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81% Chinese Sympathize With Christchurch Mosque Shooter, Online Survey

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Hi, seems like you're new to Social studies. No organization ever takes a full poll of everyone, even. Governments take census after many years: it's nearly practically impossible.

So they take sample sizes which are reflective of the larger population. The only valid conclusion you can draw from this is that 81% of all WeChat Chinese users sympathize in one form or another. That's just a conclusion to whom it can validly apply, not a definite answer, don't take it as one.

That survey was not performed by anti Chinese media, it was performed on Chinese social media where everyone who operates is Chinese because it is in Chinese, they have their own versions of Youtube, Quora and everything, you can visit sometime and see their public opinion for yourself too.

The root of the resentment is from the Uighur extremism, otherwise the resentment didn't exist before.
That is SILLY.
You might as well take a poll among visitors to "China Uncensored" and conclude it is a valid representative poll and the world is against China.
Not that there isn't Islamophobia in China but only a very small section.
Apparently the Quartz is out to create division and tar China.
.
 
Chinese society is fervently anti Muslim/Islam, we see this with Chinas policy toward Rohongya right and Uyghur oppression.
If so tell me why that all Muslim countries are Chinese friends, every single of them, while Muslim countries themselves are usually not.
 
Millions of Indians think that is cool. And as I said given the times Chinese will have some psychopaths as well.
all the Subject isn't about being Islamophobic...Chinese have the right to hate Islam or criticize it...NO ONE can take that away from them...as long as they don't take away MY opinion...
BUT this topic is ABOUT the "KILLING"...

What we saw in those past pages is how simple is to "MIX" those two notions... and that is problematic...

Having psychos with as much empathy as an empty glass is unavoidable...
 
Last edited:
By Isabella Steger & Echo Huang
March 18, 2019

A survey of over 2000 Chinese people was done on WeChat, the most popular Chinese social media app, and found that after reading the manifesto, 81% sympathized with Brenton Tarrant.



Translation:

Do you have sympathy after reading the gunman's essay?

Very much sympathy - 56%

A little sympathy - 25%

No strong feelings - 13%

I hate him - 4%



Translation:

How would you characterize the attack on the mosque?

Vengeance - 61%

Terrorist attack - 10%

Self-defense behavior - 14%

Violent crime - 3%

Political intrigue - 10%


https://qz.com/1575028/new-zealand-shooter-finds-fans-in-islamophobic-corners-of-chinas-internet/

Brenton Tarrant, the 28-year-old Australian gunman who carried out the deadly mosque shooting in New Zealand on Friday (March 15), said in his screed that “the nation with the closest political and social values” to his own is China, and that he admired “non-diverse” nations.

While Tarrant, who now faces one charge of murder, didn’t elaborate on his views of China—which was one of many global references(paywall) he dropped that investigators are now examining—his hatred of Islam certainly has support from corners of China’s internet.

One anonymous post (link in Chinese) on social network WeChat titled “The words on the New Zealand shooter’s guns reflect the deep anxiety of European white men”—a reference to the white supremacy markings on Tarrant’s rifles, and his grievances over Muslim immigration to western countries—has garnered at least 100,000 views at the time of writing, the maximum number of views on a post displayed by the platform. The piece lays blame on Christchurch officials for allowing the construction of mosques, and claimed this resulted in more Muslims coming to the city. It even alleged that the shooting was staged by left-wing politicians.

Some of the comments under the post suggest that followers of thegreen religion—a sometimes derogatory term often used on the Chinese internet to refer to Islam because of the significance of the color to the faith—brought the attack upon themselves. “The green religion launches terrorist attacks everywhere, and now the attack finally comes to them… Green religion is backwards, stupid, barbaric, and violent,” said one such comment.

Elsewhere, on social network Weibo, many comments reflected the view that the shooting was a by-product of the West’s excessive political correctness, a perspective that has found increasing support on China’s internet in recent years as part of what’s known as the baizuo, or “white left” movement, a derogatory term used to describe Western progressives that is roughly analogous to the term “social justice warrior.”

One Weibo user wrote (link in Chinese), “This is a rare act of resistance from a white man. We need to find a way to prolong this and encourage white men to apply for all kinds of honors for the gunman, including a Nobel peace prize.” Another wrote (link in Chinese) that “this so-called darkest dayis simply political correctness. A reminder to the greens: not everyone is willing to tolerate your outrageous actions.” The comment was a reference to remarks by New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern, who said the attack would be remembered as one of the country’s darkest days.

Anti-Islam sentiment has become widespread on the internet in China amid resentment over what some believe to be preferential government policies toward minorities, as well as over attacks carried out by a handful of Muslim Uyghurs from the country’s far west. One prominent expression of it is in comments about “halalification,” as people express their anger that offering halal products could undermine China’s unity. A decision last year by one of the country’s biggest food-delivery apps, Meituan, to offer halal food packaging drew an outcry from people in China who said the practice was discriminatory against non-Muslims, as did a Beijing university’s move to offer halal mooncakes at its celebration of the Mid-Autumn festival.

Another indicator of that sentiment is the extraordinary popularity of the Israeli embassy’s account on Weibo, which last year ranked as the foreign mission with the most followers on the social network, according to a study last year by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. A possible reason for the embassy’s popularity is that its followers in China see its account as an outlet for sharing Islamophobic comments. One of the most liked comments under a Weibo post by the Israeli embassy on the US relocating its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem was “Put the boot into the cancer of humanity”—a likely reference to Muslims.

The rise of Islamophobia on China’s internet comes against a backdrop of the government’s intensifying crackdown on the country’s 23 million Muslims. Most of China’s Muslims are Turkic Uyghurs in Xinjiang, but another minority known as the Hui, who belong to the dominant Han ethnicity in China, live in the Ningxia autonomous region and have long been regarded as well-assimilated, model Muslims. In January, China passed a new law that could rewrite how Islam is practiced in the country.

China has in recent years constructed large-scale re-education camps in Xinjiang where, by one estimate, 1.5 million Muslims are incarcerated, while those living outside the camps are subject to unprecedented levels of surveillance in an ever-growing police state. China has likened those camps to “boarding schools” or training institutes, and says its measures are necessary in order to preventive radicalization of Muslims and to thwart terrorist attacks—an argument which has widespread support in China, following attacks including stabbings carried out by a group of Uyghurs in Kunming in 2014 which killed 31.

Beijing’s suppression of Islam has also extended to the Hui minority, where reports say that authorities are snuffing out Arabic and Islamic symbols and practices.


@UKBengali @Avicenna @PakSword @lastofthepatriots @cabatli_53 @Starlord

many westernerners and indians on social media are celebrating nz mosque terrorist attack. china has a population of over 1 billion and 2000 certainly dont represent the majority!
 
Unfortunately for these people everything is a conspiracy theory.

China is actively supporting the genocide of Rohingya Muslims by Buddhist terrorists in Myanmar. Of course they will sympathize with a White supremacist terrorist who murdered 49 innocent Muslims in the Masjid.

@Islamic faith&Secularism

@Kitco

@Riyad @Homo Sapiens
china support for myanmar has nothing to do with religion just cold hard real politik
@Adam WANG SHANGHAI MEGA @beijingwalker @undertakerwwefan
 
You know what the far right French think of you. You know what the French did in Algeria. You chose to live with those realities. Point taken?
I didn't? did you know me? or maybe you assume that being born in FR and living in it make me complicit of their past?
If you follow French news...you will see that Muslims are speaking about it... about that past... and their present situation...
Leaving with those realities...is Accepting your End and shutting up about it... And it's quite the opposite of what is happening in France...
 
many westernerners and indians on social media are celebrating nz mosque terrorist attack. china has a population of over 1 billion and 2000 certainly dont represent the majority!
Would you say the same for Westerners because the NZ mosque attacker was only one individual?

If 2000 Chinese who sympathize with NZ shooter dont represent entire Chinese population, then 1 white supremacist terrorist doesnt not represent a islamophobic Western societies.
 
And not only Chinese would condone that behavior (Rohingya plight)
I will be frank with you. I don't give a flying fcuk about Banglas or other iterations of like Rohinhya. The Uighurs are our Turkic neighbours and that does cause indigestion but there is precious little we can do anything about that. I have even told Turks that when Russians massacred Chechen Turkey did nothing. Today it trades and buys even S-400 missiles from Russia. Ultimately every country can only operate within it's capacity/self interest matrix.
 
Would you say the same for Westerners because the NZ mosque attacker was only one individual?

If 2000 Chinese dont represent entire Chinese population, then 1 white supremacist terrorist doesnt not represent a islamophobic Western societies.
If you have a cult with 2000 members, do you think this cult can represent the country they live in. I already told you, wechat is a private social media platform, only confirmed friends can view the contents, whoever confirmed being his friends are already Muslim hater like him, they are like minded bunch.
 
I didn't? did you know me? or maybe you assume that being born in FR and living in it make me complicit of their past?
I don't know you but I assume your French of Tunisian extraction. I think you well know what the Frencxh think of Arabs/Muslims and their history in North Africa, particularly FF legion's efficacy and actions there. You live with those realities.
 
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