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BretLudwig BretLudwig is offline
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Default The Great Women of China

The Great Women of China


"A commenter here once pointed out that to be a successful journalist,

it helps to be very curious but not very smart. From the Wall Street
Journal:

The Great Women of China

By MEI FONG and LORETTA CHAO

BEIJING -- Here is China's secret formula for topping the Olympic
medal tally: two X chromosomes.

WSJ's Mei Fong reports that Chinese women athletes consistently
outperform their male counterparts. She explores the reasons why.

In China, it's the women who have traditionally racked up the medals.
At the 2000 Games in Sydney, the Chinese women won five more gold medals
than the men. In Athens in 2004, the women won 19 gold medals, while the
men won 12. By comparison, American women accounted for 12 of the
nation's
35 gold medals in 2004.

Although many Chinese athletes have yet to qualify for their 2008
Olympic berths, women are widely expected to outdo the men again this
summer. Wrestling coach Zhang Zhetian says the country's best odds for a
wrestling medal lie with the women's team. His reasoning? Women work
harder. "Guys -- you've got to push them more," he says.

"Women know how to eat bitterness," says tennis coach Sun Jinfang.
(The saying "chi ku," or "eat bitterness," in China denotes a willingness
to suffer and endure back-breaking work.) Ms. Sun has helped usher four
doubles players into the Women's Tennis Association's top 30; no male
Chinese tennis players are world-ranked.

The disparity is apparent at Beijing's Xiannongtan Sports School,
where boys and girls train separately under bright red banners with
messages like, "Grow in Painful Struggle and Develop in Spurts."

In the women's ping pong hall, the tables are newer and slightly
fancier than in the men's section, splashed with logos of sponsors such
as
Japanese company Mizuno Corp. There are no visible logos on the men's
side.
Xiannongtan's director Hu Xiaobing said the female ping pong players
attract more money and sponsors.

Academics say China has long held a historical reverence for strong
women €¦

Yes, that's why all the Chinese actresses in Wong Kar-Wai movies like "In
the Mood for Love" wear such loose-fitting skirts: to provide room for
their Michelangeloesque thigh muscles.

There's a much simpler explanation: Communist countries, such as East
Germany, the Soviet Union, and now China, usually do proportionally
better
in women's events. (Cuba, under the macho Castro's rule, might be an
exception to this pattern.) Why? Because it's easier to win women's
events, so governments that judge themselves by their Olympic medals
totals put disproportionate emphasis on women's events.

If you want to win a medal in a men's event, you've got to beat a whole
bunch of men from around the world who really like the idea of being the
World's Greatest Whatever at some stupid competition. If, on the other
hand, you want to win a medal in some women's event, other than sexy
dance-like events such as figure skating or rhythmic gymnastics, you
mostly only have to beat women from societies who push women into those
events. Thus, China has long done well at, for example, women's
weightlifting.

In particular, you can get more bang from your buck with doping female
athletes with artificial male hormones, since men have so much of the
natural kind."


http://isteve.blogspot.com/2008/06/g...-of-china.html

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