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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (95121)10/1/2012 12:47:13 PM
From: Joseph Silent  Respond to of 220794
 
Once upon a time after 1am all a body got was that one channel & that was a static test pattern , pretty dull stuff.

Dull stuff, like silence and simple space, have priceless value.



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (95121)10/10/2012 12:50:55 AM
From: average joe  Respond to of 220794
 
Chinese sex fair shows how prudishness and liberation sit side-by-side Decades after Mao Zedong, couples are happy to browse sex toys together – but not all attitudes have changed





        Tania Branigan in Guangzhou
        guardian.co.uk, Monday 8 October 2012 15.14 BST


        Chinese shoppers at the sex culture festival in Guangzhou. Photograph: Dan Chung for the Guardian

        "One-two-THREE! CONTROL! … and relax," Ma Jian urges. The 78-year-old author is addressing a few dozen men clustered around a stage in Guangzhou, but he aspires to a much bigger audience. " China has more than 2,000 years of sexual history and culture and skills. It has sexual experience which western countries have never known. I want to introduce its expertise to people here and people overseas and make all men happy," he said.

        "I want all women to benefit. I take guys who shoot in three minutes and teach them to hang on for 30. That's long enough."

        Until 10 years ago this evangelist was, he said, "an underground worker", toiling in strictest secrecy. He grew up in the sexually repressive society created by Mao Zedong. The chairman of the People's Republic may have shared his own bed with numerous women, but under his rule bodies were disguised in shapeless suits and holding hands in public was shocking.

        Even in the 80s, after liberalisation had begun, a man was executed for organising orgies. Now Ma rattles off his advice – swimming increases sexual desire; pee in short bursts, not a stream – at a convention co-hosted by family planning authorities.

        More than 30,000 visitors thronged last weekend to the 10th national (Guangzhou) sex culture festival to watch pole dancers, buy 007-brand condoms and browse porn in a resolutely unerotic exhibition centre. Couples take happy snaps with giant virility figures, and unabashed shoppers fondle realistic sex dolls (though not, this year, inflatable Obamas). The wealthiest can even choose a 100,000 yuan (£10,000) solid gold "pleasure object" – the kind of high-class product that appeals to shoppers usually found in Louis Vuitton or Dolce & Gabbana, a sales assistant said.

        Men photograph semi-clad models on a catwalk at the fair. Photograph: Dan Chung for the Guardian But the shots of "artistic nudes" are tame by western standards. And though hordes of men photograph furiously as semi-clad models strut to a disco version of the Old Spice theme, there's no pouting or lip-licking. These days, sexual experimentation and puritanism sit side by side in China.

        Qiu Shuang, a lesbian activist and sex toy saleswoman, argued that repression had only kindled passions. "Maybe we seem very conservative, but we have the biggest desires," she said.

        China has an estimated six million sex workers, yet nudity is unacceptable in the cinema and there are periodic anti-porn crackdowns. Women have hymen restoration surgery so their husbands will believe they are virgins. Two years ago, an academic was jailed for hosting sex parties. It is no coincidence that the official denunciation of the disgraced politician Bo Xilai accused him of improper sexual relationships with several women.

        "People still frown on serial dating … [but] there are 200,000 sex shops and these huge sexual expos. Are they prudish about sex or are they incredibly liberated?" asked Richard Burger, whose new book, Behind the Red Door, chronicles the history of sex in China.

        He argues that for centuries China's leaders have swung between sexual openness and repression. In the Tang dynasty, prostitutes were registered; the late Ming saw explicit novels such as The Plum in the Golden Vase.

        At times, homosexual love has been celebrated. At other times, erotic books have been burned.

        In the west, the sexual revolution was part of a wider movement of personal liberation and challenges to authority. But in China, the post-Mao shift from procreation to recreation was driven not by the Beatles and Lady Chatterley but by the Communist party.



        Sex dolls on show in Guangzhou. Photograph: Dan Chung for the Guardian "After the Cultural Revolution, the government's control [of people's lives] started loosening, and at the same time the one-child policy meant people could have sex lives that weren't for the purpose of giving birth. They could have sex for pleasure," said Pan Suiming of Renmin University, one of the country's leading experts on sex.

        Li Yinhe, another researcher, said: "In the past, women were not allowed to like sex – sex was only for giving birth to children, or serving men. Now they can enjoy sex."

        When the magazine Popular Cinema dared to print a romantic clinch in 1979, it sparked a national controversy. The publication of the kiss – a still from a Cinderella movie starring Richard Chamberlain – was "decadent, capitalist, an act meant to poison our youths", complained an irate local propaganda official. But thousands more picked up their pens to support the magazine.

        But puckering up lost its subversive edge – even if the average age for a first kiss remained at 23 just a few years ago. These days premarital sex is very common and has spread to rural areas too.

        Yet even now, most assume that sexual relationships end in marriage. Half the men Pan surveyed in 2007 reported only one sexual partner – and even younger and more experienced men have double standards, as a group of female students at the festival testify.

        "There's a long way to go. People do think a woman is a slut [if she has had multiple partners]," said Emily Mai.

        "We have a right to chose premarital sex," added her friend Yee Bai. "It's freedom. We can't stand to have only 'pure, spiritual' love."

        Sun Zhongxin of Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh says the sexual revolution has benefited different sexes and sexualities to different degrees, and that both men and women may face new pressures, feeling inadequate when faced with a single and sometimes more westernised standard of sexiness.

        Tens of millions of men will not find wives or long-term partners at all, because of China's "missing" women: illegal sex-selective abortions have caused the gender ratio at birth to rise from the natural rate of 106 boys per 100 girls to 118 boys.

        Many more men are migrant workers who may see their spouses once a year at best. "They can use sexual toys to let their desire out. It's better than going to have sex with prostitutes," said the event's deputy director, Zhu Jianming.

        But as Sun pointed out, the sex industry is not just the fruit of changing attitudes; it has been aggressive in pushing "liberalisation".



        A local law enforcement official touches a statue at the fair. Photograph: Dan Chung for the Guardian The results can be alarming. One stall in Guangzhou is advertising a sex doll designed to look like a very young girl.

        Zhu dismissed concerns: "It doesn't encourage people … You can't criticise a sexual fantasy."

        But he adds that he too worries that some people "have been influenced by western ideas about sex, are out of control and indulge themselves sexually". He insisted the show was designed to encourage sexual morality and positive relationships, not just sexual knowledge.

        Though the festival clearly caters primarily to straight men, there are several older couples browsing arm in arm. A husband and wife stop to listen attentively as a salesman demonstrates the different groans emitted by a selection of fake vaginas.

        "In the past, when two people dated, they even had to keep their distance on the street," said 25-year-old Li Bo, sheepishly clasping the sex toy he had just won in a prize draw. "Of course we wouldn't want to go back to the old times."

        Additional research by Cecily Huang

        guardian.co.uk




      To: 2MAR$ who wrote (95121)10/10/2012 12:51:20 AM
      From: average joe  Respond to of 220794
       
      Top News

      Rising incomes, changing diets causing sleep apnea in China

      Wed, Sep 12 11:48 AM EDT
      By David K. Randall and Hui Li

      NEW YORK/BEIJING (Reuters) - Thirteen years ago, Li Xin thought his swelling belly was just a sign of a healthy appetite and prosperity.

      But today Li, now 47, is worried that frequent business dinners with colleagues who dine on greasy ribs, fried rice, and beer, has turned into a bigger problem.

      Li's mother, a dentist, warned her son that his weight is actually causing his loud snoring, a symptom of sleep apnea - a silent killer that is becoming a growing health problem in China.

      "I feel tired in the morning, and family members have been telling me that I sound like I was suffocating when I sleep and snore," Li said.

      Li, a furniture factory owner who lives in Chengdu, the capital of southwest China's Sichuan province, has not sought treatment for his snoring problem.

      "I've lost some weight, but still snore very loud."

      Changing eating habits in China have brought new health problems to the world's most populous nation, as the country's economic boom allowed millions of Chinese to add more meat and processed foods into their diets.

      "China has gone from famine to gluttony in one or two generations," said Paul French, a British expatriate living in the country and the author of the book, "Fat China."

      When combined with a general lack of participation in organized sports and high rates of smoking and pollution, the increasing availability of high calorie food tips more Chinese into obesity and its related health problems, he said.

      Among them are increased rates of obstructive sleep apnea, a disorder in which the throat periodically closes throughout the night, essentially suffocating a person until he or she wakes up, according to sleep doctors.

      A fatter Chinese population is leading to more patients with sleep apnea who complain of constant fatigue as a result of deficient deep sleep.

      An average of 38.5 percent of Chinese aged 15 or older have a body mass index of 25 or greater, which means they are overweight or obese, according to 2010 figures from the World Health Organization. About 4 percent of the Chinese population is obese, which means they have a body mass index of 30 or greater.

      The combined rate of overweight and obese Chinese has increased by 54 percent from 2002, while the rate of obesity alone has increased 208 percent over the same time. About 78 percent of U.S. adults meet the same standard of overweight or obese, according to WHO figures, with 46.2 percent having a body mass index of 30 or greater.

      Those who suffer from sleep apnea can be at higher risk for problems ranging from heart attacks to memory loss. Research suggests that effects of untreated sleep apnea are often more serious than insomnia, a condition which many Chinese do not experience due to a cultural tradition of taking afternoon naps, doctors say.

      Some Chinese with obstructive sleep apnea are seeking help from medical professionals, according to Dr. Han Fang, the chairman of the Chinese Sleep Research Society whose sleep clinic in Beijing used to have fewer than one patient with sleep-related respiratory problems a week on average, but is now seeing 10-20 of them every night.

      These trends may have significant health effects across the world's most populous nation, and may end up benefiting some Western companies such as ResMed and Amsterdam-based conglomerate Philips, analysts said.

      Both companies make devices that help patients breathe easier during sleep.

      INCREASING OBESITY IN CHINA

      Numerous studies have suggested that Asians are already more likely to have the disorder than Caucasians because of facial structures that result in smaller upper airways. One 2011 study published in the journal Sleep and Breathing found that nearly 70 percent of Asian subjects had some form of sleep apnea. Fatty tissue in the throat brought on by weight gain can bring on or exacerbate the condition, doctors say.

      Doctors said that high-calorie, Western-style fast food is a leading factor in China's increasing sleep issues. As consumer preferences have shifted away from full-service restaurants, China's $90 billion fast food industry has expanded at an annualized rate of 16.9 percent over the last five years, according to Los Angeles-based research firm IBIS World. There are now over 1.9 million fast food restaurants in the country.

      "The increase of sleep problems is definitely related to the increase of obesity in China, which partially results from changes of the diet structure of Chinese people," Dr. Han told Reuters in a phone interview.

      High-calorie fast-food especially contributes to rising rates of sleep apnea in children, who are more likely to eat foreign fast food than older generations, he said.

      Indeed, rising consumer incomes and changing tastes have driven the expansion of Yum Brands' KFC, Pizza Hut and other Western-style fast food restaurants such as McDonald's in urban areas over the last decade.

      Dr. He Quanying, the head of the sleep research branch of the Chinese Medical Association, said that "with an increasing obesity rate in China, we will definitely see more sleep problems like apnea." He said that the blame for the rising apnea rates comes down to the fact that "Chinese are eating too much and don't exercise enough."

      ACCESS TO TREATMENT

      Some of the increased demand for sleep apnea treatments can be traced to greater awareness of the problem and access to treatment. Doctors note that the increasing number of obese have led to corresponding higher cases of sleep apnea.

      Millions of Chinese with sleep apnea may not recognize that they have the disorder, doctors said, which makes accurate incidence reports hard to come by. Studies generally show that at least five percent of the population in industrialized countries have some form of sleep apnea, according to Dr. David Rapoport, the director of New York University's Sleep Disorders Center.

      In China, that translates into at least 70 million cases, he said. Nearly 20 percent of the U.S. population may have at least a mild form of sleep apnea as a result of obesity, he noted. The true extent of the problem in China may not be known because relatively few doctors or patients are familiar with the disorder, Rapoport said.

      "We're barely scraping the surface" in terms of medical attention, he said.

      That may change as broad income gains allow Chinese to both consume more food and have more money to spend on healthcare.

      China's health spending is projected to increase by 10.3 percent per year through 2020, according to an estimate from AllianceBernstein, the largest among the 15 countries with the highest expected healthcare spending over the same time. Spending in the U.S., by comparison, is expected to rise by 4.6 percent per year.

      Increased spending and sophistication on the part of Chinese patients should also lead to higher spending on sleep apnea treatments as well.

      Peter Farrell, the chief executive of San Diego-based ResMed, recently told analysts that the market for his company's sleep aid products in China and India should increase by more than 10 percent a year because it is building from a small base. But the overall market has not "reach the point where it is hugely material for us just yet," he said.

      ResMed is one of the leading makers of continuous positive airway pressure, or CPAP, machines that use air pressure to prevent a patient's throat from closing. Philips, whose Respironics division is the other leading CPAP-maker, did not respond to a request seeking comment for this story.

      China's obesity rates will be a long-term driver for sales growth for ResMed and Respironics, the two leading companies in the CPAP market, said Ben Haynor, an analyst at Feltl and Company, an investment firm in Minneapolis.

      "(Doctors) are becoming aware of the hand-in-hand nature of obesity and sleep apnea. This is going to be a tremendous opportunity," he said.

      (Reporting By David Randall and Hui Li in Beijing; Editing by Walden Siew and Bernard Orr)

      mobile.reuters.com