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To: RoosterRedux

Just curious...have you been there? You can’t access Facebook, YouTube, etc.. They electronically track *everything* you do. They monitor the “allowed” app (wechat) for chat groups, the same app that lets you buy or sell something. Places don’t take cash or credit. They use AI for face recognition with millions of cameras. They store the data of where you’ve been, if they decide you were near a person with Covid you’re notified to self quarantine. Your app gives you a red/yellow/green status for being out. Then there’s the “social credit score” for things like travel, you may not qualify.

So...speak out, post a video, etc., at your own peril - the chances ARE that you’ll disappear. They’re terrified of the control and know there’s nothing they can do about it.

1.5B people live like this. When you consider others things like organ harvesting from healthy people, reeducation “camps” for the religious, welding shut your door where entire families perished of the virus, ETC - these people are pure evil. They’ve basically enslaved the entire population.

...and their goal is to dominate - while we enable them. They should be put on trial, like Nuremberg - their crimes are Nazi like...but all against their own people, with the consequences now global. We should all just stop buying from China as much as possible.


36 posted on 04/07/2020 2:44:25 PM PDT by fuzzylogic (welfare state = sharing of poor moral choices among everybody)
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To: fuzzylogic
FYI
‘Noodles’ and ‘Pandas’: Chinese People Are Using Secret Code to Talk About Coronavirus Online

Chinese citizens angry at their government’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak have come up with some ingenious ways to express their outrage and circumvent the extreme censorship measures imposed by Beijing.

In a bid to control the narrative, Beijing authorities have censored sensitive topics, silenced WeChat accounts, tracked down those who are sharing criticism of the government, and disappeared citizen journalists.

But all those efforts still haven't silenced people online, and angry citizens are now relying on coded words and phrases to express their dissatisfaction, according to research from Amnesty International, exclusively shared with VICE News.

The research — by Amnesty’s Chinese editor, who's using a pseudonym for fear of retribution — shows that the most common example is “zf” which is the abbreviation for the Chinese word “government. To refer to the police, the letters “jc” are used, while “guobao” (meaning "national treasure") or panda images are used to represent the domestic security bureau. Citizens talking about the Communist Party’s Publicity Department use “Ministry of Truth” from the George Orwell novel "1984," instead.

One of the ways Beijing has sought to stem the flow of information out of China is by cracking down on the use of virtual private networks (VPNs) as a way of circumventing its censorship system, known as the Great Firewall. So discussing this technology online has also become taboo.

Instead, citizens have been talking about how to use the technology by referring to “Vietnamese pho noodles” or “ladders.”

China’s embattled president Xi Jinping is among the most censored topics on Chinese social media. A Citizen Lab report this week showed that WeChat ramped up censorship efforts in recent weeks by adding a number of Xi-related words and phrases to its blacklist.

In an attempt to get around these restrictions, Chinese citizens have begun referring to their president as a “narrow neck bottle” because the Chinese pronunciation of the phrase is similar to that of "Xi Jinping."

But despite the obscure nature of this reference, China’s censors managed to pick it up when they removed a question posting on Zhihu (China’s version of Quora) asking “how to wash a narrow neck bottle?”

“To fully appreciate conversations on China’s social media platforms, merely knowing Chinese is not enough,” said the editor, Tom Cho. “To combat systematic internet censorship, netizens in China have created a new vocabulary to discuss ‘sensitive issues.’ This language keeps evolving as the government constantly expands its list of prohibited terms online. Those not keeping up with the trend could easily be left confused.”


39 posted on 04/08/2020 4:31:09 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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