Because the BBC did a report on the abuse of women in Xinjiang concentration camps, the Chinese Communist Party retaliated by banning the BBC, and Radio Television Hong Kong actually followed the mainland’s lead and cancelled the traditional BBC broadcast arrangement. This of course has nothing to do with RTHK staff, but only with the management, the management is the initiative to follow the pace of the Chinese Communist Party, or under the pressure of the Lin Zheng government to cancel the broadcast, that only they know.
There is one country without two systems, and this is another ready-made example. Radio Television Hong Kong is no longer the Radio Television Hong Kong we have known for decades; she is beginning to shed her bones.
Not only will the media be shattered and brainwashing in schools become the norm, but also in public institutions in general, the CCP’s political propaganda will cover the whole territory, until all cultural and ideological positions are occupied.
The CCP’s public opinion warfare takes two forms, one is to build a wall and the other is to wash the ground. Building a wall is to keep all the ideologies they consider harmful outside the wall, while washing the ground is to build a good wall and continuously cleanse the “harmful” cultural remnants, so as to keep the dictatorial consciousness immaculate.
The Chinese Communist Party’s control of public opinion is, firstly, pervasive, secondly, long-lasting and institutionalized without boundaries, and thirdly, it is a political net-like occupation, slowly eroding, with no dead ends in all directions.
RTHK’s decision to stop broadcasting the BBC is the first shot fired by the Lam Cheng government at Hong Kong’s public institutions through the Chinese Communist Party’s decision to ban broadcasting.
With the popularization of oath-taking by government departments, with the curved occupation of most media, with the politicization of universities and research institutions, with the brainwashing of primary and secondary schools, the implementation of real names on the Internet will soon be implemented, with daily censorship of some Internet platforms, and even private organizations in general will be forced to adapt to the new political environment by imposing more restrictions and penalties on the speech and actions of their employees.
The Chinese Communist Party is best at transforming people’s hearts and minds in a way that Western countries are second to none. Western countries have a tradition of freedom of expression, where different ideologies have traditionally coexisted. For decades, the CCP has used the air of freedom in Western societies to spread the virus of communism.
In the 1960s, socialist ideology was once prevalent in the West, with the anti-war movement in the United States, the student movement in France, and the Red Army in Japan, all of which had their ups and downs. During the Cultural Revolution, Western youths revered Maoism, using Mao’s theory of proletarian revolution to explain the social contradictions of capitalism and advocate political struggle.
Since universal values were deeply rooted in people’s hearts, communist theories could only incite a small number of left-leaning fanatics, but could not shake the foundation of capitalism, and those ideas were hot for a few years but ended in vain.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in the 1990s, universal values became overwhelmingly dominant, and the American scholar Fukuyama even proposed the proposition of “the end of history,” causing Western society to relax its vigilance and miss the point.
At this Time, the Chinese Communist Party rose to power with the support of the U.S. and Britain. Using the free cultural environment of capitalism and its economic power, the Chinese Communist Party extended its magic hand to the Western countries, playing up and down and penetrating everywhere. Confucius Institutes and various hometown associations and societies have sprung up, attacking cities and influencing societies in the West.
In the United States, left-leaning ideology has been rampant for many years, and conservative ideology has been marginalized, largely because of the Chinese Communist Party’s silent infiltration of public opinion.
In recent years, the Chinese Communist Party’s ideological warfare has been detected, and Trump has taken a lot of administrative measures to cut off the Chinese Communist Party’s clutches.
In Taiwan, there is also a massive importation of red CCP propaganda, including books and magazines. The DPP government is also taking measures, but some intellectuals in the private sector have come forward again in an attempt to help the CCP.
Originally, there would be no problem if mainland China also opened up the space for speech, tolerated different ideologies, and competed fairly with each other. However, the CCP’s public opinion war hits other people’s homes, but other people’s public opinion war does not hit the CCP’s Home, that is unfair competition. If the Chinese Communist Party defends you at every turn, but you fail to defend yourself at every turn, then you are only facilitating your opponent and “lifting a stone to smash your own feet”.
Most of the Hong Kong people who are ready to emigrate are doing so to protect their children from being poisoned. Those who cannot leave temporarily have to think seriously about how to deal with the Chinese Communist Party’s brainwashing. To compete with the Chinese Communist Party for your next generation, protect your children from contamination. Once your children lose their purity of mind, it will be very difficult to get it back, and then the Parents and children will have opposing thoughts, which will cause you great pain.
How to resist brainwashing? It’s up to everyone to figure it out. It helps to pay attention to changes in your child’s thinking, to provide information that is different from the textbook, to discuss frequently with your child what you have learned in class, and to encourage your child to question any ideas. The most important thing is that you can’t just hand your child over to school and everything will be fine, you can’t just open the door to your child’s mind wide and let the CCP drive in. We must focus on his schooling, help him stay alert, nourish him with a worldview of universal values, and help him build an independent personality.
Nothing is more important than protecting the independence of a child’s personality and the purity of his mind, and our struggle against the CCP must begin with the mind.
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