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In China, an App About Xi Is Impossible to Ignore — Even if You Try

Bussard Ramjet

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In China, an App About Xi Is Impossible to Ignore — Even if You Try

Communist Party members using the Study the Great Nation app during a weekly meeting in Beijing in February. Tens of millions of Chinese are now using the app, often under pressure from the government.CreditJason Lee/Reuters
merlin_151638735_4726dda1-6550-4bb2-a3ff-587d4ba13b59-articleLarge.jpg

Image
merlin_151638735_4726dda1-6550-4bb2-a3ff-587d4ba13b59-articleLarge.jpg

Communist Party members using the Study the Great Nation app during a weekly meeting in Beijing in February. Tens of millions of Chinese are now using the app, often under pressure from the government.CreditCreditJason Lee/Reuters


By Javier C. Hernández

  • April 7, 2019
CHANGSHA, China — Inside a fishing gear store on a busy city street, the owner sits behind a counter, furiously tapping a smartphone to improve his score on an app that has nothing to do with rods, reels and bait.

The owner, Jiang Shuiqiu, a 35-year-old army veteran, has a different obsession: earning points on Study the Great Nation, a new app devoted to promoting President Xi Jinping and the ruling Communist Party — a kind of high-tech equivalent of Mao’s Little Red Book. Mr. Jiang spends several hours daily on the app, checking news about Mr. Xi and brushing up on socialist theories.

Tens of millions of Chinese workers, students and civil servants are now using Study the Great Nation, often under pressure from the government. It is part of a sweeping effort by Mr. Xi to strengthen ideological control in the digital age and reassert the party’s primacy, as Mao once did, as the center of Chinese life.

“We must love our country,” said Mr. Jiang, one of the top scorers on the app in Changsha, the capital of the southern province of Hunan. “We are getting stronger and stronger.”

more than 100 million registered users — a reach that would be the envy of any new app’s creators.

But those numbers are driven largely by the party, which ordered thousands of officials across China to ensure that the app penetrates the daily routines of as many citizens as possible, whether they like it or not.

Schools are shaming students with low app scores. Government offices are holding study sessions and forcing workers who fall behind to write reports criticizing themselves. Private companies, hoping to curry favor with party officials, are ranking employees based on their use of the app and awarding top performers the title of “star learner.”


Many employers now require workers to submit daily screenshots documenting how many points they have earned.

ubiquitous in China, but experts say Study the Great Nation is different because the government is forcing people to use it and punishing those who cheat or fall behind.

The app allows users to earn points for staying on top of news about Mr. Xi. Watching a video about his recent visit to France, for example, earns one point. Getting a perfect score on a quiz about his economic policies earns 10.

The app comes as Mr. Xi, who rose to power in 2012, is leading a broader crackdown on free speech in China, imprisoning scores of activists, lawyers and intellectuals, and imposing new restrictions on the news media. Mr. Xi has spoken frequently about what he calls the need to guard against online threats. He has warned that the party could lose its grip on power if it does not master digital media.

“There is no national security without internet security,” Mr. Xi said in a speech this year. “If we cannot succeed on the internet, we will not be able to maintain power in the long run.”

David Bandurski, co-director of the China Media Project, said the app was a way for Mr. Xi to ensure that Chinese families are invested in the life of the party at a time when many dismiss propaganda as stilted and irrelevant.

Mao’s playbook in his quest to be seen as a singular, transformative force.

The app features a television series called “Xi Time” and Mr. Xi’s quotations on topics like building a strong military and achieving a “Chinese dream” of prosperity and strength. The app recommends stories about Mr. Xi on its home screen and sends push notifications highlighting “golden sentences” from his latest speeches. Even the Chinese name for the app is a play on Mr. Xi’s name.

The app, which also offers lighter fare about traditional Chinese culture, history and geography, presents a censored version of current events. Topics such as China’s mass detention of Muslims are not included.

At Hulunbuir University in northern China, school officials monitor the scores of more than 1,100 teachers and students who use the app as part of the school’s efforts to spread Mr. Xi’s ideas, known in China as Xi Jinping Thought.

“Everyone studies voluntarily and has very high scores,” said Bai Mei, an ideology instructor at the university.

Not everyone is as enthusiastic. In interviews, students and workers complained that superiors publicly chastised them for low scores. Others said bosses threatened to deduct pay or withhold bonuses if they did not use the app more frequently. They did not want to provide their names for fear of punishment, but some have complained online.

videos by prison guards, raps by children and adulatory song-and-dance routines by power plant workers. Some party members have suggested the app can be used as a dating tool to screen potential mates (“If you see a guy on the subway using the app,” says one cartoon, “you should marry him”).

In Changsha, which coincidentally is an hour’s drive from Mao’s childhood home, the local news media has lauded Mr. Jiang, the owner of the fishing gear store, for his high scores. He and his wife sometimes answer questions on the app together at dinner, alongside their 9-year-old son.

Mr. Jiang said his military training had inspired him to devote himself fully to Study the Great Nation. By using the app, he said, he has grown even more patriotic.

“President Xi has a dream of great renaissance,” he said. “When young people are strong, the nation is strong.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/07/world/asia/china-xi-jinping-study-the-great-nation-app.html
 
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@cirr @Han Patriot @TaiShang and others..

Is this what China really wants. A new cult of personality. Forcing everyone to download and spend time on the little red app? What good ever came out of it?

The cult of personality was considered harmful by the party itself before Xi Jinping. But Xi Jinping seems to have forgotten the lessons of the cultural revolution.
 
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@cirr @Han Patriot @TaiShang and others..

Is this what China really wants. A new cult of personality. Forcing everyone to download and spend time on the little red app? What good ever came out of it?

The cult of personality was considered harmful by the party itself before Xi Jinping. But Xi Jinping seems to have forgotten the lessons of the cultural revolution.
Xi create a ' social credit score" in CN to make sure that all Cnese must do what Xi tell them to do. If they failed, then they can not buy ticket for plane and train, also can not borrow money from the bank and the police will come and arrest them once day.

Their lives belong to Xi. Thats why I hope Mod will seperate Cnese poster from this far east section, cos talking to Cnese is not better than talking to Xi's animals. Waste of time :coffee:
 
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Xi create a ' social credit score" in CN to make sure that all Cnese must do what Xi tell them to do. If they failed, then they can not buy ticket for plane and train, also can not borrow money from the bank and the police will come and arrest them once day.

Their lives belong to Xi. Thats why I hope Mod will seperate Cnese poster from this far east section, cos talking to Cnese is not better than talking to Xi's animals. Waste of time :coffee:

It is not helpful to call anyone animal.

But I would like to hear from the Chinese posters here: @TaiShang @cirr @Han Patriot @Adam WANG SHANGHAI MEGA
 
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New York Times...There are tons of videos about life in China made by foreigners living here on youtube, check them out and get a general idea of what China is really like if you really want to know, those NYT staff write tons of China related articles thousands of miles away in their New York offices, most of them have never set a foot in China ever.
 
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New York Times...There are tons of videos about life in China made by foreigners living here on youtube, check them out and get a general idea of what China is really like, those NYT staff write tons of China related articles thousands of miles away in their New York offices, most of them have never set a foot in China ever.

Umm... I have read and seen many of those foreigner produced videos about China. Also, NYT reporting on China these days is strictly from its reporters based in Beijing usually, most of whom can also speak Chinese.

Also, this phenomenon of app has been reported in many places.

Do you deny that this app exists and is among the most "popular" and that all kinds of Chinese people are forced to use it?
 
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Umm... I have read and seen many of those foreigner produced videos about China. Also, NYT reporting on China these days is strictly from its reporters based in Beijing usually, most of whom can also speak Chinese.

Also, this phenomenon of app has been reported in many places.

Do you deny that this app exists and is among the most "popular" and that all kinds of Chinese people are forced to use it?
I NEVER heard of such an App, I can't say for sure that if it exists, but based on my experience living in both China and US, it's just another piece of China bashing propaganda piece, western propaganda really brainwashed so many people that many foreigners were totally in shock when they first visited China, it's almost everything opposite to what they learned from their media about China.

Top mobile apps in China by total downloads 2018
app-ranking-oct-2018-004.png


That's what someone who knows China's recent past and present has to say about China.

 
.
Even in HK, this is my first time heard about this app and after the researching I think this app is existed but government forced people in China using this app is purely BS.
 
.
Umm... I have read and seen many of those foreigner produced videos about China. Also, NYT reporting on China these days is strictly from its reporters based in Beijing usually, most of whom can also speak Chinese.

Also, this phenomenon of app has been reported in many places.and spr

Do you deny that this app exists and is among the most "popular" and that all kinds of Chinese people are forced to use it?
The one really brainwashed is you. You are in total denial China is successful and many Chinese are content with their way of life. No countries is perfect but China is far from failure. In fact, no countries can matched China feat for progression in such short time.

Are you going to deny western media is not biased against China?

After Indian gets humiliated by small Pakistan on 27th Feb. All you can do is do propaganda spread hate thread to ease your India failure. Pathetic :crazy:
 
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In China, an App About Xi Is Impossible to Ignore — Even if You Try

Communist Party members using the Study the Great Nation app during a weekly meeting in Beijing in February. Tens of millions of Chinese are now using the app, often under pressure from the government.CreditJason Lee/Reuters
merlin_151638735_4726dda1-6550-4bb2-a3ff-587d4ba13b59-articleLarge.jpg

Image
merlin_151638735_4726dda1-6550-4bb2-a3ff-587d4ba13b59-articleLarge.jpg

Communist Party members using the Study the Great Nation app during a weekly meeting in Beijing in February. Tens of millions of Chinese are now using the app, often under pressure from the government.CreditCreditJason Lee/Reuters


By Javier C. Hernández

  • April 7, 2019
CHANGSHA, China — Inside a fishing gear store on a busy city street, the owner sits behind a counter, furiously tapping a smartphone to improve his score on an app that has nothing to do with rods, reels and bait.

The owner, Jiang Shuiqiu, a 35-year-old army veteran, has a different obsession: earning points on Study the Great Nation, a new app devoted to promoting President Xi Jinping and the ruling Communist Party — a kind of high-tech equivalent of Mao’s Little Red Book. Mr. Jiang spends several hours daily on the app, checking news about Mr. Xi and brushing up on socialist theories.

Tens of millions of Chinese workers, students and civil servants are now using Study the Great Nation, often under pressure from the government. It is part of a sweeping effort by Mr. Xi to strengthen ideological control in the digital age and reassert the party’s primacy, as Mao once did, as the center of Chinese life.

“We must love our country,” said Mr. Jiang, one of the top scorers on the app in Changsha, the capital of the southern province of Hunan. “We are getting stronger and stronger.”

more than 100 million registered users — a reach that would be the envy of any new app’s creators.

But those numbers are driven largely by the party, which ordered thousands of officials across China to ensure that the app penetrates the daily routines of as many citizens as possible, whether they like it or not.

Schools are shaming students with low app scores. Government offices are holding study sessions and forcing workers who fall behind to write reports criticizing themselves. Private companies, hoping to curry favor with party officials, are ranking employees based on their use of the app and awarding top performers the title of “star learner.”


Many employers now require workers to submit daily screenshots documenting how many points they have earned.

ubiquitous in China, but experts say Study the Great Nation is different because the government is forcing people to use it and punishing those who cheat or fall behind.

The app allows users to earn points for staying on top of news about Mr. Xi. Watching a video about his recent visit to France, for example, earns one point. Getting a perfect score on a quiz about his economic policies earns 10.

The app comes as Mr. Xi, who rose to power in 2012, is leading a broader crackdown on free speech in China, imprisoning scores of activists, lawyers and intellectuals, and imposing new restrictions on the news media. Mr. Xi has spoken frequently about what he calls the need to guard against online threats. He has warned that the party could lose its grip on power if it does not master digital media.

“There is no national security without internet security,” Mr. Xi said in a speech this year. “If we cannot succeed on the internet, we will not be able to maintain power in the long run.”

David Bandurski, co-director of the China Media Project, said the app was a way for Mr. Xi to ensure that Chinese families are invested in the life of the party at a time when many dismiss propaganda as stilted and irrelevant.

Mao’s playbook in his quest to be seen as a singular, transformative force.

The app features a television series called “Xi Time” and Mr. Xi’s quotations on topics like building a strong military and achieving a “Chinese dream” of prosperity and strength. The app recommends stories about Mr. Xi on its home screen and sends push notifications highlighting “golden sentences” from his latest speeches. Even the Chinese name for the app is a play on Mr. Xi’s name.

The app, which also offers lighter fare about traditional Chinese culture, history and geography, presents a censored version of current events. Topics such as China’s mass detention of Muslims are not included.

At Hulunbuir University in northern China, school officials monitor the scores of more than 1,100 teachers and students who use the app as part of the school’s efforts to spread Mr. Xi’s ideas, known in China as Xi Jinping Thought.

“Everyone studies voluntarily and has very high scores,” said Bai Mei, an ideology instructor at the university.

Not everyone is as enthusiastic. In interviews, students and workers complained that superiors publicly chastised them for low scores. Others said bosses threatened to deduct pay or withhold bonuses if they did not use the app more frequently. They did not want to provide their names for fear of punishment, but some have complained online.

videos by prison guards, raps by children and adulatory song-and-dance routines by power plant workers. Some party members have suggested the app can be used as a dating tool to screen potential mates (“If you see a guy on the subway using the app,” says one cartoon, “you should marry him”).

In Changsha, which coincidentally is an hour’s drive from Mao’s childhood home, the local news media has lauded Mr. Jiang, the owner of the fishing gear store, for his high scores. He and his wife sometimes answer questions on the app together at dinner, alongside their 9-year-old son.

Mr. Jiang said his military training had inspired him to devote himself fully to Study the Great Nation. By using the app, he said, he has grown even more patriotic.

“President Xi has a dream of great renaissance,” he said. “When young people are strong, the nation is strong.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/07/world/asia/china-xi-jinping-study-the-great-nation-app.html
In China, an App About Xi Is Impossible to Ignore — Even if You Try

Communist Party members using the Study the Great Nation app during a weekly meeting in Beijing in February. Tens of millions of Chinese are now using the app, often under pressure from the government.CreditJason Lee/Reuters
merlin_151638735_4726dda1-6550-4bb2-a3ff-587d4ba13b59-articleLarge.jpg

Image
merlin_151638735_4726dda1-6550-4bb2-a3ff-587d4ba13b59-articleLarge.jpg

Communist Party members using the Study the Great Nation app during a weekly meeting in Beijing in February. Tens of millions of Chinese are now using the app, often under pressure from the government.CreditCreditJason Lee/Reuters


By Javier C. Hernández

  • April 7, 2019
CHANGSHA, China — Inside a fishing gear store on a busy city street, the owner sits behind a counter, furiously tapping a smartphone to improve his score on an app that has nothing to do with rods, reels and bait.

The owner, Jiang Shuiqiu, a 35-year-old army veteran, has a different obsession: earning points on Study the Great Nation, a new app devoted to promoting President Xi Jinping and the ruling Communist Party — a kind of high-tech equivalent of Mao’s Little Red Book. Mr. Jiang spends several hours daily on the app, checking news about Mr. Xi and brushing up on socialist theories.

Tens of millions of Chinese workers, students and civil servants are now using Study the Great Nation, often under pressure from the government. It is part of a sweeping effort by Mr. Xi to strengthen ideological control in the digital age and reassert the party’s primacy, as Mao once did, as the center of Chinese life.

“We must love our country,” said Mr. Jiang, one of the top scorers on the app in Changsha, the capital of the southern province of Hunan. “We are getting stronger and stronger.”

more than 100 million registered users — a reach that would be the envy of any new app’s creators.

But those numbers are driven largely by the party, which ordered thousands of officials across China to ensure that the app penetrates the daily routines of as many citizens as possible, whether they like it or not.

Schools are shaming students with low app scores. Government offices are holding study sessions and forcing workers who fall behind to write reports criticizing themselves. Private companies, hoping to curry favor with party officials, are ranking employees based on their use of the app and awarding top performers the title of “star learner.”


Many employers now require workers to submit daily screenshots documenting how many points they have earned.

ubiquitous in China, but experts say Study the Great Nation is different because the government is forcing people to use it and punishing those who cheat or fall behind.

The app allows users to earn points for staying on top of news about Mr. Xi. Watching a video about his recent visit to France, for example, earns one point. Getting a perfect score on a quiz about his economic policies earns 10.

The app comes as Mr. Xi, who rose to power in 2012, is leading a broader crackdown on free speech in China, imprisoning scores of activists, lawyers and intellectuals, and imposing new restrictions on the news media. Mr. Xi has spoken frequently about what he calls the need to guard against online threats. He has warned that the party could lose its grip on power if it does not master digital media.

“There is no national security without internet security,” Mr. Xi said in a speech this year. “If we cannot succeed on the internet, we will not be able to maintain power in the long run.”

David Bandurski, co-director of the China Media Project, said the app was a way for Mr. Xi to ensure that Chinese families are invested in the life of the party at a time when many dismiss propaganda as stilted and irrelevant.

Mao’s playbook in his quest to be seen as a singular, transformative force.

The app features a television series called “Xi Time” and Mr. Xi’s quotations on topics like building a strong military and achieving a “Chinese dream” of prosperity and strength. The app recommends stories about Mr. Xi on its home screen and sends push notifications highlighting “golden sentences” from his latest speeches. Even the Chinese name for the app is a play on Mr. Xi’s name.

The app, which also offers lighter fare about traditional Chinese culture, history and geography, presents a censored version of current events. Topics such as China’s mass detention of Muslims are not included.

At Hulunbuir University in northern China, school officials monitor the scores of more than 1,100 teachers and students who use the app as part of the school’s efforts to spread Mr. Xi’s ideas, known in China as Xi Jinping Thought.

“Everyone studies voluntarily and has very high scores,” said Bai Mei, an ideology instructor at the university.

Not everyone is as enthusiastic. In interviews, students and workers complained that superiors publicly chastised them for low scores. Others said bosses threatened to deduct pay or withhold bonuses if they did not use the app more frequently. They did not want to provide their names for fear of punishment, but some have complained online.

videos by prison guards, raps by children and adulatory song-and-dance routines by power plant workers. Some party members have suggested the app can be used as a dating tool to screen potential mates (“If you see a guy on the subway using the app,” says one cartoon, “you should marry him”).

In Changsha, which coincidentally is an hour’s drive from Mao’s childhood home, the local news media has lauded Mr. Jiang, the owner of the fishing gear store, for his high scores. He and his wife sometimes answer questions on the app together at dinner, alongside their 9-year-old son.

Mr. Jiang said his military training had inspired him to devote himself fully to Study the Great Nation. By using the app, he said, he has grown even more patriotic.

“President Xi has a dream of great renaissance,” he said. “When young people are strong, the nation is strong.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/07/world/asia/china-xi-jinping-study-the-great-nation-app.html

Screenshot_20190408-195836.png
 
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i also never heard of this APP, i asked my colleges, none of them had heard of it. it Is obviously that it Is A fake news
I NEVER heard of such an App, I can't say for sure that if it exists, but based on my experience living in both China and US, it's just another piece of China bashing propaganda piece, western propaganda really brainwashed so many people that many foreigners were totally in shock when they first visited China, it's almost everything opposite to what they learned from their media about China.

Top mobile apps in China by total downloads 2018
app-ranking-oct-2018-004.png


That's what someone who knows China's recent past and present has to say about China.

yes, i also never heard of this APP, i asked my colleges, none of them had heard of it. it Is obviously that it Is A fake news
 
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i also never heard of this APP, i asked my colleges, none of them had heard of it. it Is obviously that it Is A fake news

yes, i also never heard of this APP, i asked my colleges, none of them had heard of it. it Is obviously that it Is A fake news
But "Social credit system" is true, right? If u dont say what Xi tell u guys to say, then u can not buy plane and train ticket, right??

Of course, in our eyes, Xi is just a stupid fatso who made CN lost in 2014 oil rig conflict
 
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I NEVER heard of such an App, I can't say for sure that if it exists, but based on my experience living in both China and US, it's just another piece of China bashing propaganda piece, western propaganda really brainwashed so many people that many foreigners were totally in shock when they first visited China, it's almost everything opposite to what they learned from their media about China.

Top mobile apps in China by total downloads 2018
app-ranking-oct-2018-004.png


That's what someone who knows China's recent past and present has to say about China.


This is an old list. The current list shows the Xi App as the most downloaded app.

Even in HK, this is my first time heard about this app and after the researching I think this app is existed but government forced people in China using this app is purely BS.

Multiple people have reported that it is compulsory for all state employees and many private ones too to download it. Research it and you will find about it.

The one really brainwashed is you. You are in total denial China is successful and many Chinese are content with their way of life. No countries is perfect but China is far from failure. In fact, no countries can matched China feat for progression in such short time.

Are you going to deny western media is not biased against China?

After Indian gets humiliated by small Pakistan on 27th Feb. All you can do is do propaganda spread hate thread to ease your India failure. Pathetic :crazy:

Why don't you answer the main question? What do you think about this app? Should people be forced to download and learn from this app, like Mao's Red Book?
 
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Umm... I have read and seen many of those foreigner produced videos about China. Also, NYT reporting on China these days is strictly from its reporters based in Beijing usually, most of whom can also speak Chinese.

Also, this phenomenon of app has been reported in many places.

Do you deny that this app exists and is among the most "popular" and that all kinds of Chinese people are forced to use it?
Just buy a ticket and visit China. You can see it for yourself. All those Indians whose been there come back realising India is so far behind. Trust me, they all do...lol
 
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Why don't you answer the main question? What do you think about this app? Should people be forced to download and learn from this app, like Mao's Red Book?

We have answer you but jealousy , failure and denial. Blind you. You are a utter loser. :enjoy:
 
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