I’ve seen the future, and I don’t like it very much – Elizabeth Kay
If you like setting fiction in the near future you try very hard to imagine what it will be like - but you have no idea how accurate your dystopia may be. No one predicts a utopia any more.
I’ve recently returned from China. Don’t get me wrong – I
liked the place a lot, and I have developed a considerable respect for the
Chinese. There’s so much they’ve got right – and so much they’ve got wrong,
too.
I was
surprised to learn that the population of China was already 400,000,000 in
1904. It’s nearly 1,400,000,000 today. If you’re familiar with the work of
Malthus you’ll know that an unchecked population increases exponentially, whilst food production increases arithmetically. It ought to be quite
clear to everyone that something has to be done before we breed our way into
oblivion, but the Chinese seem to be the only people who have tried to address
this issue, and they’ve been vilified for it. Their one-child policy has had
its drawbacks, in that an imbalance has been created with too many elderly
people, and the recent announcement that this is to be changed to a two-child
policy has had an interesting reception, worldwide. Overpopulation is a problem
that has no easy answer. Do we really want a world where every inch is given over
to food production for human beings, and wilderness is an archaism? China is
the only distant country I’ve ever visited with no badly-behaved children, no
temper tantrums in the street, no snotty bare-footed baby beggars. The kids
are, in the main, well-dressed, well-housed, well-educated and well-loved. The
Chinese have tried, with tower block after tower block, to give each person a
roof over their head and enough to eat.
But the
consequences are soul-destroying. City after city with millions of inhabitants,
the tops of their harmonious and inventive sky-scrapers disappearing into the
mists of industrial pollution. Crowds of people stretching as far as they eye
can see, queueing to see the embalmed body of Chairman Mao, the Giant Buddha,
the Terracotta Warriors. Most tourists in China are Chinese – they’re the ones
taking photographs of us, rather than
the other way round, and the lack of personal space results in a lot of pushing
and shoving, although somehow none of it is aggressive. It’s the difference
between growing up as an only child, or one of a large family. It’s a paradox
that isn’t lost on me.
The
building projects they have tackled in this enterprise are immense. Because the
tower blocks are crammed together no one has a garden. Instead, they have a
number of People’s Parks, with trees and grassy areas and playgrounds for
children. There are spaces for adult handball, badminton, table-tennis – as well
as the regular sessions of tai chi. Seventy-year-olds do the splits with ease;
they’re supple and fit and clearly enjoy the socialisation each morning brings.
There’s no sense of the isolation of the elderly that we have in our big
cities.
The biggest dam in the world
spans the Yangtze River at a renowned beauty spot, the Three Gorges. This dam
has saved millions of lives from the impact of seasonal flooding, but its
impact on the eco-system has been profound. What was once a fast-flowing river
has been stilled into a vast reservoir providing drinking water, whilst the dam
generates hydro-electric power. And the wildlife has died from the bottom up.
Virtually no birds, no fish, no dragonflies; instead, sheets of poisonously
bright green algae. A stunning landscape of Devonian simplicity, devoid of
everything except vegetation.
Teaching a generation to treasure its wildlife when it has little experience of it other than as a component of Chinese medicine is a big ask. It’s been said that the giant panda is a dead-end animal, ripe for extinction with its troublesome diet of bamboo grown only at high altitudes and its slow rate of reproduction. But it is a species unique to China, unique in appearance, unique in cuddle-appeal. It’s the creature that may teach those who inherit it to take an interest in other less commercial animals, for the breeding sanctuary at Chengdu brings in the crowds just as much as the immense Forbidden City or the weird landscape of the karst mountains - or the amazing limestone interiors of them, with their stalagmites and stalactites.
So much to
admire. And so much that is hidden, too. You only see what you’re meant to see.
But when our reporting of population issues is so biased (heaven forbid that
any country lose its trading opportunities by praising a policy that leads to a
declining customer base) it’s hard to know what’s true and what isn’t. I try to
go on the evidence of my senses – the slash and burn devastation behind the
fringes of trees on the main roads in Borneo, the bush meat for sale by the
side of the road in the Ivory Coast – but China is a hard nut to crack. The
Great Chinese Firewall that filters the internet keeps out negative reporting of
internal matters, but it keeps out the violence and the pornography as well.
Young people haven’t heard of Viagra, have no idea what it is. Don’t get their
inboxes full of explicit sex and advertisements that promise the impossible as
well as the downright distasteful and horrific.
It’s a
strange country. Its cities feel safe. There’s an emphasis on harmony and much that is beautiful,
both ancient and modern. It’s clean. The streets are rubbish-free and washed
each night, the public toilets are clean, there’s no graffiti. But my abiding
memories are of a generation of men hawking and spitting because they smoke so
much (considerable tax revenue), miles and miles of geometric concrete and glass
and steel, wreathed in smog, and people. Millions and millions and millions of
people, wearing pollution masks. Relics of the past, such as cormorant fishing, turned into tourist attractions. Unless we obliterate ourselves some other way,
this is the future for our descendants.
Comments
They also seem to still be proud of their large population, despite the attempts to curb its growth. One of our local guides described Xi'an (population 10 million) as a small city by Chinese standards. When she heard that we came from a town with a population of about 10 thousand, she clearly thought this was pitiful - while politely trying not to show it!
Apart from where we came from, the question we were asked most often was how old we were. Perhaps they find it hard to judge the age of non-Chinese.
The part of Liz's post I'd like to reinforce is the one about the People's Parks. If we in Britain were to start using our public parks in the same way, it would be a massive social change, and hugely beneficial, particularly for the elderly.