Pod Save the World - Dissident at the Doorstep Episode 1: Batman Gets Punched
Episode Date: January 13, 2024It’s 2011. Hollywood A-lister Christian Bale is in China and gets punched in the face by security guards for trying to visit Chen Guangcheng, a local human rights activist under house arrest. It’s... all captured by a CNN crew and broadcast across the world. A few months later Guangcheng would escape to the United States. But after you arrive in America as a hero, what happens next?
Transcript
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They're already there way.
Oh, well, okay.
Well, that's easy.
You're a genius.
Thank you.
You're fantastic.
Thank you.
Hello.
Hello.
Hi, Stan here.
How are you going?
Hi, Stan.
This is Colin.
Hi, Colin.
And Allison from Brooklyn.
Hi.
Hi, Stan.
Hey, how are you going?
I'm Alison Klayman.
That's my husband, Colin Jones.
Recently, we called up Stan Grant, one of Australia's most
respected and awarded journalists.
We wanted to talk to him about an unusual phone call he got back in December 2011.
So then tell us about the Hollywood star.
As a CNN correspondent in Beijing, Stan got a lot of calls, but not from celebrities.
That's why this particular request was so surprising.
Christian Bale, the world would know as Batman.
He got in contact with us and called our business.
euro and said, look, I've seen your story on Cheng Guangcheng, and I'd like to try to get to meet the man.
Christian was in China for the premiere of a new film, and he was asking Stan to take him to a tiny village in
Shandong province to meet a blind human rights activist named Cheng Guangcheng.
And we said, well, if you've seen the story, you know how difficult that's going to be,
nigh on impossible.
The man Christian wanted to see
had grown up in a poor farming village.
It wasn't until he was a teenager
that Cheng Guangchung had learned to read braille.
But almost as soon as he did, he started teaching
himself law. Then he started challenging
local officials, on behalf of the rural
poor and the disabled. Sometimes
he even managed to win.
Guangcheng's biggest case
involved trying to stop officials in his home county
from carrying out a brutal campaign of
forced abortions and sterilizations
under China's one-child policy.
That got him arrested.
He spent years in jail,
and after he was released,
Guangcheng was put right back under house arrest
in the same village where he had grown up,
Dong Shurku.
Guards were stationed outside his home 24-7,
making sure that Guangchung couldn't leave
and other people couldn't get to him.
So Stan told Christian to keep his expectations low.
And I said, you know, Christian,
we're really not going to get to Chang Guangcheng,
and he said, well, no, I think we should try.
And that then began a chain of events.
It started to resemble something out of a Hollywood movie.
The first thing Stan and CNN needed to figure out
was how to get Christian out of Beijing.
As one of the most famous actors in the world
on a press circuit for a new film,
the Chinese government was keeping a close eye on him.
They made their plans via email.
Christian used a secret account and a fake name.
Stan and his crew decided they would pick Christian up
in the middle of the night.
At three in the morning,
they drove their van into the bowels of his hotel parking garage.
As we drove in, we opened the side door of the van,
and this hooded figure who was standing in the darkness
raced across the car park into the back of the van, and we took off.
Stan and Christian and the CNN crew made the eight-hour drive from Beijing to Dong Shagu.
As the sun rose, they watched as the glass towers of the city
gave way to a parched rural expanse.
Finally, their van arrived at the village entrance.
A single lane paved road flanked by bare trees.
Patches of snow were on the ground.
They got out of the van and were immediately stopped by.
A big hulking figure.
He was an enormous character.
And he was wearing one of those old green army great coats
coats and one of those army hats with the red star
and the furry flaps tied up on the side.
and he came toward us
and with his other security by his side.
They could have been playing closed police.
They might have just been local guys
hired to do exactly what they were doing now.
Whoever they were, they were not letting Stan and Christian into the village.
Why can I not go visit this man?
Hollywood actor Christian Bale is used to action,
but this is no movie set.
This is from the roughly two and a half minute story
that CNN broadcast later that day.
I turned around at one point while I was trying to fend off one of the security people
to see Christian dodging a hail of blows but with his camera out and filming it at the same time.
As we leave, the guards give chase in their car.
They're still right on our tail.
We got back into the car, pursued through the streets.
There were several cars pursuing us and others at other.
roadblocks trying to intersect us, and we were going at great speed down tiny laneways and
dirt roads trying to find a way back and get out of the city, which we did ultimately manage to do.
Christian Bale says this is not what he'd hoped for.
What I really wanted to do was shake the man's hand and say thank you and tell him what an
inspiration he is.
Christian did not get to meet Wang Chung that day, but his attempted visit became a huge international
story. You can only imagine what Batman confronting Chinese security to try to get to see a blind
Chinese activist would do. It just lit everything up. Catching all this on the news was pretty surreal.
I couldn't quite get my head around the fact that a Hollywood A-lister had run off from his
press circuit to go get hit in the face. Probably inevitably, a lot of the coverage focused on Christian.
It was almost like he was both the hero and the victim in the story.
The headline I still remember was,
Batman, Star Punched.
But of course, that's not really how Christian wanted the story to play.
Guangcheng was the hero, and Christian wanted the world to know about him.
As it so happened, the world was about to find out.
Only a few months after Christian Bale tried to visit,
Guangcheng escaped house arrest.
Soon he found himself at the center of a diplomatic crisis
between the world's two superpowers.
And after a series of events that made the Bail episode seem trivial by comparison,
Guangcheng made it to the United States.
Here, he received a hero's welcome.
A moment of jubilation and liberation
for the blind human rights activist Chen Guangcheng.
A New York moment, too,
with flashboards and well-wishers
and their whole-hearted support.
But after you arrive in America as a hero,
what happens to you next?
He was becoming a political football.
Washington kept coming out of him.
Many Chinese people who have to,
escape China feel it's really difficult to have a new life in a totally different country.
He was frequently changing his mind. He was often manipulated.
He felt that he was being controlled by the people who were actually some of his best friends.
Both sides were just hearing what they wanted to hear. No, he thinks for himself.
From crooked media, this is Dissident at the Doorstep.
Back in 2011, we were paying attention to the story, not just because of the spectacle.
of it all. Allie and I were especially interested because we had been living in China,
working as journalist, and had been making a documentary film about another Chinese activist
named Ai Wei Wei. Wei was an internationally famous contemporary artist.
That same year that Christian tried to visit Guangcheng, Wei Wei also made headlines around the
world when he was arrested by Chinese authorities and held for 81 days.
It was really scary when Wei Wei disappeared. No one was sure if we'd ever see him again.
eventually he was released,
but the government wouldn't let him leave China for several years.
I remember thinking at the time
that if that could happen to someone as well-known and connected as Ai Wei Wei,
what hope did someone like Guangcheng have?
Of course, I was totally wrong.
Within what seemed like the blink of an eye,
Guangcheng was here in New York,
living about 100 blocks south of the apartment that Ali and I ended up in
after leaving Beijing.
During that first summer that he and his family were here,
Guangchung might have been the most famous human,
rights figure in the world. Everyone wanted a piece. Richard Gere and George Soros were reaching out for meetings.
Members of Congress were clamoring for him to come testify in D.C., and he was getting invited to all kinds of
human rights gala's and society functions. We first met Guangcheng at one of these. A black-tie gala
Konday-Nast traveler held at Lincoln Center. That was probably the most glittery event I've been to in the city.
Susan Sarandon and Michael Bloomberg were there. I remember standing at the urinal, and then realizing
that the guy next to me was Sir Richard Brandt.
Branson. Branson was one of the 12 visionaries being honored that night by Condé Nass Traveler
for being a global citizen who was changing our world. Here he is on the red carpet.
It's the one award you feel really good about receiving because Condonass is a well-respected magazine.
Hillary Clinton and Susan Sarandon also received awards. On the red carpet, Branson and Olivia
Wilde, another honoree posed for pictures.
I just can't wait ahead. Olivia is Richie.
Olivia.
Olivia.
I just can't wait to meet all of these people tonight
because these are the people who are changing the world.
Ai Wei Wei had also been named a Kandai Nass visionary,
which is why we got an invite.
But Wei Wei couldn't be there.
He was still not allowed to leave China.
So instead, Guangcheng had been invited
to accept Weiwei's prize on his behalf.
I met Guangcheng in the lobby,
right before we all funneled into the theater.
He was swarmed by people,
and we only got to talk for a few seconds.
I think I said I admired him greatly,
and probably mentioned knowing I Wei Wei.
When Guangcheng accepted the award on stage,
I remember being struck by how powerful a speaker he was.
It didn't matter that he had spent the previous seven years in detention,
and he was speaking through a translator.
He easily commanded the audience's attention.
Offstage, Guangcheng posed for picture,
with Jeffrey Wright and Nicholas Christoph,
seemingly everyone wanted to shake his hand.
I'm a Tom Wolfe fan,
and there was obviously something radical chic about the evening.
Guangcheng, who only months before
had been under house arrest in rural China,
was now being fetid among the glitterati of New York.
But I figured if this earned a little more attention
for him and his cause, what was the harm?
He'd been fighting for the rule of law in China
and the rights of the rural poor, especially women,
and it made sense to me at the time
that his activism in China
was part of a larger project.
Guangcheng was one of many liberals
around the world trying to write injustices.
After so many months of being a news story
and an honoree,
Guangcheng faded from the public eye.
I figured that he had settled into a quieter life,
as many dissidents do
once they're forced to leave China.
As the years passed,
I really stopped thinking about him much at all.
Soon enough, anyway,
Trump had been elected president
and my attention was swept up
in the waking nightmare
of how the rest of the decade played out.
There was the incessant and vulgar cruelty
of Trump's presidency.
The climate crisis accelerated
and became seemingly irreversible.
The relationship between China and the U.S.,
which had never really been so great,
veered toward open hostility.
And then, as if in slow motion,
we watched as COVID gripped the entire world.
After all this,
I hadn't really thought about Guangcheng for years.
But then in August 2020,
With a presidential election on the horizon,
Guangcheng appeared in the national spotlight once again.
This time, though, it was as an official speaker
at the Republican National Convention,
where he endorsed Donald Trump for re-election.
Greetings.
My name is Chen Guangzhou.
Standing up to tyranny is not easy.
I know.
So, there's President Trump,
but he has showing the card.
to wage that fight.
I was shocked.
I couldn't quite imagine
how Guangcheng had gotten on that stage
or how he'd ended up believing something like this.
It just did not square
with the man we'd met almost a decade earlier.
And then came January 6th.
Guangcheng was in the back of my mind that day.
So, while we were watching footage
of people storming the Capitol,
I had the thought to check his Twitter account.
I'd wanted to see what his take was.
And what I found,
was a series of videos he posted of himself,
at the rally near the White House,
standing amid a crowd
as yellow don't tread on me flags waved overhead.
Stumbling onto these videos,
I was hit again by the sense of Bill Wildermand.
I couldn't quite get my head around how
in the span of a decade,
Guangcheng could go from standing up
against authoritarianism in China
to become just another guy
at the Stop the Steel rally.
I first learned of Guangchang's activism
when I was still a teenager living in China.
I followed,
his work ever since. This is Yang Yang Chang, a research scholar at Yale Law School and a frequent
writer on Chinese politics and U.S.-China relations. She grew up in China and moved to the U.S.
around the same time Colin and I moved to China. Yang Yang is going to be our other co-host for the
series. I came to the U.S. in 2009 for my PhD in physics. After graduation, I stayed here to
continue my physics research. Trump's election and the deteriorating political
situation in China shattered my naive notions of the world and my place in it.
I read in search of answers, but I found fewer writing from my background or perspective.
I felt I had things to say that no one else could speak for me. So I picked up the pen myself.
One thing led to another, and after over a decade of working on the Large Hadron Collider,
I switched disciplines in the middle of the pandemic to the field of China's studies.
During all this time, I have paid attention to Guangcheng's story.
The Batman incident Colin and Ali brought up at the beginning of this episode, however, was news to me.
I think that story slipped my mind when it took place because I had no idea who Christian Baal was at the time.
But I do remember being deeply struck by Guangcheng's courage and conviction.
I read about his triumphant arrival.
to New York, and then watched him endorse Donald Trump at the 2020 Republican National Convention.
Seeing this trajectory felt like the subversion of a fairy tale.
Instead of happily ever after, the story ends in heartbreak and betrayal.
It also encapsulates much of what has happened in my birth country and my adopted home during my lifetime.
I hope that by tracing Guangcheng's life and work,
I can relive the years of reform and regression in China that I witnessed
but was too young to understand.
And to try to untangle some of the troubled ties between the world's two superpowers.
We also have some other big questions.
Starting with, how did this happen?
How did someone who stood for democracy and rule of law in China
end up joining an insurrection, looking to overturn a U.S. election?
Is Guangcheng free?
Is America, the land of the country,
free. And what do you do with someone who you feel has betrayed everything you've idolized them for?
What do you do with their legacy? So much has been said about Guangcheng and assumed about him by
others. But we wanted to get to know the man himself. And to do that, we must try to speak to him
directly. That's after the break. When we started working on this project, we heard that Guangcheng
would receive a major prize from a conservative organization in the spring of 2022.
That would also fall just around the 10-year anniversary of his arrival in the U.S.
It seemed like a great opportunity to connect.
We had no idea if Guangcheng would agree to talk to us,
but we figured we could at least ask in person.
So Colin got in touch with the organization that was giving Guangcheng his prize,
the Bradley Foundation.
Given that we were associated with crooked media, which is run by former Obama staffers,
I wasn't sure what the Bradley people would make of a media request from me.
But after waiting a few days, I got a friendly reply from Bradley's head of comms that all was good.
So, I was headed to Washington, D.C.
The Bradley prizes were held inside the Great Hall of the National Building Museum,
just east of the White House.
The room was enormous, flanked by Corinthian columns, holding up a ceiling that must have been 50 feet high.
Still, it felt packed to me.
I see a lot of blue suits, and as I was saying,
a lot of sort of salmon ties, pastel blue ties.
Very, very DC vibe.
The crowd was mostly older and white, but not exclusively so.
I was eager to see Guangcheng,
to see how much he had changed since I met him 10 years earlier.
But as I scanned the crowd, he was nowhere to be seen.
The Bradley Foundation was not something I was familiar with
before we heard about Guangcheng getting this award.
Turns out, Bradley is over 80 years old.
It's been conservative for all that time.
One of its founders was also a charter member of the John Birch Society.
But it's really only been in the last two decades
that Bradley has emerged as a major force in American politics,
helping to shape the conservative agenda at the national level.
Bradley has hundreds of millions of dollars in its endowment,
and it's lately distributed them to an array of causes.
That includes local opera companies, but also ending affirmative action, contesting climate science, union busting and so-called election security.
The Bradley Prize, which Guangchung would be receiving, along with a $250,000 stipend, is part of this larger project.
Past winners include Jeb Bush, Fox News's Roger Ailes, and Charles Murray, author of The Bell Curve.
For Guangchung to win a Bradley Prize, put him among a noted conservative.
cohort. I took my seat as the event got underway.
Richard Graber, Bradley's president and CEO, gave an opening address with a slightly menacing edge.
Here at home, the battle for freedom is not fought over land, but over ideals. The attacks are not
from a foreign enemy, but from within. After Richard, the economist Glenn Lowry, who was one of
Guangchung's fellow Bradley Prize recipients that year, gave a speech decrying the post-BLM
discourse on racism in America.
The cultural barons and elites of America who run the human resource departments of corporate
America, the universities, the movie studios.
These powerful people have bought into the woke anti-racism sensibility, hook, line, and sinker.
Then came Guangcheng.
A short video introduction played him onto the stage.
Chen Guan Cheng was born in a village in eastern China.
When only an infant, he was struck by a Syrian.
fever so serious that it left him blind.
Guangchung's hair had gone salt and pepper since I'd last seen him at the Kandanaas Gala,
but he looked elated.
After 10 years living in the United States,
he was able to give his speech in English,
reading off braille notes he kept in front of him.
On May 19, 2012,
almost 10 years ago,
my family and I arrived in America.
After a bit more self-introduction,
Guangcheng moved on to his main subject, the Chinese Communist Party.
The ultimate objectives of the CCP are to destroy universal values, civilized culture,
and individual freedoms of body and mind.
The CCP wants to tear down the vast free market economy.
its social ethics
and its veneration
of a holy spirit.
One reason I had wanted to attend the Bradley Prizes
was because it offered a chance
to see Guangcheng in front of a conservative audience.
I'd wanted to see how well he had fit in.
And with these comments about the free market
and the Holy Spirit, it certainly sounded as if he did.
But then Guangzhou also said this.
American holds the hopes and dreams of humanity.
The Constitution and the rule of law guarantee democracy, freedom, human rights, and social justice.
I seriously doubt that in that room full of some of America's most prominent conservatives,
there are many other people who would agree that the U.S. Constitution guarantees social justice.
But to be fair, I wasn't entirely clear what Guangcheng meant by it either.
In any case, it didn't seem to bother the crowd much.
They loved him.
Guangcheng closed by telling us that we should embrace American exceptionalism,
that the United States had to confront the CCP,
and that our country was the best hope the world had.
Together, we will make miracles.
Thank you.
They gave him a standing ovation.
After the speeches and a panel discussion,
a former Navy vocalist in a black sequin dress with a small back tattoo,
closed out the ceremony.
When I listened to the recordings from the Bradley event, this rendition of America the Beautiful stood out.
It reminded me of performances of patriotic songs on Chinese state TV.
The night revolved around this age-old ideal of America and its greatness.
How might a Chinese activist like Guangcheng fit into this narrative?
After the ceremony, Colin brought this up with the Bradley Foundation's CEO.
Richard Graber.
Is he the first Chinese national
to win the Bradley Prize?
Yes, he is.
Yes, he is.
And it's a great story.
You know, at a time when people are questioning
about what's unique and exceptional
about the United States,
he kind of reinforced it tonight in his comments
about what it meant to him to come to this country,
land of hope and opportunity,
just a beacon in the world.
The United States does lead.
should lead and should be proud of its heritage.
What Richard is saying is that Guangcheng story,
or at least the part that the Bradley Foundation prefers to tell,
corroborated Richard's belief in American exceptionalism.
When I spoke with other people there, I heard similar sentiments.
America was right at the forefront of how they had understood Guangcheng's speech.
A woman named Sandy Krimmers, who said she was Guangcheng's friend,
told me every American child needed to hear his message.
That way, they could understand what it was like to fight for freedom rather than have it served up to them on a plate.
Sandy went on to ascribe Guangcheng some impressive powers.
I was most excited by his use of the word Holy Spirit and his speech.
Okay, why?
Because it's, for his culture, there's really no God, right?
Religion is opioid for the masses.
But even Wang Chen, we've talked about this at length.
Even though he's blind, he can sense truth.
He knows he hears it, he can sense it, he's searching for it.
He knows that there's something beyond what we can see because he's blind.
What a difference 10 years makes.
I kept thinking this throughout the night.
At the Connie Nass Traveler event,
Guangcheng was applauded by Obama-era liberals
who wanted to believe that they were doing well by doing good.
Tonight, his message was welcomed by a very different crowd.
I had an idea of what they thought about Guangcheng,
but I was dying to know what he made of the whole thing.
and I still wanted to ask for an interview.
I wasn't quite sure how he'd react to the request,
let alone our whole idea for this podcast.
Finally, I got my chance to find out.
Chen, what's her call in?
Oh, you know?
Chen Yang Yang, gave us to tell him.
I went up to him and introduced myself.
Yang Yang had already messaged him on WhatsApp
that I'd be at the event.
I called him Chen, just as she did in her texts.
That literally means teacher Chen,
but it's more just like a term of respect.
Guangcheng told me that he has been so happy in America the last 10 years,
and that getting this reward was an important indication
that America accepts him and recognizes the work he's done.
After a little more small talk, I made my pitch.
I mentioned that we were coming to another smaller event of his tomorrow,
a 10-year anniversary celebration at Catholic University.
I asked if that might be a good time to interview him for the show.
So we'll next day go to your hordeaux.
Yes, right, right, right.
He said in the United States.
Yeah.
So we're at the time.
We can do a lot of years.
Yeah, right.
Right, right.
You can go ahead.
We can do more than time.
He said yes.
That's next on Dissant at the Doorstep.
Dissident at the Doorstep is an original podcast from Crooked Media.
Our hosts are Alison Clayman, Yang Yang Chung, and me, Colin Jones.
From Crooked Media, our executive producers are Tommy Vitor,
Sarah Geismer, and Katie Long,
with special thanks to Mary Knoff and Alison Falzetta.
Our senior producers are Maria Byrne and Meg Kramer.
Mara Walls is our story editor.
Our producer is Wudan Yan.
Our associate producers are Bowen Wong and Sydney Rap.
Translation by Valerie C.
With additional translation by Yang Yang Chung and Richard Yeh.
Voiceovers by Richard Yeh.
Our fact checker is Tamika Adams.
Sound design and mixing by Hannes Brown.
Original score by Alon Isikoff, and our podcast art is by John Lee.
If you like Dissident at the Doorstep and want ad-free episodes and exclusive content from the show,
join Friends of the Pod, Crooked's new subscription community at crooked.com slash friends.
