Or is it mostly the same as the west.

Was just curious.

  • Tabitha ☢️[she/her]
    ·
    3 months ago

    western LGBTQ+ 'pride' is unfortunately sometimes seen as bourgeois decadence

    I'm curious, is the US currently funding pro-LGBTQ+ groups/rhetoric inside of China? I imagine if Xi passed a serious LGBTQ+ rights law (perhaps on a similar level to Cuba's recent law), would such funding from the US quickly switch to anti-LGBT groups?

    I can imagine US dissent funding to skip LGBTQ+ entirely to focus on "underground churches". A lot of us in the west grew up being told Christianity was illegal in China, despite there being millions of Christians in China openly attending openly Christian churches. I wonder if anyone has done a video essay on that kind of topic.

    • PointAndClique [they/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      Groups no, not to any large degree. The Foreign NGO law that came into effect in 2017 saw a contraction or closure of many groups across different sectors. Incidentally, a number of WeChat groups I was in/accounts I followed also closed over that time. The foreign NGOs definitely funded smaller local NGOs and when that money and support dried up, they shut up shop.

      As for rhetoric, I would posit yes. fedpostings don't look

      spoiler

      Short form video content is the main vehicle I've seen because it's so easy to set up a douyin (tiktok) or WeChat 'channel' and subtitle western anti-LGBTQ+ content. I've seen JBP content under supposed 'English learning' channels (their channel name will be something like 'English Everyday'. They have few followers but there are so many that I'm almost certain they're O/S funded/supported. I've also seen way too much Andrew Tate and a surprising number of Christian Ministers being reupped. I block the JBP, religious stuff and block and report the Tate stuff but it comes back. I also use WeChat to learn Chinese so I usually try to avoid the English-language content but it still comes through.

      Then there's the overseas Chinese who film their lives and share on WeChat, and be like 'oh look how life is over here in Ontario/Adelaide/Bristol'. Usually it's like 'heres a supermarket, here's a hospital, here's a school' but occasionally I've seen these vloggers go to pride parades, or protests and their coverage is usually negative and the comments tend that way too. I'm guessing that's because expats tend to be wealthier/more conservative so this is likely incidental, but this content is usually better received than the JBP stuff because it's Chinese language, is presented as objective slice of life. If there were overseas funding of anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric, this would be an effective vehicle. Hasbara is already onto it within and outside China in turning people against the Palestinian cause but they're absolutely hopeless at it and get called out 99% of the time, thankfully.


      It's hard to give a full picture because of the nature of these apps and the tailored fyp, but I want to get across as someone who actively avoids that content, I still get it. Just as bad as YouTube I'd say.

      In my assessment, both pro/anti narratives are already there and are being pushed in equal measure, they're two sides of the same coin, and dirt_owl is on the money that rainbow capitalism as a deliberate effect is shifting the ills of capitalism onto minority groups. The anti-LGBTQ+ narrative is almost directly being imported from the west too. Capitalism gets you on the swings and the roundabouts.