All: This thread is terrible and violates the spirit of this site in too many ways to list. HN is not a place for nationalistic flamewar or accusing each other. Please don't do that damage here. The container is fragile.
If this epidemic continues, we're going to do less "please don't" and more "we've banned". I don't mean the coronavirus— I mean the epidemic of violating HN's guidelines. Please review https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and stick to the rules when posting here.
The vast majority of the community come here for curious conversation, not to hear people bashing each other and their countries in the same few ways over and over again. That's not only nasty, it's tedious. Please take it elsewhere.
I truly don't understand why "expel Chinese journalists" was even considered as a reasonable course of action by the US.
It may not explicitly violate the letter of the 1st Amendment, but it certainly violates its spirit, not to mention invites reciprocal action like this that only deepens the fog of war over our most dangerous adversary power.
There are many, many legitimate ways to punish foreign governments, but the expulsion of reporters should never be among them, unless we are at war with that government.
"But China did it first!" Well, then we should highlight how outrageous and unacceptable that behavior is, and sanction them some other way. Not reciprocate.
It's kind of ridiculous all the way around. On the one hand, the U.S. should probably be more pragmatic in cases like this. On the flip side, I'm frankly surprised that they're simply being banned/removed from the country.
I'm all for calling out a lot of the issues on both sides of the ocean on this one, even if I do feel that the actions of one country are far worse than the other. Two wrongs do not make a right.
The U.S. should never have allowed more than half of any given industry (especially medicine and other essential infrastructure) to be produced overseas to begin with. The trade war was bound to happen, still, civility should always remain at the table.
> "But China did it first!" Well, then we should highlight how outrageous and unacceptable that behavior is, and sanction them some other way. Not reciprocate.
You're falling squarely into the trap that I believe China plays so frequently: the belief that every other group of people shares a compatible value system and culture and any disagreement can be resolved with diplomacy, but never force.
To be frank, the Chinese view us as dumb by setting restrictions on ourselves, in an effort to inspire them to do similar self-restraint measures.
This methodology is flawed and outdated, the Chinese are not the Russians.
There are thousands and thousands of journalists working for foreign governments, friendly and hostile, in the United States. Some hostile foreign governments even operate domestic broadcasting operations in America. (China, Russia, etc...)
The worst thing that's ever been done in recent memory is requiring those operations to register as foreign agents. And I think at one time there was a move to limit the Kremlin's cadre to something like 1,000 people. But I might be remembering that part wrong.
Aw, WSJ videos covering China were some of my favourite content. China is really lashing out.
Nothing is surprising since they banned Zedd from China simply for liking a South Park tweet, he's a very popular (and harmlessly generic) pop musician:
"Shooting the messenger" refers to envoys, emissaries, ambassadors, and other official agents and representatives. Harming them has led to some devastating consequences for the people doing the harm.
Supposedly, but we'd never actually know about the times where the message died with the messenger, would we? For all we know it's incredibly effective.
I don't believe this is true, I'm just pointing out we'd have no way of knowing.
Probably a mathematical model of human societies accurate enough to predict how they react to carefully tailored messages inserted into popular media and how to use this to control their behaviors. The world's most advanced militaries are useless when their societies refuse to use them or turn them on themselves in civil wars. As individuals, the effects of such a weapon would be almost invisible as it targets the behavior of humans when they interact as a group. Even if you consciously knew this is going on, society as a whole would still unconsciously follow the playbook planted for it.
This is a big hit for journalism about China. A lot of very good quality reporting on (among others) Xinjiang came from these people. We will all be much less informed about China in the future.
The subtle shift in confidence that this action implies is that China is confident in itself after "beating" the virus while the west is struggling.
A "media war" between China and the US might be worse than a trade war. While a trade war is just about numbers, this will be about ideology and there will be no middle ground.
There's growing resentment against Western media for the way the news reported. Take a look at following links. I saw one of them personally on NYTimes couple of days ago. The one from CNN below the banner reads "California prisons" but the picture is from a mosque in Istanbul. One incident is a mistake, but multiple times same "mistake" only show malevolence.
Seems like a weird mistake that somehow got propagated to multiple platforms at once. What would be the ulterior motive of portraying Californian prisons as ornate places of worship? I don't see any political angle here, so it seems reasonable to assume it was a mistake.
(I didn't downvote you. As far as I'm concerned, CNN is frequently sloppy and deserves criticism for that.)
In reality, it's just that these outlets are the only ones with large bureau operations. There are plenty of other independent reporters and smaller sources with much better coverage.
EDIT: FYI, couldn't read the article due to a paywall, did a search, found out some about the history. Thought this added information to the conversation. Yes, this is clearly propaganda, but I still thought it was interesting. You're all of age, you can read this sort of propaganda without being harmed.
This is an information war. The US is also banning Chinese journalists. In the end, everybody is losing and I don't see anyone here doing the right thing.
I definitely suspect that might be the case. In order to push back against local public anger, the Chinese government have invested a lot of credibility in the idea that their handling of Covid-19 is a shining model for the rest of the world, but it just doesn't feel like it should work. Exponential growth being what it is, if it failed it'd be possible to remain in denial for a while and cover it up for a while longer but sooner or later...
[+] [-] dang|6 years ago|reply
If this epidemic continues, we're going to do less "please don't" and more "we've banned". I don't mean the coronavirus— I mean the epidemic of violating HN's guidelines. Please review https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and stick to the rules when posting here.
The vast majority of the community come here for curious conversation, not to hear people bashing each other and their countries in the same few ways over and over again. That's not only nasty, it's tedious. Please take it elsewhere.
More explanation in this thread: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22605365
[+] [-] unknown|6 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] koboll|6 years ago|reply
It may not explicitly violate the letter of the 1st Amendment, but it certainly violates its spirit, not to mention invites reciprocal action like this that only deepens the fog of war over our most dangerous adversary power.
There are many, many legitimate ways to punish foreign governments, but the expulsion of reporters should never be among them, unless we are at war with that government.
"But China did it first!" Well, then we should highlight how outrageous and unacceptable that behavior is, and sanction them some other way. Not reciprocate.
[+] [-] tracker1|6 years ago|reply
I'm all for calling out a lot of the issues on both sides of the ocean on this one, even if I do feel that the actions of one country are far worse than the other. Two wrongs do not make a right.
The U.S. should never have allowed more than half of any given industry (especially medicine and other essential infrastructure) to be produced overseas to begin with. The trade war was bound to happen, still, civility should always remain at the table.
[+] [-] saber6|6 years ago|reply
You're falling squarely into the trap that I believe China plays so frequently: the belief that every other group of people shares a compatible value system and culture and any disagreement can be resolved with diplomacy, but never force.
To be frank, the Chinese view us as dumb by setting restrictions on ourselves, in an effort to inspire them to do similar self-restraint measures.
This methodology is flawed and outdated, the Chinese are not the Russians.
[+] [-] gameswithgo|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] mrscottson|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] spectramax|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] Leary|6 years ago|reply
Here's a timeline for those who haven't followed this:
Feb 3rd: WSJ publishes opinion piece titled "China Is the Real Sick Man of Asia"
Feb 19th: China expels three China-based WSJ reporters
March 2nd: America limits journalists from Chinese state media from 160 to 100
[+] [-] reaperducer|6 years ago|reply
No.
There are thousands and thousands of journalists working for foreign governments, friendly and hostile, in the United States. Some hostile foreign governments even operate domestic broadcasting operations in America. (China, Russia, etc...)
The worst thing that's ever been done in recent memory is requiring those operations to register as foreign agents. And I think at one time there was a move to limit the Kremlin's cadre to something like 1,000 people. But I might be remembering that part wrong.
[+] [-] theseadroid|6 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sick_man_of_Asia
The phrase reminds any Chinese about China's darkest history in 500 years.
[+] [-] dirtyid|6 years ago|reply
It's widely believed the expelling of the three WSJ report was retaliation to that.
[+] [-] osazuwa|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] unknown|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] dmix|6 years ago|reply
Nothing is surprising since they banned Zedd from China simply for liking a South Park tweet, he's a very popular (and harmlessly generic) pop musician:
https://twitter.com/Zedd/status/1182376966495838208
[+] [-] reaperducer|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] triceratops|6 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongol_conquest_of_Khwarezmia#...
Suppression of the press is unfortunately very effective in the short term. Historians may eventually uncover the truth but it will be far too late.
[+] [-] MegaButts|6 years ago|reply
I don't believe this is true, I'm just pointing out we'd have no way of knowing.
[+] [-] jbverschoor|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] sub7|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wffurr|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] FpUser|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] magicsmoke|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] vincvinc|6 years ago|reply
The subtle shift in confidence that this action implies is that China is confident in itself after "beating" the virus while the west is struggling.
A "media war" between China and the US might be worse than a trade war. While a trade war is just about numbers, this will be about ideology and there will be no middle ground.
[+] [-] mengibar10|6 years ago|reply
https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=https%3A%2F%2Fpbs.twimg...
https://img.piri.net/mnresize/840/-/resim/imagecrop/2020/03/...
[+] [-] catalogia|6 years ago|reply
(I didn't downvote you. As far as I'm concerned, CNN is frequently sloppy and deserves criticism for that.)
[+] [-] mengibar10|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mac01021|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] cepp|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] predictmktegirl|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] xster|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] markmiro|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] cepp|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ta999999171|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] seanmcdirmid|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gwd|6 years ago|reply
https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/xwfw_665399/s2510_665401/t1...
Seems this is part of an ongoing diplomatic spat.
EDIT: FYI, couldn't read the article due to a paywall, did a search, found out some about the history. Thought this added information to the conversation. Yes, this is clearly propaganda, but I still thought it was interesting. You're all of age, you can read this sort of propaganda without being harmed.
[+] [-] crypt1d|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] coliveira|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] api|6 years ago|reply
Naaaaah... impossible.
[+] [-] makomk|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] JungleGymSam|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] mengibar10|6 years ago|reply