Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Commies are baaad, m'kay?

Benh Thanh Market

Thirty odd years ago, the fall of South Vietnam and the end of the war started an exodus of thousands of Vietnamese fleeing the arrival of the «conquerors from the North». They ended up settling down in Western Europe, Australia, other Asian countries, but mostly in North America. Today, the Vietnamese diaspora is about 3 million strong. Many Vietnamese emigrants have since gone back to the country but a vast majority of them are still living abroad and remaining very antagonistic towards the current government of Vietnam.

The most vocal group resides in California, where they lobby the American government against any concessions or goodwill gestures towards Vietnam. As a group, they are similar to the Miami Cubans, who have never forgiven Castro for taking the power that they felt belongs to them by divine rights and who are still tediously plotting their comeback.

I read a lot of Vietnamese blogs every day, mainly those written by Western expatriates living and working in Vietnam, but also some written by Vietnamese in Vietnam. I find these blogs more honest and more credible in their description of life in Vietnam, than the blogs written by Vietnamese living abroad or comments from bitter and resentful Vietnamese-Americans of the Miami Cuban School. Most of the latter are mainly crude propagandistic rants that are so remote from facts and reality that I wonder whether the person writing them has been living in a cave for the past thirty years.

Ad hominem insults and criticism of the current Vietnamese government are presented without any proof or references, without any links to credible sources of information. Over the top allegations and accusations are printed in Vietnamese local magazines (I’m talking about North American magazines written in Vietnamese) and blindly accepted by their readers. All this creates an echo chamber where lies and propaganda are mixed and ingurgitated by the same captive audience. Any public figure in the Vietnamese community who dares to raise any question or express any skepticism is immediately accused of treason and branded «communist», which is the ultimate insult. Any individual or artistic group that has any connection with Vietnam is immediately boycotted. And of course, lecturers, entertainers, etc. from Vietnam are also boycotted and hounded by demonstrators to make sure that nobody can hear their messages or watch their performances. All that in the name of freedom, mind you, to protest the absence of, in Vietnam.


This is why I would like to reproduce below part of an expat’s blog in Saigon: http://tinyurl.com/h6axk

«A capitalist, consumer culture has taken root with a vengeance here. It's almost as if the Vietnamese are in overdrive to make up for 25 years of economic stagnation. Everywhere I see evidence of a burgeoning middle class and the trappings of wealth -- DVD shops (pirated, but obvious evidence of DVD players) , florists, photo studios, refrigerators, LCD HDTVs, glossy fashion magazines, etc.

Yesterday I went to a Walmart-type store crammed with toasters, cookies, cell phones, audio equipment, shampoo, cosmetics, pots and pans, produce, a bakery (the Vietnamese bake excellent bread), clothing, stationery, rice cookers -- you name it, this place had it. Except for the checkout girls wearing ao dais, It felt pretty much like any similar store in Des Moines or Milwaukee. It warmed my heart.

Some find it fashionable to bemoan the spread of wealth and market-based economies across the world. "Everything is being Starbuck-ized!" they complain as they sip their lattes or Pinot Noir. Certainly the free market has its ugly spots. But I challenge any of those people to spend 40 years working from dawn until dusk plowing fields with a water buffalo and living in a dirt-floor house. I'm pretty sure they would politely decline. Instead, they would go to the local Whole Foods and drop a wad on overpriced organic produce and free-range chicken packaged in tidy, sanitized containers. Just like the Vietnamese.»

Magazine stand


Supermarket

Here are some of the blogs about Vietnam that I mentioned earlier. Go read them and make your own opinions. Ignorance is not a good option.


http://noodlepie.typepad.com/blog/
http://www.vietnamesegod.blogspot.com/
http://www.stickyrice.typepad.com/
http://tphcm.blogspot.com/
http://www.ourman.typepad.com/
http://vietnamstreets.blogspot.com/
http://www.diacritic.org/blog/
http://layered.typepad.com/antidote_to_burnout/

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I know what you mean. Online newspapers from Viet Nam reports both the good and the bad news, but the anti-VC newspapers steal the bad news without giving proper credits (they give credits to news taken from a US source), twist it to make it look worse, then reprint it. Even the Vietnamese site of the BBC is not exempt from it. Check this article http://www.bbc.co.uk/vietnamese/vietnam/story/2006/06/060621_security_law.shtml
I can assure you that was not the original text when the article first appeared on the BBC website. The original text can be found here http://www.asiafinest.com/forum/index.php?s=ea877f0ff3a7f7ec022654f71227dd9e&showtopic=78731
if the Vietnamese version of the BBC can engage in this kind of bias news reporting, then you can't expect much more from the anti-VC people.

Buddhist with an attitude said...

The anti-VC people, as you call them, are shameless in their lies and distorsions. The irony is that they sincerely believe they are defending freedom of information when they act that way. They don't see it as a form of censorship or propaganda. And they don't see that they are treating their readers as children that cannot be trusted to make up their own mind and must be sheltered from the truth. Every time I try to set the records straight, I'm called a commie or a marxist-leninist or whatnot.

Anonymous said...

Great post.

I agree entirely. I have met a lot of returning Vietnamese who have had a negative attitude for so long about this beautiful country.

Then they come back and they are knocked out and shamed by what they have been saying. Its no hell hole and while freedom is not absolute the unspoken agreement between the people and their government is this: you just leave us alone to provide for our families with minimal interference and we will all get along fine.

Democracy may be desireable. But it brings with it problems too. Like Winston Churchill said: democracy is the worst type of government, apart from all the others.

There are other more pressing issues but there is a feeling that somewhere there is a long term plan to eventually make it happen and it will. By my reckoning about 20 more years would be right.

Look at the economy. Look at the high levels of literacy. Look at the vast changes - this country is on the right track.

Cultures will change and sadly some of the old ways will die out but...all of this is second in importance to putting food on the table of Vietnamese family.

Prosperity will bring with it other problems - juvenile crime, obesity etc. But it beats malnutrition anyday.

As regards crimes perpetrated by the Vietnamese government in relation to those that have spoken out. It appears there are unfortunate cases, and I wont be an apologist in these areas, but they are blown out of all proportion by some.

For those Vietnamese living in the USA, I have two words - Quantanamo Bay - by my reckoning the human rights abuses of their current government far far far out weigh those of Vietnam.

One more thing. While America fights, here in Hanoi I see government sponsored peace posters everywhere. This is the only time I have seen this any where in the world. People not celebrating winning wars or revelling in military shows of strength - but actually celebrating peace.

Perfect they may not be - but, the peace thing, well thats my kind of government.

Vietnam appears very much to be on the right track.

HanoiMark said...

Regretfully I've noticed the appearance of a bunch of old South Vietnamese flags (you know, the yellow with red stripes) in Toronto. I don't remember it being like this before. 2 weeks ago there was a day long Vietnamese celebration/concert in front of city hall and those flags were everywhere. I don't know how they get away with it frankly. It was supposed to be a cultural festival not a political rally. It hardly represents the whole community. I ran into a friend there who is an international student from Vietnam. It sure ain't his flag. Everyone seems blissfully unaware that this is the flag of an organization with a paramilitary terrorist wing. Check out this article on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_of_Free_Vietnam

HanoiMark said...

Oops the URL got cut off.
Cut and paste this:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_of_Free_Vietnam