Some 36 Crazy Things That Only Happen In China
Over the past decade China saw rapid economic expansion. But its growth model and controversial politics have not come without their fair share of problems. Rising property prices, rising food prices, restrictions on investment, an emphasis on speed over safety, and lax environmental standards have led to some truly unique and sometimes crazy situations in China.
Rich people build mountain villas on top of apartment buildings, local governments incentivize burials at sea, and people are pour their money into everything from walnuts to cockroach farms.
We identified 35 strange things that have happened in China.
Rich people build mountain villas on top of apartment buildings, local governments incentivize burials at sea, and people are pour their money into everything from walnuts to cockroach farms.
We identified 35 strange things that have happened in China.
Businesses hang nets to prevent employees from committing suicide.
Firefighters are on hand to prevent self-immolations.
Immolations are a very popular form of protest. Before and during the leadership transition in 2012, Beijing positioned firefighters in Tiananmen Square to prevent self-immolations.
A national pork reserve exists to combat inflation.
China has replaced the U.S. to become the world's largest consumer of pork. The country has a national pork reserve that it releases when prices soar.
A tourism law is created that tells Chinese tourists to "behave."
Grave robbers steal and sell corpses for "ghost marriages."
Cute kids get replaced by cuter kids.
Local governments sponsor burials at sea.
Land prices have surged in China making graveyards expensive. With that in mind, some Chinese local governments give families financial incentives to scatter the ashes of their relatives at sea. Guangzhou offered $160, while it was reported that in Wenzhou families were offered as much as $1,290.
Entire Apple stores get counterfeited.
As Chinese cities develop across the country fake stores have become increasingly prevalent. Arguably the most famous fake store was the fake Apple store in Kunming, southern China.
Nail houses and graves pop up to protest land grabs.
Land grabs are all too common in China, where local governments often seize land without adequately compensating the owner. While most families cave to government pressure, some refuse and developers continue to build around a stand alone home or grave, leading to "nail houses" and "nail graves."
People build houses on top of apartment buildings.
Land is at a premium in China, especially in big cities. And the wealthy have taken to building elaborate homes on top of apartment buildings in China. While some of these are sanctioned, many like the mountain villa were not and the owner was asked to tear it down.
Couples divorce to avoid property taxes.
The Chinese government announced a 20 percent tax on profits from home sales. But couples with more than one home have been getting divorced, taking one property each, and then selling one of the homes tax free, to take advantage of loopholes.
Wealthy people have stand-ins at their trials
Buildings fall over sideways and are sometimes intact.
The government signs a deal to buy pig semen from the UK.
People spend thousands of dollars on walnuts.
Wealthy Chinese with limited investment options have taken to investing in walnuts, jade and gold mooncakes. Recently, con artists have been selling fake walnuts filled with cement.
They spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on jade.
And they earn high returns on cockroaches.
Fathers hire assassins to kill their sons' World of Warcraft avatars.
People get arrested for spreading rumors about the Mayan Apocalypse.
Ninety-three people were arrested in China for spreading rumors about the Mayan Apocalypse. One man spent all his savings to build an 'ark' to survive the Apocalypse.
'Love Hunters' look for women in shopping malls.
Yang Jing, a matchmaker at Diamond Love and Marriage looks for women and sometimes men at shopping malls. Wealthy Chinese pay tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars to "love hunters" like Jing to find their "ideal spouse," according to The New York Times.
The government announces a ban on gift giving, and it immediately hurts the economy.
They have cricket fighting competitions.
Thousands of dead pigs float in a Chinese river.
The smog is so bad it can be seen from space.
Milk gets infused with melamine.
China's dairy industry has been hit with milk contamination scandals since 2008. Milk products have been found containing everything from mercury to melamine and detergent.
Rivers turn red.
Bridges collapse within a few months of being built.
One person was killed and 22 injured, when the Wuyishan Gongguan Bridge collapsed in China's Fujian province.
Cities with no occupants pop up all over the country.
26-mile bridges get built to nowhere.
Gigantic accidents occur on newly-built high-speed rail lines
Forty people were killed and 200 injured, when high-speed trains collided near Wenzhou in 2011.
Whole media organizations get banned.
China blocked Bloomberg.com after it ran an article on the wealth of the family of president-in-waiting Xi Jinping.
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