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lhp

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Posts posted by lhp

  1. My wife had her second interview today and was approved. Her first interview was in late June, 2013. That's 492 days (16+ months), for those of you keeping score at home.

     

    My wife's first interview was at the old GZ consulate. The new one is even easier to get to. Take exit B1 from Pearl River New Town stop. The Consulate is literally across the street.

     

    If you're looking for a place to grab a bite beforehand, or a cafe to wait in while your own SO is in the consulate, turn right out of exit B1 and walk a block. There are a number of cafes and restaurants.

     

    Glad this whole experience is coming to an end, and glad to have some good news to share.

  2. 2. For medical exam in Shanghai, when are results available? I've read they are available later same afternoon when done at GZ facility, but not sure about Shanghai.

    My wife did her medical in Shanghai on Oct 17, and we weren't able to get the results until the 23rd. (She was assigned a pickup date.) Seems like GZ is the only place with one day turnaround.

  3. Physical in Shanghai done. I've got to make a trip to Shanghai this week to pick up the results.

     

    The Canton Trade Fair is going on at the same time as my wife's interview, so hotels in GZ are expensive. We're going to stay out by the airport…the better to catch our 8 am flight back home. Got a pretty good rate via Booking.com.

     

    In other news, there's a Dengue fever outbreak in Guangzhou. So the sites of GZ might be a little different than usual:

    http://www.thenanfang.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/fumigation-gz-dengue-fever-02.jpg

  4. It seems much more possible for you to move to China for a year or two than it would be for her to move to the States.

    As the others have said, she'd either need a job offer and visa sponsorship or be accepted to an American university. Job + visa is hard to get. Universities are happy to accept Chinese students, but given that the cost of a year of school would probably be $30k+, CBA might indicate that you going to China makes more economic sense.

  5. We received an email today calling my wife back in for another interview. She was told to bring her passport, a new medical report, a valid police report, and two recent photos. We also have to fill out a DS-260, which wasn't a requirement when she had her interview way back in 2013. Another couple who have also been waiting for AP since last year got the same email a week or so ago.

     

    The interview is at the end of October (in the afternoon, not the morning), 16 months after her original interview. Hoping that she'll leave this interview with good news, but we'll see.

  6. More on the same story: Plane turns back to Dulles so FBI can arrest mom in parental kidnapping case

     

    A direct United Airlines flight from Dulles airport to Beijing turned around mid-flight Thursday at the request of FBI agents, who then arrested a passenger in connection with a possible international parental kidnapping after the plane landed.
    Lindsay Ram, a spokeswoman for the FBI’s Washington field office, said the mother, Wenjing Liu, was arrested Thursday under probable cause of international parental kidnapping. Her plane, which took off from Washington Dulles International Airport around noon Thursday, landed back at the same airport at 5 p.m., Ram said.
    According to court documents, she was charged with knowingly and unlawfully attempting to remove her son from the United States with intent to obstruct the lawful exercise of parental rights.
    Ram said the boy’s father called local authorities, who then contacted the FBI about the alleged kidnapping. After researching the parents’ child custody agreement, Ram said, agents reached out to the airline and had pilots turn the plane around mid-air.
    Ram said the plane was over North America when it headed back to Dulles.
    The child and mother got off the plane, and the mother was taken into custody. Ram said the child went home with his father.
    Liu is a Chinese citizen and was married in Leesburg, Va. to the boy’s father in 2007 and lived in various locations in Virginia. The boy, who has dual United States and Chinese citizenship, was born in 2010 and the pair divorced in 2013. The pair had joint legal custody of the child, and the custody order said that neither party could travel with the child outside the United States without written and notarized consent of the other party.
    According to an affidavit by an FBI agent, Liu told the boy’s father in an e-mail on Thursday morning that her grandmother was dying, so she and the boy were flying back to China. The father told her the child could not go because she would not be able to send him to school, and she e-mailed back saying that she already booked the plane ticket and they were leaving immediately, the court documents say.
    Authorities said that Liu told the father that she was taking the trip because she had been notified about her grandmother’s declining health on Wednesday, but travel documents show that she made flight reservations for one-way airline tickets on Aug. 27.

     

    Interesting that the child is reporting as having 'dual citizenship'; I thought China doesn't allow it. If I were the father, I'd make sure to contact the Chinese Embassy and get the kid's Chinese passport (and citizenship) cancelled.

     

    I'm very glad the father didn't lose his child. Seems like you hear about so many of these cases; when I talked to my wife about it she mentioned how common this sort of thing is in China (wives running away with the children) because they 'have no other alternative'.

  7. Very impressive.

     

    In 2007 I visited the Jin Mao Tower, at which point the Shanghai World Financial Center was nearing completion. A few months back my wife and I went to the SWFC's observation deck, and checked out the almost-finished Shanghai Tower. I guess I'll have to wait to visit the Shanghai Tower until the next super skyscraper is almost done.

     

    Standing at the bottom of any of the three buildings and looking up is an incredible site…and it gave me a case of vertigo.

  8. Xinjiang is fantastic, probably my favorite place we've traveled "in China". It was unreal to be in a residential neighborhood three or four blocks away from a tourist site in Urumqi and realize that almost all the women were in burqas. And it was fun being in a "Chinese" city where my terrible Putonghua was better than many of the locals'! :rotfl:

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  9. I very rarely get 100%. Usually forget some tones or don't get a definition exactly right.

     

    I think the proof is in the pudding…try doing some reading! From Amazon.com you can get the Chinese Breeze books (the ones with red covers are Level 1). They've got fun stories and the Memrise HSK 1 class was just about enough to get me through them, with the occasional help of Pleco and my wife .

     

    I haven't bought any of the Mandarin Companion books yet, but they also look good.

  10. It makes sense that the Party wouldn't like NGOs since they've previously rejected the concept of 'civil society'; the Party should be able to do it all, they think.

     

    With regards to hacking, I think the difference is that the PLA is willing to do bespoke hacking jobs for Chinese companies. The NSA hasn't shown a willingness to do this; if they had, I think it would have come out in the Snowden leaks.

     

    I think there's spycraft, which every country does to one another, and then there's corporate espionage. While both may be illegal, governments have the (scary?) power to put themselves above the law when doing things "in the national interest", while companies do not have the same power when breaking laws for their own interests. China's model of direct government support (or ownership) of companies apparently includes using intelligence and military assets to conduct spycraft on behalf on Chinese business interests. This is different to what the US does, and is different from 'regular' spying.

  11. On that point:

     

    An examination of 20 years of data from across China finds that heavy air pollution is to blame for the drop in life expectancy in the north.

    BEIJING — Life expectancy is 5.5 years lower in northern China than in the south because of heavy air pollution, a new study examining 20 years of data has determined.

    The research, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by four economists in China, the U.S. and Israel, examined air quality readings collected in 90 Chinese cities from 1981 to 2000 and compared those with mortality data collected at 145 locations across the country from 1991 to 2000.

    Other studies have established strong correlations between air pollution and poor health and attempted to quantify the loss of life in China due to air pollution. But the specificity of the study published Monday may provide a jolt to policymakers and the public as debate intensifies over how much China has sacrificed to achieve rapid economic growth.

    The researchers found that a seemingly arbitrary Mao-era economic policy on coal-fired boilers for winter heating created dramatic differences in air quality within China. North of the Huai River, the government provided free coal, while to the south, people were essentially denied central heat. In effect, this policy created two experimental groups that could be compared with each other, and the impact of burning coal on air quality — and on health — could be isolated and quantified.

    Follow the link for the whole article.
  12. What I think could work (long term, not short term) would be to get true complete data on wait times and consular staffing. Then highlight inefficiencies when comparing visas processed per consular site per the number of staff. Then somehow lobby the government to add additional staffing to GUZ.

    I've been thinking about this, specifically asking families to file FOIA requests to get data from the government about what was done when. I'm not sure what to request from whom, but it seems like we should be able to request:

    1. That the FBI disclose when the background check request was received, when it was processed, and how long it took for this to be sent back to GZ.
    2. That USCIS Guangzhou report on how long it is taking for background check requests to be sent, received, and processed.
    3. Would there be anything to request from State or Homeland Security?

    Here are the various sites: USCIS FOIA requests, FBI FOIA, State FOIA, DHS FOIA.

     

    I think this is an uphill battle, though – I doubt there are many who want to expend political capital to do something that a political opponent could describe as "helping Chinese Communists come to the United States".

     

    We are seven days away from having waited a year.

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