
As you know, China hosted the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics. Over 100 events, 15 disciplines, and 7 sports. A giant panda – cartoon, not real – named Bing Dwen was the official mascot of the Games. Nail-biting competition had U.S. viewers, in record low numbers, on the edges of their seats watching Curling, Luge, Bobsleighing, etc. Estimated cost of the extravaganza: $4 billion in USD.
American Military News highlighted the civic commitments of several major American companies that helped sponsor the games:
Proctor & Gamble, “committed to doing the right thing by respecting human rights in every aspect”;
Coca-Cola, where “respect for human rights is a fundamental value. For more than 130 years, the Company has built a reputation on trust and respect and we are committed to earning that trust with a set of values that represent the highest standards of integrity and excellence”;
Intel, “committed to maintaining and improving systems and processes to avoid complicity in human rights violations related to our own operations, our supply chain, and our products”;
Visa, that recognizes “our responsibility to respect, advance and maintain global human rights standards across our company, operations and supply chain”; and, then there’s,
Airbnb, where all community members “treat everyone in the Airbnb community – regardless of their race, religion, national origin, ethnicity, skin color, disability, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, or age—with respect, and without judgment or bias.”
According to NBC News, the host nation of the Games symbolically displayed its commitment to the Olympic spirit by featuring cross-country skier Dinigeer Yilamujiang who helped carry the Olympic torch that began the Games. As an attractive young Uyghur woman, she embodied the commitment of China and its sponsors to the true Olympic spirit.
Why a Uyghur woman, you ask? You likely know.
It’s explained in detail in a Wikipedia post that features the photo above of Uyghur males being educated in a de-extremification (AKA: “de-radicalization”) group propaganda session under the auspices of one of China’s “autonomous region department of justice” authorities.
The photo above shows but a small part of one propaganda project that included a
“total of 5 venues set up in the county, covering all townships and key villages, and nearly 60,000 religious figures, non-clergy, key special groups, susceptible groups aged 16-45 years old, township (town) village cadres, village branch secretaries, temple management committee directors, ethnic minority cadres of the village working group, individual industrial and commercial households, hajj and hajj personnel, female body washers, and some teachers and villager representatives participated in the propaganda activities.”
I.e., all the Uyghurs in the grid square.
Mass-produced right thinking is described under the title: “knock on the door of the soul with emotion, soothe the emotions of the masses with reasoning.” Sort of Zen-like.
One unsolicited testimony to the value of mass indoctrination was offered by a woman who said,
“After listening to (the indoctrinator) preaching, I suddenly became enlightened, and I understood that the reason why my husband was taken into custody was that religious extremism harmed my whole family.” (Use Google Translate to shift from Chinese to English.)
Mention is made in the Wikipedia article of the CCP’s more physical techniques used in Uyghur internment camps where Proctor & Gamble products are unavailable, Cokes are not served, computer chips are not privately owned, Visa cards are not accepted, and Airbnb properties are unavailable for rent.
In places where Uyghur Lives Don’t Matter.
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