Chinese sue CNN for $1.3 billion

Almost any American who has taken Chinese in the past decade should know the phrase "Meiguo ren hen xihuan da guansi" (Americans really like to sue people). It is usually presented as a point of difference between our two cultures, and McDonald's coffee inevitably comes up.
Well, the tables sure are turning. Reuters reports that a primary schoolteacher and a beautician have filed suit against CNN for the allegedly slanderous comments against the Chinese people made by Jack Cafferty. (The crotchety CNN anchor called Chinese products "junk" and the country's leaders "goons.")
The suit asks for $1.3 billion dollars -- $1 per person in China -- for "violat[ing]the dignity and reputation of the Chinese people." Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Jiang Yu called the suit "spontaneous action" on the part of the Chinese people.
It certainly brings new meaning to the title of Cafferty's book, It's Getting Ugly Out There.










Sorry for the sidetrack, but
Sorry for the sidetrack, but I just wanted to point out that the plaintiff in the McDonalds case deserved everything she won:
http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cur78.htm
As someone who is (almost) a lawyer, it kills me that this case is the perfect example of trial attorneys justly punishing a company that puts its own profits above its customers' safety, and yet McDonalds was able to spin it as Exhibit A in the movement to limit this kind of lawsuit.
Continuous imrpovement
This is something I have tried to explain to Chinese (and other non-Americans) innumerable times. Although many (most?) single instances of personal injury lawsuits may be petty or silly, the fact that they exist pushes society along a path of continuous improvement.
ShaMao
http://shamao.typepad.com