Pack
away those images of pods of revolutionary workers in buttoned-down
Mao tunics performing t'ai chi in the city square; Beijing has
embarked on a new-millennium roller-coaster ride, and it's taking
everyone along for the ride. These days, the city's youth are
more interested in MTV then Mao; rhetorical slogans from the
Cultural Revolution have given way to herniated English splashed
across designer-copy T-shirts; and expats, tourists, foreign
investors and a cellular phone-toting hipoisie are mixing it
up with the bureaucrats.
The old
hutongs and buildings are being demolished, new buildings are
going up, small things are giving way to big things and big
things are giving way to even bigger things. This fast-paced,
two-minute-noodles lifestyle doesn't please everyone - the old
comrades are complaining about uppity youths and loss of values
- but the capital of the People's Republic of China doesn't
look like it's slowing down any time soon.