Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Jeff Bezos. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Jeff Bezos. Afficher tous les articles

vendredi 30 août 2019

Per qualche renminbi in più

Media Quisling: Washington Post publishes special advertising section pushing propaganda for communist China
By Brian Flood



China says the U.S. can 'do more' to reduce the fentanyl demand after the U.S. says China is to blame for much of the fentanyl trafficking in the States.
Washington Post readers were treated to an eight-page “advertising supplement” on Thursday touting the achievements and talking points of the Chinese government in a section of the paper that's off-limits to Post editors.
The special section, dubbed “ChinaWatch,” came with a warning declaring, “Content in this advertising section was prepared by China Daily, and did not involve the news or opinion staff of The Washington Post.”
China Daily is owned by the Communist Party of China. 
Regular readers of the Post have seen similar sections in the past, and countries such as Russia have published similar sections in other papers, but Thursday’s version raised eyebrows as China’s ruling Communist Party has been in the news for a variety of topics amid a trade war with President Trump.
Earlier this year, the Washington Post’s own editorial board declared that China had launched a “massive campaign of cultural extermination” against Uighurs and other Muslims in the East Turkestan colony of the country. 
The Post’s editorial board described the “gross bigotry with which Chinese authorities view the Uighurs” and called for bipartisan legislation as a result.
“We have run the China Watch advertising supplement for more than 30 years. The China Watch advertising supplement has always been clearly labeled as such. Every page of each advertisement states that the supplement was prepared by China Daily and did not involve the news or opinion departments of The Washington Post. 
In addition, the layout and format of the supplements differs from our editorial content in a number of ways, including headline style, body font and column width,” a Washington Post spokesperson told Fox News. 
The newspaper did not comment on how much money it received for publishing the special section.
Media Research Center vice president Dan Gainor told Fox News he was taken aback when he saw the eight-page section in the Post.
“Are they so desperate for cash, when they are owned by one of the richest men in human history, that they have to publish propaganda for communist China?” Gainor asked.
Gainor then joked, “We’ve always called it Red China, but the Washington Post wants to make sure it’s always read.”
The Washington Post is owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who reportedly is the richest person in the world with a net worth of over $100 billion dollars. 
Under Bezos’ control, the Post began using the slogan “Democracy Dies in Darkness” in 2017 as Trump was feuding with the media.
The Post's special “ChinaWatch” section featured glowing headlines such as “Nation puts its best sporting foot forward,” which hyped the country’s fitness initiative.
The “China Watch” section of the Post also included a look back at comments then-President Richard Nixon made in 1971 about American leaders seeking to normalize relations with China and a tidbit about China being a rapidly growing market for venture capitalists.
Gainor took specific exception with a financial story headlined, “Reforms juggernaut rolls on” that declared, “Financial services sector perks up on further opening-up, promising to stabilize China’s economic growth.”
Washington Post
readers also were provided stories about Chinese tech companies, the introduction of high-speed trains across the country and a piece examining young job seekers who find success working in the communist nation’s tourism industry.
China Daily
did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In 2013, journalist Mitch Moxley detailed his time working for China Daily in a feature for The Atlantic
Moxley said he spent the majority of his time writing “government-friendly puff pieces” and wasn’t allowed to criticize local issues, such as a counterfeit silk market he discovered.
“Many of the articles weren't so much arguments supported by fact, but rants supported by nothing. Many violated everything I had ever learned about journalistic ethics,” Moxley wrote.
Moxley declined comment when reached by Fox News about the Post selling space to China Daily.
This week, there have been rapid-fire developments in the trade fight between the U.S. and China. The president, after urging American businesses to abandon China, over the weekend threatened to declare a national emergency and freeze those relationships—as China imposed retaliatory tariffs on $75 billion in U.S. goods and the Trump administration announced increased tariffs on $550 billion in Chinese goods.


Steve Herman
✔@W7VOA

Eight-page supplement (from the Communist Party of #China) inside today’s @washingtonpost (owned by @amazon billionaire @JeffBezos).

25
3:04 PM - Aug 29, 2019 · Washington, DC
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Voice of America White House bureau chief Steve Herman tweeted an image of the section.
“Meanwhile, overseas expansion of #China Communist Party-controlled media continues,” Herman added, with a link to a Financial Times report that China’s state TV was preparing to launch in Europe despite critics labeling it propaganda.

jeudi 9 mars 2017

Defective Anatomy

Dalai Lama says Chinese have parts of brain missing
Chinese Mistake Satire on Trump for Real News
By JAVIER C. HERNÁNDEZ

President Trump at the White House last week. Several publications, quoting a satirical New Yorker piece as factual, reported a frantic Mr. Trump worried about eavesdropping. 

BEIJING — The story dripped with intrigue.
A frantic President Trump, holding court in a bathrobe, ordered his aides to wrap the White House telephones in tinfoil, several Chinese publications reported this week, citing The New Yorker.
There was only one problem: The New Yorker article, by the comedian Andy Borowitz, was satire.
That did not stop the story, purporting to describe the depths of Mr. Trump’s worry that his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, was eavesdropping on him, from ricocheting across the Chinese internet.
“Trump turns White House upside down looking for signs of Obama: ‘I know he’s still here!’ ” read headlines in respected publications like Caijing, a business magazine, and Sina, a news portal.
Internet readers were puzzled. 
The state-run news media — and China’s army of censors — are not known for making jokes. 
Was this for real?
“This is illness,” one user wrote about Mr. Trump on Weibo, a microblogging site.
Others were more discerning. 
“This was made up and meant to be funny,” another user said. 
“Surprising it was treated as news. Editor, could you be more professional?”
It was not the first time that American humorists have unintentionally duped the Chinese news media.
In 2012, People’s Daily, the flagship newspaper of the Communist Party, reported that Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader, had been named “Sexiest Man Alive for 2012.” 
The newspaper based its report on a satirical article in The Onion.
And in 2013, Xinhua, the official news agency, mistook as fact a satirical report in The New Yorker about the purchase of The Washington Post by Jeff Bezos, the Amazon chief executive. (The New Yorker article said that Mr. Bezos had bought the newspaper by clicking on it by mistake. That piece was also written by Mr. Borowitz as part of his regular column, “The Borowitz Report.”)
The satirical article about Mr. Trump was published on Saturday, and first picked up in China online and in print on Tuesday by Reference News, a newspaper that translates foreign news and is published by Xinhua. 
The newspaper removed the story from its website on Wednesday after the Chinese news media reported that it was false.
Fake news articles, conspiracy theories and rumors are rampant on the Chinese internet, and media analysts say it is not surprising that Chinese outlets fall victim to jokes.
“Fake news is undoubtedly a serious problem in China,” David Bandurski, editor of the China Media Project at the University of Hong Kong, wrote in an email.