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China the Socialist Utopia

Started by VladTepes, Wednesday, 01 September 2021, 02:10 PM

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VladTepes

China the Socialist Utopia.

QuoteChina erases billionaire actress Zhao Wei from history

One of China's most famous and richest actresses has been completely erased and the Chinese government is thought to be behind it.

Jamie Seidel
August 31, 2021 - 10:11AM

She has millions of adoring fans. She's worth billions of dollars. But Beijing has all but erased actress Zhao Wei from history. And they won't say why.

Zhao's name won't be immortal. Her entire internet existence has been scrubbed.

All serials and chat shows featuring her have vanished from major Chinese online streaming sites. She no longer even appears in the online credits for the movies she appears in.

Zhao Wei shot to fame in the late 1990s in China's most successful television series ever, My Fair Princess. Since then, she's progressed from being an A-list actress to director, pop singer and businesswoman.

Such success under Chairman Deng Xiaoping's policy of "opening up" China and embracing the incentives of private enterprise made Zhao very wealthy.

But her business empire struck trouble under Xi Jinping. Zhao was accused of being unpatriotic for hiring a Taiwanese actor to play a leading actor in a 2016 film. Beijing had that choice overturned.

Shortly after, Zhao's business acquisitions began to attract close regulatory and taxation scrutiny. Last month a public relations agency she owns became embroiled in a nationalistic scandal after one of its clients – actor Zhang Zhehan – took a selfie while visiting Japan's Yasukuni war dead shrine.

On Saturday, reports emerged on Chinese news sites that Zhao had fled the country on a private jet and was spotted at Bordeaux airport in France, where she and her husband Huang Youlong own a vineyard.

Now Zhao appears to have become the highest-profile victim of a Chinese Communist Party crackdown on celebrities and billionaires.

There can be only one ...

Beijing is worried about personality cults. At least any not centred on Xi Jinping.

"Xi Jinping thought" is now compulsory teaching at schools. "Xi Jinping urges" features in almost every state-controlled news report.

But the lives and acts of entertainment celebrities remain much more popular on social media chat rooms. Little wonder celebrity fan culture is not something Xi considers to be a Chinese characteristic.

On Friday, Beijing's Cyberspace Administration agency issued a set of instructions to social media and internet operators aimed at "rectifying issues" with fan communities.

The purpose was to ensure "political and ideological safety in the cyberspace as well as creating a clean internet".

Celebrities can no longer be ranked in order of popularity.

Talent agencies must submit themselves to Communist Party oversight.

Fan clubs must be licenced and officially authorised.

Any disagreement between fans of different high-profile personalities must immediately be censored.

The regulatory crackdown follows the publication of a policy guideline, Implementation Outline for the Establishment of a Rule of Law-Based Society, which mandates the establishment of "moral norms" as "legal norms".

Cancel culture

China's National Radio and Television Administration in 2018 ordered the banishment of actors whose "morality is not noble", who was "tasteless, vulgar and obscene", or whose "ideological level is low and have no class".

All must ban "actors with stains, scandals and problematic moral integrity".

At the weekend, the Communist Party-controlled Global Times accused Zhao of having "been entangled in various scandals over the years".

It admits no official reason for her erasure has been given.

"Aside from her celebrity identity, Zhao was also widely known as a billionaire investor surrounded with lawsuits," it reads. "As early as 2001, Zhao received an overload of criticism for publicly wearing a dress featuring a Japanese military flag ...

"Zhao's removal from video platforms comes two weeks after actor Zhang Zhehan ... had all of his accounts and works banned on various social media platforms including Weibo, after posing at Japan's notorious Yasukuni Shrine, sparking wide outrage."

The list of fallen Chinese folk heroes is beginning to run high.

Zhang was subject to a similar erasure last month, with all online references to his work deleted.

Actress Zheng Shuang fell foul of Beijing Friday. She's been accused of tax evasion and ordered to pay a $A63 million fine. If she pays the fine, she won't be investigated. She may even be able to keep her profile.

Late last year, Zheng's career ended after her private life exploded across the world. Her former partner accused her of abandoning two surrogate children in the United States. Zheng then vanished from public sight for four months.

Celebrity singer Huo Zhun recently resigned after being publicly attacked for promiscuous behaviour. And Chinese-Canadian singer Kris Wu was charged with "violation of morality" amid rape and underage sex accusations earlier this month.

Now state-regulated media is reporting China's youth as welcoming the celebrity crackdown.
Eunice Zhang, an 18-year-old "fan circle member" said she used to spend hours every day defending her idols and promoting them on social media popularity ratings. "In the past, when my idols got new commercial endorsements, I would use all my pocket money to buy (their products)," she reportedly said. "But now I only buy useful products."

Communism strikes back

Chinese censors are busy setting things straight.

State-controlled social media has been promoting messages including "raise the threshold to become a celebrity", "virtue before artistry", and "the rewards of a moral society".

Chairman Xi himself restated China's commitment to Communist values at a Central Committee for Financial Affairs meeting earlier this month. He stressed that "Common prosperity is the prosperity of all the people, not the prosperity of a few people".

"Common prosperity is the essential requirement of socialism and an important feature of Chinese-style modernisation," he reportedly said. "It is necessary to follow the principles of marketisation and rule of law, and co-ordinate the prevention and resolution of major financial risks."

It appears Chairman Xi equates independent billionaires with such risk. Especially as growing inequality threatens to undermine his message of eliminating poverty.

But concentrations of wealth are also perceived as threats to the power of the Communist Party, which has imposed strict new regulations on business investment, ownership and control.

In July, tech giant Tencent owner Ma Huateng saw his personal fortune slashed from $A82 billion to $A68 billion at the stroke of a pen.

He's not the only one. Billionaire Jack Ma vanished from public life after his Ant Group was prevented from launching a public offering. That crackdown came after Ma dared criticise Communist Party regulators for stifling tech sector growth.

It should be no surprise. Chairman Xi promised to tackle "extreme wealth" when he returned to power for a second term in 2017. But it took until this month's Central Committee meeting for the formal promise to enforce "reasonable adjustments to excessive income" to be made.

It's not all about economics. It's also about power.

In July, Chinese agricultural tycoon Sun Dawu was jailed for 18 years after being convicted under the catch-all "picking quarrels and provoking trouble" offence. He'd been outspoken about a simple property dispute.


Yeah that last one is my favourite too.
An offence "picking quarrels and provoking trouble" whereby someone can be jailed for any length of time the judge sees fit.

Must be great to have the State so concerned for your well-being they go to such lengths to protect you.
The lucky Chinese people eh !   :rolleyes:
Ottomans: 'Hippity hoppity, Vienna's our property"
...and then the Winged Hussars arrived.

Vlad's K7 "Back in Black"
YouTubeLandyVlad Rides

Hooli

If China was a two-bit backwater with no money then Team Ah-merkinshire World Police Fuck Yeah! would have invaded years ago on the excuse of human rights.

Kiwifruit

Stepson lives in Shanghai. We are cautious what we say in communications with him. Changes afoot there. Harder for Westerners to get jobs now, very keen to use their own.
Another great day on the right side of the grass.😎

Globalrider

Long ago my father said "beware the yellow peril". With the build up in the South China Sea and their so called hijack diplomacy, the world is headed down a very slippery slope with the Fongs! - If everyone stopped buy Chinese it would soon sort them out! - Just saying!   :popcorn:
I need to go somewhere I've not been but won't know until I get there!

Kiwifruit

#4
Interesting comment Stan. I totally agree, a silent boycott of Chinese products would suit me. Look at the ethics and morals of the PRC. Copy, cheat, counterfeit, steal, no tactic is too underhand.
I have bought food believing it to be NZ product because it had the outline of NZ on the packaging only to find on closer inspection Product of China in the smallest of fineprint on the packaging.
I knew a fella that imported Chinese made garden machinery. On the internals of a chainsaw was 'Stihl' in the casting.  Recently l purchased a garden chipper, takes up to 70mm branches. Has a Honda engine which starts first pull. Sturdy construction, was not cheap but works a treat.... NZ made, keeps our country working.
I had best stop, I dislike the chows with a passion.
Do your part, search out and buy goods produced in a country with similar values to our own.
Another great day on the right side of the grass.😎

Hooli

This isn't the first forum I've seen a thread on how to avoid buying anything from China, seems a good idea to me.

Mick_J

Sounds like a great idea but then how will we post what we have done without our Chinese made computers?  :confused1:
Keep the rubber side down.          Mick

VladTepes

Delboy on youtube wont be able to "build" any motorbikes if he can't buy endless chinesium shit to bolt on....

wanker.
Ottomans: 'Hippity hoppity, Vienna's our property"
...and then the Winged Hussars arrived.

Vlad's K7 "Back in Black"
YouTubeLandyVlad Rides

grog

Avoiding Chinese made, tell me how? My Aussie tools, Chinese. My Canon stuff, Chinese. My Aussie oil filters/air filters, Chinese. Never ending list.My garden hose, made in Australia, it leaked, sorry sir, no wrty, we dont have that model anymore. Japanese bike is good, Me and Wife both Aussie Made. Jaanese ute, made in Thailand. Nike shoes, Chinese. USA golf clubs, Chinese made. My beer made at my house, definately not Chinese.  :laugh:

Kiwifruit

That's OK Grog, just stick with the beer then. I hear what you say, it's not easy to avoid Chinese
But if we have a choice......on my trip to Melbourne l saw a great billboard "buy your kids a job, buy Australian Made" Says it all really.
Unless you're a Kiwi..... nah, l will buy Aussie made if l can too  :cheers:
Another great day on the right side of the grass.😎

VladTepes

Quote from: grog on Friday, 03 September  2021, 07:36 PM
My beer made at my house, definately not Chinese.  :laugh:

I'll bet the stuff you make it in is, though.

Hard to avoid these days for sure since Australia pretty much pushed our industry offshore - sacrificed on the altar of 'free trade'.
Ottomans: 'Hippity hoppity, Vienna's our property"
...and then the Winged Hussars arrived.

Vlad's K7 "Back in Black"
YouTubeLandyVlad Rides

grog

Vlad, ingredients from SA, pretty sure fermenters from Vic. Hops from Tas. Other bits surely Chinese. Been here long enough to make them local.  :)

Batkwaka

When you have the Australian Liberal Gov (in this instance) accepting a $100,000 bribe from the Communist Party in China, the day after signing a Free Trade Agreement, it's not hard to figure out why China is getting out of control.
May the sun be warm & shining and your roads be smooth & winding.

Kiwifruit

China not silly they've bought up heaps of political favour here, they donate to both parties.   :facepalm:
Another great day on the right side of the grass.😎

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