Stuff You Should Know - Why is Chinese art being stolen?
Episode Date: March 6, 2025The market for Chinese art used to be very small and is now a billion dollar annual industry. What changed? And how is this all tied to a string of heists? Listen in to find out. See omnystudio.c...om/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh, and there's Chuck, and Jerry's here too, and this is Stuff You Should Know.
And we're going to talk a little bit about Chinese art heists.
So let's get started.
Go.
That's right.
Big thanks to Livia.
She did a banger of an article for us.
But also thanks to you.
Where'd you come up with this idea?
Oh.
Was this a recommendation?
I'm so bad about that.
I don't know.
But we also have to thank a reporter for GQ Magazine named Alex W. Palmer, who in 2018
wrote a pretty, a banger of an article as well about these art heists of
cultural, very specific cultural and art artifacts from China that have been stolen from museums
in the 2010s and basically posed the question, is the Chinese government behind this?
Right.
Are they commissioning people to rob art museums? And I mean, not just like, you know,
some Tinker Town museum on the corner of a neighborhood
that like, I don't know, you know, not a good museum.
You know those museums?
I'm talking like world-class museums,
like the Fountain Blue outside Paris.
Paris, France, that is, not Texas.
Yeah.
So yeah, there's like a, still, that is, not Texas. Yeah. Um, so yeah, there's like a...
Still to this day, people don't know exactly what the deal was,
and it seems like, despite what Palmer, Alex Palmer, was saying,
Palmer basically was like, you know, didn't point the finger directly,
but that was kind of the premise of the article,
that who knows who's behind this,
and it's possible that the government
of China has some hand in it.
But also the Chinese art market, as we'll see,
has blown up so much that it's also entirely possible
that it's just like that makes a lot of sense
for thieves to steal Chinese art.
The thing is, is the string of particular heists
that Alex Palmer talks about that really kind of form
this galaxy of particular heists,
the thieves would go in and steal really specific stuff
that were Chinese antiquities.
A lot of times they'd been looted,
and they would walk right past other things
that were really, really valuable.
And it almost seemed like they had a shopping list looted and they would walk right past other things that were really, really valuable.
And it almost seemed like they had a shopping list of items that were particularly Chinese
that they wanted to steal.
Yeah, I don't think almost seem like it.
That seems like a certainty to me.
It's true.
It is.
You could see that list be like, you know, Imperial Seal, China Dog,
or the waving cat that's fortunate,
and then, you know, eggs, butter, and apples.
Yeah, the Picasso, nah.
Yeah, they just walk right past really expensive stuff.
But yeah, it wasn't because they didn't know
what they were doing, it seems like.
Some of the people who were caught with this
were clearly professional thieves.
Yeah, and some not so great.
But we'll get to that.
We should do a little backstory here to kind of set this all up.
And we are going to go back to about a hundred and close to 110 year period known as the
century of humiliation.
And this is when China was kind of getting just beat up on all fronts back then.
A lot of global powers at the time were kind of coming in and saying, you know, China,
you should just sort of listen to us and do what we say.
Particularly during the Opium Wars from 1841 to 1860, a lot of European countries in the
UK forced China to, you know, to accept treaties they didn't want to accept.
Forced them to accept opium imports.
I think it was 19 different countries opening these treaty ports for imports from those 19 countries
and accept them and basically said you had no choice in the matter. Add to this later that century in the 1890s to 1900s when China battled with Japan, which ended up losing parts of
Manchuria, losing Taiwan, had a lot of control over Korea at the time that was, you know,
they no longer had control over. And this all sort of leads up to the Chinese Communist Party taking power and Chairman Mao Zedong saying in 1949,
we're not going to be subject to insult and humiliation any longer.
That century of humiliation was a dark part of our past and we need to forget about it.
Yeah. So this idea, this concept of the century of humiliation was coined by Mao. And in the 21st century,
the Chinese Communist Party that Mao founded have kind of really kind of used that as a
point of pride and as a point of unity among the country, which is really interesting because
they view it as a really shameful period
of their history and yet they it does generate pride in them and brings them together. And I
think a sense of like we're going to overcome that we're never going to go back to that.
But that's a change from how Chairman Mao approached it. He was like we're never turning
backwards. And in fact, everything that reminds us of the past, we're just going to destroy.
So go into museums, go into libraries, go into, you know, anywhere that, like landmarks, things
that remind us of the past. They call them the four olds that were just meant to be destroyed.
And it was the cultural revolution is what they called it. And that's how it was approached for about 50 years.
And then finally, it kind of turned and then that pride kind of extended to Chinese antiquities.
And in particular, today in China, there's a tremendous amount of – there's a tremendous sense of loss
over some particular items that came from a particular place called the Yuanming
Yu, the Garden of Perfect Brightness, I think is what it's called, but less formally it's called
the Old Summer Palace. It's in Beijing, I believe, and it was magnificent from what I can tell. Yeah, it was, and these aren't the only things, I mean, all Chinese artifacts and
cultural relics were looked at this way, but this was just a pretty notable space
at the time. It was built in 1709 and then for the next century and a half
basically just got bigger and bigger. And it had temples, it had gardens and pools,
and it had a lot of art, all kinds of art.
You name it, they had it.
Some of the most important art of that period of China and preceding it.
During the Second Opium War in 1860, the Europeans were again coming in and kind of doing their
thing against China.
The government of China said, you know what, you have some people here on a negotiating
mission, we're going to capture them, we're going to torture them.
And so British, I think about 5,000 British and French forces took part in what has been
kind of looked back on now as one of the greatest acts of cultural vandalism in modern history.
When they looted and either stole
or just could just outright destroyed or vandalized
everything at the old summer palace essentially.
Yeah, they were apparently already in the process
of looting the palace when they heard about
the torture deaths of that delegation that was trying to broker
peace for the Second Opium War.
And they were like, oh, okay, well, I guess we'll burn the place down too.
And they did so over, I think, two days and nights, but the fire kept going for like three
days.
And rather than rebuild, China decided to preserve the place in ruins.
It's kind of like Hiroshima.
Like they decided to preserve some of the bom. It's kind of like Hiroshima.
Like they decided to preserve some of the bombed out areas.
It's just a reminder.
But rather than a reminder to never use nukes ever again,
this was a reminder to China
of like what outside powers did to China.
Like this is what happened to China in the past
and it's something to use to kind of motivate you
to become the best kind of China there is
that could never let something like that happen again.
Yeah. A lot of this stuff, as you would imagine,
like, a lot of, you know, looted things during wartime
ended up in control of royalty in other countries.
Uh, private collection sometimes,
but a lot of royal palaces in Europe ended up with this stuff.
Queen Victoria even, and this is a great little find from Libya.
Besides art, Queen Victoria apparently also got a Pekingese dog that she named Looty,
as in loot.
Yeah, as in the dog itself was looted.
Yeah, exactly.
And I think it was the first Pekingese in all of England.
I would believe it.
I also read that at the time, the press
reported that the dog had to be taken to a different palace
because it was being ostracized by the other dogs
for its eastern ways, whatever that means.
Well, one of the most prized sort of things at this palace
was this water clock.
And it was, you know, don't think of it as a normal clock because it was, what it really
was was a big fountain and the 12 spouts were carved in the shape of the heads of the animals
of the Chinese zodiac.
And whenever one of the fountains squirted, That was what time it was. So that became a really big symbol of this
whole looting basically. It was in the European wing of the palace, but it went away and part
of, and again, some of the repatriation and these theses, we'll see, was all kinds of stuff,
but it seems like that these fountain heads
hold particular significance.
They're the most symbolic.
So, again, this summer palace stuff,
it was just such a big deal.
Like you said, one of the biggest acts
of cultural vandalism ever.
It's such a symbol in this country of China's shame.
And these things are like the greatest symbol of that larger symbol.
Like these zodiac heads mean everything to China. And to get them back is enormous.
The Communist Party kind of took a shift, especially as China became more and more
economically powerful. And it started to kind of look at getting some of these antiquities
back rather than looking at them as reminders of some terrible backwards past.
They became part of China's heritage, and the Chinese government in particular started
to want to get these back.
And they started a kind of a trend, I think, culturally that was like, hey, start having
pride in these heritage antiques
and let's see if we can get them back into China.
How?
Who cares?
Just go get them.
Yeah.
And one good way to do that is to have a ton of money.
So a lot of billionaires from China obviously stepped forward and showed a lot of interest
in growing their collections or probably even starting and then growing their collections
of Chinese art from history. And some of them even open private museums
to showcase this stuff. They were working with the auction houses very closely. And
like you mentioned earlier, the Chinese art market, it went from really not much of anything
in the year 2000 to about a billion dollars a year in value by 2018.
Wow.
Especially the stuff that was looted by the UK and by Europe and the United States.
And like I said, it's everything you can think of.
It's statues, paintings, carvings, and any kind of art you can imagine. According to UNESCO, close to 1.7 million Chinese objects
are currently held in 47 countries other than China
in 200 different museums.
And those are just museums in just 47 countries.
I saw that the Chinese government itself estimates
that there's about 10 million antiquities spread
throughout the world outside of China.
And China considers basically all of these stolen.
Even if a Westerner came in and paid for them back in 1900,
the Chinese government basically considers whoever sold it to
have been taken advantage of by that Westerner.
So if you have a piece of Chinese art, an antique that's Chinese,
Hang on to it.
you may want to hide it actually because there's a good chance
that China considers that stolen and that that's not rightfully yours.
Maybe there's some law in your country that says it's yours.
China doesn't really recognize that because in a lot of cases,
they weren't sold legitimately
they were stolen they were part of war loot like with the old summer palace and
they have a great point there's a lot of stuff out there not just from China but
from other countries that colonial powers went to and said we really like
this we're going to literally steal it and we're going to display it in our
museums and 150 years from now you're gonna to literally steal it and we're going to display it in our museums.
And 150 years from now, you're gonna ask for it back
and we're gonna say no.
Yeah, but we're gonna ask for our stuff back
and get most of it.
Right, after World War II, right?
Yeah, which we'll talk more about that, I guess,
in a little bit.
But as far as the government's involvement,
officially, there was one group called the China
Poly Group. It's a state-owned industrial company and it was originally part of
the Chinese military and they traded arms but in 2000 they said you know
what let's diversify and let's start a wing of this company called Poly Culture
and let's make it one of our missions to go and get some of these artifacts. They had their own museum to put some of these in in Beijing so that
was one of the big sort of groups trying to head up this effort right along with
the Chinese billionaires and then in 2000 Sotheby's and Christie's auction
houses in Hong Kong auctioned off three of those heads three of those zodiac
fountain heads. Right.
And this was a big deal.
The Chinese Bureau of Cultural Relics was like, you can't sell this stuff.
Like this stuff's really important to us.
It was stolen.
It was looted.
They had no luck.
I think they were trying to get it back for free.
And they eventually said, all right, well, we'll just bid on it and get it the old-fashioned
way, which they did.
Right. Okay. So in 2000, China, as far as like its search for repatriating its art in antiquities,
was so powerless that Christie's and Sotheby's felt comfortable telling the government of China,
sorry, no, we're not going to give these back to you. Less than 10 years later in 2009, when the estate of Yves Saint Laurent went up for auction,
China contacted Christie's and said,
hey, you're about to auction off two more of those zodiac
heads.
If you do it, it's going to be really bad for you.
And China had become such a player in the global art
market that Christie's would they handed him
over they gave them to them and in exchange I think Christie's was the
first auction house to have an independent or license to independently
operate in China within the next year or something like that so that's how
powerful they became and then also is kind of a nod to how valuable Chinese
antiquities became when China started to become interested
in them. There was an auction in 2015, less than two decades after China became interested
in its own heritage. The presale of this 16-inch vase, sorry this is 2010, a 16-inch vase presale
value was $800,000. A half hour after it went under the gavel,
it sold for almost $70 million to a Chinese billionaire.
It's a lot of dough.
It is.
It also just shows how bad they want this stuff back
because there's one other thing, Chuck.
You mentioned the billionaires getting involved.
It's not just one way to show off how much money they have.
It's also to show everybody how patriotic they are
because they're buying these things at astronomical prices to bring back to China
for China.
For sure. So let's take a break and we'll come back and talk about what China was going
to do about this officially right after this. All right, so we're back and wondering what China was going to officially do about this.
In 2009, the government said, you know what, we're all bets are off now.
We're officially going to get a treasure hunting team together and we're going to go send them
around the world and investigate all this art that's in the United States,
that's in Europe, that's in the UK. One of these guys, one of the chief detectives,
his name was Liu Yang, and he went all over the place and he was like, hey, this
was in the summer palace, this was in the summer palace, you guys have our stuff.
And they noticed kind of not too long after that,
a lot of these museums on their websites
are sort of quietly removing mentions and webpages
about these Chinese artifacts on their websites.
Yeah, Liu Yang had quite a reputation.
I read in that Alex Palmer GQ article
that he wrote a comprehensive book
on all the looted antiquities,
at least from the old summer
palace, and could show you printouts of websites from museums around the world where that thing
was being held. So I guess there was also a really tense meeting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
in New York when he showed up too, because he would just walk around and be like, that's China's,
that's China's, that was stolen, that was looted.
And very strangely, that was, what'd you say, 2009?
The very next year, the string of museum heists of Chinese antiquities began.
Yeah, for sure.
I did want to point out though, when I was making the previous point that they took down these websites, but not everybody because the Fontainebleau in France was one of those
that were like, no, you can see right here on our website and we'll tell you like what
this is and when and where it was looted, like what palace was sacked at the time.
So they kind of, you know, held firm in their belief that it was theirs, I guess.
But yeah, these robberies started in 2010. And we don't know exactly how many of these have happened. We're going to talk about quite a few of these. But they were detailed in the GQ article.
And then since 2018, there's also been more. And it seems like there may have been a concerted effort.
And then other people
just started, you know, because they became really valuable and there was a market for
it. People kind of piggybacked on stealing this Chinese art and that the entire thing
may not be some, you know, complete masterminded by one group or government kind of thing.
Yeah, that was my interpretation too.
Yeah. So apparently the whole thing started in Stockholm, Sweden
at the Drottningholm Palace, which is, well,
a Swedish royal palace.
And they have a Chinese pavilion there.
And there's a state-owned collection
of Chinese antiquities.
And on August 6, 2010, it was quite a surprise because there was a group of cars that were set fire to elsewhere in Stockholm.
And as the police ran over there and were very much distracted by these sudden car fires,
because usually that means riot, so I can imagine that put the police on edge. The thieves ran over to the palace
in their Chinese pavilion
and started ransacking some specific items.
I think they smashed three display cases,
and I'm not sure how many items they stole,
but I believe it seemed pretty specific,
and they were out of there in six minutes.
So they were clearly pros. Do you think the Swedish police were like,
guys, we might have our first riot in the country's history?
They're like, I've been waiting for this since I was a boy.
I've been told a car fire means a riot.
And they're like, what is a riot?
And I said, well, Sven will explain it to you.
Right.
Sven's been out of the country before.
Uh, so yeah, smash and grab, six minutes in and out.
They hopped on some
mopeds, they drove those over to a lake and they got on a boat and they got out
of there and this was a very sort of you know clearly professional job, knew
exactly what they were going for and you'll see you know in a lot of these
cases it's pretty similar like they knew where the stuff was, they knew exactly
what they wanted on their little grocery list, like you mentioned.
The next one was a few months after that at the Code Museum in Norway. They busted a glass
ceiling and not in a good way and rappelled down just like a movie.
Yeah, just like Charles Grodin in Miss Piggy.
That's right. And took 56 things from the China collection there.
A lot of this stuff was from a Norwegian army officer named Johan Vilhelm Norman Munt,
who was a big art guy, eventually fought on China's side in the Sino-Japanese wars in 1894
and 1895. But he was big into art, had a lot of this stuff,
including stuff from the Summer Palace,
and that stuff was taken in the first
of the Code Museum's burglaries.
Right, yeah, there was another one,
what, three years later, and this is a big deal.
When a museum gets struck, like, it's not good,
especially if word gets out, because as Livia was pointing out,
museums a lot of times don't announce the fact
that they've been robbed.
Number one, it's very humiliating,
because they're entrusted with protecting these things
that are part of humanity's cultural heritage.
And then secondly, it also practically means
that they need to beef up security,
because now thieves are on alert, like, oh, the Code Museum is really easy to break into,
and they'll become a much bigger target. So for two different break-ins to become public knowledge,
it's just not really a good thing. But it was also very curious that they were both,
they both seemed to be Chinese art heists. Right after that, they suddenly became very interested in negotiating with China to give back some of the antiquities that they held.
And in particular, a Chinese billionaire named Huang Nubo, I'm quite sure it's not exactly how you say his last name, because I said it like I'm from Mississippi or something.
I'm from Mississippi or something. He came to Stockholm, or no, Bergen,
and said, what do you got?
I can give you a donation if you want.
And they showed him some columns from the old summer palace,
and I read that he wept when he saw them.
Yeah, and this was a case where they used
the car fire thing again, which is really surprising
to use sort of the same method.
Hey, it works.
It works in Scandinavia.
I guess so, but it just seems like that would be a tip off.
Maybe like watch the museum because, you know,
Sweden and Norway aren't big riot countries
as far as I know.
I would hope it would be now, you know.
After two?
Yeah.
Yeah, I would think after one.
But anyway, they use the same method.
They ended up the museum code, closed the China collection for renovation.
When? That was in 2013 and it's still closed for renovation. So if that tells you anything, I'm not sure if that thing's opening again anytime soon.
No, I think by renovation, they mean the head curators in the basement clutching the remaining objects to their chest.
Exactly.
Get back. get away.
So the Swedish burglars and both Code burglars were not caught.
But kind of an indicator that really does point a bit of a finger at China, someone
in China, they got a tip the Code Museum did from the publicity the second robbery brought.
They got a tip about one of the objects that was stolen in the first robbery,
that it was in a Shanghai airport on display.
So that does kind of show you that China is very much like, where did you get this? Who cares?
They probably didn't even ask that unless they were congratulating.
And so when Norway found this out, they decided not to do anything about it
because they had just recently ticked China off by giving the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize
to Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, who was imprisoned at the time in China.
So China wasn't happy with Norway, so Norway was like,
you just keep your airport integrity,
we're gonna just not say anything about it.
Exactly.
So that was Scandinavia and England around the same time.
This was April of 2012.
Meanwhile, in England,
the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge was robbed.
There were 18 items taken from here.
Again, very specific Chinese artifacts. These
were valued between 8 and 23 million bucks. The same month in England, the Malcolm McDonald
Gallery at Durham University's Oriental Museum was hit. And they took two items this time,
but they were super valuable. They were $3 million between the two of them. But these guys were caught. They finally nabbed somebody.
The judge said in sentencing that they displayed
crass ineptitude because they stashed the stuff
in a sort of a swamp, a parcel of land that was super swampy,
went back to get it, couldn't find where they put it.
And a witness saw somebody like searching the area
and was really agitated on their cell phone,
seemed suspicious, phoned it in,
and authorities searched the area
and not only found the objects,
but eventually arrested dudes.
They did. They got some people.
From what I was reading up about it,
they were like in their early 20s, not very pro.
I think they were up and coming criminals,
is the impression that I have.
But...
I think crass ineptitude says it all.
It really does.
They also, this is another giveaway,
um, the police found a cell phone in one of their underpants
while they were being arrested.
And they used that cell phone to kind of build a case
that connected that heist to, I think,
the Cambridge heist and a bunch of other ones, actually.
And they ended up tracing it back to a group of travelers, like Brad Pitt and Snatch.
Snatch?
No, Snatch is that Amy, what's her name?
Oh, yeah, yeah, Amy Schumer.
Schumer, yes, thank you.
That was a stupid sidetrack.
But, so these were real life travelers,
and they had a gang called the Wrathkeel Rovers,
and they were responsible for a bunch of different burglaries
and robberies and things like that,
but they seemed to be behind all of the Chinese art heists
in the country.
What's significant about it is that there was a member of this gang named Chi-Chung Donald Wong.
He was from South London and he seems to be their Chinese connection
because he kept traveling in and out of the country going to China
and smuggling their loot over there.
And I don't think they recovered a single thing
from those heists, did they?
I don't think so.
Yeah, I mean, they figured this stuff
was just successfully smuggled and eventually sold
and private collectors have them.
But this was, I was sort of just surprised for some reason
that these were, you know, Irish travelers
and I just figured they would all be
Chinese people.
But, yeah, they were just hired robbers, basically.
So I was like, oh, okay, once I wrapped my head around that,
they were just doing a job for money.
Exactly.
So the question remains, though, because the police are like,
we never caught the highest person at the top of this,
the head cheese, the ultima ombre, that kind of person.
And they think that even if they had found that person,
that person was probably commissioned by Chinese mafia,
Chinese billionaires, maybe the Poly Group, who knows.
But that seems to be the case for all of the robberies
where they found the people who carried out the robbery.
They were just hired criminals.
They were not doing this because, you know,
they love China or something like that.
They were either commissioned to,
or they knew that the Chinese art market was so hot
that it would just make sense to steal Chinese objects
because they were going to fetch a pretty high price.
Yeah. Should we take another break?
Yeah.
All right. We'll take another break? Yeah.
All right, we'll take a break
and we'll talk about more heists and I'm going to take
us to France.
Won't you come with me?
I love France.
How about France in 2015?
Wasn't that a particularly pretty summer, I think?
Or spring?
I think it was.
Well, let's go find out,
because on March 1st, 2015,
at the Chateau de Font-Au-Bleu,
outside Paris, which is, I think,
beginning back in medieval times,
one of the homes of the French monarchs.
There was a collection assembled by Empress Eugénie,
who was the wife of Napoleon III.
She was the last Empress of France.
And she put together a collection of at least 800 objects.
Those were just the ones on display.
300 of them, these were Chinese objects, antiquities.
300 of them were from the Old Summer Palace
alone, mostly taken by French soldiers who were there
to sack the Old Summer Palace in 1860, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think thieves, when they broke into the Fountain
Blue in 2015, they made off with like 15 different things.
One of which sticks out to me, it was a replica
of the King of Siam's crown.
Siam is now Thailand, and that really has very little
to do with China, it was certainly not a Chinese
heritage object from what I can tell.
That one seems a little hinky to me, I'm not sure
if that was a commissioned robbery or not,
but regardless, I don't, oh, they did find
at least some of the people who were behind it.
And again, these were just hired guns, basically.
Yeah, and it was sort of the same pattern as before
as far as getting in and out of there.
And this time, they were pretty good
at what they were doing.
Even though, like you said, they got six of them, they questioned them, they still couldn't
get the big fish.
You know, I guess they're maybe not good at questioning.
But they couldn't land the whale, unfortunately.
Paul Harris is an art dealer from Britain who he thought it was French professional criminals who did this again
I just hired people in one case Irish travelers in this case
French, you know art
Art thieves, I guess. Yeah pretty good specialty
This apparently was the origin of the phrase no Sherlock
So if you look at research on this,
a lot of the research will say,
hey, all of these events are sort of part
of this larger operation, like we've been talking about.
Since that article, though, I mentioned
there have been other art heists, other crimes.
There was one in June of 2019 other art heists, other crimes.
There was one in June of 2019 at the Museum of Far Eastern Art in Switzerland this time, in Geneva.
Took some couple of things from the Ming dynasty
in less than a minute this time.
They had DNA evidence in this case
and they did catch the people.
These were British dudes.
They said they were just trying to make money
to pay off a debt.
So again, it looks like another,
either hired people to return these
or just people being hired out
because this stuff's valuable.
Or just guys doing it because they know it's valuable.
Yeah, it's just too, it's just-
You can't, you don't know for sure, you know.
No, again, that hot Chinese art market
kind of dilutes the possibility that it's just the Chinese government.
There was one, there was a second robbery on the Fountain
Blower in an attempt.
The police broke it up before it could happen in Operation
Bamboo.
The, I guess, Spanish and French police got together
and they said, let's get these guys.
And they did before they could rob the place.
And those guys said that they were hired
by the Chinese mafia and that they had been going
after three specific pieces of art, Chinese art.
And I don't think that that led anywhere either.
I think also though, even if you could trace it back
to say the Polly group or the prime minister, it wouldn't
matter.
China would basically just say so, or they would deny it or whatever.
And everybody needs to be essentially in at least good economic terms with China right
now that it's just the issue is not going to get pressed.
So it doesn't really matter.
It's more just an academic kind of interesting thing to try to track it back to who's behind
it.
It's not actually going to result in any kind of geopolitical differences.
No, of course not.
As far as the Chinese government, you know, this whole time they've maintained like, hey,
this isn't us that's doing this.
The polyculture group, I believe the general manager even talked to the Global Times about
it and said it was a nonsense story, the GQ story.
We may sue.
I don't think anything ever became of that.
My dad's gonna sue you.
Yeah, do with that what you will.
But their official position as a government is like all of that stuff is
illegitimate.
Like everything you own, you own illegally.
There's nothing like, if you have one, like they had one in the airport, like you mentioned,
if you have something like this in your private collection, the Chinese government doesn't
dissuade any of that.
I don't know that they officially encourage it,
but they definitely don't say like,
hey, you have this stolen thing in your private collection.
No, and there's no, apparently,
there's no legal repercussions for it either.
Even if somebody from Norway or Sweden came over
and said, this is ours, like, this was stolen
from our museum, China would just be like,
well, there's no laws here
that could punish whoever did this, so go home.
And they officially, apparently, do discourage theft,
but because the item could become damaged in the robbery.
Right, yeah, yeah.
That's why, not because it violates any laws or treaties
or anything like that, because again, there's a lot of soreness from the idea that these things were stolen.
And there's, I mean, it's not even like they make a good case.
That's exactly what happened historically.
And so I was trying to figure out like, okay, if there's museums around the country that,
you know, there's this growing movement for repatriation. Here in
America we have like the Indigenous Graves Act which is like if you have Native American
remains in your museum collection you should give them back to the group from which they came so
that they can you know bury the remains or do whatever custom they do rather than keeping them in a museum collection.
That's a good example of this kind of growing awareness of responsibility museums have for
giving stuff back that was stolen from a country, but museums just aren't really going with it.
And I was looking at it and I sent you, I think, some parts of, I think, an artsy article
that talks about this, like China, Greece, Nigeria.
They're all like, you guys have some really important cultural treasures of ours,
so give them back. And museums are basically saying like,
no, you won't be able to take good care of them. We can take better care of them.
And then I think the British Museum was just discovered
to have suffered an extensive robbery from inside
that really kind of undermines that argument
that they can protect these things better
than the countries can because this curator
at the British Museum stole something like 2,000 pieces
from the museum's collection was selling them on eBay.
So it's not like China and other countries
don't have a legitimate claim to this.
It's just more like Western museums
are just basically, they're just digging in
and saying like, no, we're not going to give these back.
Yeah, I think if every piece of ill-gotten art,
whether it was through looting or stealing,
or even started out that way and
then were purchased and repurchased.
Like there'd be a lot of half-empty museums if only like super legitimate, legitimately
acquired art was on display.
Yeah.
Maybe even more than half.
That's got to be ultimately the reason why they don't want to do it.
Yeah.
They're like, what are we going to put in the Chinese art wing of the Met?
Yeah, I think also in the UK in particular,
they have a law that says museums aren't allowed
to repatriate cultural artifacts to other countries.
And they're like, yep, that's the law.
And I think the Chinese government is like,
that's your law, you can change that law. Stop hiding behind that. So...
cultural heritage is now divided among multiple countries. So let's say it was a Yugoslavian item.
And now, yeah, Czechoslovakia and Slovenia,
they're both saying like, that's ours.
That's a ticklish spot.
But for the most part, if it's, you know,
a stable country is like, that's ours, give it back.
Especially if it was looted,
there really shouldn't be any discussion about that.
I'm with you. You got anything else?
I got nothing else.
Oh, well, you can look out for a movie by Crazy Rich Asians director John M. Chu coming
out sometime soon.
Netflix is going to have something based on Grace D. Lee's novel Portrait of a Thief.
And there's a 2012 Jackie Chan movie called CZ12 about this very kind of stuff.
Jackie Chan, the best.
Yeah.
Well, since Chuck said that Jackie Chan's the best,
he unlocked Listener Mail.
He might be a fun episode.
Jackie Chan, yeah, he seems really cool,
especially the Panama Papers revelations, too.
That poor guy was the only one who got outed really
No, I don't think I knew about that. Yeah hiding money in offshore accounts in Panama that
So he couldn't didn't have to pay taxes on them
Like all these rich people were caught doing it and he was the only one that really got a bunch of publicity about it
All right. Well, maybe not
All right. This is on swamp coolers.
Hey, guys, you talked about swamp coolers
in the history of refrigeration episode.
We live in Santa Fe, New Mexico at 7,000 feet elevation
where it's historically hasn't gotten hot enough
to need air conditioning.
Although summers are getting hotter here
with a couple of weeks in the high to mid 90s every year now.
That is hot. It's pretty hot. Our house was a couple of weeks in the high to mid 90s every year now. That is hot.
It's pretty hot.
Our house was a custom built house in 2005 and it does not have AC.
So we bought a portable swamp cooler last summer to help just on those handful of really
hot days when it's too hot to sleep.
And it's really effective, I have to say, in the dry desert air.
Some people have whole house swamp coolers on the roof with thermostats inside.
They use a lot less energy than AC.
So they're a good option in places
where it's dry and not too hot.
They only lower the temperature 10 to 15 degrees.
That's not bad at all.
So anything 95 we get for a short time wouldn't really work.
I disagree.
80 to 95 is pretty substantial.
Yeah, for sure.
But that is from Chandra.
Thanks a lot, Chandra.
Whole House Swamp Cooler.
Can you just see like the tops open
and it says igloo and giant letters on the side?
Yeah, sounds like a record name too, like an album title.
Whole House Swamp Cooler?
Yeah, like the Chickasaw Mud Puppies or something.
Very nice, Chuck. Very nice.
Well, if you want to be like Chandra and write in
and tell us about something that we talked about
that's whole house size,
we love hearing that kind of stuff,
you can shoot us an email to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
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