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Stop Asian hate misinformation campagn

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athena
(@athena)
Posts: 931
Noble Member
Topic starter
 

https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/stopasianhate-chinese-diaspora-targeted-by-ccp-disinformation-campaign/

 

 

Chinese diaspora communities continue to be an ‘essential target’ of Chinese-state-linked social media manipulation taking place around the world. Chinese-state-linked accounts are running a multilingual, cross-platform campaign aimed at stoking the fears of these communities by drawing false equivalences between anti-Asian racism and increased speculation about Covid-19 laboratory-leak theories. This campaign illustrates the Chinese Communist Party’s common tactic of using accusations of racism to deflect criticism.

The #StopAsianHate hashtag was started by Asian-Americans in March in an effort to end racially motivated attacks and discrimination. It has been trending ever since. There’s no doubt that this hashtag represents a legitimate movement to raise awareness of the issue of anti-Asian violence. The Covid-19 pandemic has seen a rise in anti-Asian violence, both in Australia and internationally. One of the most prominent incidents was the deadly shooting of six Asian-American women in an Atlanta spa, which is being investigated as a hate crime.

However, the fast-changing nature of social media makes even legitimate online movements vulnerable to co-option. The same hashtag is now being used to smear Hong Kong doctor Li-Meng Yan, who has published three controversial articles claiming that the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 was artificially created in a Chinese laboratory.

Yan’s case is complicated. Her claims have been widely criticised as misleading, and Harvard social media researchers have described her work as an example of ‘cloaked science’ intended to manipulate the media. At the same time, prominent US right-wing figures have been amplifying her claims, including Republican strategist Stephen Bannon and Chinese dissident Guo Wengui, who has been targeted in the past by Chinese state information operations but also leads his own sprawling network peddling disinformation.

A search of the hashtags #StopAsianHate and #LiMengYan on Twitter between April and June 2021 returns over 30,000 tweets and retweets from more than 6,000 suspicious accounts. All posted the same set of hashtags, memes, English phrases (such as ‘Stop Asian discrimination’, ‘Yan limeng is rumor led to discrimination against Asian Americans’ and ‘Let Yan limeng disappear from America’) and Mandarin phrases (such as ‘闫丽梦公开承认“亚裔歧视”是由于其造谣病毒来源于中国实验室而引发的!’, which roughly translates as ‘Yan Limeng publicly admitted that “Asian discrimination” was caused by the rumor that the virus originated from a Chinese laboratory!’).

While accounts espousing a variety of different ideologies have amplified these hashtags, several features of this network suggest that these accounts are being operated by actors based in the People’s Republic of China, where Twitter is banned. For example, posting patterns for these accounts neatly match Beijing business hours.

In addition, there was less campaign activity on weekends and almost none during the Chinese national Labor Day holiday from 1 to 5 May.

Similar behavioural features were observed in a 2020 Twitter-attributed Chinese state takedown dataset.

Like other Chinese-state-linked information operations, the campaign has worked across multiple US-based platforms, including Facebook,

E" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Instagram, YouTube, Reddit, Google Groups and Medium. Images and phrases used in the campaign have also appeared on non-US-based platforms such as TikTok, VK and a Russian amateur blog site.

The extent of posting on new multi-language platforms indicates a marked development in capability and coordination. And the use of racism suggests efforts to leverage issues that the targeted audience is already emotionally engaging with. After rallies were held by Asian diaspora communities in March 2021 against racially motivated attacks, posts in this disinformation campaign called for similar real-world demonstrations at Guo’s residence in New York City to ‘Protect Grandma’, a reference to a 76-year-old Chinese grandmother who fended off an unprovoked assault. It’s unclear whether these Guo-targeted demonstrations happened.

President Xi Jinping has highlighted the importance of the Chinese diaspora as part of fulfilling the ‘China dream’. China’s top diplomat, Yang Jiechi, has similarly written that maintaining the support and sentiment of these communities and countering perceived threats are a ‘pressing need’ for the CCP. Even if lab-origin theories remain unsubstantiated, a belief that Beijing might have withheld evidence of a lab leak would threaten the CCP’s standing abroad and could influence domestic opinions in China.

If the goal of this new social media campaign is to deny these lab-leak theories, or to convince audiences that rising anti-Asian violence is due to Yan and her alleged co-conspirators Guo and Bannon, then this network is not particularly sophisticated, or convincing. Alternatively, by criticising the trio’s efforts to spread narratives about the origins of Covid-19, the network may be deliberately amplifying Yan’s claims and drawing attention away from more informed and balanced voices. This would benefit Beijing’s interests by associating lab-origin theories with fringe conspiracy theorists and undermining these hypotheses among mainstream audiences.

The origin of Covid-19 is a highly politicised issue for the Chinese government, and the state’s propaganda apparatus is deploying its full suite of statecraft to influence international opinion on the matter. Chinese diplomats and state media have overtly pushed conspiracies that Covid-19 originated in the US, and these claims have been amplified on social media by patriotic individuals and inauthentic accounts.

Removing inauthentic Chinese-state-linked assets from social media platforms may limit the reach and impact of CCP propaganda, but these disinformation campaigns have proved to be highly resilient in terms of their capacity to maintain a consistent presence on mainstream US-based platforms. The lack of accessible and credible Chinese-language information on US-based social media networks leaves a vacuum that disinformation can fill. For example, searching for #LiMengYan and #UnrestrictedBioweapon on Twitter between April and June 2021 also returned a separate anti-vaccine and anti-CCP campaign targeting Chinese diaspora run by accounts that could be linked to Guo, based on his logos ‘GNews’ and ‘GTV’ appearing on images.

 
Posted : 13/03/2022 10:14 pm
Rick Cool
(@rick-cook)
Posts: 1131
Noble Member
 

what is the difference between #stopasianhate #asianlivesmatter or #Asian for blacks lives matter? 

 
Posted : 13/03/2022 11:24 pm
dyno avatar
(@dyno)
Posts: 1462
Noble Member
 

@j-r-c Asians for black lives matter is funded by Chinese I think. 

 
Posted : 14/03/2022 11:31 pm
athena
(@athena)
Posts: 931
Noble Member
Topic starter
 

#StopAsianFakes: The CCP’s Role In Manufacturing the Asian Hate Crime Crisis. (thedrilldown.com)

this was in the Wall street journal. I remembered hearing about this fake scientist guy that didn't exist. 

 

also it mentioned the asian hate crime statistics: 

this study at San Bernardino university goes against FBI data that asian hate crime decrease between 1996-2020. Even the increase claimed by the San Bernardino college   found 120 people in a population of 330 million. That's roughly 1 in 3.3 million of being a victim of asian hate crime. 

I'm not denying the existence of hate crime. I'm just saying it's being blown to exponential proportions to stoke fear and hatred for the US.  

My question is if these chinese get such bad treatment why do they keep flooding to English speaking countries? 

 

 

---------------

Late last year, The Drill Down reported on China’s weaponizing of social media —hiring  contractors to make fake accounts to improve its image on the international stage, silence its critics, and attack its enemies. One of their primary objectives: COVID disinformation.

Here’s a snippet of what we reported at the time:

Recently, Facebook took down 500 accounts after they were used to spread comments from a Swiss biologist by the name of Wilson Edwards, who had purportedly written that the United States was interfering with the World Health Organization’s efforts to track the origins of the coronavirus pandemic,” NYT reports. “The Swiss embassy in Beijing said Wilson Edwards did not exist, but the fake scientist’s accusations had already been quoted by Chinese state media.”

So we know China is out there spreading total nonsense on social media —that’s obvious. What’s less obvious is that the disinformation would make it into the talking points of one White House Press Secretary, Ms. Jen Psaki.

According to the Washington Free Beacon, Psaki parroted a CCP talking point claiming that the spike in violence against Asian communities in the U.S. was due to “hate-filled rhetoric” about the origins of COVID —”a baseless claim that has been promoted by the CCP,” WFB reports.

Here’s Psaki…

“We’ve seen this rise, unfortunately, because of hate-filled rhetoric and language around the origins of the pandemic,” Psaki said in response to a question on the 339 percent increase in anti-Asian hate crimes since President Joe Biden took office last January.

Here’s where China’s weaponized social media accounts really pay off —they’ve spun the White House briefing room. “Allegations of that unfounded link grew to a fever pitch last spring and were trumpeted during #StopAsianHate rallies across the country. A Wall Street Journal investigation found, however, that the driving force behind the rallying call was a network of fake social media accounts driven by the Chinese government as it pushed to undermine the plausible ‘lab-leak’ theory,” according to WFB.

The fake accounts mobilized Americans against America. A brilliant bit of cyber-espionage and social media sleight of hand. More than half of Americans (54%) get their news from social media aka a contractor hired by the CCP to tell them to go out and “fight back” against Asian hate.

They’ve turned us against us —and no one sees it’s happening.

Here’s a bit of news that probably didn’t make the social media rounds as much as #StopAsianHate:

America’s mainstream discourse around Asian-Americans largely ignores inconvenient facts. Attacks on Asian-Americans have indeed risen in recent years. According to the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino, anti-Asian hate crimes reported to the police in major cities in 2020 rose to 145% of the number of reports in 2019. But this refers to only 120 incidents in a nation of 330 million. This jump also runs up against longer-term trends. Between 1996 and 2019 the number of hate crimes against Asian-American and Pacific Islanders declined nearly 50%, from 355 to 179, according to FBI figures. At the same time, the AAPI population more than doubled.”

That was from the Wall Street Journal – not People’s Daily.

 
Posted : 15/03/2022 12:01 am
ASIANS 4 BLACK LIVES MATTER 黑人的命也是命 avatar
(@naval)
Posts: 2959
Famed Member
 

@j-r-c 

Asians for Black Lives Matter = systemic racism exists 

stop asian hate = stop Sinophobia meme without any organization.  

 
Posted : 15/03/2022 5:01 pm
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