Amazing (and Disturbing) Pictures, Pollution in China
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Amazing (and Disturbing) Pictures, Pollution in China
I cam across an article about a documentary on pollution in China and wanted to share it here. There is really not much to say as the pictures and their descriptions speak for themselves. Stuff like this most likely goes on in other third world countries, but rarely do I think it is captured or shows to the world in such a matter.
Below is a link to the complete exhibition as well as selected narrations and pictures that I transferred into this tread. Feel free to discuss.
PS. I was not sure where to post this (Politics, Photography or general Bay Area forum sections); so if the mods want to move it to a more appropriate area, that is fine.
http://www.chinahush.com/2009/10/21/...tion-in-china/
2. Chemical waste from Jiangsu Taixing Chemical Industrial District (江苏泰兴化工园区) dumped on top of the Yangtze River bank. May 15, 2009
6. Guiyu, Guangdong province, (广东省贵屿镇) rivers and reservoirs have been contaminated, the villager is washing in a seriously polluted pond. November 25, 2005
9. In Ma’anshan, Anhui province (安徽马鞍山), along the Yangtze River there are many small-scaled Iron selection factories and plastic processing plants. Large amounts of sewage discharged into the Yangtze River June 18, 2009
16. Hebei Province Shexian Tianjin Iron and steel plant (河北省涉县天津钢铁厂) is a heavily polluting company. Company scale is still growing, seriously affecting the lives of local residents. March 18, 2008
21. Shanxi Province is the most polluted areas of China. It is also the province with the highest rate of birth defects. This loving farmer couple adopted 17 disabled children. April 15, 2009
25. Villagers from Kang village in Linfen City, Shanxi Province (山西省临汾市下康村) due to long-term consumption of the polluted water contaminated by industrial waste, there were 50 people who have cancer and cerebral thrombosis. 64-year-old **** Baosheng got ill since 2003, he has fester all over his body so he cannot go to bed and lying face down on the edge of the bed each day. July 10, 2005
Below is a link to the complete exhibition as well as selected narrations and pictures that I transferred into this tread. Feel free to discuss.
PS. I was not sure where to post this (Politics, Photography or general Bay Area forum sections); so if the mods want to move it to a more appropriate area, that is fine.
http://www.chinahush.com/2009/10/21/...tion-in-china/
October 14, 2009, the 30th annual awards ceremony of the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund took place at the Asia Society in New York City. Lu Guang (卢广) from People’s Republic of China won the $30,000 W. Eugene Smith Grant in Humanistic Photography for his documentary project “Pollution in China.”
Lu Guang (卢广), freelancer photographer, started as an amateur photographer in 1980. He was a factory worker, later started his own photo studio and advertising agency. August of 1993 he returned to post-graduate studies at the Central Arts and Design Academy in Beijing (now is the Academy of Arts and Design, Tsinghua University). During graduate school, he studied, traveled all over the country and carved out a career, became the “dark horse” of the photographer circle in Beijing. Skilled at social documentary photography, his insightful, creative and artistic work often focused on “social phenomena and people living at the bottom of society”, attracted the attentions of the national photography circle and the media. Many of his award winning works focused on social issues like, “gold rush in the west”, “drug girl”, “small coal pit”, “HIV village”, “the Grand Canal”, “development of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway” and so on.
Lu Guang (卢广), freelancer photographer, started as an amateur photographer in 1980. He was a factory worker, later started his own photo studio and advertising agency. August of 1993 he returned to post-graduate studies at the Central Arts and Design Academy in Beijing (now is the Academy of Arts and Design, Tsinghua University). During graduate school, he studied, traveled all over the country and carved out a career, became the “dark horse” of the photographer circle in Beijing. Skilled at social documentary photography, his insightful, creative and artistic work often focused on “social phenomena and people living at the bottom of society”, attracted the attentions of the national photography circle and the media. Many of his award winning works focused on social issues like, “gold rush in the west”, “drug girl”, “small coal pit”, “HIV village”, “the Grand Canal”, “development of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway” and so on.
6. Guiyu, Guangdong province, (广东省贵屿镇) rivers and reservoirs have been contaminated, the villager is washing in a seriously polluted pond. November 25, 2005
9. In Ma’anshan, Anhui province (安徽马鞍山), along the Yangtze River there are many small-scaled Iron selection factories and plastic processing plants. Large amounts of sewage discharged into the Yangtze River June 18, 2009
16. Hebei Province Shexian Tianjin Iron and steel plant (河北省涉县天津钢铁厂) is a heavily polluting company. Company scale is still growing, seriously affecting the lives of local residents. March 18, 2008
21. Shanxi Province is the most polluted areas of China. It is also the province with the highest rate of birth defects. This loving farmer couple adopted 17 disabled children. April 15, 2009
25. Villagers from Kang village in Linfen City, Shanxi Province (山西省临汾市下康村) due to long-term consumption of the polluted water contaminated by industrial waste, there were 50 people who have cancer and cerebral thrombosis. 64-year-old **** Baosheng got ill since 2003, he has fester all over his body so he cannot go to bed and lying face down on the edge of the bed each day. July 10, 2005
#2
truly awesome. My friend just showed me a thing of photos yesterday, showing all these amazing landscapes and great places. He is like "see man you are an idiot" china is nice blh blah blah. I think China has some really nice places, but the sad fact is for the average citizen life is hard as hell there.
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yup, especially if you're Tibetan - it's important to see all sides of ANY country - people always knock the US for its flaws - it's time the former Olympics host shows theirs AND deals with it
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China is like the older brother of N. Korea.
they only try to show whats good and hide the rest.
i remember watching the documentary Panorama regarding Beijing Olympics, its sickening what the government does to its own people. China, USA, they're all the same.
they only try to show whats good and hide the rest.
i remember watching the documentary Panorama regarding Beijing Olympics, its sickening what the government does to its own people. China, USA, they're all the same.
Last edited by Jin; 11-02-2009 at 05:39 PM.
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It looks like most of the pictures are very recent. Just remember, that China shut down a LOT of factories to try to decrease the pollution for the olympic games. I believe most of these factories were never reopened, so it was even worse only a few years ago.
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I have some great Chinese friends and I think the culture is something really fantastic, but once you get me started on their gov't, there's no stopping me.
Screw communism!
I feel so bad for some of the Chinese people who have to suffer through that crap. No wonder they all come here!
Screw communism!
I feel so bad for some of the Chinese people who have to suffer through that crap. No wonder they all come here!
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every country has flaws. i wouldnt be surprised if china has worst slums than india or any other country that old santa looking dude on TV talks about.
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very sad indeed that people have to live like that, it doesnt matter where those slums are at they are still human, and its sad when we can treat an animal better than our own human brothers and sisters.
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I have some great Chinese friends and I think the culture is something really fantastic, but once you get me started on their gov't, there's no stopping me.
Screw communism!
I feel so bad for some of the Chinese people who have to suffer through that crap. No wonder they all come here!
Screw communism!
I feel so bad for some of the Chinese people who have to suffer through that crap. No wonder they all come here!
just on a side note, 80% of world's resources are used up by 20% of the population. think about that.
Last edited by Jin; 11-02-2009 at 05:47 PM.
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I've never seen anything as bad as those pictures (knock on wood), and I feel really bad for those that have to suffer through that kind of toxic existence.
I don't know what's worse, living in those conditions or living in war torn Iraq/Afghanistan (other countries that have been torn by war)
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Yeah, it's some messed up stuff... I've been to several third world countries in my days and I can tell you that it's not pretty, and MUCH MUCH MUCH MUCH worse then the USA!!! Here we have laws to prevent a lot of that crap, and in some of those countries they do too, it's just a matter of enforcing them... The difference is that we can.
I've never seen anything as bad as those pictures (knock on wood), and I feel really bad for those that have to suffer through that kind of toxic existence.
I don't know what's worse, living in those conditions or living in war torn Iraq/Afghanistan (other countries that have been torn by war)
I've never seen anything as bad as those pictures (knock on wood), and I feel really bad for those that have to suffer through that kind of toxic existence.
I don't know what's worse, living in those conditions or living in war torn Iraq/Afghanistan (other countries that have been torn by war)