FunkyGibbon
Well-Known Member
China reverses tiger and rhino products ban - CNN Video
It's hard not to see this as a really bad moment I think.
It's hard not to see this as a really bad moment I think.
I really don't see how they can justify this, especially when they want to be seen as equal/better when compared to the West!? This is a huge step backwards, both for conservation and the Chinese civilisation. There's just no need for this, these traditional medicines have been debunked, so what, exactly, is the point in this?
TCM (traditional Chinese medicine) is still ubiquitous in mainland China, and most people swear by it. It is used in conjunction with, not as an alternative to, modern medicine. I'm quite certain it is of significant benefit in many respects (not limited to the placebo effect). But there is no doubt that TCM also contains a lot of hokum, in terms of outdated medical practices and views, of which the disastrous and totally discredited use of animal parts is only one aspect.
TCM is seen as a part of China's cultural heritage; for this reason and, one suspects, the financial interests of the big TCM companies, it is given a sort of protected status where criticism isn't really accepted and is seen as unpatriotic.
To give a recent example, there is a brand of herbal liquour which has been running ads for a while to the effect that it is literally a panacea to any health problem an old person might experience. A doctor posted somewhere on social media that this was total rubbish, and after a fairly murky process (not just judicially, it was left alone for a while until outcry somehow generated) got into trouble. Telling, one of the things he admitted to was something along the line of 'offending the sensibilities of the Chinese people'.
China is modernising fast and is already a world leader in some technologies, whilst still lagging massively begind in other areas. Whilst modernisation inevitably leads to some adoption of western attitudes, it also leads to some level of backlash to these ideas. China wants to be seen as an equal, but on her own terms, not through the 'imposition' of a western value measurement system. Really this just means China doesn't want to be criticised by the West.
I happen to think that this decision is driven by economics rather than politics however. Environmentalism is on the rise in China and there are also nationalist pressures that work in favour of conservationism. If those could be harnessed in favour of tigers for example...
Honestly, the United States is a great example of a Western country where many people still do and believe ridiculous things that have harmful effects, so the fact that China has aspects of its culture that are like that is to be expected, I think. I agree that it doesn't make sense from anything except an economic perspective, although I actually did not realize that TCM in China was corporatized to any extent. @FunkyGibbon do you know exactly what that looks like? Are these companies selling products in grocery stores?
Does anyone know the extent to which this will have an effect on the trade? Obviously, tiger and rhino parts were still flowing into China, being used for TCM and decimating wild populations while the decades-long ban was in place...
To clarify, I'm not saying I think it was the right move; I'm appalled and outraged as well. I just wonder how this will play out on a practical level.
TCM is seen as a part of China's cultural heritage; for this reason and, one suspects, the financial interests of the big TCM companies, it is given a sort of protected status where criticism isn't really accepted and is seen as unpatriotic.
I happen to think that this decision is driven by economics rather than politics however. Environmentalism is on the rise in China and there are also nationalist pressures that work in favour of conservationism. If those could be harnessed in favour of tigers for example...
I'm quite certain it is of significant benefit in many respects (not limited to the placebo effect).
TCM is seen as a part of China's cultural heritage; for this reason and, one suspects, the financial interests of the big TCM companies, it is given a sort of protected status where criticism isn't really accepted and is seen as unpatriotic.
If those could be harnessed in favour of tigers for example...
Would it be possible to establish rhino and tiger farms in China?
What Asian countries have widespread use of TCM?
I know for sure that it´s very popular in Vietnam too. All the busted smuggling cases of rhino and tiger parts in the Czech republic in last few years, including slaughter of captive tigers and production of bone/meat extract was coordinated/organised by local Vietnamese mafia and target market was always Vietnam, not China (and Vietnamese minority in Europe to minor degree).