cringe

  • Are_Euclidding_Me [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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    5 days ago

    So the first time I heard about this story was from a Radio Free Asia article. As such, I’m not inclined to believe it, and reading this article hasn’t really changed that. This one, like the RFA one I read a couple weeks ago, is heavy on “social media users said” and light on actual evidence. I’m curious about what the truth is and why these people are being arrested. My guess is that it’s less to do with the subject of their writing and more to do with the particular path towards monetization they’ve chosen. Especially given the number of photos in this NYT article that are labeled as photos of Boys’ Love merch. You’d think if this kind of thing were banned in China it would be difficult to find so many photos of it.

    • ClimateStalin [they/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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      4 days ago

      And I know that the NYT is capable of doing more in depth journalism when they decide to. They could try maybe sending journalists to China/hiring Chinese journalists, and actually digging?

      Interview people who’ve been arrested for this, find out what exactly it was because of, look at police records, interview cops who’ve arrested people for this or ask the higher up cop about it at a press conference or something. You know, all the stuff you would normally do for a story taking place in the US?

      But no it’s in China so all we need is “people on social media said,” no further investigation needed. Like, do they think those things aren’t possible in China? They very much are. China is a normal country with normal procedures regarding journalism and police information. You could actually investigate this and write a real article.