Archive for May 29th, 2007

China’s Executes Head of FDA (Equivalent) and Chongqing’s Former Justice Chief

We have had some nice discussion on this blog on whether a lengthy prison sentence or the death penalty is appropriate for the Chinese business people who knowingly did things like allow the sale or export of poison food, fake infant formula, toothpaste, pet food, etc. and whether the death penalty is appropriate for corrupt Chinese government officials who abuse their power for personal gain.

See, e.g., comments 3 and 4 to Lindsay Yoshitomi’s good post, Counterfeit Drugs.

And see my prior post on this topic, Throw the Bums in Jail.

And see this NY Times article — “China Sentences Former Drug Regulator To Death.”  This poor chap made the mistake of letting bribes get in the way of doing his job.  For the haunting confession he wrote before he was executed, see my prior post, Sins and Mistakes.  Bum or not, I felt true empathy and compassion for this man and his family as I read his confession.

And finally, see this  WSJ article, China Executes Chongqing’s Former Justice Chief.

Should we adopt this Chinese approach in the USA? E.g., when our business leaders or public officials really blow it like this, its off to prison for a long time or even the firing squad for them?

Would this encourage or discourage people from taking public office or taking leadership positions in business; and is that a good or a bad thing?

If you are a big law and order hard liner, if YOU had to personally make the call and sign off on an execution (not somebody else), would you have the guts, ethics and leadership ability to do so?   (Saying somebody else should do it is a totally different issue.)

And if you could make public policy in the US with the wave of your hand (similar to what our US Supreme Court can do via a majority opinion), what would your ruling be on an issue like this, and why?  And would such a policy be “executable” (pun intended) in the US from a practical and political standpoint?

Discuss.

Add comment May 29th, 2007

Urban Tourists (i.e., you and me) Lured By Call of the Countryside

We recently had some good email discussion re: the deep sixing of our planned boat trip between Suzhou and Hangzhou, and the Plan B that I proposed of a visit to WuZhen.

The China Daily recently published a nice article that relates to this deviation from our original plan titled, “Urban Tourists Lured by Call of Countryside.”

It turns out that while the rural migrants of China are flocking to the cities to try and crawl their way out of poverty, the urban population is in turn seeking out the romanticized, picturesque villages of China to get away from the grind.

This in turn reminds me of the recent WSJ article, No Satisfaction: Why What You Have is Never Enough. A must read for anybody in business.

This article posits two theories for why some people are miserable: (1) humans are not built to be happy; and (2) humans are terribly bad at forecasting what it takes to be or make us happy.

Which theory to you adhere to?

And were the Stones right? You/me/we just can’t get no satisfaction?

6 comments May 29th, 2007


Calendar

May 2007
M T W T F S S
« Apr   Jun »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Posts by Month

Posts by Category

The posts, comments and/or views expressed on this trip blog, whether by a Cal Poly student or faculty or an outside guest to the blog, do not necessarily reflect the policies or views of Cal Poly, the Orfalea College of Business (OCOB), any of the OCOB's graduate programs and/or other students who participate in the trip.