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#16
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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On the other hand, North Korea is a prison lead by a madman. No coming in or out, all food is provided by the government, children belong to the leading political party...very similar to George Orwell's description of Oceania. David |
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#17
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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It is true that there are captitalist sectors to bring revenue into China, but they're still subject to censorship and the lack of freedoms that we as Americans have. |
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#18
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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#19
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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#20
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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He was not allowed to travel, inside China or out, without written permission. Every aspect of his life was controlled until he left. He is a little younger than me, I would guess he was born in 1960. Things may have improved a little, but not much. In China people are imprisoned for speaking against official government actions or policy. That is censorship. There is no US government representative who review and censors what our media is allowed to print or broadcast on the evening news. Having a list of 4 words (it use to be 7) that you cannot say on TV is not censorship. American companies that are working with the Chinese governemt have set up gated communities. The company builds the factory, a school, stores, a clinic, and the community is walled in. Entire families live together inside the walls. They are not allowed to leave, no one can come in to visit. If you dont want to work there anymore your entire family must leave. The standard of living those 'workers' have is lower than the people in US prisions. Im not saying these are prison camps, but its very close. Last edited by KenWittlief : 12-09-2006 at 20:24. |
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#21
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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The FCC and other parts of our government engage in and codify censorship regularly. Your acceptance of their moral ideology does not mean that we're not being censored; it means only that you aren't offended by it. I am. |
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#22
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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Last edited by thegathering : 12-09-2006 at 21:07. |
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#23
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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#24
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
The US government cannot censor our media, because that would require every broadcast be reviewed by a government representative before the broadcast happens, and any objectionable material is removed. That is what happens in China.
In the US the FCC has regulations and imposes fines for content and expressions that are considered lewd and vulgar, but they do not censor the content, they have the authority to impose fines and penalties after the fact. H. Stearn has proven that, if you are willing to pay the fines you can say whatever you want. In his case he has made more money by being obscene and paying the fines. He has never spent a day in prison for saying (*@# or @(#&$&# or even for saying {(&&*!+=;>~%*@+! on the radio. But what China is doing with Wikipedia is not about obscenity or vulgarity, it is about controlling what anyone is allow to say or read regarding any aspect of the Chinese government. |
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#25
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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Your assertion is that China censors every word uttered on its television stations, over its airwaves and written in its print and that because the United States fines for the use of some words, arrests people for the use of others and prohibits us from speaking about some smaller amount of topics makes us different; that it makes us free. The United States gives implicit support to censorship, both by its domestic actions to curb certain forms of speech and by its inaction in China. Dollars, not democracy, are the guiding principles of our foreign policy there. Wikipedia's actions are therefore meaningless, really, because it remains the act of an organization that makes no revenue. When McDonald's, Nike and The Gap refuse to do business with China because of its policies of oppressing its population, then maybe there'd be something worth talking about. |
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#26
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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In fact, most people can live their lives without heavy-handed government control. That's not to say all is right and well: censorship is widespread, news is propaganda, any politics is a very touchy subject, etc. But the bigger issue for most of the country is the economic disparity between cities and rural areas. Their issue is more about the incompetent government rather than the totalitarian government, with corrupt officials, ineffective policies, and the like. These are getting fixed, to some extent, when protests are done skillfully (to the right people in charge, quietly to avoid embarassing the government). A lot of the old conservatives are still in control, so things are slow-moving and it will not be easy, but the direction they're headed in gives cause for optimism. This change, though, must come from within, and it will have to be a gradual erosion. There's still too much political inertia, pride, and infrastructure for radical changes, but progress is being made. In that regard, Wikipedia can take whatever stance it wants, and everyone can applaud their moral high ground, but it won't help make the change go faster or more effectively. Whether appeasement is any better, I don't know. I do know, though, that it opens a channel into the country that is not ultimately government controlled (unlike state-sponsored companies). I'd think that would count for something in the long run. And whatever government exists at the end of the day still has to take care of the social and economic issues of 1.3 billion multi-ethnic people living in a hugely varied and disjointed geography without creating a total ecological collapse. Unless it happens to turn into a magical government, they've got generations of work cut out for them. |
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#27
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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There was a folk song going around in the 60s about how you cant pave over grass with concrete, because the grass will find cracks and the concrete will eventually buckle, and the grass will grow through, just like you cant pave over the truth - eventually the truth will break through everywhere. So if Wikipedia had agreed to the Chinese government terms, they would have foot in the door, they might have been a small crack in the pavement. Instead they have in effect totally censored themselves. |
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#28
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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Last edited by Adam Y. : 13-09-2006 at 15:17. |
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#29
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Re: Wikipedia defies China's censors! :)
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