Lindegaard, looked at CCTV footage of crimes to see how people actually behaved in real-life conditions, she found that in 90 per cent of cases including brawls, rapes and attempted murders, someone intervened to help.
Bregman is especially convincing in debunking two of the most notorious social psychology experiments of the 20th century. Philip Zimbardos Stanford Prison Experiment is still widely taken to show that if you give an ordinary person a uniform and authority, they will become a tyrannical monster. Stanley Milgrams obedience experiments similarly concluded that all it takes is an authority figure in a white coat with a clipboard and people will be ready to inflict potentially lethal electric shocks on their fellow human beings.
Bregman is not the first to discredit either experimentProspect ran a piece unraveling both in April last yearbut his summary of their failings is damning. In the Stanford Prison Experiment, the subjects playing the role of guards were not left to their own devices but instead strongly coerced into behaving badly. And even then, the original study papers show that two thirds of them in fact refused to take part in sadistic games. When the BBC tried to re-run the experiment for a 2002 reality show, this time without any pressure applied, the result was an outbreak of harmony. By day seven, the group had voted in favour of creating a commune. In Milgrams study, what is striking is how much subjects resisted obeying orders. And there is good evidence that many subjects simply did not believe that they were causing harm, (rightly) assuming that they were involved in some kind of simulation.It would indeed have been incredible if one of the USs leading universities was actually torturing people.
And yet despite these and other well-documented rebuttals, Bregman writes, veneer theory is a zombie that just keeps coming back, often in the guise of whataboutery. What about Auschwitz? What about the Rwandan genocide? What about countless other examples of human depravity?
Of course Bregman has to concede that we too often descend into barbarism. But the reasons he gives come with silver linings. For example, while he accepts that some of Milgrams subjects clearly did act with intentional cruelty, their chief reason for doing so was not sadism but the desire to help. Subjects reported that they hated what they were being asked to do but believed it would benefit science, and thereby eventually help create a better world. The moral of this story is that if you want to make people do evil, dont appeal to their worst naturesjust hijack their better ones. Time and again wrongdoers follow the same justificatory path as Adolf Eichmann, a leading architect of the Holocaust, who did evil because he believed he was doing good.
Did he do evil because he believed he was doing good? Adolf Eichmann at his trial in Jerusalem in 1962 AP/Shutterstock
The other generally benign mechanism that can be abused is our capacity for empathy and fellow-feeling. Studies of soldiers suggest that they are not primarily motivated by ideology or nationalism, but by friendship and solidarity with their comrades-in-arms. Just as parents often say they wouldnt hesitate to kill to protect their babies, soldiers kill primarily to protect each other.
But Bregman does have to concede that these silver linings are attached to some pretty dark clouds. It seems were born with a button for tribalism in our brains, he says. Empathy and xenophobia are two sides of the same coin. His concession that the good and the bad are deeply connected jars with the headline message that most people, deep down, are pretty decent. Isnt it rather the case that, deep down, were amoral? We have instincts for co-operation and fellow feeling, not because were good but because we have evolved to find these things useful. The fact that these instincts can be harnessed for good and evil suggests to me that there is nothing inherently good or bad about them.
Despite Bregmans occasional willingness to acknowledge our darker side, his is not a balanced appraisal. Instead he offers a piece of advocacy for our better natures that reads like a 400-page TED talk, driven by stories, full of inspirational moments and punctuated by one-sentence paragraphs. Its brisk and entertaining, but we are swept along too quickly. Although there is no reason to doubt the evidence he presents, it is not selected or framed impartially. Some of his villains, such as Richard Dawkins and Machiavelli, appear in caricature form, while the ideas of thinkers such as Hume and William James are somewhat distorted.
The strongest indication of imbalance is in the contrast between his strongly evidenced debunking of the pessimists, and his much more anecdotal case for the optimists. Bregman is on reasonably solid ground when he advocates for the humane Norwegian prison system and for citizens assemblies, both of which have been widely studied. But much less so whenon the strength of tales about an inspirational head of a Dutch healthcare companyhe gushes about revolutionary management. Jos de Bloks ideas are, supposedly, on par with cracking DNA.
So what are they? His company is based on the principle that staff should be driven by intrinsic motivations and do a good job for a positive social purpose, not extrinsic financial ones. It sounds wonderful (if not entirely novel), but it is just an anecdote. Is the secret of de Bloks success really the managerial attitude that Bregman notes, or could other factors be more important? His brief mention that the companys overheads are negligible due to its lack of an expensive head office suggests there is more to this story than progressive leadership. Similarly, his visit to an equally inspirational alternative Dutch school, Agora in Roermond, makes it sound idyllic, with students drawing up individual plans with coaches rather than teachers. But one brief, breezy eulogising chapter does not add up to an argument that the model is replicable, much as Id like to believe that it is.
Despite its excesses and its breathless enthusiasm, the book works as a much-needed corrective to excessive pessimism about human wickedness. But why is such a corrective needed? Why are we so well-disposed to the view that we are not generally well-disposed?
Bregmans book is an attempt to challenge the basic premise on which the more pessimistic orthodoxy rests: that human nature is essentially rotten to the core
Bregman argues that to believe in our own sinful nature is comforting it provides a kind of absolution. If thats just how people are, theres no point feeling guilty over our own failings or getting too bothered by those of others. He also highlights two importantpsychological mechanisms at work. One is negativity bias. We are more alert to the bad than to the good, presumably for evolutionary reasons. For survival purposes, we need to be much more attuned to potential threats than to what is harmless. The cost of failing to notice a lion is much higher than the benefits of noticing a kitten. Thanks to the omnipresence of news, were also affected by availability bias. We pay more attention to what we see most and the news is filled with tragedies. This theory seems intuitively plausible, but given that intellectual pessimism long predates 24-hour news, it can only be an intensifier rather than a cause of our fundamental distortion.
Bregman argues that we need to counter our gloomier tendencies because our grim view of humanity is a nocebo. Just as placebos have positive effects simply because people believe they do, nocebos are negative expectations of treatment or prognosis that become self-fulfilling prophecies. One nice piece of evidence for this are the studies that show the longer students study economics, which teaches them that human behaviour is motivated by self-interest, the more selfish they become. A society in which people assume the worst about human beings will be one that has coercive penal systems, authoritarian schools and low levels of trust, all things that will make matters worse.
Bregman clearly thinks that the flip side of this is that belief in human goodness can act as a placebo. If hes right about that, it hardly matters if many of his claims are factually true: believing them will make them so. He doesnt undersell the extent to which positive beliefs can lead to positive actions. Kindness is catching, he says. And its so contagious that it even infects people who merely see it from afar.
But his evidence is again anecdotal. If kindness truly did have an R value of above one, the world would be full of loveliness and his book wouldnt be needed. In his cries for the potential snowballing effects of good deeds we can hear the echoes of so many empty hopes of the past. People sincerely believed that the 1967 Summer of Love was going to usher in a new Age of Aquarius. Soon after Live Aid in 1985, an article by Stuart Hall and Martin Jacques in Marxism Today claimed that A new politics sweeps the land and that the ideology of selfishness has been dealt a further, severe blow. Right now people are quick to predict that the new sense of community fostered by the Covid-19 lockdown will change society for the better, forever.
The world is never as grim as some fear or as sunny as others hope. The debate about whether human nature is essentially good or bad is pointless. The answer is that it is neither. We have the capacities for love, kindness and sympathy and also for hatred, malice and selfishness. To ask which set of characteristics comprises our essence is like asking whether a Manhattan is actually whiskey or vermouth.
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Though you cant watch the Tonys this weekend, some of Broadways best are just a click away – The Boston Globe
Posted: at 4:42 pm
With Broadway mothballed for the foreseeable future and the Tony Awards shelved until a to-be-determined date, whats a theater fan to do these days? In the absence of a Tony ceremony that was supposed to air Sunday night, weve compiled a list of award-worthy performances and plays that fans can watch to celebrate the best of the truncated Broadway season. (Unless otherwise noted, you can find all of these clips on YouTube.)
Tell me more, tell me more! In place of this years postponed awards show, CBS is presenting a sing-along version of the classic 1978 film Grease, starring John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, and Stockard Channing, as part of its revived Sunday Night Movies lineup. The Grease Sing-Along, airing at 8:30 p.m., will be accompanied by onscreen lyrics to all the shows classic songs, including Summer Nights, Look at Me, Im Sandra Dee, Youre the One That I Want," Greased Lightnin, and Hopelessly Devoted to You.
The rousing Moulin Rouge! The Musical is the epitome of a big, splashy, vibrant Broadway musical thats much missed these days. Scrambling up hits from the likes of Beyonc, Rihanna, Adele, the Police, OutKast, and Lady Gaga, the show received its world premiere at Bostons Emerson Colonial Theatre in 2018 before bowing on Broadway last summer. It wouldve been a top Tony contender in many categories, including best musical. You can see stars Aaron Tveit and Karen Olivo, who play lovestruck composer Christian and doomed chanteuse Satine, harmonizing on the soaring Elton John ballad Your Song on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert last fall. Or watch Danny Burstein, as nightclub impresario Harold Zidler, and the dynamic cast perform the shows explosive opening mash-up of Lady Marmalade and Because We Can from the Al Hirschfeld Theatre on Good Morning America in February.
Another show with local roots that wouldve been a serious Tony contender is Jagged Little Pill, which premiered at Cambridges American Repertory Theater in 2018 and opened on Broadway last fall. The show features the songs from Alanis Morissettes trailblazing 1995 album, finding the fire and fury in a story that touches on a range of hot-button issues, including opioid addiction, racism, rape culture, and gender identity. Watch the cast perform You Learn on Good Morning America last December. Or go behind the scenes at a rehearsal with director Diane Paulus, choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, and cast members Celia Rose Gooding and Antonio Cipriano as they work through a performance of Head Over Feet.
The fierce, cheeky, female-empowered musical Six, which passed through the ARTs Loeb Drama Center last summer on its way to Broadway this spring, was a legit contender for Tony gold, including best musical. Written by Lucy Moss and Toby Marlow and staged as an exhilarating pop concert, the show tells the story of the six wives of Henry VIII, tossed-aside queens who refused to be relegated to the dustbin of history. Check out the London cast slaying the shows scorching opening number, Ex Wives, at the 2019 Olivier Awards, in a flash-mob performance of that electric anthem outside the Tower of London, or strutting to Anne Boleyns catchy cautionary tune Dont Lose Your Head on BBCs The One Show.
The race for best actress in a musical likely would have included previous Tony winners Olivo and Katrina Lenk. Yet the contest was shaping up as a showdown between Olivier Award winner Sharon D. Clarke for her stirring performance as a Black woman grappling with the Jim Crow South in Tony Kushner and Jeanine Tesoris Caroline, or Change and pint-size dynamo Adrienne Warren for her turn as the inimitable pop diva in Tina: The Tina Turner Musical. Watch Clarkes soul-shaking rendition of Lots Wife at last years Oliviers and the sparkling Warren, who came to Boston in a 2010 tour of Dreamgirls, sing an earthquaking River Deep/Mountain High at the same ceremony. Or click on Warren belting out Turners pop anthem The Best from her bathtub on The Rosie ODonnell Show in March.
Patti LuPone has long been one of Broadways most renowned divas. She has two Tony Awards (for Gypsy and Evita) and seven other nominations. Would she have added a third award to her shelf as the acerbic Joanne in the revival of Stephen Sondheims Company? Judge for yourself. Check out LuPone slaying the lacerating lament The Ladies Who Lunch at a 2011 concert performance of Company or delivering a more sardonic version at the composers 80th birthday bash in 2010. Well drink to her.
Speaking of Company, Marianne Elliotts revelatory revival reimagined the restless bachelor Bobbie as a romantically ambivalent single woman facing the uncertainties of aging alone. Lenks turn as Bobbie on Broadway had only just begun before the show had to shut down. For now, fans can view Lenks star-making turn as the enigmatic Dina in a duet with Tony Shalhoub on the aching Omar Sharif from The Bands Visit at the 2018 Tonys, where it won best musical and nine other trophies. The shows tour was set to arrive at the Colonial in late March, until the pandemic shut theaters. This is a small glimpse of its magical charms.
David Byrnes dazzling American Utopia, a heart-lifting theatrical concert that had a tryout at the Colonial last September before opening on Broadway, felt like a balm for these times. Watch Byrne and his diverse band as they summon an anguished cover of Janelle Mones searing protest anthem against racial violence and the deaths of Black men and women at the hands of the police, Hell You Talmbout. The powerful call-and-response song recites the names of 18 victims, including Sean Bell, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Freddie Gray, Sandra Bland, and Emmett Till, and was written, said Mone in 2015, to challenge the indifference, disregard, and negligence of all who remain quiet about this issue. (You can also watch Monae herself perform the song here.) Say their names, say their names, say their names.
Theres nothing wrong with escapism in these fraught times. But in light of the urgent Black Lives Matter protests, theater fans might be in the mood for more thought-provoking drama. Dominique Morisseaus haunting Pipeline tells the story of a mother desperate to protect her young Black son from getting caught in the so-called school-to-prison pipeline. The play is available for streaming on the subscription service BroadwayHD.com (a free trial is available). The trailblazing writer-performer Anna Deavere Smith explores similar territory in her solo performance piece Notes From the Field, seen at the ART in 2016. In the film version, available on HBOs streaming services, Smith embodies a multitude of characters as she investigates the connections between police brutality, the mass incarceration of Black men, and an educational system that often fails communities of color.
One of the most talked-about new dramas of the Broadway season, Jeremy O. Harriss Slave Play, would have been a top contender for best play, along with Matthew Lopezs multi-generational epic The Inheritance. You can watch Harris discuss the psychological and personal roots of his provocative examination of race, sex, trauma and America itself, on the BUILD series. Or click on an interview with Lopez and actor Kyle Soller discussing generational responsibility and the legacy of AIDS in the Oliver Award-winning Inheritance on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon.
Christopher Wallenberg can be reached at chriswallenberg@gmail.com.
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Black Canadians say racism here is just as harmful as in the United States – The Record (New Westminster)
Posted: at 4:42 pm
MONTREAL The death of George Floyd in Minnesota following a police intervention has spurred massive protests in both Canada and the United States and societal soul-searching on the need to fight racism on both sides of the border.
But while many Canadian leaders have denounced the death of Floyd, who died in Minneapolis last week after pleading for air while a white police officer pressed a knee on his neck, his death has also prompted some public figures to claim systemic racism doesn't exist in Canada as it does in the United States.
The Canadian Press asked several black Canadians to share their experiences with racism and their thoughts on systemic discrimination in both countries.
Kenrick McRae
McRae, 49, said Floyd's experience in the United States hit home with him, because it has echoes of his own experiences with Montreal police.
"What I've been seeing (in the United States) is a reflection of what I went through," he said. "In my cases, if there were no video recordings, these police here in Montreal would have gotten off."
In March 2017, McRae was stopped by police who claimed his car's licence plate light was out. When he argued that the light was working and got out of the car to film the officers, he says, they rushed at him, tried to take his camera, and arrested him and held him in their car for 90 minutes before releasing him without charges.
In a 2019 decision, the police ethics board upheld McRae's complaint and concluded that the two officers had illegally arrested and detained him during a stop that was "founded on his race."
McRae, who now keeps several cameras to film his interactions, says this incident is one of dozens over the years in which he's been stopped and harassed by police without cause.
"I would say in an average of two years (I've been stopped) over 25 times," he said. "And out of the 25 times, there's never been a ticket, for anything."
Omari Newton
Newton, a Vancouver-based actor and writer, says he's experienced racism both in that city and in Montreal, where he grew up.
He recalled one time when he was pulled over by police when driving home from an intramural basketball game with three black friends and one of their girlfriends, who is white. He said he was initially confused when police started flashing their flashlights and demanding ID.
Eventually, Newton said, the officer leaned in to ask the sole white passenger if she was OK.
"She's confused. She's like 'Yeah, what are you talking about?' " he recalled. "The cop says 'You're here on your free will?' "
He said he then realized what was happening.
"These cops decided that four brothers with a white girl in the middle, clearly, this is like a kidnapping or potential assault situation. There's no way that these guys are friends," Newton said.
Newton, 40, said those who deny there is racism in Canada "don't know the history of our country's formation."
"I'm proud to be Canadian. We've come a long way as a nation, and I wouldn't want to live anywhere else. That doesn't mean we are a utopia," he said.
Sharon Nelson
Nelson, who works with Montreal's Jamaica Association, believes firmly that what happened to Floyd could have happened anywhere, including Canada.
She said most black people, including herself, can tell stories about being followed by sales staff while shopping, being treated differently depending on whether they're wearing business attire or clothes perceived as "ethnic," and being told to "go home."
Nelson, 49, bristles at Quebec Premier Francois Legault's statement this week that there is no systemic discrimination in Quebec.
"Why is it harder for people of colour to find a decent apartment, or housing or places to live?" she asked.
"Why is it that when racialized people move into certain neighbourhoods, certain people start moving out of that neighbourhood? Those are the questions that those individuals who say there's no systemic discrimination in Quebec need to ask."
Lauren Jiles
"As a black and an Indigenous woman, I don't have the privilege to think of the police force as a helpful resource," says the burlesque performer known by her stage name Lou Lou la Duchesse de Riere.
"I've been pulled over with an ex, and then I was accused of being a prostitute once my band card was taken as an ID. I was 17 years old. I've been detained at the border and accused of smuggling cigarettes when I was 18, and I've been directly assaulted by police when I was 30."
She said she regularly has her accomplishments diminished and accredited to some form of affirmative action. "I was accepted to McGill's law faculty when I was 19, straight out of (junior college) without a bachelor's degree. It's really hard. I was told by a lawyer, a potential colleague and employer, that the only reason was because it looked good for the university."
Jiles, 32, says that while working in clubs, she has been exoticized and targeted as an Indigenous woman and has repeatedly watched as black people are not let in, are kicked out or are given poor service.
"Racism is more in your face in the U.S., and I feel like here (in Canada) it's insidious and it intrinsically hides into our policies, into our legal system, into all of our infrastructures," she said.
"We have just as much work to do in our own backyard, and this lie, this narrative that things are so much better here, it's a form of racism. It's a form of blindness."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 5, 2020.
Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version referred to a bank card being taken as ID from Lauren Jiles.
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Cooking Whisks Market Size, Share, Growth Survey 2020 to 2025 and Industry Analysis Report – Cole of Duty
Posted: at 4:42 pm
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What are the market factors that are explained in the report?
-Key Strategic Developments:The study also includes the key strategic developments of the market, comprising R&D, new product launch, M&A, agreements, collaborations, partnerships, joint ventures, and regional growth of the leading competitors operating in the market on a global and regional scale.
-Key Market Features:The report evaluated key market features, including revenue, price, capacity, capacity utilization rate, gross, production, production rate, consumption, import/export, supply/demand, cost, market share, CAGR, and gross margin. In addition, the study offers a comprehensive study of the key market dynamics and their latest trends, along with pertinent market segments and sub-segments.
-Analytical Tools:The Global Cooking Whisks Market report includes the accurately studied and assessed data of the key industry players and their scope in the market by means of a number of analytical tools. The analytical tools such as Porters five forces analysis, feasibility study, and investment return analysis have been used to analyzed the growth of the key players operating in the market.
The research includes historic data from 2015 to 2020 and forecasts until 2026 which makes the reports an invaluable resource for industry executives, marketing, sales and product managers, consultants, analysts, and other people looking for key industry data in readily accessible documents with clearly presented tables and graphs.
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Doctor Who: 10 Things That Make No Sense About Martha Jones – Screen Rant
Posted: at 4:42 pm
Martha Jones is one of the most relatable Doctor Who companions. Like many fans, she fell in love with The Doctor, had sibling relationships, sass, sarcasm, and aspirations. She graced the screen after the beloved Rose, but never considered herself as second best.
RELATED:10 Doctors And Companions Sorted Into Hogwarts Houses
But as a companion, some things aren't quite right: from audience opinions, plot lines, and character flaws that weren't fitting to her character. Here are 10 things about Martha that just didn't make sense.
After everything she had gone through with The Tenth Doctor during the two-part episode "Human Nature," and "The Family Of Blood," Martha should have known better. The Doctor didn't want his real self known to him. In the season 3 episode "Utopia," Martha knew that a Chameleon Arch was used to rewrite the biology of a Time Lord, yet she brought it to The Master's attention.
For fans of The Tenth Doctor, some of his behavior was difficult to watch. His relationship with Martha just didn't make any sense. Yes, the writers wanted him to go through a grieving period, and yes, he couldn't just leap into another companionship. But he strung her along, and at points, she let him.
RELATED:Doctor Who: 10 Reasons The Doctor & Martha Weren't Real Friends
But why make him sabotage his friendship with Martha? Martha became a gateway companion that was halfway between love interest and friendship, essentially becoming the transition from Rose to Donna.
When Martha is approached by The Doctor after the events of "Smith and Jones," she is wearing a red jacket and faded denim jeans for her brother's birthday celebration. The Doctor promises he can bring her back to that same night, and the two go off for "one" adventure in time and space. One becomes several, and Martha is still wearing the same clothes. It might be one night for the rest of the universe but Martha has been to the past, the future, and faced Daleks in Manhattan. We Don't see her change clothes until "The Lazarus Experiment," when she arrives back home. One theory is The Doctor didn't want her to get used to being in The TARDIS as she was meant to leave after one trip.
In the episode, "Smith and Jones," The Doctor kissed Martha without a clear explanation and mostly ignored her genius during their travels. Martha was interested in The Doctor, he was dashing and intelligent and nothing intimidated him, not even a smart, forward medical student such as herself. The Doctor often brought up Rose, instead of seeking Martha's opinion and shared in joy with Captain Jack over her safety on a parallel world.
RELATED:Doctor Who: 5 Reasons Martha Was A Better Companion Than Clara (& Vice Versa)
But when Rose and The Doctor were reunited in "Journey's End," and Martha saw them together, she expressed happiness. "Oh my God, he found you." She wasn't scorned, The Doctor was her friend and she loved him.
Tom Milligan and Martha Jones officially met during the Toclafane invasion in the three-part Master epic. Tom assisted Martha on the last leg of her journey and sacrificed himself when he thought The Master was going to kill her. But a connection had been formed, and although all memories were wiped of the horrid events, Martha called his practice and found him again. They became engaged between Martha's departure as a companion and her reappearance in season 4. Between that time and the Big Finish Productions audio episode "Dissected" it was revealed Martha broke it off. Yet speculation remains as to why.
Ah yes, the plot hole filler. This isn't the first time an actor has been on the show as two characters. Peter Capaldi appeared asCaecilius and The Twelfth Doctor, Karen Gillan as a soothsayer and companion Amy Pond,Colin Baker as Commander Maxil and The Sixth Doctor, the list goes on. Freema Agyeman appeared as Adeola in the two-part final of season 2 and companion Martha Jones. Some of the similarities have explanations, such as Peter Capaldi's Twelfth Doctor. But Adeola was only referenced in passing and could have had a stronger storyline.
Martha Jones became a companion to The Doctor after Rose. Rose was the first companion in the New Who series and The Doctor's attachment was a mutual fondness. Then when Rose left, the Casanova Doctor who had regenerated full of love, broke, slowly declining and full of reckless abandon. Martha is seen as the rejected companion, only there in an attempt to fill the void left by Rose.
RELATED:Doctor Who: 5 Companions Who Grew A Lot (& 5 Who Didn't)
But Martha saved The Doctor's life on multiple occasions and knew when it was her time to leave. She stopped clinging to him not because she stopped loving him, but because she knew it was unhealthy.
So, now Martha is conveniently single after her engagement with Thomas Milligan, just in time for the big goodbye sequence in "The End Of Time: Part 2." The Tenth Doctor is making his way through time and space to say farewell to all his companions and receive his final reward. During this time, Martha and Mickey are shown fighting against Sontarons, revealing they are married, and The Doctor saves them from being killed by Sontaran Jask. Did Martha and Mickey start a relationship immediately after the events of "Journey's End," when they left the TARDIS with Captain Jack? And was it more closure for his character than hers?
Martha was needed to create a connection with the Hath. But she spent most of the episode separate from The Doctor and Donna. Why was she brought back only to be put on the back burner? She hardly had any interaction with The Doctor to show her character growth, and her involvement in "The Sontaran Stratagem" and "The Poison Sky" was mainly as a clone. Everyone loves a companion crossover, and Martha did show she was able to save herself and everyone else without The Doctor, yet again. But was it needed?
Martha will forever be seen in the eyes of many fans as the companion who pined after The Doctor. But that wasn't her legacy, it wasn't what she stood for. Martha was aware. She pushed The Doctor when he was apathetic and left when the time was right. She was strong and sassy. She told him that the title of a Doctor was something that had to be earned. Martha was cool, calm, and collected, with a level head in dangerous situations, but always empathetic. Despite all of these things, Martha isn't appreciated.
NEXT:Doctor Who: 10 Things That Make No Sense About Amy Pond
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Zarreen Moghbelpour is a cinephile, writer, reading enthusiast, and performer based in Australia.
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Doctor Who: 10 Things That Make No Sense About Martha Jones - Screen Rant
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Macau – Wikipedia
Posted: June 5, 2020 at 2:08 pm
Special administrative region of China
Special administrative region in People's Republic of China
Macau, also spelled Macao (; , Cantonese:[u.mn]; official Portuguese:[mkaw] Macau), and officially the Macao Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, is a city in the western Pearl River Delta by the South China Sea. It is a special administrative region of China and maintains separate governing and economic systems from those of mainland China.[7] With a population of 696,100[8] and an area of 32.9km2 (12.7sqmi), it is the most densely populated region in the world.
Macau was formerly a colony of the Portuguese Empire, after Ming China leased the territory as a trading post in 1557. Portugal paid an annual rent and administered the territory under Chinese sovereignty until 1887, when it gained perpetual colonial rights in the Sino-Portuguese Treaty of Peking. The colony remained under Portuguese rule until 1999, when it was transferred to China.
Originally a sparsely populated collection of coastal islands,[9] the territory has become a major resort city and the top destination for gambling tourism. It is the ninth-highest recipient of tourism revenue and its gambling industry is seven times larger than that of Las Vegas.[10] Although the city has one of the highest per capita incomes in the world, it has severe income inequality.[11] Its GDP per capita by purchasing power parity is one of the highest in the world and higher than any country in the world in 2014 according to the World Bank.[12]
Macau has a very high Human Development Index, although it is only calculated by the Macau government instead of the United Nations.[6] Macau has the fourth-highest life expectancy in the world.[13] The territory is highly urbanised and most development is built on reclaimed land; two-thirds of the total land area is reclaimed from the sea.[14]
The first known written record of the name "Macau", rendered as "Ya/A Ma Gang" ("/-/-"), is found in a letter dated 20 November 1555. The local inhabitants believed that the sea-goddess Mazu (alternatively called A-Ma) had blessed and protected the harbour and called the waters around A-Ma Temple using her name.[15] When Portuguese explorers first arrived in the area and asked for the place name, the locals thought they were asking about the temple and told them it was "Ma Kok" ().[16] The earliest Portuguese spelling for this was Amaquo. Multiple variations were used until Amaco / Amacao and Maco / Macao became common during the 17th century.[15] By the 1911 reform of Portuguese orthography, the spelling Macau became the standardised form, however the use of Macao persisted in English and other European languages.[17]
Macau Peninsula had many names in Chinese, including Jing'ao (/), Haojing (), and Haojing'ao ().[15][18] The islands Taipa, Coloane, and Hengqin were collectively called Shizimen (). These names would later become Aomen (), Oumn in Cantonese and translating as "bay gate" or "port gate", to refer to the whole territory.[18]
During the Qin dynasty (221206 BC), the region was under the jurisdiction of Panyu County, Nanhai Prefecture of the province of Guangdong.[19][20] The region is first known to have been settled during the Han dynasty.[21] It was administratively part of Dongguan Prefecture in the Jin dynasty (265420 AD), and alternated under the control of Nanhai and Dongguan in later dynasties. In 1152, during the Song dynasty (9601279 AD), it was under the jurisdiction of the new Xiangshan County.[19] In 1277, approximately 50,000 refugees fleeing the Mongol conquest of China settled in the coastal area.[20][22]
Macau did not develop as a major settlement until the Portuguese arrived in the 16th century. The first European visitor to reach China by sea was the explorer Jorge lvares, who arrived in 1513.[23] Merchants first established a trading post in Hong Kong waters at Tamo (present-day Tuen Mun), beginning regular trade with nearby settlements in southern China.[23] Military clashes between the Ming and Portuguese navies followed the expulsion of the Tamo traders in 1521.[24] Despite the trade ban, Portuguese merchants continued to attempt settling on other parts of the Pearl River estuary, finally settling on Macau.[24] Luso-Chinese trade relations were formally reestablished in 1554 and Portugal soon after acquired a permanent lease for Macau in 1557,[25] agreeing to pay 500 taels of silver as annual land rent.[26]
The initially small population of Portuguese merchants rapidly became a growing city.[27] The Roman Catholic Diocese of Macau was created in 1576, and by 1583, the Senate had been established to handle municipal affairs for the growing settlement.[27] Macau was at the peak of its prosperity as a major entrept during the late 16th century, providing a crucial connection in exporting Chinese silk to Japan during the Nanban trade period.[28] Although the Portuguese were initially prohibited from fortifying Macau or stockpiling weapons, the Fortaleza do Monte was constructed in response to frequent Dutch naval incursions. The Dutch attempted to take the city in the 1622 Battle of Macau, but were repelled successfully by the Portuguese.[29] Macau entered a period of decline in the 1640s following a series of catastrophic events for the burgeoning colony: Portuguese access to trade routes was irreparably severed when Japan halted trade in 1639,[30] Portugal revolted against Spain in 1640,[31] and Malacca fell to the Dutch in 1641.[32][33]
Maritime trade with China was banned in 1644 following the Qing conquest under the Haijin policies and limited only to Macau on a lesser scale while the new dynasty focused on eliminating surviving Ming loyalists.[34] While the Kangxi Emperor lifted the prohibition in 1684, China again restricted trade under the Canton System in 1757.[35] Foreign ships were required to first stop at Macau before further proceeding to Canton.[36] Qing authorities exercised a much greater role in governing the territory during this period; Chinese residents were subject to Qing courts and new construction had to be approved by the resident mandarin beginning in the 1740s.[37] As the opium trade became more lucrative during the eighteenth century, Macau again became an important stopping point en route to China.[38]
Following the First Opium War and establishment of Hong Kong, Macau lost its role as a major port.[39] Firecracker and incense production, as well as tea and tobacco processing, were vital industries in the colony during this time.[40][41] Portugal was able to capitalise on China's post-war weakness and assert its sovereignty; the Governor of Macau began refusing to pay China annual land rent for the colony in the 1840s,[42] and annexed Taipa and Coloane, in 1851 and 1864 respectively.[43] Portugal also occupied nearby Lapa and Montanha,[42] but these would be returned to China by 1887, when perpetual occupation rights over Macau were formalised in the Sino-Portuguese Treaty of Peking. This agreement also prohibited Portugal from ceding Macau without Chinese approval.[44] Despite occasional conflict between Cantonese authorities and the colonial government, Macau's status remained unchanged through the republican revolutions of both Portugal in 1910 and China in 1911.[45] The Kuomintang further affirmed Portuguese jurisdiction in Macau when the Treaty of Peking was renegotiated in 1928.[45]
During the Second World War, the Empire of Japan did not occupy the colony and generally respected Portuguese neutrality in Macau. However, after Japanese troops captured a British cargo ship in Macau waters in 1943, Japan installed a group of government "advisors" as an alternative to military occupation. The territory largely avoided military action during the war except in 1945, when the United States ordered air raids on Macau after learning that the colonial government was preparing to sell aviation fuel to Japan. Portugal was later given over US$20million in compensation for the damage in 1950.[46]
Refugees from mainland China swelled the population as they fled from the Chinese Civil War. Access to a large workforce enabled Macau's economy to grow as the colony expanded its clothing and textiles manufacturing industry, developed tourism, and legalised casino gaming.[47] However, at the height of the Cultural Revolution, residents dissatisfied with the colonial administration rioted in the 1966 12-3 incident, in which 8 people were killed and over 200 were injured. Portugal lost full control over the colony afterwards, and agreed to cooperate with the communist authorities in exchange for continued administration of Macau.[48]
Following the 1974 Carnation Revolution, Portugal formally relinquished Macau as an overseas province and acknowledged it as a "Chinese territory under Portuguese administration".[49] After China first concluded arrangements on Hong Kong's future with the United Kingdom, it entered negotiations with Portugal over Macau in 1986. They were concluded with the signing of the 1987 Joint Declaration on the Question of Macau, in which Portugal agreed to transfer the colony in 1999 and China would guarantee Macau's political and economic systems for 50 years after the transfer.[50] In the waning years of colonial rule, Macau rapidly urbanised and constructed large-scale infrastructure projects, including Macau International Airport and a new container port.[51] Macau was transferred to China on 20 December 1999, after 442 years of Portuguese rule.[7]
Following the transfer, Macau liberalised its casino industry (previously operating under a government-licensed monopoly) to allow foreign investors, starting a new period of economic development. The regional economy grew by a double-digit annual growth rate from 2002 to 2014, making Macau one of the richest economies in the world on a per capita basis.[52] Political debates have centred on the region's jurisdictional independence and the central government's adherence of "one country, two systems". While issues such as national security legislation have been controversial, Macanese residents generally have high levels of trust in the government.[53][54]
Macao is the last Portuguese colony to gain independence and the only one which is not member of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries. Portuguese is one of the official languages of Macao. In 2006, during the II Ministerial meeting between China and Portuguese Speaking Countries, the CPLP Executive Secretary and Deputy ambassador Tadeu Soares invited the Chief Executive of the Government of the Macau Special Administrative Region, Edmund Ho, to request the Associate Observer status for Macau. The Government of Macau has not yet formalized this request. In 2016, Murade Murargy, then executive secretary of CPLP said in an interview that Macao's membership is a complicated question, since like the Galicia region in Spain, it is not an independent country, but only a part of China.[55] But the Instituto Internacional de Macau and the University of So Jos are Consultative Observers of CPLP.
Macau is a special administrative region of China, with executive, legislative, and judicial powers devolved from the national government.[56] The Sino-Portuguese Joint Declaration provided for economic and administrative continuity through the transfer of sovereignty, resulting in an executive-led governing system largely inherited from the territory's history as a Portuguese colony.[57] Under these terms and the "one country, two systems" principle, the Basic Law of Macao is the regional constitution.[58] Because negotiations for the Joint Declaration and Basic Law began after transitional arrangements for Hong Kong were made, Macau's structure of government is very similar to Hong Kong's.[59]
The regional government is composed of three branches:
The Chief Executive is the head of government, and serves for a maximum of two five-year terms.[67] The State Council (led by the Premier of China) appoints the Chief Executive after nomination by the Election Committee, which is composed of 400 business, community, and government leaders.[68][69]
The Legislative Assembly has 33 members, each serving a four-year term: 14 are directly elected, 12 indirectly elected, and 7 appointed by the Chief Executive.[70] Indirectly elected assemblymen are selected from limited electorates representing sectors of the economy or special interest groups.[71] All directly elected members are chosen with proportional representation.[72]
Twelve political parties had representatives elected to the Legislative Assembly in the 2017 election.[73] These parties have aligned themselves into two ideological groups: the pro-establishment (the current government) and pro-democracy camps.[74] Macau is represented in the National People's Congress by 12 deputies chosen through an electoral college, and 29 delegates in the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference appointed by the central government.[2]
Chinese national law does not generally apply in the region, and Macau is treated as a separate jurisdiction.[56] Its judicial system is based on Portuguese civil law, continuing the legal tradition established during colonial rule. Interpretative and amending power over the Basic Law and jurisdiction over acts of state lie with the central authority, however, making regional courts ultimately subordinate to the mainland's socialist civil law system. Decisions made by the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress can also override territorial judicial processes.[75]
The territory's jurisdictional independence is most apparent in its immigration and taxation policies. The Identification Department issues passports for permanent residents which differ from those issued by the mainland or Hong Kong, and the region maintains a regulated border with the rest of the country.[76] All travellers between Macau and China and Hong Kong must pass border controls, regardless of nationality.[77] Chinese citizens resident in mainland China do not have the right of abode in Macau and are subject to immigration controls.[78] Public finances are handled separately from the national government, and taxes levied in Macau do not fund the central authority.[79]
The Macao Garrison is responsible for the region's defence. Although the Chairman of the Central Military Commission is supreme commander of the armed forces,[80] the regional government may request assistance from the garrison.[81] Macau residents are not required to perform military service and current law also has no provision for local enlistment, so its defence force is composed entirely of nonresidents.[82]
The State Council and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs handle diplomatic matters, but Macau retains the ability to maintain separate economic and cultural relations with foreign nations.[83] The territory negotiates its own trade agreements and actively participates in supranational organisations, including agencies of the World Trade Organization and United Nations.[84][85][86] The regional government maintains trade offices in Greater China and other nations.[87]
The territory is divided into seven parishes. Cotai, a major area developed on reclaimed land between Taipa and Coloane, and areas of the Macau New Urban Zone do not have defined parishes.[88] Historically, the parishes belonged to one of two municipalities (the Municipality of Macau or the Municipality of Ilhas) that were responsible for administering municipal services. The municipalities were abolished in 2001 and superseded by the Civic and Municipal Affairs Bureau in providing local services.[89]
Sex trafficking in Macau is an issue. Macau and foreign women and girls are forced into prostitution in brothels, homes, and businesses in the city.[90][91][92][93][94]
Macau is on China's southern coast, 60km (37mi) west of Hong Kong, on the western side of the Pearl River estuary. It is surrounded by the South China Sea in the east and south, and neighbours the Guangdong city of Zhuhai to the west and north.[95] The territory consists of Macau Peninsula, Taipa, and Coloane.[96] A 1km2 (0.39sqmi) parcel of land in neighbouring Hengqin island that hosts the University of Macau also falls under the regional government's jurisdiction.[97] The territory's highest point is Coloane Alto, 170.6 metres (560ft) above sea level.[88]
Urban development is concentrated on peninsular Macau, where most of the population lives.[98] The peninsula was originally a separate island with hilly terrain, which gradually became a tombolo as a connecting sandbar formed over time. Both natural sedimentation and land reclamation expanded the area enough to support urban growth.[99] Macau has tripled its land area in the last century, increasing from 10.28km2 (3.97sqmi) in the late 19th century[14] to 32.9km2 (12.7sqmi) in 2018.[88]
Cotai, the area of reclaimed land connecting Taipa and Coloane, contains many of the newer casinos and resorts established after 1999.[11] The region's jurisdiction over the surrounding sea was greatly expanded in 2015, when it was granted an additional 85km2 (33sqmi) of maritime territory by the State Council.[100] Further reclamation is currently underway to develop parts of the Macau New Urban Zone.[101] The territory also has control over part of an artificial island to maintain a border checkpoint for the Hong KongZhuhaiMacau Bridge.[88][102]
Macau has a humid subtropical climate (Kppen Cwa), characteristic of southern China. The territory is dual season dominant summer (May to September) and winter (November to February) are the longest seasons, while spring (March and April) and autumn (October) are relatively brief periods.[95] The summer monsoon brings warm and humid air from the sea, with the most frequent rainfall occurring during the season. Typhoons also occur most often then, bringing significant spikes in rainfall. During the winter, northern winds from the continent bring dry air and much less rainfall.[103] The highest and lowest temperatures recorded at the Macao Meteorological and Geophysical Bureau are 38.9C (102.0F) on both 2 July 1930 and 6 July 1930 and 1.8C (28.8F) on 26 January 1948.[104]
The Statistics and Census Service estimated Macau's population at 667,400 at the end of 2018.[106] With a population density of 21,340 people per square kilometre,[107] Macau is the most densely populated region in the world. The overwhelming majority (88.7 per cent) are Chinese, many of whom originate from Guangdong (31.9 per cent) or Fujian (5.9 per cent).[108] The remaining 11.6 per cent are non-ethnic Chinese minorities, primarily Filipinos (4.6 per cent), Vietnamese (2.4 per cent), and Portuguese (1.8 per cent).[1] Several thousand residents are of Macanese heritage, native-born multiracial people with mixed Portuguese ancestry.[109] Of the total population (excluding migrants), 49.4 per cent were born in Macau, followed by 43.1 per cent in Mainland China.[110] A large portion of the population are Portuguese citizens, a legacy of colonial rule; at the time of the transfer of sovereignty in 1999, 107,000 residents held Portuguese passports.[111]
The predominant language is Cantonese, a variety of Chinese originating in Guangdong. It is spoken by 87.5 per cent of the population, 80.1 per cent as a first language and 7.5 per cent as a second language. Only 2.3 per cent can speak Portuguese, the other official language;[112] 0.7 per cent are native speakers, and 1.6 per cent use it as a second language. Increased immigration from mainland China in recent years has added to the number of Mandarin speakers, making up about half of the population (50.4 per cent); 5.5 per cent are native speakers and 44.9 per cent are second language speakers.[113] Traditional Chinese characters are used in writing, rather than the simplified characters used on the mainland. English is considered an additional working language[114] and is spoken by over a quarter of the population (27.5 per cent); 2.8 per cent are native speakers, and 24.7 per cent speak English as a second language.[113] Macanese Patois, a local creole generally known as Patu, is now spoken only by a few in the older Macanese community.[115]
Chinese folk religions have the most adherents (58.9 per cent) and are followed by Buddhism (17.3 per cent) and Christianity (7.2 per cent), while 15.4 per cent of the population profess no religious affiliation at all. Small minorities adhering to other religions (less than 1 per cent), including Hinduism, Judaism, and Islam, are also resident in Macau.[116]
Life expectancy in Macau was 81.6 years for males and 87.7 years for females in 2018,[13] the fourth highest in the world.[117] Cancer, heart disease, and respiratory disease are the territory's three leading causes of death. Most government-provided healthcare services are free of charge, though alternative treatment is also heavily subsidised.[118]
Migrant workers living in Macau account for over 25 per cent of the entire workforce.[119] They largely work in lower wage sectors of the economy, including construction, hotels, and restaurants. As a growing proportion of local residents take up employment in the gaming industry, the disparity in income between local and migrant workers has been increasing.[97] Rising living costs have also pushed a large portion of non-resident workers to live in Zhuhai.[119]
Casinos on the Macanese skyline
Tourism plays an important role in the economy of Macau, the people from Mainland China being the region's most prolific tourists.
Macau has a capitalist service economy largely based on casino gaming and tourism. It is the world's 83rd-largest economy, with a nominal GDP of approximately MOP433billion (US$53.9billion).[4] Although Macau has one of the highest per capita GDPs, the territory also has a high level of wealth disparity.[11] Macau's gaming industry is the largest in the world, generating over MOP195billion (US$24billion) in revenue and about seven times larger than that of Las Vegas.[10] Macau's gambling revenue was $37billion in 2018.[120]
The regional economy is heavily reliant on casino gaming.[10] The vast majority of government funding (79.6 per cent of total tax revenue) comes from gaming.[121] Gambling as a share of GDP peaked in 2013 at over 60 per cent,[10] and continues to account for 49.1 per cent of total economic output. The vast majority of casino patrons are tourists from mainland China, making up 68 per cent of all visitors.[122] Casino gaming is illegal in both the mainland and Hong Kong, giving Macau a legal monopoly on the industry in China.[10] Revenue from Chinese high rollers has been falling and was forecast to fall as much as 10% more in 2019. Economic uncertainty may account for some of the drop, but alternate Asian gambling venues do as well. For example, Chinese visitors to the Philippines more than doubled between 2015 and 2018, since the City of Dreams casino opened in Manila.[120]
Casino gambling was legalised in 1962 and the gaming industry initially operated under a government-licensed monopoly granted to the Sociedade de Turismo e Diverses de Macau. This license was renegotiated and renewed several times before ending in 2002 after 40 years.[123] The government then allowed open bidding for casino licenses to attract foreign investors.[124] Along with an easing of travel restrictions on mainland Chinese visitors, this triggered a period of rapid economic growth; from 1999 to 2016, Macau's gross domestic product multiplied by 7[10] and the unemployment rate dropped from 6.3 to 1.9 per cent.[97] The Sands Macao, Wynn Macau, MGM Macau, and Venetian Macau were all opened during the first decade after liberalisation of casino concessions.[124] Casinos employ about 24 per cent of the total workforce in the region.[97] "Increased competition from casinos popping up across Asia to lure away Chinese high rollers and tourists" in Singapore, South Korea, Japan, Nepal, the Philippines, Australia, Vietnam and the Russian Far east led in 2019 to the lowest revenues in three years.[120]
Export-oriented manufacturing previously contributed to a much larger share of economic output, peaking at 36.9 per cent of GDP in 1985[125] and falling to less than 1 per cent in 2017.[126] The bulk of these exports were cotton textiles and apparel, but also included toys and electronics.[127] At the transfer of sovereignty in 1999, manufacturing, financial services, construction and real estate, and gaming were the four largest sectors of the economy.[10] Macau's shift to an economic model entirely dependent on gaming caused concern over its overexposure to a single sector, prompting the regional government to attempt re-diversifying its economy.[128]
The government traditionally had a non-interventionist role in the economy and taxes corporations at very low rates.[129] Post-handover administrations have generally been more involved in enhancing social welfare to counter the cyclical nature of the gaming industry.[130] Economic growth has been attributed in large part to the high number of mainlander visits to Macau, and the central government exercises a role in guiding casino business growth through its control of the flow of tourists.[131][132] The Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement formalised a policy of free trade between Macau and mainland China, with each jurisdiction pledging to remove remaining obstacles to trade and cross-boundary investment.[133]
Due to a lack of available land for farming, agriculture is not significant in the economy. Food is exclusively imported to Macau and almost all foreign goods are transshipped through Hong Kong.[134]
Macau has a highly developed road system, with over 400km (250mi) of road constructed in the territory. Automobiles drive on the left (unlike in both mainland China and Portugal), due to historical influence of the Portuguese Empire.[135] Vehicle traffic is extremely congested, especially within the oldest part of the city, where streets are the most narrow.[136] Public bus services operate over 80 routes, supplemented by free hotel shuttle buses that also run routes to popular tourist attractions and downtown locations.[137] About 1,500 black taxicabs are licensed to carry riders in the territory.[138] The Hong KongZhuhaiMacau Bridge, opened in 2018, provides a direct link with the eastern side of the Pearl River estuary.[139] Cross-boundary traffic to mainland China may also pass through border checkpoints at the Portas do Cerco and Ltus Bridge.[140]
Macau International Airport serves over 8 million passengers each year and is the primary hub for local flag carrier Air Macau.[141] The territory's first rail network, the Macau Light Rapid Transit, is currently under construction. Phase 1 of the Taipa line had begun operations in December 2019, the Taipa line will connect 11 metro stations throughout Taipa and Cotai.[142] Ferry services to Hong Kong and mainland China operate out of Outer Harbour Ferry Terminal, Inner Harbour Ferry Terminal, and Taipa Ferry Terminal. Daily helicopter service is also available to Hong Kong and Shenzhen.[143]
The Macau Light Rapid Transit (MLRT) also known in Portuguese as Metro Ligeiro de Macau (MLM) is a mass transit system in Macau. It serves the Macau Peninsula, Taipa and Cotai, serving major border checkpoints such as the Border Gate, the Outer Harbour Ferry Terminal, the Lotus Bridge Border and the Macau International Airport.
Macau is served by one major public hospital, the Hospital Conde S. Janurio, and one major private hospital, the Kiang Wu Hospital, both located in Macau Peninsula, as well as a university associated hospital called Macau University of Science and Technology Hospital in Cotai. In addition to hospitals, Macau also has numerous health centres providing free basic medical care to residents. Consultation in traditional Chinese medicine is also available.[144]
None of the Macau hospitals are independently assessed through international healthcare accreditation. There are no western-style medical schools in Macau, and thus all aspiring physicians in Macau have to obtain their education and qualification elsewhere.[145] Local nurses are trained at the Macau Polytechnic Institute and the Kiang Wu Nursing College.[146][147] Currently there are no training courses in midwifery in Macau.[citation needed] A study by the University of Macau, commissioned by the Macau SAR government, concluded that Macau is too small to have its own medical specialist training centre.[148]
The Macau Corps of Firefighters (Portuguese: Corpo de Bombeiros de Macau) is responsible for ambulance service (Ambulncia de Macau). The Macau Red Cross also operates ambulances (Toyota HiAce vans) for emergency and non-emergencies to local hospitals with volunteer staff. The organization has a total of 739 uniformed firefighters and paramedics serving from 7 stations in Macau.[149]
The Health Bureau in Macau is mainly responsible for coordinating the activities between the public and private organizations in the area of public health, and assure the health of citizens through specialized and primary health care services, as well as disease prevention and health promotion.[150] The Macau Centre for Disease Control and Prevention was established in 2001, which monitors the operation of hospitals, health centres, and the blood transfusion centre in Macau. It also handles the organization of care and prevention of diseases affecting the population, sets guidelines for hospitals and private healthcare providers, and issues licences.[151]
As of 2016[update] Macau healthcare authorities send patients to Queen Mary Hospital in Hong Kong in instances where the local Macau hospitals are not equipped to deal with their scenarios, and many Macau residents intentionally seek healthcare in Hong Kong because they place more trust in Hong Kong doctors than in Mainland-trained doctors operating in Macau.[148]
Education in Macau does not have a single centralised set of standards or curriculum. Individual schools follow different educational models, including Chinese, Portuguese, Hong Kong, and British systems.[152] Children are required to attend school from the age of five until completion of lower secondary school, or at age 15. Of residents aged 3 and older, 69 per cent completed lower secondary education, 49 per cent graduated from an upper secondary school, 21 per cent earned a bachelor's degree or higher.[153] Mandatory education has contributed to an adult literacy rate of 96.5 per cent. While lower than that of other developed economies, the rate is due to the influx of refugees from mainland China during the post-war colonial era. Much of the elderly population were not formally educated due to war and poverty.[154]
Most schools in the territory are private institutions. Out of the 77 non-tertiary schools, 10 are public and the other 67 are privately run.[155] The Roman Catholic Diocese of Macau maintains an important position in territorial education, managing 27 primary and secondary schools.[156] The government provides 15 years of free education for all residents enrolled in publicly run schools,[155] and subsidises tuition for students in private schools. Students at the secondary school level studying in neighbouring areas of Guangdong are also eligible for tuition subsidies.[157]
The vast majority of schools use Cantonese as the medium of instruction, with written education in Chinese and compulsory classes in Mandarin. A minority of private schools use English or Portuguese as the primary teaching language. Luso-Chinese schools mainly use Chinese, but additionally require mandatory Portuguese-language classes as part of their curriculum.[152]
Macau has ten universities and tertiary education institutes. The University of Macau, founded in 1981, is the territory's only public comprehensive university. The Kiang Wu Nursing College of Macau is the oldest higher institute, specialising in educating future nursing staff for the college's parent hospital. The University of Saint Joseph, Macau University of Science and Technology, and the City University of Macau were all established in subsequent years. Five other institutes specialise in specific vocations or provide continuing education.[158]
The mixing of the Chinese and Portuguese cultures and religious traditions for more than four centuries has left Macau with an inimitable collection of holidays, festivals and events. The biggest event of the year is the Macau Grand Prix in November,[159] when the main streets in Macau Peninsula are converted to a racetrack bearing similarities with the Monaco Grand Prix. Other annual events include Macau Arts festival in March, the International Fireworks Display Contest in September, the International Music festival in October and/or November, and the Macau International Marathon in December.
The Lunar Chinese New Year is the most important traditional festival and celebration normally takes place in late January or early February.[160] The Pou Tai Un Temple in Taipa is the place for the Feast of Tou Tei, the Earth god, in February. The Procession of the Passion of Our Lord is a well-known Roman Catholic rite and journey, which travels from Saint Austin's Church to the Cathedral, also taking place in February.[161]
A-Ma Temple, which honours the Goddess Matsu, is in full swing in April with many worshippers celebrating the A-Ma festival. In May it is common to see dancing dragons at the Feast of the Drunken Dragon and twinkling-clean Buddhas at the Feast of the Bathing of Lord Buddha. In Coloane Village, the Taoist god Tam Kong is also honoured on the same day.[161] Dragon Boat Festival is brought into play on Nam Van Lake in June and Hungry Ghosts' festival, in late August and/or early September every year. All events and festivities of the year end with Winter Solstice in December.
Macau preserves many historical properties in the urban area. The Historic Centre of Macau, which includes some twenty-five historic locations, was officially listed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO on 15 July 2005 during the 29th session of the World Heritage Committee, held in Durban, South Africa.[162]However, the Macao government is criticized for ignoring the conservation of heritage in urban planning.[163] In 2007, local residents of Macao wrote a letter to UNESCO complaining about construction projects around world heritage Guia Lighthouse (Focal height 108 meters), including the headquarter of the Liaison Office (91 meters). UNESCO then issued a warning to the Macau government, which led former Chief Executive Edmund Ho to sign a notice regulating height restrictions on buildings around the site.[164] In 2015, the New Macau Association submitted a report to UNESCO claiming that the government had failed to protect Macao's cultural heritage against threats by urban development projects. One of the main examples of the report is that the headquarter of the Liaison Office of the Central People's Government, which is located on the Guia foothill and obstructs the view of the Guia Fortress (one of the world heritages symbols of Macao). One year later, Roni Amelan, a spokesman from UNESCO Press service, said that the UNESCO has asked China for information and is still waiting for a reply.[165][164] In 2016, the Macau government approved an 81-meter construction limit for the residential project, which reportedly goes against the city's regulations on the height of buildings around world heritage site Guia Lighthouse.[164]
Food in Macau is mainly based on both Cantonese and Portuguese cuisine, drawing influences from Indian and Malay dishes as well, reflecting a unique cultural and culinary blend after centuries of colonial rule.[166] Portuguese recipes were adapted to use local ingredients, such as fresh seafood, turmeric, coconut milk, and adzuki beans. These adaptations produced Macanese variations of traditional Portuguese dishes including caldo verde, minchee, and cozido portuguesa. While many restaurants claim to serve traditional Portuguese or Macanese dishes, most serve a mix of Cantonese-Portuguese fusion cuisine. Galinha portuguesa is an example of a Chinese dish that draws from Macanese influences, but is not part of Macanese cuisine.[167] Cha chaan teng, a type of fast casual diner originating in Hong Kong that serves that region's interpretation of Western food, are also prevalent in Macau.[168] Pastel de nata, pork chop buns, and almond biscuits are popular street food items.[167]
Despite its small area, Macau is home to a variety of sports and recreational facilities that have hosted a number of major international sporting events, including the 2005 East Asian Games, the 2006 Lusophony Games, and the 2007 Asian Indoor Games.
The territory regularly hosts the Macau Grand Prix, one of the most significant annual motorsport competitions that uses city streets as the racetrack. It is the only street circuit that hosts Formula Three, touring car, and motorcycle races in the same event. The Guia Circuit, with narrow corner clearance and a winding path, is considered an extremely challenging course and a serious milestone for prospective Formula One racers.[169]
Macau represents itself separately from mainland China with its own sports teams in international competitions. The territory maintains its own National Olympic Committee, but does not compete in the Olympic Games. Current International Olympic Committee rules specify that new NOCs can only be admitted if they represent sovereign states (Hong Kong has participated in the Olympics since before the regulation change in 1996).[170]
Macau has six sister cities, listed chronologically by year joined:[171]
Additionally, Macau has other cultural agreements with the following cities:
Macau is part of the Union of Luso-Afro-Americo-Asiatic Capital Cities[173][174] from 28 June 1985, establishing brotherly relations with the following cities:
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Macau | History, Geography, & Map | Britannica
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Macau, special administrative region (Pinyin: tebie xingzhengqu; Wade-Giles romanization: te-pieh hsing-cheng-ch) of China, on the countrys southern coast. Macau is located on the southwestern corner of the Pearl (Zhu) River (Chu Chiang) estuary (at the head of which is the port of Guangzhou [Canton]) and stands opposite the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, which is some 40 miles (60 km) away on the eastern side of the estuary.
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Macau comprises a small narrow peninsula projecting from the mainland province of Guangdong and includes an area comprising the islands of Taipa and Coloane, which are joined by an expanse of land that was reclaimed from the sea and is known as Cotai. Extending up a hillside is the city of Macau, which occupies almost the entire peninsula. The name Macau, or Macao (Pinyin: Aomen; Wade-Giles romanization: Ao-men), is derived from the Chinese Ama-gao, or Bay of Ama, for Ama, the patron goddess of sailors.
Macau Peninsula is connected to the island area by bridges. Both the peninsula and the island area consist of small granite hills surrounded by limited areas of flatland. The original natural vegetation was evergreen tropical forest before the hills were stripped for firewood and construction. No part of Macau reaches any great elevation; the highest point, 565 feet (172 metres), is at Coloane Peak (Coloane Alto) on Coloane. There are no permanent rivers, and water is either collected during rains or piped in from the mainland.
Macau lies just within the tropics, and it has a monsoonal (wet-dry) climate. Four-fifths of its total average annual rainfall of 83 inches (2,120 mm) falls within the summer rainy season (AprilSeptember), when the southwest monsoon blows. Temperatures reach 84 F (29 C) in the summer and fall to 59 F (15 C) in winter. Besides being rainy, the summer months are also hot, humid, and unpleasant. Winters, on the other hand, are somewhat cooler and less humid and can be delightful.
Nearly all of the population, of which a great majority lives on Macau Peninsula, is ethnic Chinese, born on either the mainland or Macau. There are also small groups of other Asians (including people of mixed Chinese and Portuguese ancestry, often called Macanese). However, the once-significant Portuguese minority has been reduced to only a small proportion of the population. Of the ethnic Chinese, the vast majority are Cantonese speakers, and a few speak Hakka. Chinese (Cantonese) and Portuguese are both official languages; English is also commonly spoken.
Macaus population is overwhelmingly Buddhist, while others adhere to Daoism and Confucianism or combinations of the three. Among the small number of Christians, the great majority are Roman Catholics. About one-sixth of the population professes no religious affiliation.
Macau is one of the most densely populated places in the world, and the entire population is classed as urban. Macau has a relatively older population, with less than one-fourth being younger than age 25.
The service sector dominates the economy, employing about three-fourths of the total labour force. There are few natural resources, an exception being fish in the Pearl River estuary, which are used for local needs. Agriculture is minimal; small quantities of vegetables are grown, and there is some poultry raising (chickens and eggs).
Macau is a free port, and trade is vital. The mainland is of major importance as a supplier of food and inexpensive consumer goods, and a 2004 agreement with China that eliminated tariffs on many of Macaus goods helped increase exports to the mainland. Much of Macaus imports consist of raw materials or semifinished goods for manufacturing purposes. Other imports include machinery and apparatuses, and imported petroleum provides most of the power for domestic electric generation. However, some two-thirds of Macaus power requirements must be imported from Guangdong. Apparel and textile fabrics are the primary exports, and reexports constitute a small but significant proportion of the total value of exports. China is Macaus principal trading partner; trade with the United States and Hong Kong is also significant. In 1991 Macau became a member of the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs, now the World Trade Organization.
In 1989 the Monetary and Foreign Exchange Authority of Macau replaced the Instituto Emissor de Macau as regulator of the currency, the Macau pataca, which is pegged to the Hong Kong dollar. Commercial and foreign banks, as well as banks of issue and a banking association, constitute Macaus banking and financial system. Since the mid-1990s the government has made efforts to attract foreign investors and thus diversify the economy away from its heavy reliance on tourism.
Nonetheless, tourism and gambling are the most important components of Macaus overall economy, and the region in effect serves as the playground of nearby Hong Kong and, increasingly, the Chinese mainland. High-speed hydrofoils, as well as some traditional but slower river ferries, carry tourists from Hong Kong and Shenzhen (just north of Hong Kong) to Macaus numerous gambling casinos, bars, hotels, and other attractions. Internal transport is good, and there are local ferries between the peninsula and the islands. Following the December 1999 transfer of administrative status from Portugal to China, Macau remained a free and open port. An international airport became operational in Macau in 1995.
Before it became a special administrative region of China in 1999, Macau followed the colonial constitution promulgated in 1976; it was administered by a governor, who in agreement with the Legislative Assembly was appointed by the Portuguese president. With the transfer of sovereignty over the territory to China, the Basic Law of the Macau Special Administrative Region, which outlined a policy of one country, two systems, went into effect. For a period of 50 years, Macau will thus retain its capitalist economy and some political autonomy, but foreign policy and defense matters will remain under Chinese administration.
According to the Basic Law, the chief executive, who serves a five-year term, holds executive authority but is under the jurisdiction of the central government in Beijing. An election committee of 300 members, who serve five-year terms, selects the chief executive, who can serve up to two consecutive five-year terms. The chief executive appoints an executive council, which consists of 7 to 11 members, to assist in policy making. The legislature is a single-chamber Legislative Assembly, headed by an elected president and vice president; the assembly has 33 members, who serve four-year terms and are selected by a combination of direct popular election (14), indirect election by a committee of special-interest groups (12), and appointment by the chief executive (7).
Law is based on the Portuguese system. The judicial system was completely administered from Portugal until 1993, when a high court of justice was established in Macau. A new penal code was authorized in 1996 in response to a rise in crime. The Basic Law states that the judicial system remains intact with the transfer of sovereignty and that all judges are appointed by the chief executive. The highest court is the Court of Final Appeal, headed by a chief justice. There are also lower primary courts, intermediate courts, and administrative courts. Macau has a small security force, but defense is the responsibility of the central government in Beijing.
Primary and secondary education in Macau is overwhelmingly at private schools, although the great majority of these schools receive government subsidies. Five years of primary education are officially compulsory, and education is free for children from age 6 to 15. Most receive instruction in Chinese (Cantonese), while the remainder are taught in either English or Portuguese. The University of Macau, formerly the University of East Asia, opened in the early 1990s. In the early 2000s plans were made to move the university from its location on Taipa Island to a parcel of land on Chinas Hengqin Island. An agreement for jurisdiction of the land to be transferred to Macau was reached in 2009 as part of a 40-year lease from China. The new campus was inaugurated in 2013, and relocation was completed in 2014. Literacy is now nearly universal in Macau; a slightly larger proportion of males than females is literate.
There are medical centres and hospitals in Macau, and traditional Chinese medicine is also practiced. The elderly receive medications free of charge. The average life expectancy is about 80 years, and the birth and infant mortality rates are both low. The government has constructed low-income housing units, and the private sector has introduced social housing with controlled prices.
Chinese culture predominates, overlaid by a veneer of Portuguese architecture (notably churches and cathedrals) and customs. Chinese temples and shrines coexist with restored villas from the colonial period. Barrier Gate, which links Macau Peninsula to the mainland, is a popular spot for tourists, as are such early 17th-century structures as Monte Fort and the nearby ruined facade of St. Pauls Cathedral (destroyed 1835). The historic buildings on the peninsula collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2005.
As is the case in Hong Kong, Cantonese pop (canto-pop) is a popular form of music. Spectator sports include both dog and horse racing. The Macau Grand Prix attracts numerous international competitors and fans of motor racing. Macaus major sports complexes include the Macau Olympic Complex and the Macau East Asian Games Dome; the latter was built for the 2005 East Asian Games, hosted by Macau. Football (soccer), track and field, volleyball, and roller hockey are popular team and individual sports. In the 1990s Macau hosted several roller hockey world championships.
The former Lus de Cames Museum, named for the Portuguese poet and writer of the epic Os Lusadas, was in a 17th-century house that once was used by the British East India Company; its collections are now part of the Macau Museum of Art and feature Chinese pottery, paintings, and artifacts. Adjacent to the art museum is the Macau Cultural Centre, with several performance and exhibition venues. Also of note is the Macau Museum in the Monte Fort compound, which has exhibits on the history of the region.
Local radio stations in Macau (one state-run) and a state-run television station broadcast programs in Chinese (Cantonese) and Portuguese. In addition, cable and satellite television broadcasting is available, and television and radio broadcasts also come from Hong Kong. Several daily newspapers are circulated; most are published in Chinese, but a handful are in Portuguese and English. Internet use is widespread, and mobile telephone usage is ubiquitous.
The first Portuguese ship anchored in the Pearl River estuary in 1513, and further Portuguese visits followed regularly. Trade with China commenced in 1553. Four years later Portuguese paying tribute to China settled in Macau, which became the official and principal entrept for all international trade with China and Japan and an intermediary port for ships traveling from Lisbon to Nagasaki (at the time, Japans only outport for trade). China, nonetheless, still refused to recognize Portuguese sovereignty over the territory. The first governor was appointed in the 17th century, but the Portuguese remained largely under the control of the Chinese. Missionaries carried over on Portuguese ships transformed Macau into an East Asian centre of Christianity. Even though Chinas trade with the outside world was gradually centralized in Guangzhou (Canton) toward the end of the 18th century, merchants were allowed into Guangzhou only during the trading seasonfrom November to Mayand the international merchant community established itself at Macau. By the mid-19th century the British colony of Hong Kong had surpassed Macau in trade, and within a few years the merchants had largely deserted the Portuguese possession, which never again was a major entrept.
In the 1930s and 40s Macau, declared a neutral territory during the Sino-Japanese War and World War II, became a refuge for both Chinese and Europeans. The Chinese population in the territory continued to grow when the communist government assumed power in China in 1949. In 1951 Portugal officially made Macau an overseas province. Following a military coup in Portugal in 1974, the government allotted more administrative autonomy and economic independence to the territory. The constitution promulgated in 1976 established the Legislative Assembly, which was dominated by the minority Portuguese. Until diplomatic relations were solidified between Portugal and the communist government in China in 1979, discussions on transferring Macau to Chinese control were fruitless.
In March 1984 the Portuguese governor dissolved the assembly in response to opposition within the government to extend the right to vote to the Chinese majority. A few months later new elections, which included Chinese suffrage, finally brought a significant number of Chinese deputies into the government. In April 1987 Portugal and China reached an agreement to return Macau to Chinese rule in 1999, using the Hong Kong Joint Declaration between Britain and China as a model. They agreed to provisions under the Basic Law that would ensure the autonomy of Macau for 50 years after the start of Chinese rule. These included Macaus right to elect local leaders, the right of its residents to travel freely, and the right to maintain its way of life, both economically and socially. Defense and foreign policy matters were to be administered by China, and those living in Macau without Portuguese passports would become Chinese citizens. Elections continued to turn out record numbers of voters and a Chinese majority legislature. On December 20, 1999, Macau became a special administrative region under Chinese sovereignty, as Hong Kong had in 1997.
The period since reunification has been peaceful and marked by increasing prosperity. Much of the regions economic growth has come from the tremendous expansion in gambling and gaming since 2000, which transformed Macau into one of the worlds largest gambling centres (in terms of revenue). Tourism also has risen sharply from levels in the 1990s. Major infrastructure projects have included continued land reclamation throughout the region and a third bridge (opened 2005) between Macau Peninsula and Taipa Island. The political situation has been stable, with orderly legislative elections. Ho Hau Wah (Edmund Ho) was named Macaus first chief executive at reunification in 1999; he was reelected to a second term in 2004. In 2009 Chui Sai On was elected president, succeeding Hau. By the mid-2010s his administration was facing a sharp decline in gaming revenues.
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Something is wrong when Macau bars mention of Tiananmen Square massacre – Hong Kong Free Press
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First, they banned a photographic exhibition, then they banned a June 4 vigil about the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Neither had ever been forbidden since 1990.
Last Friday was the Macau Court of Final Appeals (CFA) opportunity to show that the police decision may have been politicised, but the court applied the law: that separation of powers, rule of law and fundamental rights are taken seriously in Macau. Sadly, the CFA upheld the police ban.
Within its more than 30 pages of the CFA ruling on an appeal against the banning of the June 4 vigil (Chinese and Portuguese), you will not find the word Tiananmen or reference to the June 4, 1989 affair. Not once. Neither will you find the appellants reasoning.
The Health and the Police departments arguments occupy more than one-fourth of the judgment. There are two episodic references, but not a single paragraph on the appellants reasons. History will be provided with one side of the story alone. This unequal treatment is telling.
The CFA, like the police, grounded its decision on Covid-19 health reasons. However, there is no one currently infected in Macau and there have been no new cases in the last 50 days. The borders have been closed to non-residents, and mandatory quarantine upon entry has been imposed (with some exceptions) since March.
Students are back in schools and life is gradually getting back to normal. The Macau International Dragon Boat Race a massive event, last year with Thousands of skilled athletes participating and Thousands of people attending is going ahead in June, co-organised by the same public entity that banned the Tiananmen themed photo exhibition.
Lets walk back a few months and place this judgment in context. In late September last year, in a different case, the Macau CFA upheld a ban on protests against Hong Kong police brutality, on the embarrassing grounds that it breached Hong Kong law (Chinese and Portuguese).
Proscribing a fundamental right based on a law from another jurisdiction throws to the wind centuries of constitutional doctrine. This is akin to the Macau CFA holding that an assembly against gender discrimination would disrespect Saudi Arabia law.
The 2019 CFA judgment also claimed that should the Macau Police allow the assembly to take place, its decision would very likely be interpreted as meaning that the [Macau] police agreed with the applicants decry of the Hong Kong Police.
According to this Macau CFA doctrine, police should only allow protests which they do not disagree with. Police patrol political ideas and the CFA condones.
The 2019 judgment did not only blatantly violate the right of assembly. It disregarded the rule of law, which requires that the law be above politics and be truthfully and consistently applied. That judgment heralded the first-day-of-the-rest-of-Macaus-life.
This is the context in which last Fridays judgment should be read, and the reason it came as no surprise. With all its unavoidable flaws, we can trust Macau courts on mainstream matters of justice. But on constitutional matters with a political tone, justice risks losing relevance.
Of the two statutes made relevant to the ruling, the Right of Assembly Statute is clear: an assembly can only be banned if its purpose is contrary to the law (Article 2). In this case, the purpose was to decry the Tiananmen massacre and express solidarity with its victims.
This is not unlawful. An unlawful purpose would be, say, an assembly seeking blatant racist and discriminatory goals, in breach of a criminal provision. It is the purpose that must be illegal. The CFA judgment fails to consider this.
To be contrary to a law in Macau means to breach a statute approved by the Legislative Assembly. The right of assembly cannot be banned on the grounds of contradicting a chief executive (CE) or police order. It is not just me saying it, it is provided by Article 40 of the Basic Law and Article 2 of the said statute. It is there in black and white. This is not something that can be missed.
No assembly can be banned based solely on the Right of Assembly Statute because this statute does not list any specific reason for banning assemblies. They can only be banned when another statute outlaws it. This requires another law stipulating that the purpose is illegal.
The CFA relied on Article 3 of the prevention and control of transmissible diseases statute (the Health Statute) and on a number of Macaus CDC recommendations. It argues that the assembly would be illegal because the Health Statute provides that everyone must abide by orders and measures issued by the relevant authorities.
However, as noted by one judge who partially dissented, Articles 23 to 25(1.1) of the Health Statute provide that the CE (not the police) is the only authority competent to issue special measures restricting not prohibiting social gatherings based on health reasons. Yet, the CE did not issue any such special measure.
This is an insurmountable obstacle because it means that no valid order exists to ban social gatherings. The CDC recommendations are legally irrelevant for the patently obvious reason that they are not mandatory, and any police order to that effect would be illegal; as would any CE special measure prohibiting it under the Health Statute instead of just restricting it.
The CFA tries to sidestep this undodgeable obstacle by saying that the police order banning the June 4 vigil, although based on health reasons, was not under the Health Statute. It was issued under the Right of Assembly Statute, the CFA claims.
This is flawed because as we saw and the CFA agrees the Right of Assembly Statue cannot apply alone. It depends on another law determining that the assemblys specific purpose is illegal.
Moreover, if the police order was not valid under the Health Statute and, as the CFA claims, was not issued under such statute, why did the CFA talk about the Health Statute in the first place? If it was not applicable, why apply it? To cite Bentham, it seems nonsense upon stilts.
It is a truism to say that fundamental rights are not absolute. But they can only be limited by law. Not by the police. The CFA elevated the police to a status that it does not enjoy.
If a fundamental right is to be lawfully restricted, it must be done proportionally and only in as much as necessary. Adjudicating on fundamental rights is not like flipping a two-sided coin.
Three hundred people were expected in Senado Square. There could have been room to hold the vigil with each participant wearing protective masks and abiding by the social distancing guidelines. Why the outright ban?
According to the Health Statute, not even the CE could approve special measures prohibiting social gatherings, only restricting them. The police decision violated the principle of proportionality and was invalid for that reason as well.
Lets revisit last years judgment and see how it compares with the judgement banning of the 2020 Tiananmen vigil.
The 2019 judgment would say that the Tiananmen vigil was rightly proscribed because it is contrary to Chinese law. It would also say that should the Macau Police allow the assembly to take place, its decision would be very likely interpreted as meaning that the [Macau] police agreed with the applicants decry of the Tiananmen massacre.
If the true reasons behind the 2020 assembly ban are the same as the ones behind the 2019 ban, even a one-person vigil despite there being no remaining coronavirus cases would have been prohibited on health grounds.
The word Tiananmen may have been omitted, but it is not forgotten.
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Something is wrong when Macau bars mention of Tiananmen Square massacre - Hong Kong Free Press
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Professor: too early to predict impact of US-China tensions over Hong Kong on Macau gaming industry – Inside Asian Gaming
Posted: at 2:08 pm
A professor for Macaus economy and gaming industry says it is too early to predict what kind of influence US economic sanctions imposed on Hong Kong would have on Macaus economy, but suggested the Macau SAR government and operators pay close attention to US-China relations in the second half of this year.
US President Donald Trump threatened to place sanctions on Hong Kong this week after the Chinese National Peoples Congress (NPC) agreed to implement a national security law on Hong Kong. The law would include revoking Hong Kongs preferential treatment as a separate customs and travel territory from the rest of China. So far the White House has not provided an implementation timeline for any sanctions.
As Hong Kong fears losing its special close economic ties with the US, the escalating tensions between China and the US once again raise concerns about the impact this will have on Macaus economy and gaming industry.
Ricardo Chi Sen Siu, Associate Professor in Business Economics and Director of the Centre for Career and Research Advancement in Integrated Resorts at Macau University, told Inside Asian Gamingthe US Presidential election in November could have a big say in future relations between the nations.
No matter the US sanctions on Hong Kong in recent days or US-China trade disputes in recent years, it is hard to have any clear and accurate predictions about the influence on Macau before the US election, Sui said. There are too many uncertainties.
The Chinese NPC will offer legislative details of its national security law in Hong Kong in late June, with Siu suggesting Western governments will wait until then before making any decisions on how to react.
Unlike Hong Kong, Macau has always maintained a close relationship with the Beijing Government, and Macau officials and NPC deputies have expressed support for the Hong Kong national security law.
But Sui said even though the implementation of the national security law would lead US capital to be withdrawn from Hong Kong, its still too early to say whether the US-China relations would cause difficulties for US capital on the re-tendering of gaming licenses in 2022 in Macau.
Sui suggested the Macau SAR government and gaming operators keep an eye on developments between the US and China but should focus more on boosting their gaming and tourism offerings after the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Special guest Walt Power to discuss the five false paradigms of the Macau gaming industry in GAME3 tonight – Inside Asian Gaming
Posted: at 2:08 pm
Inside Asian Gamingwill host the latest installment of its GAME online interactive experience tonight, 2 June 2020, at 17:00 Macau time, featuring Walt Power, CEO of Ho Tram Project, as special guest.
Power, whose 17 years working in the Macau casino industry included stints as SVP of Operations for Sands China subsidiary Venetian Macau Limited and Chief Operating Officer of Studio City developer New Cotai Entertainment, was most recently CEO and Executive Director of South Shore Holdings, majority owner of THE 13 Hotel.
His appointment as CEO of Ho Tram Project, which operates The Grand Ho Tram Strip outside Vietnams Ho Chi Minh City, was announced earlier this month.
Over the course of 40 minutes on Tuesday 2 June, Power will reveal and discuss what he describes as five false paradigms of the Macau gaming industry. He will also briefly discuss his new role at The Grand Ho Tram Strip.
The event will comprise a 20-minute interview byIAGs Vice Chairman and CEO Andrew W Scott, followed by a 20-minute AMA (ask me anything) session during which GAME members will be able to ask Mr Power anything they wish.
Only GAME members will be able to attend the online interactive event. Industry friends and colleagues can sign up for free atwww.iaggame.com.
First announced byIAGin late March, GAME is a brand new online innovation and solutions platform developed in response to the challenges posed to the Asian gaming industry by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Short for Gaming Asia Mega Experience, GAME is a recognition of the difficulties faced in bringing the industry together at a time when we need to collaborate and develop innovative ideas more than ever before.
It provides a variety of interactive and engaging online experiences ranging from interviews with industry heavyweights and keynote speeches to workshops, talks and panel discussions.
For more information on GAME and to join the more than 300 current GAME members for free, visitwww.iaggame.com.
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