Debunk NYT fake news to demonize China

https://fair.org/home/action-alert-nyts-china-covid-coverage-needs-to-acknowledge-reality/

Debunk NYT fake news to demonize China / ACTION ALERT: NYT’s China Covid Coverage Needs to Acknowledge Reality 揭穿《紐約時報》假新聞以妖魔化中國/行動警報:《紐約時報》的中國新冠病毒報導需要承認現實 by ARI PAUL 1-20-22

NYT: The Army of Millions Who Enforce China’s Zero-Covid Policy, at All Costs
A New York Times article (1/12/22) assailed China for following a zero Covid policy, “no matter the human costs”–without ever mentioning the human costs of not containing the coronavirus.

The New York Times report (1/12/22) on the response to an outbreak of Covid-19 in the Chinese city of Xi’an featured over-the-top hand-wringing about “authoritarianism” and a complete erasure of the dangers of the coronavirus. Had this article been about Covid-19 response in Europe or the United States, one could swear it was from InfoWars or some other far-right, Covid-denying fringe outlet.

China’s “zero Covid” policy is indeed a major outlier in the world’s approach to the pandemic. The country, the most populous in the world, took pride in this fact when it announced that it had less than 200 reported positive cases for January 8, a slight increase from days before (Reuters, 1/9/22). This hasn’t come without its hardships; noncitizens of China should be advised not to plan a vacation to a country with closed borders (CNN, 11/15/21; Time, 12/1/21). And outbreaks are met with lockdowns that can upend daily life for millions, as the city of Xi’an is learning (Xinhua, 1/10/22).

‘Iron-fist, authoritarian policies’
The Times article by Li Yuan started off with some undeniable hardships, reflecting chaotic coordination of services. But it leaped from this to calling the Chinese Covid response a set of “iron-fist, authoritarian policies [that] emboldened its officials, seemingly giving them license to act with conviction and righteousness.” Chinese officials are striving to “ensure zero Covid infections”—not because it is the right thing to do, but because “it is the will of their top leader, Xi Jinping.”

With language like “conviction and righteousness” and “the will of their top leader,” you can hear the Times attempting to parody the propagandistic style of CCP outlets for its own anti-China purposes. But by applying tems like “iron fist” and “authoritarian” to successful public health measures, the Times unironically echoed the framing of right-wing partisans (Breitbart, 8/3/21, Federalist, 9/9/21; Fox News, 9/29/21; Newsmax, 9/13/21; Telegraph, 11/22/21; Miami Herald, 12/20/21) when they attack less effective Western containment policies.

New York TImes depiction of a security guard in Xi’an

The New York Times compared officials who enforced public health measures in Xi’an to Holocaust engineer Adolf Eichmann; like him, they are “willing to be the enablers of authoritarian policies.”

It gets worse. When reporting on how low-level officials in the city comply with lockdown measures, Yuan quoted Chinese social media commentary to invoke philosopher Hannah Arendt’s “banality of evil,” a concept Arendt applied (as Yuan noted) to high-ranking Nazi official Adolf Eichmann. Again, this is the same trope the far right (CNN, 7/7/21; Reuters, 12/15/21; NBC, 1/12/22) uses when they insist that vaccine cards and mandates are just a step away from the cattle cars, which is not just absurd but an offensive trivialization of Nazi terror.

This invocation of Arendt sets up the rest of the piece: While there are some who don’t like the Xi’an lockdown, those that are going along with it aren’t an opposing viewpoint, but rather the brainwashed drones of a devious plot against humanity. “Chinese intellectuals,” Yuan wrote, are baffled that workers and civilians who enforce zero Covid policies are “driven by professional ambition or obedience…to be the enablers of authoritarian policies.” Such prose could have been lifted from Josh Mandel, the Republican senate candidate in Ohio who, in response to the idea of vaccine mandates, “compared [President Joe] Biden to the Gestapo, the Nazi secret police force” (Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 9/10/21).

Them, not us
New York Times depiction of Xi’an ambulance

The New York Times complained that lockdown rules in Xi’an hospitals “deprived…loved ones of a last chance to say goodbye.” The more than 30,000 people who would have been lost by their loved ones if Xi’an had the same Covid death rate as the US were not brought up.

The Times spoke of social media censorship in China in relation to lockdowns. Such an issue isn’t nothing, but again, this is also true of the major US social media networks, like Facebook and Twitter (Bloomberg, 6/7/21).

The Times wrote of “the hospitals that denied patients access to medical care and deprived their loved ones of the chance to say goodbye.” It noted that because of the lockdown, a man was denied care and died of a heart attack, and a pregnant woman who was turned away had a miscarriage.

The part about dying alone suggests that in a normal country, it is standard procedure to allow visitors in to see patients who are dying from contagious diseases. This is of course not the case, as the Times (3/29/20) acknowledges in its non-China reporting.

As for the denial of care, keep in mind that these were two tragedies in a city of 13 million. People being unable to access emergency rooms because they are overflowing with Covid patients is an enormous problem in the United States—sometimes with fatal results—but the Times story gives no inkling that access to care could be a problem outside an “authoritarian” state.

And Xi’an’s health system under lockdown does have some semblance of accountability, as the AP (1/6/22) reported: “Hospital officials in the northern Chinese city of Xi’an have been punished after a pregnant woman miscarried after being refused entry, reportedly for not having current Covid-19 test results.” The CCP-run Global Times (1/5/22) called the incident a “heartbreaking misfortune” and reported that “local authorities stressed that all hospitals must not use the excuse of epidemic prevention and control to avoid treating patients.”

There are other forms of accountability in Xi’an public health. The South China Morning Post (1/5/22) said that the city “suspended its top official in charge of big data after the system powering the local health code app, a critical tool in China’s zero-Covid strategy, crashed for a second time.”

The Times article does acknowledge that

a few low-level Xi’an officials were punished…. The general manager of a hospital was suspended. Last Friday, the city announced that no medical facility could reject patients on the basis of Covid tests.

“But that was about it,” Yuan sighs. It’s not clear what kind of retribution she was hoping for—prison sentences?

‘To surmount these trying times’
NYT depiction of food delivery in Xi’an.
The New York Times, depicting food delivery during the Xi’an lockdown, said that “some people have struggled to get food” in the city.

China’s state-run news wire, Xinhua (1/4/22), doesn’t dispute that the lockdown in Xi’an comes with “strict” containment measures, but at the same time defends them as a necessary public health measure. It quoted one French expatriate who “believes that it is necessary for Xi’an to adopt strict control measures”: “Not being free now is for real freedom later. The epidemic should be brought under control as soon as possible through strict measures.” As the paper put it, Chinese “authorities have taken strict measures to curb the spread of the virus,” noting that the response’s priority is “to surmount these trying times.”

This outlook is one that many people have expressed the world over, including in the United States. While few have experienced the kind of intense lockdowns associated with China’s zero-Covid policy, a great many people from all corners of the globe have come to the conclusion that canceling events and travel, mandating remote work, restricting in-person services and requiring masks are things that must be done to tackle this pandemic.

Just compare this Times report to Xinhua’s coverage (1/13/22) of the US government’s response to the omicron surge. It is written in cold, straight journalism that pulls heavily from US officials, academics and at least one US newspaper. And while it paints a picture of a country struggling to deal with the pandemic, it does report some positive news: “The White House also promised to make lab capacity available for 5 million free polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests.”

Xinhua could have easily mocked America’s overstrained hospitals and the breakdown of public services (New York Times, 1/7/22, 1/14/22; AP, 1/8/22; NPR, 1/13/22) as proof that Covid has exposed the United States as a failed state and an empire in decline. Instead, Chinese state media’s reporting on the pandemic in the US is, at least in this instance, fairer than the Times coverage of Xi’an. That’s quite a feat.

FAIR (1/29/21, 9/17/21) has criticized New York Times coverage of China’s Covid policy in the past, for its harsh, one-sided attacks on a strategy that has literally saved millions of lives. (If the same proportion of China’s population had died from the pandemic that has so far died in the United States, its death toll would be 3.6 million. Its actual toll: less than 5,000.) But its latest coverage of Xi’an, with the casual flinging about of Nazi analogies, reaches a level of partisan hyperbole that puts the paper of record on a par with Fox News and Breitbart.

ACTION:
Please tell the New York Times to report on the successes as well as the problems of China’s Covid strategy, without resorting to the far-right’s anti–public health tropes.

CONTACT:
Letters: letters@nytimes.com
Readers Center: Feedback
Twitter: @NYTimes

Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective. Feel free to leave a copy of your communication in the comments thread.

Video: Ukraine on Fire: The Real Story Documentary by Oliver Stone

https://vimeo.com/252426896

Video: Ukraine on Fire: The Real Story Documentary by Oliver Stone on US let successful regime change in 2014, followed by failed regime change in Hong Kong and ongoing regime change attempts in Myanmar, Cambodia and Thailand, all in the names of fake Democracy, Human Rights and Rules of Laws.

Ukraine, the ‘borderlands’ between Russia and ‘civilized’ Europe is on fire. For centuries, it has been at the center of a tug-of-war between powers seeking to control its rich lands and Russia’s access to the Mediterranean.

The Maidan Massacre in early 2014 triggered a bloody uprising that ousted president Viktor Yanukovych, spurred Crimeans to secede and join Russia, and sparked a civil war in Eastern Ukraine.

Russia was portrayed by Western media as the perpetrator, and has been sanctioned and widely condemned as such. But was Russia responsible for what happened?

Ukraine on Fire provides a historical perspective for the deep divisions in the region which led to the 2004 Orange Revolution, the 2014 uprisings, and the violent overthrow of democratically-elected Yanukovych.

Covered by Western media as a ‘popular revolution’, it was in fact a coup d’état scripted and staged by ultra-nationalist groups and the US State Department.

Investigative journalist Robert Parry reveals how US-funded political NGOs and media companies have emerged since the 1980s, replacing the CIA in promoting America’s geopolitical agenda abroad.

Executive producer Oliver Stone gained unprecedented access to the inside story through his on-camera interviews with former President Viktor Yanukovych and Minister of Internal Affairs Vitaliy Zakharchenko, who explain how the US Ambassador and factions in Washington actively plotted for regime change.

And, in his first meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Stone solicits Putin’s take on the significance of Crimea, NATO and the US’s history of interference in elections and regime change in the region.

Now, at last, the full exposé is available in the West. Though, of course, everyone is encouraged to purchase a copy to support Stone’s important work.

Watch “The Future of the U.S. and China Conference 2022

https://youtu.be/dMa24OmbChI

Watch “The Future of the U.S. and China Conference 2022: The Financial Relationship” on YouTube 在 YouTube 上觀看“2022 年中美會議的未來:金融關係”.

A good 1 hour session from the Asia Society Seek Truth From Facts conference held about a week ago. Salient points :

The US is shooting itself in the foot by limiting Chinese companies from tapping the US capital market. This is one of the few areas which really makes sense for the 2 countries to cooperate for a win-win solution. In the short run, US investors will lose a chance to participate in the growth of Chinese companies, and in the long run, the Chinese people will think that the US is trying to slow down or prevent China’s rise and success of Chinese companies in the international market. This will have a serious long term negative effect on the US.

The effect of this action on Chinese companies is minimal, as China has access to international investors from the EU and the middle east. They can also relist on the HK and Chinese stock markets as what they have been doing. Sophisticated US investors will find ways to invest in them anyway. The politicians in DC are gravely mistaken and overestimate the effect on Chinese companies.

The headline news of China clamping down on Chinese internet companies is misinterpreted as China clamping down on all private companies. This is not true. The companies in the internet space in China are only a fraction (11 out of 550) of the largest companies in China. Many of these large companies are ones we have never heard of in the US. China’s private sector is expanding and investing as what they have been doing before the crackdown. The Venture Capital sector is booming.

Most of China’s recent investments are in the manufacturing, auto, and health care sectors, with only 2% in the consumer internet space, whereas in the US, a large portion is in the consumer internet space.

The US turned negative against China since Xi became the head of the CPC in 2012. Before then, China was not seen as a communist country with all the negative baggage of what that implies, whereas now it is. So the antagonism towards China from the US congress and politicians is ideological and creates blinders.

US business had very little influence in the present administration. Little hope of change in the short term. In the intermediate term, hopefully US business and people can influence the US government to move in a positive direction. People outside of Washington may not be as antagonistic towards China as the US congress and politicians.

Video: We can’t believe one generation has changed China after we came here in 1986

Video: We can’t believe one generation has changed China after we came here in 1986, 52 years of marriage, last 13 years lives in China. 1986年我們來到這里後,我們無法相信一代人改變了中國,結婚52年,自2009年在中國生活。

https://vimeo.com/668835310
https://www.facebook.com/100036400039778/posts/643221193567876/?d=n

Mr. and Mrs. Johnson first visited China in 1986 with their five children.

These couples have been married for over 52 years and living in China from 20th April, 2009.

I’m grateful to these couples for accepting to share their life experiences about marriage and life in China with Living in China Series.

We discussed about how China was in the year 1986, their perception about the country China before moving here, what marriage means to them, what has kept their marriage over 52 years,
What are the differences between Australia and China, Does having Children changes the dynamics of marriage? Their advice for young couples, what’s their social life in China looking at their age among other important issues.

a means to terrorise Chinese scientists and engineers. Something has gone dramatically wrong

“They have turned the China Initiative into an instrument for racial profiling,” says Judy Chu, a Democratic representative from California who is the first Chinese-American woman elected to Congress. “They have turned it into a means to terrorise Chinese scientists and engineers. Something has gone dramatically wrong.” “他們將中國倡議變成了種族定性的工具,”來自加利福尼亞的民主黨代表趙美心說,她是第一位當選國會議員的華裔女性。 “他們把它變成了恐嚇中國科學家和工程師的手段。 出現了嚴重的錯誤。”

Don’t be foolish, US wants your brainpower only

Don’t be foolish, US wants your brainpower only. In the 1800s Chinese was slave labor built the US transcontinental railroad, when done, the ultimate reward was the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, renewed under different versions till today.

別傻了,美國祇想要你的腦力。 在 1800 年代中國人是奴隸勞工建造了橫貫美國大陸的鐵路,完成後,最終的回報是 1882 年的排華法案,並在不同的版本下更新至今。

SCMP: The Biden administration on Friday announced policy changes to attract international students specialising in science, technology, engineering and maths

Video: Uygur Slave Labor DEBUNKED: New legal paper slams ASPI’s report on China

Video: Uygur Slave Labor DEBUNKED: New legal paper slams ASPI’s report on China 維吾爾奴隸勞工被揭穿:新的法律文件猛烈抨擊 ASPI 關於中國的虛假報告

https://vimeo.com/668754382
https://youtu.be/JN-Rq2iUYPY
Read the paper in full here: http://www.cowestpro.co/papers.html
https://www.facebook.com/100036400039778/posts/643101076913221/?d=n

In 2020, ASPI, or the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, released a report claiming to have uncovered the widespread use of Uygur slave labor in Chinese factories. The report, Uyghurs for Sale, went on to gain huge traction in media and government circles, ultimately leading to the popular belief today that Xinjiang’s Uygur people are forced to work against their will. This has had huge ramifications, including but not limited to the US announcing a boycott of any and all products produced in Xinjiang.

But a recent report by Australian Jaq James, an independent Western propaganda analyst and international law advocate, debunks ASPI’s entire report from a legal standpoint, concluding that “the ASPI report was not a work of scholarly analysis, but rather a piece of strategic disinformation to exact harm.” The 78-page report shows that not a single one of ASPI’s 18 accusations stand up to scrutiny, and that the report purposefully and maliciously smears China as a human rights abuser, with the ultimate result being that it was actually the Australian think tank that has infringed on the human rights of the Uygur people, namely “their right to work and their right to access work-training programs, and possibly other human rights.”

Jaq argues that this could mean that ASPI actually contributed to human rights violations of consensual Uygur workers under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. She also argues that ASPI and the Australian government “must right the grave wrong perpetrated against the Uyghurs because of the ASPI report.”

More fake news propaganda by the largest San Francisco Newspaper on China

More fake news propaganda by the largest San Francisco Newspaper on China, one of the mouthpiece of the US Government to demonize Chinese, Chinese Americans and China. 美國政府喉舌之一,舊金山最大報紙對中國的更多假新聞宣傳來妖魔化中國人, 美藉華人和中國.

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