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No More Clean Air and No More CNN
Beijingers Hope Some Improvements to Their City Will Remain

Chien Hwang
I will miss the clean air, the lack of heavy traffic and the lack of bad billboards.
I'll miss taxi drivers following the rules of the road, the kind and helpful volunteers, and being the center of attention.
I'll miss the bikini-clad cheerleaders, the free stuff all over town, the Fuwa mascots, and the extra flowers and trees.
I'll miss the sports nuttiness, the clueless foreigners, the loud and colorful clothing, the "ambush" functions and parties, and the clean public toilets.
I'll miss the ability to watch uncensored feeds of CNN and the BBC.
I'll even miss the crowded hotel bars, the bad stadium food and the armed police.
And I'll miss the color red.
I'm an optimist, though, and like many people in China, I hope of few of these things are here to stay. Wish us luck.
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I am optimistic about China and its future. That was reinforced by what I saw during the Olympics.
I have been watching the U.S. political conventions and comparing the heavy-handed police tactics and our supposed right to demonstrate and comparing it to what had occurred in China. Oddly in China the demonstrators were from other countries, and not from China. The press made a big deal about Tibet and it wanting to become a theocracy. But that wasn't the show -- all in all China played host to the world's elite athletes and opened it doors to the world, that is what people saw and marveled at. What a spectacle, proof to all of the world of what China has become: a country of progress on the world stage, striving for harmony for its people and the world. I'm for that. Those doors that China opened are not going to close. Nor is the spirit and pride everyone saw in the Chinese people.
China and its people simply impressed the world.