• =?UTF-8?Q?Without_a_Covid_Narrative=2C_China=E2=80=99s_Censors_Are_Not?

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 26 22:15:06 2022
    Without a Covid Narrative, China’s Censors Are Not Sure What to Do
    By John Liu and Paul Mozur, Dec. 22, 2022, NY Times

    Since China dropped its strict “zero Covid” policy, a joke has been making the rounds on social media about the sudden shift.

    Three men who don’t know one another sit in a prison cell. Each explains why he was arrested:
    “I opposed Covid testing.”
    “I supported Covid testing.”
    “I conducted Covid testing.”

    The joke has yet to be broadly censored. It is a sign of just how much the Chinese Communist Party, usually a master of messaging, is struggling to come up with a coherent explanation for the policy shift and a clear directive for what to do with an
    explosion of cases now threatening the country’s medical resources.

    So dizzying was the switch that even two weeks later, the state’s powerful propaganda and censorship system has yet to catch up to the flood of confusion and criticism seeping through the country’s typically tight internet controls.

    Apart from laying out the new Covid rules, Chinese official media still hasn’t offered much guidance from top leaders on the situation. The country’s hundreds of thousands of internet censors, experts say, haven’t gotten guidance on what to allow
    and what to delete — and may be confused, given that what was blocked a month ago is now official policy. Many Chinese have been asking why they put up with years of harsh lockdowns and travel restrictions, only for the leadership to abandon them and
    allow the virus to spread unabated.

    For China’s leadership, maintaining public trust hinges, in part, on a difficult task: finding a narrative that makes sense of the reversal.

    In the weeks since “zero Covid” ended, China’s all-encompassing propaganda and censorship machine has fallen into its old routine of deleting negative press and spreading “positive energy” posts that praise the struggles of individuals and the
    government. But experts said the three-year trauma caused by the stringent pandemic measures and the last-minute U-turn would prove hard for people to quickly move past.

    “It will be impossible for everyone to forget completely. Many will remember ‘zero Covid’ deeply and clearly,” said Fang Kecheng, an assistant professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong who studies China’s propaganda. However, that may
    not lead to widespread loss of confidence in the government, he added, noting that “people still have ways to convince themselves that things don’t seem so bad now.”

    Thus far, propagandists have hewed to past norms in handling the crisis. They have avoided excessive mentions of the policy shift, instead emphasizing social stability. State media has sympathetically called the situation “stressful” but otherwise
    portrayed it as a well-orchestrated decision to overcome a virus that is no longer as deadly as it once was.

    Across the country, an acute shortage of medicine, videos of people crowding hospitals, and long lines outside crematories and funeral homes marked a stark contrast with the seven deaths reported by the government this week. On Tuesday, the health
    authorities explained that only deaths caused by coronavirus-induced pneumonia and respiratory failure would be attributed to Covid.

    Anger soon erupted online, with many accusing the authorities of double standards based on their frequent and detailed reports of Covid death statistics from overseas, particularly Europe and the United States. Many used the hashtag #
    WhatIsTheCriteriaForDeathByCovid in complaints on Tuesday. By Wednesday, censors had begun to block such posts.

    People wrote about their relatives’ deaths, urging others not to trust propaganda that Covid is now like a flu. A blood bank appealed to college students for urgent donations. Cancellations of travel reservations for the upcoming Chinese New Year
    holiday surged as people decided to stay home.

    State media coverage of the country’s top leadership has steered clear of the outbreak. On Monday, a commentary on People’s Daily justified the new policy, saying it will bring about a “significant positive effect” on economic recovery. While the
    piece said “a lot of work is to be done,” it stopped short of acknowledging the chaos it created.

    In some ways, the approach is similar to the one taken during the initial outbreak of the virus in Wuhan nearly three years ago. At the time, even as the crisis intensified, official Communist Party mouthpieces emphasized the government’s control of
    the situation and avoided content that could trigger alarm. China’s leader, Xi Jinping, disappeared from the public spotlight to insulate himself from potential criticism. Once the virus was contained, Mr. Xi appeared in the city triumphant.

    This time, it may take longer for Chinese officials to regain the message over a medical crisis driven by a virus that has, in large countries like India and the United States, killed by the hundreds of thousands as waves of illness have overwhelmed
    medical facilities. Aside from general comments about coordinating Covid prevention measures, Mr. Xi has remained silent. He has said nothing directly about the recent surge in cases.

    For now, experts said, both the censors and the propaganda officials appear to be scrambling to figure out what to do.

    “I don’t think I’ve seen a planned or orchestrated propaganda plan coming out. It’s more because the general direction has changed, so the propaganda has to follow suit suddenly,” Mr. Fang said. One major test will come when the virus spreads
    to smaller, rural areas with insufficient medical resources, he said.

    A small but vocal chorus online has called out the abrupt and disjointed policy changes. Asong Yu, a 30-year-old finance worker in northeastern China, has questioned in sardonic and indirect ways the sudden changes and the lack of explanation.

    In one post, Mr. Yu shared a response by ChatGPT, the viral chatbot powered by artificial intelligence, to the prompt “Are there pigs that can do a 180?” He had particular vitriol for those he called “epidemic prevention enthusiasts,”
    nationalists who previously parroted the government’s position on “zero Covid,” only to be jilted by Beijing’s about-face. Online he called them “abandoned dogs being beaten by their owners.”

    “The previous propaganda is completely opposite to the current one. I think, however stupid some people might be, they will have to wake up,” Mr. Yu said in an interview.

    So far, Mr. Yu’s posts have avoided the censors’ knife. In part, that’s because there are no obvious ways to deal with such a major about-face. Censors must decide whether to delete some portion of official posts supporting “zero Covid” for
    years and how much to tolerate a new zeal for the lifting of lockdowns.

    Some people online have already encouraged others to go out and get Covid to build up immunity. Some college students, for instance, have lamented their inability to catch it over the past month, worrying that they will get sick during graduate school
    entrance exams scheduled this week.

    The sudden change in China’s policy has created chaos and confusion among the tech companies that hire their own censors, and the accounts supporting the party that toe the official line, said Eric Liu, a former censor for Weibo and now an analyst at
    China Digital Times, a news website tracking censorship in China.

    “I have yet to see a very clear, hardhanded censorship order, so I think it has something to do with the chaos that they are contradicting themselves,” Mr. Liu said, pointing out that most likely Beijing has not figured out an official narrative.
    That, in turn, has prevented the Cyberspace Administration of China, the country’s internet regulator, from issuing uniform orders to censors.

    “A regulated narrative will definitely happen, but we don’t know when it will happen,” he said.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/business/china-covid-censorship-propaganda.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Mon Jan 2 02:27:13 2023
    On Tuesday, December 27, 2022 at 2:15:07 PM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    Without a Covid Narrative, China’s Censors Are Not Sure What to Do
    By John Liu and Paul Mozur, Dec. 22, 2022, NY Times

    Since China dropped its strict “zero Covid” policy, a joke has been making the rounds on social media about the sudden shift.

    Three men who don’t know one another sit in a prison cell. Each explains why he was arrested:
    “I opposed Covid testing.”
    “I supported Covid testing.”
    “I conducted Covid testing.”

    The joke has yet to be broadly censored. It is a sign of just how much the Chinese Communist Party, usually a master of messaging, is struggling to come up with a coherent explanation for the policy shift and a clear directive for what to do with an
    explosion of cases now threatening the country’s medical resources.

    So dizzying was the switch that even two weeks later, the state’s powerful propaganda and censorship system has yet to catch up to the flood of confusion and criticism seeping through the country’s typically tight internet controls.

    Apart from laying out the new Covid rules, Chinese official media still hasn’t offered much guidance from top leaders on the situation. The country’s hundreds of thousands of internet censors, experts say, haven’t gotten guidance on what to allow
    and what to delete — and may be confused, given that what was blocked a month ago is now official policy. Many Chinese have been asking why they put up with years of harsh lockdowns and travel restrictions, only for the leadership to abandon them and
    allow the virus to spread unabated.

    For China’s leadership, maintaining public trust hinges, in part, on a difficult task: finding a narrative that makes sense of the reversal.

    In the weeks since “zero Covid” ended, China’s all-encompassing propaganda and censorship machine has fallen into its old routine of deleting negative press and spreading “positive energy” posts that praise the struggles of individuals and
    the government. But experts said the three-year trauma caused by the stringent pandemic measures and the last-minute U-turn would prove hard for people to quickly move past.

    “It will be impossible for everyone to forget completely. Many will remember ‘zero Covid’ deeply and clearly,” said Fang Kecheng, an assistant professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong who studies China’s propaganda. However, that may
    not lead to widespread loss of confidence in the government, he added, noting that “people still have ways to convince themselves that things don’t seem so bad now.”

    Thus far, propagandists have hewed to past norms in handling the crisis. They have avoided excessive mentions of the policy shift, instead emphasizing social stability. State media has sympathetically called the situation “stressful” but otherwise
    portrayed it as a well-orchestrated decision to overcome a virus that is no longer as deadly as it once was.

    Across the country, an acute shortage of medicine, videos of people crowding hospitals, and long lines outside crematories and funeral homes marked a stark contrast with the seven deaths reported by the government this week. On Tuesday, the health
    authorities explained that only deaths caused by coronavirus-induced pneumonia and respiratory failure would be attributed to Covid.

    Anger soon erupted online, with many accusing the authorities of double standards based on their frequent and detailed reports of Covid death statistics from overseas, particularly Europe and the United States. Many used the hashtag #
    WhatIsTheCriteriaForDeathByCovid in complaints on Tuesday. By Wednesday, censors had begun to block such posts.

    People wrote about their relatives’ deaths, urging others not to trust propaganda that Covid is now like a flu. A blood bank appealed to college students for urgent donations. Cancellations of travel reservations for the upcoming Chinese New Year
    holiday surged as people decided to stay home.

    State media coverage of the country’s top leadership has steered clear of the outbreak. On Monday, a commentary on People’s Daily justified the new policy, saying it will bring about a “significant positive effect” on economic recovery. While
    the piece said “a lot of work is to be done,” it stopped short of acknowledging the chaos it created.

    In some ways, the approach is similar to the one taken during the initial outbreak of the virus in Wuhan nearly three years ago. At the time, even as the crisis intensified, official Communist Party mouthpieces emphasized the government’s control of
    the situation and avoided content that could trigger alarm. China’s leader, Xi Jinping, disappeared from the public spotlight to insulate himself from potential criticism. Once the virus was contained, Mr. Xi appeared in the city triumphant.

    This time, it may take longer for Chinese officials to regain the message over a medical crisis driven by a virus that has, in large countries like India and the United States, killed by the hundreds of thousands as waves of illness have overwhelmed
    medical facilities. Aside from general comments about coordinating Covid prevention measures, Mr. Xi has remained silent. He has said nothing directly about the recent surge in cases.

    For now, experts said, both the censors and the propaganda officials appear to be scrambling to figure out what to do.

    “I don’t think I’ve seen a planned or orchestrated propaganda plan coming out. It’s more because the general direction has changed, so the propaganda has to follow suit suddenly,” Mr. Fang said. One major test will come when the virus spreads
    to smaller, rural areas with insufficient medical resources, he said.

    A small but vocal chorus online has called out the abrupt and disjointed policy changes. Asong Yu, a 30-year-old finance worker in northeastern China, has questioned in sardonic and indirect ways the sudden changes and the lack of explanation.

    In one post, Mr. Yu shared a response by ChatGPT, the viral chatbot powered by artificial intelligence, to the prompt “Are there pigs that can do a 180?” He had particular vitriol for those he called “epidemic prevention enthusiasts,”
    nationalists who previously parroted the government’s position on “zero Covid,” only to be jilted by Beijing’s about-face. Online he called them “abandoned dogs being beaten by their owners.”

    “The previous propaganda is completely opposite to the current one. I think, however stupid some people might be, they will have to wake up,” Mr. Yu said in an interview.

    So far, Mr. Yu’s posts have avoided the censors’ knife. In part, that’s because there are no obvious ways to deal with such a major about-face. Censors must decide whether to delete some portion of official posts supporting “zero Covid” for
    years and how much to tolerate a new zeal for the lifting of lockdowns.

    Some people online have already encouraged others to go out and get Covid to build up immunity. Some college students, for instance, have lamented their inability to catch it over the past month, worrying that they will get sick during graduate school
    entrance exams scheduled this week.

    The sudden change in China’s policy has created chaos and confusion among the tech companies that hire their own censors, and the accounts supporting the party that toe the official line, said Eric Liu, a former censor for Weibo and now an analyst at
    China Digital Times, a news website tracking censorship in China.

    “I have yet to see a very clear, hardhanded censorship order, so I think it has something to do with the chaos that they are contradicting themselves,” Mr. Liu said, pointing out that most likely Beijing has not figured out an official narrative.
    That, in turn, has prevented the Cyberspace Administration of China, the country’s internet regulator, from issuing uniform orders to censors.

    “A regulated narrative will definitely happen, but we don’t know when it will happen,” he said.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/business/china-covid-censorship-propaganda.html


    All these requests for so-called "narratives" are not needed as the virus is dynamically changing all the time in terms of spreads and controls. In fact, China has stopped reporting on the number of cases and infections in their daily news anymore.

    The situation in China is going through its peaks, and hopefully, stable response time to virus situation to the public can bring some relief to the people and medical facilities. The number of deaths will rise and will continue to put stress to families.
    However, normal lives of going to work and shop and schooling still remain.

    At this time, there is rising demand for oxygen tanks. Smaller portable oxygen tanks are in demands and more production of these portable tanks will be met by mid January to end January.

    One problem that one could see is that a lot of things like medical facilities, wards, beds, respiratory monitoring equipment and oxygen tanks and other associated medical things are not buffered enough to meet the rising demand for these expansions of
    bed and medical facilities.

    However, China can meet these demands they have big production capacity to meet the dynamic demand for them. Hence, narrative is not necessarily until such time when the medical pressure is leveled and measurable for a narrative of it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)