Posted on 04/23/2016 12:57:20 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
Wanted: Ten million Chinese students to civilize the Internet
By Xu Yangjingjing and Simon Denyer
April 10, 2015
China wants to recruit 10 million young people, mostly university students belonging to the Communist Partys youth wing, to spread positive energy on the Internet in other words, to use social media to praise and defend the government.
Web users recently posted a document issued by the China Communist Youth League dated Feb. 13 that asks for no less than 20 percent of its members to be recruited as cyber civilization volunteers, who would be expected to become good Chinese Netizens and promote the voice of good youth.
China had nearly 650 million Internet users at the end of 2014, official figures show. Among them are millions of online commentators who post pro-government comments and attack those critical of the authorities. They are known as the 50-cent party, because they are supposedly paid 50 Chinese cents (also known as 5 mao, equivalent to 8U.S. cents) per post.
This latest scheme would significantly expand their numbers with a volunteer force. The students would be expected to post content online to promote socialist core values, with each person asked to participate in a so-called sunshine comments campaign at least three times this year.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
P!
I am presently in China.
Google, Pandora, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and lots of other sites are blocked.
Oddly enough, FreeRepublic, Bing, iHeart Radio (Limbugh/Carr/Hannity live stream) and CIBTV (Live and recorded Catholic Mass from the States) are not blocked.
The Chinese already have people on the internet pushing socialism. It is called the “50 cent Army”, as they are paid 50 cents RMB (about 8 cents American) for each post they make that is double-plus good for socialism. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/50_Cent_Party
I know what you mean: infamous Wumao’s. Their reach is not confined to China. They are virtually everywhere on Internet. If a major daily like WSJ publishes an article critical to China, a swarm of pro-Chinese shills descend on the comment section to deny and spin the report. They are also active in S. Korea, where Chinese of Korean descent have a large presence. These ethnic Koreans are pushing pro-regime talking points and Han-chauvisim.
I think I ran into these 50 cent people in the comment section of a YouTube video on the Tiananmen Square massacre (and Wikipedia and Britannica don’t even use that name, but the words “protests” and “incident” instead. Has to be the Chinese government influence. We really didn’t win the Cold War with Red China’s government still in power.
You can bet money that the U.S. government already does this, although with people already employed by government, not student volunteers.
Like this hasn’t been going on in this country for years. Heck,I think some college professors even give credits to their classes for going into forums and news comment sections and promoting a certain agenda.
And PAC's directly or indirectly connected to the regime.
A list of Socialist outfits.
One thing I have learned about Socialists is that they have all learned that the intent of outside Socialists not in control, is to take control from the inside Socialists now in control, as well as everyone else.
Socialists are cannibals at heart.
VOA Volunteers of America
If that is true, then shouldn't we here on this site provide a better example to them?
I’ve wondered the same; when you have alphabets with thousands of characters, I guess you really have to fall back on a Western model. Why not? We switched to Arabic numbers because the Roman numerals were impractical for many higher functions.
What’s the best Chinese food you had in the last month?
Hillary and Soros HAVE done the same in the US.. it doesn’t take 10 million... fewer than a few hundred - can totally disrupt the conversations between free citizens.
I wish eternal death on democrat shills..
Australian filet steak
Yeah, FreeRepublic has been kind of an embarrassment lately, hasn’t it?
Grass fed! My favorite Chinese-Australian story is the Chinese flight money guy who bought an Australia vineyard sight unseen for 38 million
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