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Who is the media behind the attack in the propaganda war between the United States and China? |
For example, The Wall Street Journal’s
Editorial Board argued on Monday that China “is paying for the
Communist Party chief’s policy mistakes,” referring to Chinese President Xi
Jinping. The editorial argues that the world economy, including China’s, is
slowing down and that “the latest data released Monday on China’s ebbing
growth will echo around the world” because “the response from Beijing
suggests its leaders are running out of ideas to arrest the decline.”
The piece goes on to bemoan China’s “dynamic
zero-Covid” policy, which has objectively saved millions of lives and made
China’s supply chains resilient and reliable for global investors.
It did not
mention, for example, a January report by Citigroup, based on three surveys conducted
by the American Chamber of Commerce China, the EU Chamber of Commerce China, and
the Japan External Trade Organization, that found that all three put China as
their favorite investment spot specifically because of its COVID-19 containment
strategy.
The WSJ’s
editorial also took aim at a “crackdown on real-estate speculation” that
is apparently hurting average people as property prices drop. It notes, “Property
is the main source of savings for many Chinese families.” It, however, does
not mention that soaring property prices, first of all, show all the unhealthy
characteristics of a bubble – but are also pricing young people out of home ownership worldwide.
In fact,
the WSJ doesn’t even go into specifics to cite Beijing’s response to its
economic challenges besides saying “monetary stimulus.” One simple
starting point could have been a report from the Central Political Bureau of
the Communist Party of China’s meeting
on July 28 that touched on these exact same issues, including what the
WSJ cited as a demand-side issue.
Coupled
with what the routine coverage of China by Murdoch-owned print media looks
like, one can’t help but feel like it’s all done on purpose. Let me give some
more notable examples.
How about when the Murdoch-owned New York
Post published a column by Missouri Senator Josh Hawley
that bizarrely claimed America was adopting “social credit scores” as “the
latest corporate import from Communist China” despite the fact that
not only is there no all-encompassing Orwellian social credit system in
America, there isn’t even one in China – as Vincent Brussee, an analyst at the Mercator Institute for
China Studies, argues.
Or, not to be outdone by its sister
publication, when the WSJ printed an opinion column in October 2021 – this
time giving air to the infamous lab-leak origin theory of
COVID-19. Los Angeles Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winner Michael Hiltzik
masterfully dismantled this propaganda piece, noting that the two
authors of the WSJ piece are not even trained virologists.
"The Wall Street Journal opinion
section has a desire to portray China as a sinister entity, and the pandemic
has been a superlative cudgel for use against a country that has emerged as a
potent threat to America's worldwide economic primacy," Hiltzik concluded, adding that such
pieces would only embarrass the WSJ’s serious journalists.
It’s hard to discern exactly which serious
journalists Hiltzik might have been referring to, however, because when it
comes to China, the Murdoch media relies on the likes of Wenxin Fan or Didi Tang, with The WSJ and The Times of London
respectively, who carry water for American imperialism by spreading the
narratives of “Freedom for Hong Kong” or “Uygur Genocide.”
What’s all the more sinister about
Murdoch-owned media, as was learned in a May 2020 report by the Sydney Morning Herald, is the entire
symbiotic complex that surrounds the narratives they push. That report found
the Murdoch-owned Daily Telegraph in Australia ran a piece based on a 15-page “dossier” ostensibly
leaked from an intelligence agency, allegedly showing that China destroyed
documents related to the coronavirus in Wuhan, but the ‘dossier’ was found to
be highly suspicious and apparently based on all-public information, without
any intelligence services’ involvement.
Notably, this news report was picked up
and used by US national security figureheads and sparked serious political
debate in Australia and the US. We are now not talking about misinforming
the general public, but actual government officials and people with power. It
goes to show the damage that disinformation can do to society – and why people
should think twice before consuming it.
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