Chinese college teacher suspended after student reports ‘insulting hero’

Sichuan Vocational and Technical College Tang Fanding was reported by students online.

Tang Fanding, a counselor at Sichuan Vocational and Technical College, has been reported by students for allegedly using class groups to speak after hours to harass students and “insult heroes”. Tang was suspended last Wednesday and is under police investigation.

According to the Sing Tao Daily, students took a screenshot of Tang’s insults to the “heroes of the India-China conflict”. The screenshots show Tang writing in the group, “Please don’t send the children of civilians to the front line of the battle …… The red mountain should be guarded by the sons of the red Family!” and “War is for the dictator, they are talking about protecting the people”.

Tang also referred to WHO Director-General Tan Desai, who is suspected of helping to conceal the Communist virus Epidemic, as “Tan China”, and criticized China’s epidemic prevention measures, including the mandatory wearing of masks, saying “I am the only one not wearing a mask at the Suining station”, and that WHO The report said that the WHO is encouraging people to wear masks, but only “the words of Tan China”.

The report said that the students of the school had reported Tang Fanding earlier, and this Time the content of the report was posted on the Internet, and under the pressure from outside and inside, Tang Fanding was not only suspended, but also investigated by the police.

“Whistleblowing” is an important part of the Chinese Communist Party‘s Culture, which is used by the authorities to monitor the entire population. During the Cultural Revolution, the Communist Party turned relatives against each other, reported on each other, and criticized anyone whose ideas did not match the Party’s standards, causing millions of families to be torn apart. This set of control tactics is used by the authorities to this day. As recently as mid-February, it was learned from overseas Chinese that local authorities in many parts of China were enticing students to report Parents and classmates of faith in a move to require schools to investigate students’ beliefs.

The scary thing is that after decades of brainwashing by the Chinese Communist Party, many Chinese people have accepted this tactic without question and use it against those around them who disagree with them, even those they have never met on the Internet.

There have been discussions on overseas social media platforms about whether the culture of whistle-blowing is the most emblematic of Chinese inferiority. The state machine is used to retaliate against opponents, are you not afraid that one day the fist will hit you in the face?

A message in the comments section said: “It’s not the Chinese who are inferior, it’s the communist state that is inferior. When I answer ‘No you’re wrong, Ivan is next door ~’ see the Soviet Union is the same.”

“In fact, many bad habits are the inevitable product of communist/centralized rule, such as harsh censorship, speech control, wiretapping, a culture of whistleblowing, and a frenzied suppression of unfavorable speech.”

Others responded with a quote from Liu Zhongjing: “The Chinese people at large have no boundaries or bottom line in their learning from the Communist Party and in their mutual destruction of each other. This is an important reason why the Communist Party is able to rule.”

The Chinese Communist Party recently finally made public the death toll of Communist soldiers in the Sino-Indian border clashes last June: four dead and one wounded, which resulted in a lot of questions from the outside world. The Chinese authorities have arrested at least seven netizens who questioned the death toll, and hunted down one netizen outside the country, 19-year-old Wang Jingyu, who was placed under police surveillance by his parents and threatened to return to China within three days.

As for the crime of “insulting a hero,” Wang Yajun, a mainland commentator, had earlier tweeted similar remarks to Tang Fanding.

After Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of the Global Times, said that men should “die for their country” like the soldiers who died in the Sino-Indian border conflict, Wang Yajun tweeted an appeal to Chinese Communist interests who send their children abroad, saying, “If Hu Xijin’s son graduates from abroad and goes to war, I will donate three months’ salary! If Jin Canrong’s son comes back from Canada to go to the front line, I donate five months’ salary…” As a result, Wang Yajun was blocked and his WeChat account and WeChat public number were permanently suspended.