Chapter 747: Seeing and Hearing
Winter snow was floating outside the window, and the temperature was already below zero. Pen ~ fun ~ pavilion www.biquge.info
But the low temperature can't penetrate the double-glazed windows, and the room is still warm. The children of the Rahman family wore thick winter clothes and had snowball fights outside, and the temperature in India and California was so high that snow was a rarity.
Looking at the children playing happily outside the window, Raman himself smiled. A few months ago, he was a native hat, but now he has changed greatly, with tens of millions or even hundreds of millions of dollars in assets, hundreds of the world's best talents under management, and his bearing and self-confidence are flourishing in him.
Zhou Qingfeng's employment has always been suspicious, and there is no suspicion. He didn't have time to manage chores, so he simply left it alone. This led to the great power and responsibility of the people under him, and he directly troubled the person in charge if something happened.
Raman never imagined that he would one day be able to mobilize huge manpower, material and financial resources, and when he first asked for more than $30 million to buy equipment, his hand trembling when he signed it.
But when this dark-skinned, low-born Indian scholar found that power was so useful, he hid in his office and cried for a long time. For this reason, he specially wrote an email about his experiences in China and sent it to his enlightenment teacher in India.
"Dear teacher, I haven't been able to write to you for months. Before, it was because life was difficult, but now it is busy with work. I'd like to tell you about the recent situation when I'm free today.
Three months ago, I was worried about my future in my California home when I suddenly got a lucrative job in China. I swear to the gods, I really don't know why I was chosen? But I couldn't refuse, so I took my family to an ordinary city in northeast China.
For three months, I experienced a great psychological shock. I have a strong desire to talk to you about what I see, hear, and think.
Before I arrived in this city called 'Tianyang', I knew that Huaxia was already a first-class country in the world. But I also feel that China has an imperial capital, a magic capital, a big city, and a large number of talents, and we in India are not bad.
We have Mumbai, we have New Delhi, we have Bangalore, we have Kolkata, and our biopharma and software industry is among the best in the world. I have always felt that if China can develop in more than 30 years, then India will definitely be able to do it.
But I now find that it makes no sense to focus only on the most developed cities in a country. If we want to compare, we should compare ordinary cities that are more ordinary, more broadly meaningful, and more basic. 'Tianyang' is such an ordinary Chinese city.
When I arrived in 'Toutyang', I was told that it was a dilapidated old industrial city, with shrinking development and a very bad economy.
When I saw the wasteland where the lab was going to be built, I agreed with the statement, and the situation here was really bad. I think it would be nice if the lab could be built in two years.
But in just one night, I realized that there was too much difference between me and the locals on the measure of 'terrible'. It took only one day for the construction workers here to level the 20,000 square meters of land to be built for the laboratory.
What's the suck about this? That's great!
The construction workers here can call in a large number of construction machinery with a single phone call, and easily recruit dozens or even hundreds of workers with rich construction experience with a single phone call, and everyone can gather and immediately understand their responsibilities. They work through the night with little to no rest.
One day, really one day to get the job done.
I was amazed at the ease of transportation and the ease with which a large number of construction machinery could be transported, as well as the low price and skill of the skilled workers.
But what surprised me the most was the foreman's organizational management ability, this kind of person is a project manager in the United States, with an annual salary of more than $100,000. But when I asked the interpreter about the civil engineering major he graduated from, the answer was that the foreman, who was in his 50s, had graduated from junior high school and was the head of a nearby village, and had never studied at university.
Believe me, I was really overwhelmed.
I think in the Indian countryside, a village chief can easily gather hundreds of people, but these hundreds of people should be illiterate. It is absolutely impossible to be like in China, where hundreds of people in their forties and fifties have all Chinese in junior high school.
That's when I realized that education began in the seventies and eighties in this country, and as a result, the workforce here is highly cognitive and the cost of management is very low.
I used to think that elite education in India was the right thing to do, but now my notions have been shaken. Any person in a country has a junior high school Chinese, and the benefits of this are extremely obvious.
I couldn't have thought for a long time that there was a country that could offer such a large and inexpensive and highly qualified population. The local workers were not at all proud of their educational qualifications, and all said that they were uneducated, and that they considered them to be illiterate without a university education.
I absolutely disagree with this point of view, and even express my anger!
The pace of construction of the lab was surprising, and although I have never met a real investor in this lab, there is no doubt that it is financially strong.
The infrastructure construction of the entire laboratory cost about 300 million US dollars, and this money was spent in three months, in exchange for an enviable experimental park.
With the best environment, the most advanced equipment, and the best talents, even the locals were extremely surprised that a barren beach had turned into an extremely beautiful scientific research community.
I am extremely satisfied with my work and life here. Within three months, I had been joined by more than 100 highly skilled biochemical researchers, all of whom had different nationalities and backgrounds, and it was my job to reconcile them.
So far, I've done a good job. I have signed a confidentiality agreement and I can't say much about the content of my work, but I would like to talk about life here.
The abundant supply of supplies is usual, but what surprised me was the harmonious interpersonal relations here, which I originally wanted to get in the United States but did not get, and I was surprised to get it in China.
I came from a low caste in the Shudras, and my education experience was extremely difficult, and I went to the United States in the hope of gaining a free space for development. I brought my daughter from India to the United States because I didn't want her to be treated as a slave or even a slave by her high-caste classmates.
But what disappoints me is that in India it is the upper castes who bully the lower castes, and in the United States it is the lower castes that bully the lower castes. My daughter has been ostracized and even bullied at school, and I have complained to the school teacher countless times, but the answer I received was to tell my daughter not to cause trouble.
My daughter is the most well-behaved in the world, she is even very timid, how can she cause trouble? But I can't do anything about it, I can't change anything.
In this small and run-down city of China, my daughter went to a bilingual school on her first day and came to me in the evening with joy and said, 'Dad, I've made friends, the teachers and children here like me'.
This was very gratifying to me, and I have felt it in my interactions with the locals as well. They weren't xenophobic, and when they heard that I was from India, they just smiled and said 'oh' a few times, and after a few conversations, they didn't care who I was at all.
Originally, I was worried that I would not encounter some trouble or discrimination because of the country, ethnicity, and customs. And my translator told me that as long as there is mutual respect, ordinary people in China do not have extreme hatred of foreigners. The government will even deliberately take care of outstanding talents from abroad.
These three months of life were the most comfortable I have had in nearly a decade, and I couldn't help but have the intention of staying here for a long time. It's a pity that Huaxia's green card is the most difficult thing in the world to get, and that's the only thing that frustrates me. (To be continued.) )