Evan Agostini/Invision/AP; Flickr/Norman Hammer
Earlier this week, the Communist Party of China
banned Justin Bieber from performing in the country for being “a controversial young foreign idol” and for “a series of bad behaviors.”
Winnie the Pooh was also
banned from the country this week, reportedly because of memes that compared Chinese President Xi Jinping to the honey-loving bear.
View image on Twitter
Follow
Kenneth Roth
✔@KenRoth
China blacklists Winnie the Pooh(!) because of comparisons with Xi Jinping.
Sensitive, sensitive.
http://bit.ly/2uuKEKG
2:21 AM - 18 Jul 2017
Twitter Ads info and privacy
The Chinese government is
notorious for its censorship and heavy-handed control of information. Every day, government censors rove the Internet searching for potentially subversive content to block.
Sometimes, the results are comical, as with Winnie the Pooh. Other times, the results are decidedly more ominous.
Here are six more absurd things that the government has banned or censored.
1. Social media and search engines
Information can spread uncontrollably around the world on social media. To keep that from happening, China just blocks websites wholesale.
Facebook, Google, Snapchat, Twitter, Youtube, Instagram, and Pinterest are some of the popular social media and search engine sites that you won’t be able to use in China because of the “Great Firewall.”
2. Images of empty chairs
View image on Twitter
Follow
Index on Censorship
✔@IndexCensorship
Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo's chair is still empty
https://www.indexoncensorship.org/2017/07/chinese-dissident-liu-xiaobos-chair-still-empty/ …
12:59 PM - 10 Jul 2017
Twitter Ads info and privacy
Nobel prize winning human rights activist Liu Xiaobo
died last week from liver cancer. He had been serving a jail sentence for his work advocating for human rights and democracy.
Xiaobo was awarded the Nobel prize in 2011 while in jail and the committee in Sweden honored in absentia with an empty chair on the stage.
That image became a potent symbol of Chinese repression, but before it could go viral, the Chinese government blocked references to it.
Read More: US Says China Is ‘Complicit’ in Human Trafficking
3. References to Tiananmen square
In 1989, pro-democracy demonstrations in Tiananmen square were violently suppressed by the Chinese government.
To this day, a death count from the massacre hasn’t been released and Chinese citizens are hard-pressed to find information on the event, because references are thoroughly scrubbed from the Internet.
4. “The Big Bang Theory”
Image:
Flickr/BagoGames
“The Big Bang Theory” might seem like a tame comedy with few political overtones,
but to the Chinese government it’s “content that violates China’s constitution, endangers the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, provokes troubles in society, promotes illegal religion and triggers ethnic hatred.”
According to the New Yorker, the ban was part of a broader effort to reduce the influence of Western pop culture within the country.
Read More: Female Stars of ‘Big Bang Theory’ Are Demanding Equal Pay for Equal Work
5. Images of umbrellas
18 May
Christopher DeWolf
✔@dewolfleloup
Replying to @dewolfleloup
Instead of sensitive, human-scaled structures, today's Hong Kong is more likely to build giant megablocks with blank walls
#BorrowedSpaces pic.twitter.com/g37jYqPfxy
Follow
Christopher DeWolf
✔@dewolfleloup
When the Umbrella Revolution erupted in 2014, it turned some of HK's worst urban spaces into its best
#BorrowedSpacespic.twitter.com/cN233WObmK
7:14 PM - 18 May 2017
Twitter Ads info and privacy
After pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong became known as the “
Umbrella Revolution,” the Chinese government censored umbrella images on the Internet, and reporters were once denied using umbrellas at a press conference. They were
given raincoats instead.
6. Ramadan
While impossible to fully ban, the Chinese government has made it difficult to celebrate the holiday. In addition to a
sweeping campaign of repression against the minority Uighur population, which is predominantly Muslim, party loyalists have been
deputized to patrol public buildings during Ramadan to make sure nobody is fasting — a central tenet of the holiday.
TOPICS
China,
Winnie the pooh,
Justin Bieber,
Bans,
Censorship,
Xi Jinping,
Internet
Joe McCarthy is a Content Creator at Global Citizen. He believes apathy is the biggest threat to creating a more just world and tries his hardest to stay open-minded and curious. Living in New York keeps him aware of how interconnected our world is, how every action has ripples.