To: ByGoneYrs who wrote (37767 ) 9/28/2020 12:14:04 PM From: RetiredNow 3 RecommendationsRecommended By GROUND ZERO™ isopatch voltz
Respond to of 74362 How is this ok? The Chinese Communist Party has free reign on Twitter to stir up Americans against each other to divide and conquer us, but Twitter censors the President of the USA. I'm getting to the point where I believe we need to declare Twitter, Facebook, and Google as enemies of the people and revoke their charters to do business in the US. They are clearly not committed to free speech and they are actively working to destroy this country. It's time they are dealt with before it is too late. ---------Chinese State Media Outlet Throws Support Behind Black Lives Matter Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News, Chinese state media outlet Xinhua has thrown its support behind Black Lives Matter with a cartoon that depicts police officers armed with pitchforks and torches hunting down a black man. “Statistics show, time and again, that some are disproportionately prejudiced against in the U.S. #FightRacism,” tweeted the official Xinhua News account. The image shows three white police officers and a dog hunting down an African-American male to the refrain of “hunt that blackie!” Following the death of George Floyd and the explosion of BLM riots and demonstrations that followed, Chinese media and Communist political figures threw their weight behind the movement as a means of criticizing America’s human rights record.This is pretty rich given that China literally incarcerates dissidents in re-education gulags and harvests the organs of political prisoners. Respondents to the tweet pointed out the revolting irony.“So how are the Uighurs doing up in Xinjiang?” asked one. Another respondent pointed out how China literally removes black people from promos for Hollywood movies.China is one of the most racist countries in the world towards black people. As this Spectator article documents, even Chinese people with darker skin are treated badly, with children being called “monkeys” if they don’t have a pale complexion.Racism in China is “so commonplace it can seem almost cheerful,” writes Carola Binney, who spent a year in China teaching English, adding that racism is a “standard undercurrent of public debate.”