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China's media enables tyranny and corruption

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China's media enables tyranny and corruption
By Jiang Xueqin

Updated 5:18 AM ET, Thu November 23, 2017

A Canadian citizen and a Yale graduate, Jiang Xueqin is a China-based educator and writer. He was formerly deputy principal of Tsinghua University High School, Peking University High School and Shenzhen Middle School. The views expressed in this commentary are his own. This is the next installment in CNN Opinion's series on the challenges facing the media as it is under attack from critics, governments and changing technology.

(CNN)I can count myself lucky that when the Chinese secret police arrested me for reporting on worker strikes and branded me a spy, all they did was deport me. It was June 3, 2002, and I was filming a worker protest undercover for a PBS documentary. As I interviewed a laid-off worker, I was jumped by thugs, thrown into a van, driven to a black spot and held incommunicado for 48 hours.

Here's what the Chinese secret police told me: I was reporting in China illegally to stir anti-China sentiment and deserved to be imprisoned for 20 years. Then they put me on a motorcade for the airport.
171121111034-free-press-jiang-xueqin-headshot-overlay-medium-plus-169.jpg


Looking back, I can now see that what saved me from the unchecked power of China's secret police was their fear of the unfettered response of the American media -- the world's free speech defender of last resort.
China let me back into the country a year later in 2003, and today I've switched from being a rebellious journalist into a public educator tasked with helping China adopt Western creativity.
And after ten years of teaching students how to think in a country that has truly "fake news," here's what I learned: A free media is a democracy's communal classroom, where citizens learn to use facts, evidence and logic to discuss and debate ideas. A free media is based on the liberating and empowering belief that the pursuit of universal truths is what unites and armors us against the arbitrariness of authority.


America's free media is the source of American power and progress; China's state-controlled media is what enables the corruption and tyranny that's decaying the nation's soul.



China's Communist Party maintains its iron grip on power by controlling what's said in the media and what's taught in the classroom.
China's state-sponsored media warp reality to cohere to Communist Party doctrine -- and thus turn truth into farce. China's classrooms teach students that authority is always benevolent and right -- and thus educate them out of the truth.
In my attempt to educate Chinese students back into the truth, my most powerful tool is the American media. When Trump calls the American media "the enemy of the people," he's echoing the sentiments of the Chinese government, which has built the "Great Firewall" to monitor and control their citizenry's pursuit of truth.

***
For thousands of years, China walled itself off from the world, but after witnessing the American subprime crisis and hosting the 2008 Beijing Olympics, it imagined a dominant role for itself on the global stage. President Xi Jinping's "China Dream" calls for Chinese schools to teach creativity to make China great again. In this rush to reverse engineer and mass manufacture Steve Jobs clones, Chinese schools have hired me to teach Western creativity.
To do so, I use the American media as the main tool to teach students how to think. In class, we analyze Atlantic and New Yorker articles, breaking down the research and thinking process of reporters. Outside class, my students translate articles from Western media and publish their own daily newspaper. I teach students how to think by having them conduct research, compile their findings in a logically coherent way and then debate their ideas openly.
I believe that China can't be creative unless people stop making facts up and stealing each other's ideas. What drives my work is the faith that creativity comes from the pursuit of truth, which, as a universal human aspiration, is a good unto itself.
When I train teachers, I force them to use multiple resources to do research, cite their sources and cross-reference facts. We read George Orwell's "1984," Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451" and Neil Postman's "Amusing Ourselves to Death" together, to learn how the consistency, coherence and clarity of words speak truth to power. I teach them new mental practices -- asking questions, switching perspectives, analyzing subtext -- that subvert their old cultural habit of parroting authority.
Media martyrs: Among those who died while working as journalists in the past 15 years
But teaching creativity in China can feel like a Sisyphean struggle, because power trumps truth in China.

The prime example of this is the Chinese media, which has always existed to serve the political elite, not to keep it in check. When I was arrested and deported by China's secret police, they threatened me that if I talked to the American media, they would use the Chinese media to attack me.

To control the media, the Party uses a carrot and stick approach. It slaps the hands of those who talk about sensitive topics, and it winks at those who take bribes in exchange for favorable publicity. Too often, Chinese reporters just publish word for word whatever press releases officials and executives give them.

The World Wide Web once promised to break the Communist Party's monopoly of information, but technology has only strengthened and expanded the Party's Big Brother reach and gaze. China's "Great Firewall" blocks foreign websites, filters out sensitive keywords and spies on its own citizens. Over the past few years, China has cracked down hard on online public expression -- draconian laws hunt down "rumor-mongers," police harass and arrest popular bloggers and an army of state-employed "public opinion analysts" monitor and manipulateonline discussion.

It's hard to teach students to form opinions based on facts and evidence when the Chinese internet is so cluttered with distortions, lies and prejudices.

By being able to tunnel through the "Great Firewall" and access blocked websites such as Google and Facebook/Twitter, Virtual Proxy Networks (VPNs) are currently the only way for businesses, universities and foreign nationals to access real information and to communicate unfiltered. But the Communist Party is determined more than ever to plug the VPN leaks in the "Great Firewall." I have endured breathing Beijing's polluted air for many years now, but without my VPN I'd suffocate.

China understands that the source of American power is in innovation. But what it cannot understand is that what empowers Silicon Valley, Wall Street and the Ivy League is the free flow of information sanctified by the Constitution and rigorously exercised by the America media. Despite all the skyscrapers and high speed railways built, China can never be as great as the United States until it frees its citizens to pursue the truth.

Ironically, then, just as China struggles to adopt American innovation, Trump risks destroying it with his war on truth. The China Dream may one day still come true, if Trump fulfills the dark prophecies of Orwell, Bradbury and Postman by amusing us all into tyranny.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/23/opinions/china-media-effects-opinion-xueqin/index.html
 
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China's media enables tyranny and corruption
By Jiang Xueqin

Updated 5:18 AM ET, Thu November 23, 2017

A Canadian citizen and a Yale graduate, Jiang Xueqin is a China-based educator and writer. He was formerly deputy principal of Tsinghua University High School, Peking University High School and Shenzhen Middle School. The views expressed in this commentary are his own. This is the next installment in CNN Opinion's series on the challenges facing the media as it is under attack from critics, governments and changing technology.

(CNN)I can count myself lucky that when the Chinese secret police arrested me for reporting on worker strikes and branded me a spy, all they did was deport me. It was June 3, 2002, and I was filming a worker protest undercover for a PBS documentary. As I interviewed a laid-off worker, I was jumped by thugs, thrown into a van, driven to a black spot and held incommunicado for 48 hours.

Here's what the Chinese secret police told me: I was reporting in China illegally to stir anti-China sentiment and deserved to be imprisoned for 20 years. Then they put me on a motorcade for the airport.
171121111034-free-press-jiang-xueqin-headshot-overlay-medium-plus-169.jpg


Looking back, I can now see that what saved me from the unchecked power of China's secret police was their fear of the unfettered response of the American media -- the world's free speech defender of last resort.
China let me back into the country a year later in 2003, and today I've switched from being a rebellious journalist into a public educator tasked with helping China adopt Western creativity.
And after ten years of teaching students how to think in a country that has truly "fake news," here's what I learned: A free media is a democracy's communal classroom, where citizens learn to use facts, evidence and logic to discuss and debate ideas. A free media is based on the liberating and empowering belief that the pursuit of universal truths is what unites and armors us against the arbitrariness of authority.


America's free media is the source of American power and progress; China's state-controlled media is what enables the corruption and tyranny that's decaying the nation's soul.



China's Communist Party maintains its iron grip on power by controlling what's said in the media and what's taught in the classroom.
China's state-sponsored media warp reality to cohere to Communist Party doctrine -- and thus turn truth into farce. China's classrooms teach students that authority is always benevolent and right -- and thus educate them out of the truth.
In my attempt to educate Chinese students back into the truth, my most powerful tool is the American media. When Trump calls the American media "the enemy of the people," he's echoing the sentiments of the Chinese government, which has built the "Great Firewall" to monitor and control their citizenry's pursuit of truth.

***
For thousands of years, China walled itself off from the world, but after witnessing the American subprime crisis and hosting the 2008 Beijing Olympics, it imagined a dominant role for itself on the global stage. President Xi Jinping's "China Dream" calls for Chinese schools to teach creativity to make China great again. In this rush to reverse engineer and mass manufacture Steve Jobs clones, Chinese schools have hired me to teach Western creativity.
To do so, I use the American media as the main tool to teach students how to think. In class, we analyze Atlantic and New Yorker articles, breaking down the research and thinking process of reporters. Outside class, my students translate articles from Western media and publish their own daily newspaper. I teach students how to think by having them conduct research, compile their findings in a logically coherent way and then debate their ideas openly.
I believe that China can't be creative unless people stop making facts up and stealing each other's ideas. What drives my work is the faith that creativity comes from the pursuit of truth, which, as a universal human aspiration, is a good unto itself.
When I train teachers, I force them to use multiple resources to do research, cite their sources and cross-reference facts. We read George Orwell's "1984," Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451" and Neil Postman's "Amusing Ourselves to Death" together, to learn how the consistency, coherence and clarity of words speak truth to power. I teach them new mental practices -- asking questions, switching perspectives, analyzing subtext -- that subvert their old cultural habit of parroting authority.
Media martyrs: Among those who died while working as journalists in the past 15 years
But teaching creativity in China can feel like a Sisyphean struggle, because power trumps truth in China.

The prime example of this is the Chinese media, which has always existed to serve the political elite, not to keep it in check. When I was arrested and deported by China's secret police, they threatened me that if I talked to the American media, they would use the Chinese media to attack me.

To control the media, the Party uses a carrot and stick approach. It slaps the hands of those who talk about sensitive topics, and it winks at those who take bribes in exchange for favorable publicity. Too often, Chinese reporters just publish word for word whatever press releases officials and executives give them.

The World Wide Web once promised to break the Communist Party's monopoly of information, but technology has only strengthened and expanded the Party's Big Brother reach and gaze. China's "Great Firewall" blocks foreign websites, filters out sensitive keywords and spies on its own citizens. Over the past few years, China has cracked down hard on online public expression -- draconian laws hunt down "rumor-mongers," police harass and arrest popular bloggers and an army of state-employed "public opinion analysts" monitor and manipulateonline discussion.

It's hard to teach students to form opinions based on facts and evidence when the Chinese internet is so cluttered with distortions, lies and prejudices.

By being able to tunnel through the "Great Firewall" and access blocked websites such as Google and Facebook/Twitter, Virtual Proxy Networks (VPNs) are currently the only way for businesses, universities and foreign nationals to access real information and to communicate unfiltered. But the Communist Party is determined more than ever to plug the VPN leaks in the "Great Firewall." I have endured breathing Beijing's polluted air for many years now, but without my VPN I'd suffocate.

China understands that the source of American power is in innovation. But what it cannot understand is that what empowers Silicon Valley, Wall Street and the Ivy League is the free flow of information sanctified by the Constitution and rigorously exercised by the America media. Despite all the skyscrapers and high speed railways built, China can never be as great as the United States until it frees its citizens to pursue the truth.

Ironically, then, just as China struggles to adopt American innovation, Trump risks destroying it with his war on truth. The China Dream may one day still come true, if Trump fulfills the dark prophecies of Orwell, Bradbury and Postman by amusing us all into tyranny.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/23/opinions/china-media-effects-opinion-xueqin/index.html
Wow, a good story. But why does Obama's brother don't believe it?

Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo
Barack Obama's half-brother, born c. 1965, son of Barack Obama Sr. and his third wife Ruth Baker.[140] Mark Ndesandjo runs an Internet company called WorldNexus that advises Chinese corporations how best to reach international customers.[141] Mark was educated in the US, graduating from Brown University; he studied physics at Stanford University, and received an MBA degree from Emory University.[142]

He has lived in Shenzhen, China, since 2002.[142] Through his mother, he is Jewish.[143] He is married to Liu Xuehua (also spelled Liu Zue Hua in some reports), a Chinese woman from Henan Province.[144][145] He is an accomplished pianist and has performed in concert.[146]


In 2009, Mark Ndesandjo published a semi-autobiographical novel, Nairobi to Shenzhen: A Novel of Love in the East.[147][148] He published a memoir in 2013, entitled, Cultures: My Odyssey of Self-Discovery.[149] In it, he accused their father Barack Sr. of abuse.[150]


@takeitwithyou Thanks for your crazy search for these stories, but it seems that more and more Americans live in China. So your country is really heaven?:-)
 
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Wow, a good story. But why does Obama's brother don't believe it?

Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo
Barack Obama's half-brother, born c. 1965, son of Barack Obama Sr. and his third wife Ruth Baker.[140] Mark Ndesandjo runs an Internet company called WorldNexus that advises Chinese corporations how best to reach international customers.[141] Mark was educated in the US, graduating from Brown University; he studied physics at Stanford University, and received an MBA degree from Emory University.[142]

He has lived in Shenzhen, China, since 2002.[142] Through his mother, he is Jewish.[143] He is married to Liu Xuehua (also spelled Liu Zue Hua in some reports), a Chinese woman from Henan Province.[144][145] He is an accomplished pianist and has performed in concert.[146]


In 2009, Mark Ndesandjo published a semi-autobiographical novel, Nairobi to Shenzhen: A Novel of Love in the East.[147][148] He published a memoir in 2013, entitled, Cultures: My Odyssey of Self-Discovery.[149] In it, he accused their father Barack Sr. of abuse.[150]


@takeitwithyou Thanks for your crazy search for these stories, but it seems that more and more Americans live in China. So your country is really heaven?:-)

No he did not pull the Obama's brother clip LOL. Love it, as Chinese as it can get.
 
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I want to thank you for your replies and insist they make you a think tank Chinese here. The brilliance in your replies is so bright I need shades.:P
Wow, you are the leader in this respect. I need to learn from you. And wish you the next "terrorist attack" to be safe.;)
 
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It seems that american enjoy China.
View attachment 440130

C’mon Two I know we may all look alike to you but this is not exactly a typical picture of a crowd of Americans. We are multi-ethnical but not like this extreme. I think this crowd is mostly Central Asians or Middle Easterners or something. Black Africans in the front..the others..???...Iraqis??...I can’t identify them specifically other than saying they look like they are from Asia.

I’m sure there are better pics to use as an example.

@Gomig-21 can you pick out “all the Americans”.
 
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China controls everything from the media to banks to company's China is a communist regime what else do you expect? They fudge figures and release it as truth it helps when the media is controlled the government of China and foreign journalist are only allowed to write stories that praise China.
 
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C’mon Two I know we may all look alike to you but this is not exactly a typical picture of a crowd of Americans. We are multi-ethnical but not like this extreme. I think this crowd is mostly Central Asians or Middle Easterners or something. Black Africans in the front..the others..???...Iraqis??...I can’t identify them specifically other than saying they look like they are from Asia.

I’m sure there are better pics to use as an example.

@Gomig-21 can you pick out “all the Americans”.
They come from all over the world. My city is dominated by manufacturing exports. USA is an important customer. So Americans are very good in China. so you don't need to worry.

Really, it seems that more and more Americans live in China. And speak fluent chinese, even dialects. And they have begun to expand into inland provinces, even as we this small city.

Jonathan(chinese name: 江喃), Now living in Chengdu, for 18 years... He can speak the Sichuan dialect fluently.
20170629181231605.jpg

Picture text: My Sichuan dialect is more fluent than English.

Annie(chinese name: 唐伯虎), her 10 years came to China. Now she is a Chinese actor and singer.
timg


A Chinese TV series.
timg


Martin(chinese name: 吴孟天), Now he lives in Xiamen. He can be regarded as a Chinese star. he has participated in many Chinese variety shows. even CCTV...

timg

timg

timg

timg


Oh, I'm sorry, it's too much.

@Hamartia Antidote @takeitwithyou @TruthTheOnlyDefense So. Thanks for your story.
 
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171121111034-free-press-jiang-xueqin-headshot-overlay-medium-plus-169.jpg


That fool is biting the hand that is feeding him

When the USA is intervening in everything worldwide, overt or covert, civil or beatful and inhuman, like a mafia boss with its large number of gangs and hitman positioning at every corners of the earth, every intelligent government needs to protect their sovereignty and dignity at all costs! If you are not declared and present yourselves as a usa lackey or the empire's *** lickers, your country is counting down to the minutes of disintegration!
 
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@Gomig-21 can you pick out “all the Americans”.

Tough to say exactly. We're quite the mix of ethnicities and sometimes a group of people doesn't look like the average American since what is that nowadays? Hence the term "melting pot." Even so, I took a very hard look at that pic and I would say the same this you did, maybe black folks in the front row and a few white people in the 3rd row to the right center and left? Not clear-cut, though.
 
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Order vs Freedom

The true freedom is Libya war during Gaddafi is being overthrown. When people were free to do anything they want, before some ruling parties took power and forcing 'order' to the masses, limiting everyone freedom with so the called law. The rest is BS.

Chaos = freedom

Order = tyrannical

Even children know this. Do you remember how tyrannical our parents are? Forcing whatever laws, limiting our freedom and happiness.
 
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Order vs Freedom

The true freedom is Libya war during Gaddafi is being overthrown. When people were free to do anything they want, before some ruling parties took power and forcing 'order' to the masses, limiting everyone freedom with so the called law. The rest is BS.

Chaos = freedom

Order = tyrannical

Even children know this. Do you remember how tyrannical our parents are? Forcing whatever laws, limiting our freedom and happiness.
You are conflating and confusing freedom of thought and expression with anarchy.
 
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Order vs Freedom

The true freedom is Libya war during Gaddafi is being overthrown. When people were free to do anything they want, before some ruling parties took power and forcing 'order' to the masses, limiting everyone freedom with so the called law. The rest is BS.

Chaos = freedom

Order = tyrannical

Even children know this. Do you remember how tyrannical our parents are? Forcing whatever laws, limiting our freedom and happiness.
The world is not black and white only. Law is nothing but a trade-off with weakness of human beings. By limiting certain freedom, such as the freedom to kill, to constrain, to rob, to steal, it helps to preserve other freedoms that most people cherish.
 
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