China Says “No” to Half-assed Attempt at Affection
Dateline: China

Well wishers try to thaw Communist China’s chilly social exterior by offering free hugs, but ol’ Commie Joe says, “No Dice.”
I’m not going to recap the whole story which I’m sure you Sinophiles have already read but if you haven’t here’s a link: Life Squeezed Out of Free Hug Movement.
Now I’m sure the majority of you read that story and thought to yourself, “What’s the big deal? It’s just a couple of youngsters that want to brighten up some people’s day by offering an innocently platonic hug.” But the question you have to ask yourself…Is it really that innocent?
First let’s examine the embrace itself. The hug is, at least in the West, a standard greeting for people who know each other and share a certain level of affection for one another like; family, friends, made members of organized crime syndicates, and cell-mates. Although the mechanics of a hug vary depending on who it is you are hugging their are some static inevitabilities:
At least one arm will be clasped around the other’s torso/shoulder, because men often practice the “handshake pulled into one-armed hug.” The handshake says, “Don’t worry, I’m heterosexual.” The one-armed hug says, “I’m heterosexual, but you’re my boy. My bond with you is as resolute as my want not to fuck you.” Classic examples of the handshake pulled into one-armed hug can be seen at NBA All-Star games and reruns of Russell Simmon’s Def Comedy Jam.
You are, even for a brief moment, cheek to cheek with the person you are embracing. During this time, if only for an instant, both parties have acquiesced to entrusting their personal space with another. Guards are dropped and trust is displayed. During this period of cheek to cheekness, kisses are often exchanged, caring sentiments are spoken at a low tone into one another’s ears, knives are shoved into the backs of Roman Emperors who grew too big for their tunics.
Frontal body contact is maximized. In it’s standard rendition, where both arms are utilized to embrace the other, spatial contact is total from the shoulders down to the hips and thighs. Remove the clothes and rotate the couple to a prone position and you basically have the missionary position. And there’s nothing innocent or platonic about that. And that’s why the Chinese government lead the way they did…with the jackboots.
Now all you liberal idealists out there with your Grateful Dead T-shirts and moonbeams and free love probably think this is just another example of the state crushing an otherwise harmless and overall fun, little exhibition but this isn’t Planet Freakout where conflicts are quelled with pixie dust and drum circles. This is real life…and it stinks like patchouli. Yes, hippies, you’re perfume d’jour reeks something fierce and it’s doing little to mask the fact that you’re adverse to showering in modern facilities with indoor plumbing and fluorinated water. Your hygiene sickens me as much as these “protesters” actions. Because once again like in the 60’s when your high-minded idealism lost us the Vietnam War this Free Hug movement threatens to tear asunder China’s tightly woven social fabric. A fabric made of equal parts distrust, xenophobia, blaring ignorance, and endemic larceny.
These young rapscallions tore mercilessly through the streets of Beijing, Xi’an, and Changsha brandishing signs stating, “Free Hugs,” “refuse to be apathetic,” “care from strangers,”and say ‘no’ to giving the cold shoulder.” You see the picture above. They look Chinese but they couldn’t possibly be Chinese. If they were they’d know that being apathetic and giving people the cold shoulder is the 5,000 year old ethos that has made this proud nation a collective of 1.4 billion wary, humorless killjoys. I once watched a guy pass out from heat exhaustion in the dead of summer in Hangzhou. He laid on that searing pavement for over an hour and a half before an ambulance happened to drive by and pick him up. He cooked like an egg on that street and died before he got to the hospital. Sure, I could have called the authorities but that wouldn’t have been very Chinese of me now would it? And as a guest in this country I respect their way of life, so as much as I wanted to call I couldn’t affront my host nation and care for another human being. Something these young punks need to be reminded of the next time they hit the streets looking to make people feel better. Nothing a few months in a certain prison in Qinghai I know of won’t cure.
Look I’m not a bad guy. I like to spread joy as much as the next Chinese guy. I’ll kick a dog to make a girl think I’m tough. I’ll mock migrant workers shabby clothes. I’ll treat everybody who doesn’t make as much money as I do like a piece of fuckin’ shit. Hey man, when in Rome, but this Free Hugs movement? They’re just moving a bit too quick for us more traditional types and quite frankly society’s just not ready for that step and here are some reasons why:
A bunch of nubile, young Chinese girls draping their fertile young bodies over any and all passersby they can get their hands on isn’t going to promote a new found sense of warmth and community amongst the Chinese. It’s going to lead to one thing. Massive, justifiable rape. Just listen to this dude named Li who preaches the historical truth in this Reuters Article:
“Embracing is a foreign tradition. We are not accustom to this,” a dude name Li stated.
And he’s absolutely right. Anyone who’s ever studied anything about China knows that all Chinese insemination since the Tang Dynasty has taken place in a lab where the husband and wife were in separate rooms, each with their own licensed “Essence Extractor,” and their respective seeds were combined for fertilization in a Qi-powered centrifuge. Chinese people despise physical contact especially the sexual kind. Just look at the sparse population and complete absence of an elicit sex industry. They don’t even have massage parlors here because, quite frankly, Chinese people hate to be touched.
If the people of China, as a whole, acquiesced to the notion of hugging or being hugged by complete strangers, pickpockets the country over would make a fuckin’ killing. People here steal. All the time. If you allow open, random hugging you’re pretty much opening the door to rampant petty larceny.
Public hugging, for no reason other than butterfly wings and rays of hope from the glitter well, will cripple the already severely crippled pedestrian flow in China’s cities. You can’t walk a straight God damn line for more than ten feet in any of China’s medium or big sized cities before you have to dodge an oncoming pedestrian, cut around a line of bicycles, or juke some shithead riding his gas-powered scooter down the sidewalk. Now, I have to jockey around people who don’t even know each other who both spontaneously decided they need to stop going where they’re going and hug somebody. Mountebanks my good man.
In all seriousness, I respect what these young kids are doing. It needs to be done. There are times when China just seems so cold and apathetic and it seems this way because it is. For Christ’s sake those four “huggers” in Beijing got brought in and questioned by the cops. Hey Beijing you got a lot of laowai tourists coming in 2008, get yourself a good PR firm, shit like this ain’t gonna fly when a bunch of people who aren’t petrified by the thought of a hug come to visit during the Olympics.
But what pisses me off the most are the quotes throughout the article like the on above by that dude named Li. This innate need inherent in almost all the people of China to protect the facade. To, at all costs, preserve the collective image or “face” and shroud it inappropriately with the moniker, “tradition.” People the world over do this, individually, and out of fear but here it’s the social undercurrent. Accepted and expected. These young altruists did nothing wrong except that they went against the expected social norms for public behavior for the purpose of making the world a little brighter. I quote:
“We were inspired by an event in Changsha city,” said one of the young male organizers.”Free hugs will bring people closer together and will make the world more like a big family.”
Keep the dream alive, brother. Keep the dream alive…from your prison cell in Qinghai you rabbler-rousing schismatist!!

One minute it’s free hugs, the next minute it’s freedom, then a couple minutes later, liberal democracy. It’s a warm, embracing slippery slope if I’ve ever seen one.
Comment by John B — November 1, 2006 @ 9:21 am
A+. We need to nip this “concern for your fellow man” thing in the bud.
Comment by Brendan — November 2, 2006 @ 6:42 pm
our society is apartness.
we care what?”money making” we get colder and colder.
i really wanna know where is the love.
Comment by lizzy — November 2, 2006 @ 10:06 pm
Awesome post. I agree it’s sad. Gees mainland China sounds like a soulless place.
Comment by lisa — November 3, 2006 @ 8:06 am
“They didn’t have a permit from a proper authority.” Does that mean that there are random hug permits?
Comment by KenM — November 5, 2006 @ 12:07 am
I’d rather have a free blowjob
Comment by Fred — November 6, 2006 @ 2:30 pm
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p.s hilarious post on hugging
Comment by Karen Mc Cullagh — November 6, 2006 @ 7:34 pm
Greg,
I felt like all those hippy comments were directed towards me. Also, the one-arm-lean-in-hug should alwas
be accompanied by the pull back the hand knuckle-lock/fist bump. I leave you with the great words of Robert
Downey, Jr. “Drugs, Not Hugs.”
Comment by doom — November 7, 2006 @ 11:55 pm
The love, lizzy, is in my trousers. Or if you’re desperate, in Greg’s.
MC Dookie Braids
AKA The Concrete Junglebunny
Comment by Dookie Braids — November 9, 2006 @ 8:24 pm
Excellent. I have to support the Chinese police on this one. I wish the Chinese police could have cleaned up the year-round Burning Man crowd, from when I lived in San Francisco. Those characters just got old real quick.
Comment by Jeff — November 12, 2006 @ 2:59 am
$ SINOBLING $ » China Says “No” to Half-assed Attempt at Affection…
Well wishers try to thaw Communist China’s chilly social exterior by offering free hugs, but ol’ Commie Joe says, “No Dice.”…
Trackback by The Hao Hao Report — November 12, 2006 @ 10:45 am
Well, sorry to swim against the flow here a bit.
(1) If this is a campaign that has been organised abroad, then it does look like some (political) movement brought in from outside
(2) Public demonstrations are a touchy subject, and the participants should have known this. And this does look somewhat like a public demonstration.
From Reuters “In the capital, police moved in and took away four huggers briefly for questioning, baffled by their wacky, Western-style activities on a busy downtown shopping street.”
Briefly? That suggests that they were released afterwards. And, in Changsha and and Xian there were no arrests.
Yes, it is a cool thing, which this country needs, but being realistic about it, is it possible that everyone here could start hugging? Is it desirable that everyone here should start hugging? I’m not so sure that the answers are as obvious as everyone is making out. Why is it necessary that complete strangers should be hugging in public? Is it something that would be desirable if it became normal?
There are a lot of issues here, but not really any big news story. An arrest that possibly wasn’t, of some folks who shouldn’t have been surprised at it, and the exciting discovery that it takes a bit longer to change habits than just one day.
Comment by Chris — November 12, 2006 @ 11:46 pm
Hugs aren’t political. If hugs were political, then politics would be a lot nicer. Bombs are more political, which given the reception hugs got, may have been more appropriate.
Comment by John B — November 14, 2006 @ 11:35 am
I’ve got to say, I really do hope hugging doesn’t catch on. Not that it’s bad for people to be promoting, you know, the realization that there are human beings other than oneself and all that — but seriously, would-be huggers? Don’t fuckin’ touch me.
Comment by Brendan — November 14, 2006 @ 5:56 pm
Didn’t anyone ever teach these girls that hugging gets you pregnant? “Free Brojobs” or “Free Butt Sex!” would be much more compatible with China’s efforts to slow population growth.
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Trackback by IeriWinner_92 — December 15, 2006 @ 6:41 am
The Hug Threat…
News from Beijing: Police stop people from offering free hugs.
Man, I was just in Beijing Tuesday and Wednesday, so missed out on the free physical affection and its fallout. What I didn’t miss is the sociopolitical and cultural implications, th…
Trackback by Sinosplice: Life — January 29, 2007 @ 9:41 pm
I might be a bit late on the subject but i think it’s never too late to tell you what a fucking
idiot you are.
You are just taking this whole thing terribly out of context.
This is just supposed to place a smile on someone’s face with the simplest thing like a hug.
No one is going to change 5000 years of history on a fifth of the world’s poulation by standing
on the road for a couple of hours with a sign. but you might just lighten a dozen people’s day.
It’s just a demonstration that one person can make a diference.
And about that guy in Hangzhou, Damn you’re so full of shit. I you were gonna be chinese on that
poor soul, you wouldn’t have even looked at him, even less remembered it or stayed around to
find out how long it took for the ambulance to show up. get you story straight.
“I’ll kick a dog to make a girl think I’m tough. I’ll mock migrant workers shabby clothes. I’ll treat everybody who doesn’t make as much money as I do like a piece of fuckin’shit”
Get some therapy, bro. This is text book superiority complex. And you are actually not supposed
to tell people about it.
“Just look at the sparse population and complete absence of an elicit sex industry.”
Yeah, Right. Have you walked around the streets in china? There isn’t a single day that I come home from work without seeing Sex Dvd’s, hidden Porn shops and being offered dirty magazines by paperstand’s owner that think that
just because I am a foreigner here, I a sex addicted.
I am just sorry that I lost 10 minutes reading and commenting this horseshit.
Comment by Kellyonatrip — May 9, 2007 @ 3:12 pm