@Yadan Ma
I am Chinese, 44 years old this year. My childhood spanned the entire 1980s and 1990s. When it comes to maintaining cleanliness, this question brings back some memories of a "dirty and chaotic China."
The first memory is a small detail. In any indoor place in China today, whether it's a restaurant, hotel, or home, every room will have a plastic trash can. There will be a plastic bag lining the trash can to make it easy to remove the garbage. They usually look like this:
However, these things were not part of my childhood memories. In other words, decades ago in China, there were no such trash cans. So, how did people throw away garbage in rooms back then? My memory is that people either put the trash in a shared outdoor trash can or threw it on the ground inside the room. Once the trash on the ground accumulated enough, they would then throw it into the large outdoor trash can.
Moreover, there is an evolving version of this small detail: I remember when I just got married in 2005, the plastic bags used to line trash cans were the ones from the vegetable markets. People collected these plastic bags after buying vegetables and used them in their trash cans. No one would buy plastic bags specifically for trash cans.
But today, various types and sizes of trash bags are essential in every Chinese household. The most popular ones are the trash bags that, when full, have two drawstrings on the sides that can be pulled to close the bag. This way, you can lift the heavy trash without worrying about it spilling:
My second memory is about littering. I remember when I was in elementary school, around 1992. My mother took me to a newly built park. As we walked, I was eating peanuts and casually throwing the shells on the ground.
A sanitation worker stopped me, but my mother argued with her because she didn't see a problem with throwing peanut shells on the grass. We thought that even if we didn't litter, the wind would blow leaves onto the grass. Prohibiting littering was a common slogan on radio, newspapers, and television in China at that time. It’s important to note that because people didn't care about environmental cleanliness, the government used all mass media to educate the public.
This situation didn't significantly improve even by the late 1990s. In 2000, a Chinese TV station released a popular crime drama called "The Struggle Between Black and White," which depicted the solving of a dismemberment case. The most intriguing aspect of this series was that it featured almost no professional actors! Nearly all the key roles were played by ordinary people, and all the police officers and detectives were the actual officers who solved the case.
Since this drama was released in 2000, it reflected the urban landscape of China at that time. The city in the show had a fictional name, "Beihuan City," but everyone who watched it could recognize it as xi'an, the city with the Terracotta Army. You could see paper scraps, plastic bags, and other trash flying along the main roads of the city.
In today's China, littering is unthinkable. If someone throws a piece of waste paper on a commercial street, people will consider them uncivilized. Within minutes, a sanitation worker will pick it up and throw it into a trash can. A few years ago, a moving car threw a pile of shredded paper out the window. A highway cleaner witnessed this and recorded it on his phone, uploading it online, which sparked public outrage. Eventually, the police used roadside cameras to identify the offender, fined him, and demanded a public apology.
My child was born in 2010. If he generates trash while playing outside and can't find a trash can, he will keep the trash with him until he gets home to throw it away. Once, he had a runny nose and spent an afternoon playing in the community park. When he returned home, all four of his pockets were filled with used tissues. I asked him why he didn’t throw them in the park's trash cans, and he replied that the park was under renovation and the trash cans were temporarily unavailable.
My third memory is about vegetable markets. Up until 2005, going to an open-air farmers' market was a challenge. You had to walk on rotting vegetable leaves, wade through the waterlogged seafood section, and endure the nauseating smell of the poultry area just to buy ingredients. In the past decade or so, such farmers' markets have almost disappeared in China. They have been transformed into tall, specialized buildings, with floor-cleaning machines constantly sweeping the floors, and water flowing through specially designed hidden pipes into the city's sewage system. Today, farmers' markets are almost indistinguishable from supermarkets, equipped with elevators, central air conditioning, ventilation systems, Wi-Fi, and each shop having its own independent water supply system.
My fourth memory is about public restrooms. The relationship between Chinese people and public restrooms could fill an entire book, as there are many legendary stories. When I was a child, public restrooms did not have flushing systems. Everyone, regardless of gender, had to squat over two concrete slabs. If you weren't careful, you might splash yourself.
Workers would clean the waste once a day. In the summer, Chinese public restrooms would become an unforgettable experience for anyone. In 2006, I bought a book called "Foreigners' Views on China." Some foreigners' most painful memories of China at that time were about "using public restrooms."
Today's public restrooms in China are quite a different story. Over the years, as I've traveled across the country with my family, we've encountered all sorts of interesting restrooms. Some restrooms have real-time status systems that show which stalls are occupied. Some provide tissues via QR code scanning. There are even restrooms equipped with sofas and coffee tables for people to wait comfortably. A significant number of public restrooms have "family toilets" designed for family members assisting elderly or young children.
This summer, we traveled to Qinghai Province in northwest China. The G310 national highway winds through the desolate mountains of Gansu Province for over 100 kilometers. Sometimes, we didn't see another car for half an hour, and I had to make twelve consecutive turns to find a 500-meter straight stretch of road. This area is known for the Qinling Mountains. One afternoon, we stopped at a roadside public restroom in the middle of nowhere, not even near a village. Surprisingly, it was a well-appointed restroom, equipped with large mirrors, washbasins, stainless steel faucets, and running water. Though I'm not sure if it was tap water or spring water, in the 37°C heat that day, the water felt ice-cold on my hands. The restroom had four rooms: men's, women's, a "handicapped toilet," and a "management room." It had a functional flushing system, clean tile floors, intact stalls, and a working ventilation system.
So, if I were to explain why China is a clean country today, I would summarize based on my experiences: First, extensive and improved infrastructure means people don't need to dirty the environment to use the restroom or buy groceries. Second, trash cans, including recycling bins, are everywhere in cities and towns, so people don't have to search for them. Third, if everything is clean, people are less likely to litter out of embarrassment. In conclusion, China is becoming an increasingly clean and orderly country.
@Stephen Yeung
I have travelled to China since the late 80s, and have seen the transformation. One of the biggest improvement is in the public toilets. My standing joke in those early days was that you do not have to ask for directions to a public toilet, just follow your nose.
@Do Chen
No, China in 1990 wasn't as dirty as India is now. In 1990, the Chinese people's public health awareness was poor, but they would throw their daily garbage into the dustbin. The government had a special cleaning department. Every city had a department called "sanitation station", which hired enough workers (we called sanitation workers) to clean up the urban garbage. The garbage in the dustbin would be removed every day. The streets are cleaned every day. This department has existed since the 1950s. I grew up in a small county town. I am now 65 years old. In my memory, the earliest people who got up every morning in childhood were sanitation workers. When we were still asleep, they had already started their day's work.
@Yadan Ma
Before China became cleaner, public health campaigns were primarily organized by the government and involved widespread public participation. As early as the 1950s, China initiated extensive environmental cleaning campaigns from the perspective of "disease prevention." However, because these campaigns relied on administrative power, they were difficult to sustain. Today, China's environmental cleanliness is more dependent on the public's own awareness of hygiene.
Chinese government was very smart to lix the hygiene condition with patriotism since 1952, through a continuous “Patriotic Health Campaign” (愛國衛(wèi)生運動) for decades. If Chinese cities are quite clean today, it was only achieved through decades of hard efforts by the whole society.
中國政府很聰明,從1952年開始,通過持續(xù)數(shù)十年的“愛國衛(wèi)生運動”,將衛(wèi)生狀況與愛國主義聯(lián)系起來。如果說今天中國的城市相當干凈,那是全社會幾十年努力的結(jié)果。 原創(chuàng)翻譯:龍騰網(wǎng) http://www.nxnpts.cn 轉(zhuǎn)載請注明出處
@Kris Wang
If India replaced all its politicians' posters with posters like 'Take care of the environment, don't litter, don't spit', and changed its election funds to buy garbage cans and build public toilets, it would indeed look like China in 1990.
@Robert Wu
Thank you very much for updating my knowledge of public sanitation in China. When I travelled in China in 1990s, public toilets were atrocious and scary. Women visitors would empty themselves in their hotel rooms before going out and hoped they would not need to use toilets while they were out and about. It is gratifying to read that China’s sanitation consciousness is elevated and people in general are reluctant to litter. It is a large country with many, many people. It takes herculean effort to change people’s habit and apparently China is achieving it. Congratulations to China.
@Huang Kun
No wonder large number of Indians want to get out of India and migrate to the West.
難怪大量印度人想離開印度移民到西方。
@Prateeksha Acharya
You literally handpicked the worst looking ones from the internet. The conditions of public toilets jas been increasing a lot in india
您實際上是從互聯(lián)網(wǎng)上精心挑選了看起來最差的。印度公共廁所的條件大幅改善
@Aravind
This is the average indian public restroom indeed. Having these toilets are bad. Ignoring our flaws is worse
這確實是普通的印度公共衛(wèi)生間。有這些廁所是很糟糕的。忽視我們的缺點更糟糕
@Tungku Lee
I am sorry.. I witnessed a few time in my country that people from China threw food wrappings, bottles, cigarettes, cigarettes packages and disposal drinking cups from bubble teas on the floor without second thought.
I am not saying that all Chinese are like that but there are some who disregard the social norms…
@Nari Kyo
Small countries like Singapore are easy to manage. Imagine the size of China and look at its police density - almost the lowest in the world - and you will know that people rely almost entirely on self-awareness for self-restraint.
As a police officer, I can't imagine how I would fine citizens for chewing gum. It’s impossible.
@Tungku Lee
Actually we don’t. That’s the secret. It’s ok to chew gums in Singapore but it is illegal to sell gums in Singapore.
事實上我們沒有。這就是秘密。在新加坡嚼口香糖是可以的,但在新加坡出售口香糖是違法的。
@Nari Kyo
So that’s the trick. I see.
這就是竅門。我明白了。
@Henry Chiu
If China did that, then the west would accuse China of no human right.
如果中國這樣做,西方就會指責中國沒有人權。
@Tungku Lee
Bit I am going to spend 2 months in China for traveling and I shall see first hand on how clean is China. I do learn that China first tier cities are very clean.
我將在中國旅行兩個月,我將親眼目睹中國有多干凈。我確實了解到中國一線城市非常干凈。
@Nari Kyo
I'm looking forward to you making a comparison. Good luck on your journey.
我期待您的比較。祝你好運。
@Ashby Lisbon
You sure they were from China and not older senior Chinese immigrants?
你確定他們來自中國而不是年長的中國老年移民嗎?
@Tungku Lee
Yes. The reason I witnessed all these is just because I do my round of picking up rubbish around the neighborhood. For the almost passed one year, I have to stop people from dumping and most of the time, they are old Chinese people and children under their care. But there are some Indian migrants workers who also throwing rubbish everywhere.
As for Singaporeans, I won’t lie. Some did throw their rubbish very carelessly.
@Shu Liu
There indeed are that kind of people. And I guess those people you see must be elder generations.
確實有這樣的人。我猜你看到的這些人一定是老一輩了。
@Yadan Ma Yes, especially among the elderly. Last July, I visited a museum in Shandong Province and witnessed a group of elderly people (mainly women). They crossed the caution lines, hugged the sculptures for photos, or even stepped onto ancient boats displayed as artifacts and took pictures while sitting on them. Their behavior angered other visitors, who criticized them and called security and museum staff. In the end, the group had to leave the museum. It was really embarrassing.
@Shu Liu
Remind me of this news, this old grandma is really terrifying and scary. Finally they even couldn’t get check in at any hotel at that time.
讓我想起這個新聞,這個老奶奶真是太可怕了,太可怕了。最后他們當時甚至無法在任何酒店辦理入住。
@Tungku Lee
Most are elder generation help taking care of their grand children(cannot be too sure) and som3 children under their care…
大多數(shù)是老一輩幫忙照顧他們的孫子(不能太確定)和他們照顧的一些孩子......
@Tungku Lee
They are not taught about the behavior when they were young. We the younger people should help pick them up and educate them. Happened everywhere。
他們年輕時沒有被教導過這種行為。我們年輕人應該幫助接他們、教育他們。到處都發(fā)生過
@Cheong Tee
I visited an old “hutong" area in Beijing in 2019, and saw that the public washroom was absolutely filthy and stinky, like how nothing was improved since 1960s. Hope that things are better now, even in an old district.
@Yadan MaThe renovation of old urban communities in China has been ongoing for 20 years. Before the renovation, most toilets were like the ones you described. After the renovation, almost 100% of the toilets are like the ones shown in the photos I provided. Given that the renovation of old urban areas is a massive, long-term project, it's very likely that some old communities in Beijing had not yet been renovated during your visit.
By golly Mr Ma..China hit the nail on its head.. EDUCATE & FACILITATE.. CHINA IS WHOLLY PRACTICAL. the Chinese mental is economics and marrying this with C** engineer mental created blue skies and a great big beautiful HOME 加油
馬先生寫的。中國一針見血。教育和促進。中國是完全務實的。中國人的精神就是經(jīng)濟,將其與中G工程師的精神結(jié)合起來,創(chuàng)造了藍天和偉大而美麗的家園加油
@Ian Chen
Regarding the public toilets, I’m sure they have come a long way already, however, I think they can still be improved, although it could be more about raising the public or civic awareness of more people than improving the infrastructure themselves.
This is from my personal experience which may not be for true everyone, I’ve found that except for the toilets in the really high end luxury malls that have dedicated personnel that keep it clean constantly, many other ones although modern often smell quite bad, and are some what dirty, many people also smoke in them, this is usually even more the case in the smaller cities.
@Lù Shèng An
I wonder whether cheap 5G sensors and robots in the future can make toilet maintenance even easier.
我想知道未來廉價的5G傳感器和機器人是否可以讓廁所維護變得更加容易。
@Deepak Yadav
In India the doing Corruption and Crimes by the Politicians is treated as clean. In China doing Crimes and Corruption is treated as unclean. In China the State provides Citizens Healthcare, Education and lots of Incentives to Manufacturing Sectors. In India The Government provides nothing except taxes no Security, no Healthcare, no Education and no Incentives to Manufacturing Sectors. India is far-far away from China in everything but located very close Geographically and in Population stats mostly.
@Srinivas Varanasi
This is indeed a great story. I would love to know what made this possible in terms of public awareness, government initiatives etc
這確實是一個很棒的故事。我很想知道是什么讓這一切在公眾意識、政府舉措等方面成為可能
@Desmond Tao
I was in a small tier 2 city in China earlier this year, it's cleaner than London! Was shocked how much litter was blowing around the streets in London and there were litter bins all down the street. It boils down to lack of civic duty and pride in your surroundings.
@Kris Wang
I remember when I was a child, using public toilet costs 0.5 yuan a time, the doorman gave a pack of napkins, so the public toilet was a maggot heaven. This kind of consumption was necessary for privacy-conscious women, men rarely paid for it, and their toilets were in alleys or behind trees. Of course, everyone knows, we should pay attention to public hygiene, as long as compliance with this code is free, which is why public toilets in China are now free.They are not very comfortable to use (you need to crouch down) and lack toilet paper. But the cost of cleaning and maintenance is very low, but the purpose of keeping the city clean has been achieved
@PedroWhat I really dislike is the still very widespread smoking in public toilets in China, although there are “no smoking” signs all over the place. At many places, even in newly built shopping malls, you're still not allowed to flush the used toilet paper to prevent clogging. There is a bin for it in the corner, with appropriate smell level. But it is gradually getting better every year and toilets in highly frequented tourist spots like the Shanghai Pearl Tower are spotless.
@Arundhati Shetty
So habits changed by consistently repeating action people must take ..I think India should adopt it as well instead of just hoardings of CLean India /Swach bharat actual actions like put waste in Dust bin, Do not Piss in Public places , clean public toilet after use should be put on hoardings as well as advt in youtube videos
I have travelled to China since the late 80s, and have seen the transformation. One of the biggest improvement is in the public toilets. My standing joke in those early days was that you do not have to ask for directions to a public toilet, just follow your nose.
我從八十年代末開始就去過中國,親眼目睹了中國的轉(zhuǎn)變。最大的改進之一是公共廁所。我早年常說的笑話是,你不必問去公共廁所的路,只要跟著你的鼻子走就行了。
原創(chuàng)翻譯:龍騰網(wǎng) http://www.nxnpts.cn 轉(zhuǎn)載請注明出處
So india is where china was at in 1990
所以印度就是1990年中國的處境
No, China in 1990 wasn't as dirty as India is now. In 1990, the Chinese people's public health awareness was poor, but they would throw their daily garbage into the dustbin. The government had a special cleaning department. Every city had a department called "sanitation station", which hired enough workers (we called sanitation workers) to clean up the urban garbage. The garbage in the dustbin would be removed every day. The streets are cleaned every day. This department has existed since the 1950s. I grew up in a small county town. I am now 65 years old. In my memory, the earliest people who got up every morning in childhood were sanitation workers. When we were still asleep, they had already started their day's work.
不,1990年的中國并不像現(xiàn)在的印度那么骯臟。 1990年,中國人的公共衛(wèi)生意識很差,但他們會把日常垃圾扔進垃圾箱。政府有一個專門的清潔部門。每個城市都有一個叫“環(huán)衛(wèi)站”的部門,雇傭足夠的工人(我們叫環(huán)衛(wèi)工人)來清理城市垃圾。垃圾箱里的垃圾每天都會被清除。街道每天都有人打掃。該部門自 20 世紀 50 年代以來就已存在。我在一個小縣城長大。我現(xiàn)在65歲了。在我的記憶中,小時候每天早上起得最早的人就是環(huán)衛(wèi)工人。當我們還在睡覺時,他們已經(jīng)開始了一天的工作。
原創(chuàng)翻譯:龍騰網(wǎng) http://www.nxnpts.cn 轉(zhuǎn)載請注明出處
Before China became cleaner, public health campaigns were primarily organized by the government and involved widespread public participation. As early as the 1950s, China initiated extensive environmental cleaning campaigns from the perspective of "disease prevention." However, because these campaigns relied on administrative power, they were difficult to sustain. Today, China's environmental cleanliness is more dependent on the public's own awareness of hygiene.
在中國清潔化之前,公共衛(wèi)生運動主要由政府組織、公眾廣泛參與。早在20世紀50年代,中國就從“預防疾病”的角度開展了廣泛的環(huán)境清理活動。然而,由于這些運動依賴于行政權力,因此難以持續(xù)。如今,中國的環(huán)境清潔更多地取決于公眾自身的衛(wèi)生意識。
Chinese government was very smart to lix the hygiene condition with patriotism since 1952, through a continuous “Patriotic Health Campaign” (愛國衛(wèi)生運動) for decades. If Chinese cities are quite clean today, it was only achieved through decades of hard efforts by the whole society.
中國政府很聰明,從1952年開始,通過持續(xù)數(shù)十年的“愛國衛(wèi)生運動”,將衛(wèi)生狀況與愛國主義聯(lián)系起來。如果說今天中國的城市相當干凈,那是全社會幾十年努力的結(jié)果。
原創(chuàng)翻譯:龍騰網(wǎng) http://www.nxnpts.cn 轉(zhuǎn)載請注明出處
If India replaced all its politicians' posters with posters like 'Take care of the environment, don't litter, don't spit', and changed its election funds to buy garbage cans and build public toilets, it would indeed look like China in 1990.
如果印度把政客的海報全部換成“愛護環(huán)境、不亂扔垃圾、不隨地吐痰”等標語,把選舉經(jīng)費改為購買垃圾桶、修建公廁,確實會像1990年的中國一樣。
Thank you very much for updating my knowledge of public sanitation in China. When I travelled in China in 1990s, public toilets were atrocious and scary. Women visitors would empty themselves in their hotel rooms before going out and hoped they would not need to use toilets while they were out and about. It is gratifying to read that China’s sanitation consciousness is elevated and people in general are reluctant to litter. It is a large country with many, many people. It takes herculean effort to change people’s habit and apparently China is achieving it. Congratulations to China.
非常感謝您更新了我對中國公共衛(wèi)生的知識。 20世紀90年代我在中國旅行時,公共廁所非常糟糕和可怕。女性游客出門前會在酒店房間里排空身體,希望外出時不需要使用廁所。令人欣慰的是,中國的衛(wèi)生意識不斷提高,人們普遍不愿亂扔垃圾。這是一個大國,人口眾多。改變?nèi)藗兊牧晳T需要付出巨大的努力,顯然中國正在實現(xiàn)這一目標。恭喜中國。
No wonder large number of Indians want to get out of India and migrate to the West.
難怪大量印度人想離開印度移民到西方。
You literally handpicked the worst looking ones from the internet. The conditions of public toilets jas been increasing a lot in india
您實際上是從互聯(lián)網(wǎng)上精心挑選了看起來最差的。印度公共廁所的條件大幅改善
This is the average indian public restroom indeed. Having these toilets are bad. Ignoring our flaws is worse
這確實是普通的印度公共衛(wèi)生間。有這些廁所是很糟糕的。忽視我們的缺點更糟糕
I am sorry.. I witnessed a few time in my country that people from China threw food wrappings, bottles, cigarettes, cigarettes packages and disposal drinking cups from bubble teas on the floor without second thought.
I am not saying that all Chinese are like that but there are some who disregard the social norms…
我很抱歉..我在我的國家見過幾次,來自中國的人們不假思索地將食品包裝紙、瓶子、香煙、香煙包裝和珍珠奶茶的一次性飲料杯扔在地板上。
我并不是說所有中國人都是這樣,但有些人無視社會規(guī)范……
Small countries like Singapore are easy to manage. Imagine the size of China and look at its police density - almost the lowest in the world - and you will know that people rely almost entirely on self-awareness for self-restraint.
As a police officer, I can't imagine how I would fine citizens for chewing gum. It’s impossible.
像新加坡這樣的小國家很容易管理。想象一下中國的面積,看看它的警察密度——幾乎是世界上最低的——你就會知道,人們幾乎完全依靠自我意識來自我約束。
作為一名警察,我無法想象我會如何對嚼口香糖的公民進行罰款。不可能。
Actually we don’t. That’s the secret. It’s ok to chew gums in Singapore but it is illegal to sell gums in Singapore.
事實上我們沒有。這就是秘密。在新加坡嚼口香糖是可以的,但在新加坡出售口香糖是違法的。
So that’s the trick. I see.
這就是竅門。我明白了。
If China did that, then the west would accuse China of no human right.
如果中國這樣做,西方就會指責中國沒有人權。
Bit I am going to spend 2 months in China for traveling and I shall see first hand on how clean is China. I do learn that China first tier cities are very clean.
我將在中國旅行兩個月,我將親眼目睹中國有多干凈。我確實了解到中國一線城市非常干凈。
I'm looking forward to you making a comparison. Good luck on your journey.
我期待您的比較。祝你好運。
You sure they were from China and not older senior Chinese immigrants?
你確定他們來自中國而不是年長的中國老年移民嗎?
Yes. The reason I witnessed all these is just because I do my round of picking up rubbish around the neighborhood. For the almost passed one year, I have to stop people from dumping and most of the time, they are old Chinese people and children under their care. But there are some Indian migrants workers who also throwing rubbish everywhere.
As for Singaporeans, I won’t lie. Some did throw their rubbish very carelessly.
是的。我之所以目睹這一切,只是因為我在附近撿垃圾。快一年了,我必須阻止人們傾倒垃圾,大多數(shù)時候,他們是中國的老人和他們照顧的孩子。但也有一些印度民工也隨地亂扔垃圾。
至于新加坡人,我不會撒謊。有些人確實很不小心地扔垃圾。
There indeed are that kind of people. And I guess those people you see must be elder generations.
確實有這樣的人。我猜你看到的這些人一定是老一輩了。
是的,尤其是老年人。去年7月,我參觀了山東省的一家博物館,親眼目睹了一群老人(主要是婦女)。他們越過警戒線,擁抱雕塑拍照,甚至登上作為文物展示的古船,坐在船上拍照。他們的行為激怒了其他游客,他們批評了他們,并打電話給保安和博物館工作人員。最后,一行人不得不離開博物館。實在是太尷尬了。
Remind me of this news, this old grandma is really terrifying and scary. Finally they even couldn’t get check in at any hotel at that time.
讓我想起這個新聞,這個老奶奶真是太可怕了,太可怕了。最后他們當時甚至無法在任何酒店辦理入住。
Most are elder generation help taking care of their grand children(cannot be too sure) and som3 children under their care…
大多數(shù)是老一輩幫忙照顧他們的孫子(不能太確定)和他們照顧的一些孩子......
They are not taught about the behavior when they were young. We the younger people should help pick them up and educate them. Happened everywhere。
他們年輕時沒有被教導過這種行為。我們年輕人應該幫助接他們、教育他們。到處都發(fā)生過
I visited an old “hutong" area in Beijing in 2019, and saw that the public washroom was absolutely filthy and stinky, like how nothing was improved since 1960s. Hope that things are better now, even in an old district.
2019年,我參觀了北京的一個老“胡同”地區(qū),看到公共廁所又臟又臭,就像20世紀60年代以來沒有任何改善一樣。希望現(xiàn)在情況有所好轉(zhuǎn),即使是在老城區(qū)。
中國的城市老舊小區(qū)改造已經(jīng)持續(xù)了20年。改造前,大部分廁所都是像你描述的那樣。改造后,幾乎100%的廁所都是我提供的照片中的樣子。由于舊城區(qū)改造是一項浩大、長期的工程,在您訪問期間,北京的一些老舊小區(qū)很可能還沒有得到改造。
By golly Mr Ma..China hit the nail on its head.. EDUCATE & FACILITATE.. CHINA IS WHOLLY PRACTICAL. the Chinese mental is economics and marrying this with C** engineer mental created blue skies and a great big beautiful HOME 加油
馬先生寫的。中國一針見血。教育和促進。中國是完全務實的。中國人的精神就是經(jīng)濟,將其與中G工程師的精神結(jié)合起來,創(chuàng)造了藍天和偉大而美麗的家園加油
Regarding the public toilets, I’m sure they have come a long way already, however, I think they can still be improved, although it could be more about raising the public or civic awareness of more people than improving the infrastructure themselves.
This is from my personal experience which may not be for true everyone, I’ve found that except for the toilets in the really high end luxury malls that have dedicated personnel that keep it clean constantly, many other ones although modern often smell quite bad, and are some what dirty, many people also smoke in them, this is usually even more the case in the smaller cities.
關于公共廁所,我確信它們已經(jīng)取得了很大的進步,但是,我認為它們?nèi)匀豢梢愿倪M,盡管這可能更多的是為了提高公眾或更多人的公民意識,而不是改善基礎設施本身。
這是我個人的經(jīng)歷,可能并不適合所有人,我發(fā)現(xiàn)除了真正高端豪華商場的廁所有專門的人員經(jīng)常保持清潔外,很多其他現(xiàn)代的廁所雖然經(jīng)常聞起來很臭,而且有些骯臟,很多人還在里面抽煙,在小城市更是如此。
I wonder whether cheap 5G sensors and robots in the future can make toilet maintenance even easier.
我想知道未來廉價的5G傳感器和機器人是否可以讓廁所維護變得更加容易。
In India the doing Corruption and Crimes by the Politicians is treated as clean. In China doing Crimes and Corruption is treated as unclean. In China the State provides Citizens Healthcare, Education and lots of Incentives to Manufacturing Sectors. In India The Government provides nothing except taxes no Security, no Healthcare, no Education and no Incentives to Manufacturing Sectors. India is far-far away from China in everything but located very close Geographically and in Population stats mostly.
在印度,政客的腐敗和犯罪行為被視為干凈。在中國,犯罪和腐敗被視為不潔行為。在中國,國家為公民提供醫(yī)療保健、教育以及對制造業(yè)的大量激勵措施。在印度,政府除了稅收之外什么也不提供,沒有安全,沒有醫(yī)療保健,沒有教育,也沒有對制造業(yè)的激勵措施。印度在各方面都與中國相距甚遠,但在地理和人口統(tǒng)計方面卻非常接近。
原創(chuàng)翻譯:龍騰網(wǎng) http://www.nxnpts.cn 轉(zhuǎn)載請注明出處
This is indeed a great story. I would love to know what made this possible in terms of public awareness, government initiatives etc
這確實是一個很棒的故事。我很想知道是什么讓這一切在公眾意識、政府舉措等方面成為可能
I was in a small tier 2 city in China earlier this year, it's cleaner than London! Was shocked how much litter was blowing around the streets in London and there were litter bins all down the street. It boils down to lack of civic duty and pride in your surroundings.
今年早些時候我去過中國的一個二線小城市,那里比倫敦還干凈!令人震驚的是,倫敦街道上到處都是垃圾,街道上到處都是垃圾箱。歸根結(jié)底是缺乏公民義務和對周圍環(huán)境的自豪感。
I remember when I was a child, using public toilet costs 0.5 yuan a time, the doorman gave a pack of napkins, so the public toilet was a maggot heaven. This kind of consumption was necessary for privacy-conscious women, men rarely paid for it, and their toilets were in alleys or behind trees. Of course, everyone knows, we should pay attention to public hygiene, as long as compliance with this code is free, which is why public toilets in China are now free.They are not very comfortable to use (you need to crouch down) and lack toilet paper. But the cost of cleaning and maintenance is very low, but the purpose of keeping the city clean has been achieved
記得小時候,使用公廁要0.5元一次,門童還送一包餐巾紙,所以公廁簡直就是蛆蟲的天堂。這種消費對于注重隱私的女性來說是必要的,男性很少為此付費,而且他們的廁所在小巷或樹后。當然,大家都知道,我們要注意公共衛(wèi)生,只要遵守這個規(guī)范就是免費的,這就是為什么現(xiàn)在中國的公廁都是免費的。用起來不太舒服(需要蹲著)而且缺乏衛(wèi)生紙。但清潔維護成本很低,卻達到了保持城市清潔的目的
我真正不喜歡的是,盡管到處都有“禁止吸煙”的標志,但中國的公共廁所里吸煙現(xiàn)象仍然很普遍。在很多地方,甚至在新建的購物中心,仍然不允許用過的衛(wèi)生紙沖掉,以防止堵塞。角落里有一個垃圾箱,氣味水平適當。但情況每年都在逐漸好轉(zhuǎn),上海明珠塔等熱門旅游景點的廁所一塵不染。
原創(chuàng)翻譯:龍騰網(wǎng) http://www.nxnpts.cn 轉(zhuǎn)載請注明出處
So habits changed by consistently repeating action people must take ..I think India should adopt it as well instead of just hoardings of CLean India /Swach bharat actual actions like put waste in Dust bin, Do not Piss in Public places , clean public toilet after use should be put on hoardings as well as advt in youtube videos
因此,通過不斷勸導和教育的行動來改變習慣。我認為印度也應該采用它,而不僅僅是靠圍板清潔印度,需要實際行動,例如將廢物放入垃圾桶,不要在公共場所小便,事后清潔公共廁所應在圍板和在YouTube視頻中播放公益廣告