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by hker
1988 days ago
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It is more than “language barrier” or “diverse opinions” in China: the government actively censors information and sways public opinion [1]. Regardless of your political stance (whether you think Dalai Lama is good or evil, Tiananmen Square is good or bad), the public at large in China receives different information and opinions from outside. This is not orientalism. Concepts that could be discussed freely in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, or India, could not be discussed with ease in China. This is hinted at above, that many in China are unaware of the Tiananmen Square incident. [1]: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/01/07/wechat-... |
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My point isn't to defend the CCP apparatus or to engage in whataboutism, but simply to point out that China isn't a blob of unthinking people as they are often portrayed to be. Nor are they basically primed to instantly adopt Western values should some Westerner bravely bust through the censorship wall and "educate" them. That's where the orientalism springs from: an inability to conceive of other cultures as anything other than relative actors to one's own.[0]
In my view, it is a widespread and serious flaw in thinking that only helps to weaken the West when dealing with China.
[0] For an amusing illustrative example see https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/05/29/how-weste...