whoops no this is UC Davis in 2011. the cop pepper spraying these nonviolent student protestors filed for worker's compensation claiming "psychiatric damage" due to having his name released and won more than $38k USD in compensation.

  • emizeko [they/them]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    people were run over with tanks, and their remains hosed down the street drains

    no they weren't. about 300 people died in clashes outside the square, more than half of which were PLA and police.

    The Myth of Tiananmen and the price of a passive press | Columbia Journalism Review

    The Tian’anmen Square ‘Massacre’: The West’s Most Persuasive, Most Pervasive Lie. | Mango Press

    https://www.qiaocollective.com/education/tiananmenreadinglist

      • UmbraVivi [he/him, she/her]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Wtf this is literally George Foreman 1989

        I thought you were gonna link to a source but instead you're linking slam poetry you absolute bozo

      • robinn2
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        deleted by creator

      • Ram_The_Manparts [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        You should ask yourself the following question: Why does Tiananmen Square keep getting dragged up by western media, and meanwhile we never hear anything about this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwangju_Uprising

        Try to think of a reason why.

        (And no, the answer is not "well ackshullly South Korea is a fReE dEmOcRaCY now so it doesn't matter")

      • emizeko [they/them]
        hexagon
        ·
        1 year ago

        responding to the Columbia Journalism Review article (by the WaPo's Beijing bureau chief who was in the square) with an unsourced tone poem inspired by Jorjor Well, you don't look like a shit-eating clown at all

        The actual content of the utterance as it spills out is no more complex or nuanced than “China Bad,” and the elementary mistakes people make when they write out statements of “solidarity” make that much clear. This is not a complaint that these people have not studied China enough — there’s no reason to expect them to study China, and retrospectively I think to some extent it was a mistake to personally have spent so much time trying to teach them. It’s instead an acknowledgment that they are eagerly wielding the accusation like a club, that they are in reality unconcerned with its truth-content, because it serves a social purpose.

        What is this social purpose? Westerners want to believe that other places are worse off, exactly how Americans and Canadians perennially flatter themselves by attacking each others’ decaying health-care systems, or how a divorcee might fantasize that their ex-lover’s blooming love-life is secretly miserable. This kind of “crab mentality” is actually a sophisticated coping mechanism suitable for an environment in which no other course of action seems viable. Cognitive dissonance, the kind that eventually spurs one into becoming intolerant of the status quo and into action, is initially unpleasant and scary for everybody. In this way, we can begin to understand the benefit that “victims” of propaganda derive from carelessly “spreading awareness.” Their efforts feed an ambient propaganda haze of controversy and scandal and wariness that suffocates any painful optimism (or jealousy) and ensuing sense of duty one might otherwise feel from a casual glance at the amazing things happening elsewhere. People aren’t “falling” for atrocity propaganda; they’re eagerly seeking it out, like a soothing balm.

        https://redsails.org/masses-elites-and-rebels/