Hotznplotzn

joined 1 year ago
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50623268

Archived

A day after being sentenced to 20 years in prison under Hong Kong’s national security law, the former newspaper magnate Jimmy Lai faces a painful dilemma [...] diplomats believe that Beijing is open to the possibility of releasing Lai early to avoid making him a political martyr if he were to die in prison.

[...]

China would almost certainly want a guarantee that Lai would not use liberty in Britain as a platform for criticism of the Hong Kong and Beijing authorities. How they could be reassured of this is not clear. But the key question is what Lai himself wants and whether he would really exchange freedom to speak out for freedom from prison.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50623268

Archived

A day after being sentenced to 20 years in prison under Hong Kong’s national security law, the former newspaper magnate Jimmy Lai faces a painful dilemma [...] diplomats believe that Beijing is open to the possibility of releasing Lai early to avoid making him a political martyr if he were to die in prison.

[...]

China would almost certainly want a guarantee that Lai would not use liberty in Britain as a platform for criticism of the Hong Kong and Beijing authorities. How they could be reassured of this is not clear. But the key question is what Lai himself wants and whether he would really exchange freedom to speak out for freedom from prison.

[...]

 

Archived

A day after being sentenced to 20 years in prison under Hong Kong’s national security law, the former newspaper magnate Jimmy Lai faces a painful dilemma [...] diplomats believe that Beijing is open to the possibility of releasing Lai early to avoid making him a political martyr if he were to die in prison.

[...]

China would almost certainly want a guarantee that Lai would not use liberty in Britain as a platform for criticism of the Hong Kong and Beijing authorities. How they could be reassured of this is not clear. But the key question is what Lai himself wants and whether he would really exchange freedom to speak out for freedom from prison.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50600078

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50599374

Archived

As everyday essentials spiral, Russians have flooded social media to complain that they are being forced to give up taxis, manicures, cinema tickets — and cucumbers.

“Cucumbers have now become a luxury item,” a St Petersburg resident complained in a recent vlog detailing the items she has been forced to forgo as prices have risen.

“I’ll have to eat mango and dragonfruit instead of cucumbers,” another quipped, contrasting the prices of exotic imported fruits with the humble vegetables stacked high in boxes and priced at up to 500 roubles (almost £5) per kilogram.

[...]

“What’s happening with food prices?” one young woman despaired. “What are we going to eat? Pasta and water? I don’t buy clothes or cosmetics, I don’t go to the doctor, I try not to buy any supplements or pills. All that’s left to do is give up food.”

Seasonal factors, tax changes, stubbornly high inflation caused by years of elevated defence spending have pushed supermarket prices to new highs since the start of the year.

After VAT rose from 20 per cent to 22 per cent on January 1, companies signalled that the increase would be passed on to consumers.

Price tag showing Kinder Eggs in Russia at 2199 rubles, highlighting rising living costs.

[...]

Last year, the price of fish is thought to have increased by 22 per cent, coffee by 15 to 25 per cent, tea by 10 to 20 per cent, seasonal fruit by 15 to 20 per cent and trips on public transport by as much as 20 per cent.

“I thought that I was relatively well-off,” Nikita, a programmer who lives in Moscow, told The Times. “But there are things I used to be able to do that I can’t afford to do any more.”

[...]

Officials have come under fire for appearing to downplay public concerns. Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said in January that Russians should not fear sharp price rises, while President Putin said merely that the month’s high inflation was “expected”.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50600909

Archived

[...]

Bankrolled by enormous state investment, Beijing’s propaganda and online influence operations now extend far beyond its borders, seeking to normalize authoritarian governance and redefine reality itself, one algorithm, platform, and rewritten history at a time. And Tibetans – especially the Dalai Lama – are a prominent target. China’s information operations seek to erase Tibetan cultural identity while manufacturing consent for assimilationist rule.

[...]

The recent viral claim that the Dalai Lama’s name appears between 69 and 169 times in court documents related to notorious sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein offers a revealing case study in contemporary information warfare. Although the figures originated from social media posts rather than verified legal analysis, they circulated widely across global platforms despite repeated debunking by independent fact-checkers and legal analysts who reviewed the publicly released Epstein materials.

[...]

A detailed review of the documents shows Epstein strongly desired to forge connections with the Dalai Lama – but there’s no evidence that his wish was fulfilled. The references to the Dalai Lama are largely incidental, appearing in mass-distributed newsletters, administrative contact lists, or discussions with third parties about potential ways to connect, without evidence of personal contact, financial ties, or awareness of Epstein’s crimes on the Dalai Lama’s part. Many of the 169 references are actually duplicates upon closer examination.

Yet the allegation gained traction. This reflects a broader vulnerability within digital information ecosystems, where numerical specificity can create an illusion of credibility even when substantive context is absent. In such environments, repetition often substitutes for verification.

[...]

The timing of the controversy is also significant. The claim resurfaced in February 2026, coinciding with the Dalai Lama’s receipt of a Grammy Award for his spoken-word album. Within hours, China’s Foreign Ministry publicly condemned the award as “anti-China political manipulation,” a response consistent with past official reactions when Tibetan identity or leadership receives international recognition.

[...]

Similar dynamics emerged in 2023, when a culturally specific Tibetan greeting gesture was detached from its cultural and religious context and reframed online as inappropriate conduct, generating global outrage.

[...]

China’s campaign against the Dalai Lama reflects a strategic shift from controlling domestic narratives to actively contesting legitimacy in global digital spaces. The Epstein files episode was not an exercise in accountability but a case of narrative manipulation, in which incidental and non-substantive references were deliberately amplified to generate reputational doubt. The significance lies not in the documents themselves, but in how authoritarian actors exploit the openness of democratic information systems to convert trivial associations into lasting suspicion. If such campaigns go unrecognized, manufactured controversy, not evidence, will continue to shape international perceptions of human rights, cultural identity, and political legitimacy.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50600909

Archived

[...]

Bankrolled by enormous state investment, Beijing’s propaganda and online influence operations now extend far beyond its borders, seeking to normalize authoritarian governance and redefine reality itself, one algorithm, platform, and rewritten history at a time. And Tibetans – especially the Dalai Lama – are a prominent target. China’s information operations seek to erase Tibetan cultural identity while manufacturing consent for assimilationist rule.

[...]

The recent viral claim that the Dalai Lama’s name appears between 69 and 169 times in court documents related to notorious sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein offers a revealing case study in contemporary information warfare. Although the figures originated from social media posts rather than verified legal analysis, they circulated widely across global platforms despite repeated debunking by independent fact-checkers and legal analysts who reviewed the publicly released Epstein materials.

[...]

A detailed review of the documents shows Epstein strongly desired to forge connections with the Dalai Lama – but there’s no evidence that his wish was fulfilled. The references to the Dalai Lama are largely incidental, appearing in mass-distributed newsletters, administrative contact lists, or discussions with third parties about potential ways to connect, without evidence of personal contact, financial ties, or awareness of Epstein’s crimes on the Dalai Lama’s part. Many of the 169 references are actually duplicates upon closer examination.

Yet the allegation gained traction. This reflects a broader vulnerability within digital information ecosystems, where numerical specificity can create an illusion of credibility even when substantive context is absent. In such environments, repetition often substitutes for verification.

[...]

The timing of the controversy is also significant. The claim resurfaced in February 2026, coinciding with the Dalai Lama’s receipt of a Grammy Award for his spoken-word album. Within hours, China’s Foreign Ministry publicly condemned the award as “anti-China political manipulation,” a response consistent with past official reactions when Tibetan identity or leadership receives international recognition.

[...]

Similar dynamics emerged in 2023, when a culturally specific Tibetan greeting gesture was detached from its cultural and religious context and reframed online as inappropriate conduct, generating global outrage.

[...]

China’s campaign against the Dalai Lama reflects a strategic shift from controlling domestic narratives to actively contesting legitimacy in global digital spaces. The Epstein files episode was not an exercise in accountability but a case of narrative manipulation, in which incidental and non-substantive references were deliberately amplified to generate reputational doubt. The significance lies not in the documents themselves, but in how authoritarian actors exploit the openness of democratic information systems to convert trivial associations into lasting suspicion. If such campaigns go unrecognized, manufactured controversy, not evidence, will continue to shape international perceptions of human rights, cultural identity, and political legitimacy.

 

Archived

[...]

Bankrolled by enormous state investment, Beijing’s propaganda and online influence operations now extend far beyond its borders, seeking to normalize authoritarian governance and redefine reality itself, one algorithm, platform, and rewritten history at a time. And Tibetans – especially the Dalai Lama – are a prominent target. China’s information operations seek to erase Tibetan cultural identity while manufacturing consent for assimilationist rule.

[...]

The recent viral claim that the Dalai Lama’s name appears between 69 and 169 times in court documents related to notorious sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein offers a revealing case study in contemporary information warfare. Although the figures originated from social media posts rather than verified legal analysis, they circulated widely across global platforms despite repeated debunking by independent fact-checkers and legal analysts who reviewed the publicly released Epstein materials.

[...]

A detailed review of the documents shows Epstein strongly desired to forge connections with the Dalai Lama – but there’s no evidence that his wish was fulfilled. The references to the Dalai Lama are largely incidental, appearing in mass-distributed newsletters, administrative contact lists, or discussions with third parties about potential ways to connect, without evidence of personal contact, financial ties, or awareness of Epstein’s crimes on the Dalai Lama’s part. Many of the 169 references are actually duplicates upon closer examination.

Yet the allegation gained traction. This reflects a broader vulnerability within digital information ecosystems, where numerical specificity can create an illusion of credibility even when substantive context is absent. In such environments, repetition often substitutes for verification.

[...]

The timing of the controversy is also significant. The claim resurfaced in February 2026, coinciding with the Dalai Lama’s receipt of a Grammy Award for his spoken-word album. Within hours, China’s Foreign Ministry publicly condemned the award as “anti-China political manipulation,” a response consistent with past official reactions when Tibetan identity or leadership receives international recognition.

[...]

Similar dynamics emerged in 2023, when a culturally specific Tibetan greeting gesture was detached from its cultural and religious context and reframed online as inappropriate conduct, generating global outrage.

[...]

China’s campaign against the Dalai Lama reflects a strategic shift from controlling domestic narratives to actively contesting legitimacy in global digital spaces. The Epstein files episode was not an exercise in accountability but a case of narrative manipulation, in which incidental and non-substantive references were deliberately amplified to generate reputational doubt. The significance lies not in the documents themselves, but in how authoritarian actors exploit the openness of democratic information systems to convert trivial associations into lasting suspicion. If such campaigns go unrecognized, manufactured controversy, not evidence, will continue to shape international perceptions of human rights, cultural identity, and political legitimacy.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50599694

Archived

[...]

Industry Minister Tim Ayres has imposed a 10 per cent levy on ceiling frames from China after the Anti-Dumping Commission concluded they were being subsidised by the government and were unfairly undercutting local manufacturers. That added to interim tariffs of between 35 per cent and 113 per cent on a range of products, including bolts and hot-rolled coil steel, which began in December and could be made permanent.

[...]

Senior Chinese officials warned that the introduction of the tariffs could harm iron ore exports, given that they are processed into these products [...] But Ayres, citing “the turbulence of global trade and significant overcapacity”, said the government wanted to “strengthen our trade defences against unfair trade practices” to help local manufacturers.

[...]

The government has several other active investigations into Chinese steel manufacturing, which could result in more trade restrictions being imposed across a broader range of products to protect the industry. The most recent were put in place after a request from NSW producer Rondo.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50599077

Aide to then-Prince emailed paedophile about launching Beijing office for ‘high net-worth individuals’

Archived

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50599374

Archived

As everyday essentials spiral, Russians have flooded social media to complain that they are being forced to give up taxis, manicures, cinema tickets — and cucumbers.

“Cucumbers have now become a luxury item,” a St Petersburg resident complained in a recent vlog detailing the items she has been forced to forgo as prices have risen.

“I’ll have to eat mango and dragonfruit instead of cucumbers,” another quipped, contrasting the prices of exotic imported fruits with the humble vegetables stacked high in boxes and priced at up to 500 roubles (almost £5) per kilogram.

[...]

“What’s happening with food prices?” one young woman despaired. “What are we going to eat? Pasta and water? I don’t buy clothes or cosmetics, I don’t go to the doctor, I try not to buy any supplements or pills. All that’s left to do is give up food.”

Seasonal factors, tax changes, stubbornly high inflation caused by years of elevated defence spending have pushed supermarket prices to new highs since the start of the year.

After VAT rose from 20 per cent to 22 per cent on January 1, companies signalled that the increase would be passed on to consumers.

Price tag showing Kinder Eggs in Russia at 2199 rubles, highlighting rising living costs.

[...]

Last year, the price of fish is thought to have increased by 22 per cent, coffee by 15 to 25 per cent, tea by 10 to 20 per cent, seasonal fruit by 15 to 20 per cent and trips on public transport by as much as 20 per cent.

“I thought that I was relatively well-off,” Nikita, a programmer who lives in Moscow, told The Times. “But there are things I used to be able to do that I can’t afford to do any more.”

[...]

Officials have come under fire for appearing to downplay public concerns. Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said in January that Russians should not fear sharp price rises, while President Putin said merely that the month’s high inflation was “expected”.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50599095

...

The scale of the recall, equivalent to roughly three quarters of Nio's 2025 sales volume, surpassed that of Xiaomi's in September, when the tech firm issued a software update for over 115,000 of its popular SU7 electric sedans to fix potential safety issues involving assisted driving features.

...

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50599634

Archived

[...]

In the first incident, a [Chinese] J-16 jet shot decoy flares at a Taiwanese F-16 which had scrambled as the Chinese warplane was about to cross the Taiwan Strait median line, said three people familiar with the encounter.

In the second, a Chinese J-16 flew “very closely” behind a Taiwanese F-16 jet “basically in firing position”, said the person briefed on the incident.

The unprecedented actions did not rise to the level of danger reached when PLA aircraft locked their weapons radar on to Japanese aircraft earlier in December, said three people familiar with the incidents.

But another person familiar with the situation disputed that view. He said the PLA fighter that locked its radar on the Japanese plane was operating from a much greater distance than the J-16 was from the F-16 when it fired flares.

[...]

Two people compared the first incident to a separate dangerous episode in December when a Chinese aircraft fired flares at Philippine patrol aircraft over the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea.

In a third incident that occurred north-west of Taiwan, a Chinese J-16 flew just underneath a Chinese H-6K bomber, in a “piggybacking” tactic designed to disguise the presence of the fighter jet from Taiwanese radars.

[...]

Bonnie Glaser, a China expert at the German Marshall Fund, said the PLA was becoming “increasingly reckless” as it stepped up the pressure on Taiwan. “The next likely step in the escalation ladder is PLA aircraft operating inside Taiwan’s 12 nautical miles territorial airspace, which would further heighten the risk of an accident.”

[...]

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 1 day ago

The bit about what the Chagos islanders actually want is the only part with any validity.

This should be enough to reverse the Chagos Islands deal.

It wouldn't make sense if imperialism of the past by the UK is followed by imperialism of China-ally Mauritius. It's wrong here and there.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Chagossian people [...] have made it clear they do not want the islands to fall into Mauritian hands.

Addition: Last year, Chagossians took their fight against the UK deal to the UN by writing to the committee asking for an advisory opinion that the UK should not sign the deal over human rights concerns.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Murdoch owns the Times and the UK must get rid of these Palantir contracts. But this is has nothing to do with the topic.

The majority of the Chagossian people have made it clear they do not want the islands to fall into Mauritian hands. But Chinese propagandists do as Mauritius is a strong ally of China in the region. All others, especially the people of Chagos Island, don't want that.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Chagossian people [...] the majority of whom have made it clear they do not want the islands to fall into Mauritian hands.

The native people living there don't want the island to be under Mauritius' control, and they have certainly always known the island.

Those who are supporting UK's move are mainly pro-China propagandists, as Mauritius is a strong ally of China in the region. You may be right that many of them might not have known 6 months ago that the island even existed.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

This is fake news, as some others have already have said.

There is one Chinese fund that doesn't want to buy the remaining minority stake in an Israeli project for financial reasons and it cites this alleged ban by the Chinese government. But such a ban doesn't exist.

Both trade between the Israel and China as well as Chinese investment in Israel remain a level. For example, as one report on China-Israel economic cooperation by the Middle East Institute - authored by Chinese scholar Dr Zhu Zhaoyi - says:

On 20 August 2025, Chinese Ambassador to Israel Xiao Junzheng published a signed article in Calcalist, Israel’s largest financial daily, entitled “China’s growth can usher in a new era for China-Israel cooperation”. He highlighted that, while geographically distant, China and Israel remain highly complementary partners [...]

In May 2025, a dedicated life‑sciences matchmaking event in Tel Aviv led to six new Israeli projects, including energy management systems and carbonates technology, signing agreements to enter the park, underscoring its growing role in emerging-health innovation.

Meanwhile, the “Guang‑Israel Tech Changzhou Innovation Institute”, co-located within the park, onboarded 10 seed projects, five start-ups, and sealed three industry-academia-research cooperation agreements during its 2025 launch ceremony, highlighting the platform’s increasing capacity for commercialisation and talent development.

There are many other reports pointing in the same direction. Israel-China ties are strong, including Chinese investment in Israel.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 0 points 5 days ago (1 children)

You apparently have (intentionally?) misunderstood the article.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 7 points 5 days ago (1 children)

This is an opinion piece and should at least marked as such.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

@QinShiHuangsShlong@hexbear.net

The whatabouter is you here.

Holding back with an assessment of the case and waiting for the results? The results will be published by the same party that holds them imprisoned, and these stories are well known in China.

The journalists who investigated the corruption are detained, while the official walks free. As the article also says, one of them has already been detained in 2013 for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble” - an euphemism for expressing an opinion against the party line - and for allegedly “fabricating and spreading rumours,” but was later released on bail after spending a year in detention - just for publishing the truth.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

There are lots of good reports about the Russian economy, and they all point in this same direction.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 6 days ago

Read the stats by the World Bank.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Oh, another tankie source. The Grayzone is well-known for ...

... its misleading reporting, its criticism of American foreign policy, and its sympathetic coverage of the Russian, Chinese and former Syrian governments. The Grayzone has been accused of downplaying and defending the persecution of Uyghurs in China, of publishing conspiracy theories about Xinjiang, Syria and other regions, and of publishing pro-Russian propaganda and disinformation, especially during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (3 children)

No, it means that the Chinese government is burning its own soil and air much faster than the West, and China has much higher CO2 emissions per capita than the European Union and the rest of the democratic world.

Edit for an addition: China's CO₂ emissions exceed those of the entire West: The suppressed power question in the climate debate

While the West becomes bogged down in moral debates, the 2024 emissions data is creating a new geopolitical reality. The figures are clear: China's CO₂ emissions now exceed the combined emissions of the US, the EU, Russia, and Japan.

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