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Censorship China Medicine News

China's Battle With the Wuhan Coronavirus is Shackled by a Toxic Relationship With Information (qz.com) 84

An anonymous reader shares a report: People are panicking. When a new disease is discovered, it's undeniably hard to identify and inform the public about it quickly. Yet China is making the problem harder to solve, even though it should have learned from the SARS outbreak in 2003, when the government admitted to underreporting cases in the initial stages. Nearly 800 people died in that epidemic, which saw desperate people emptying shops for Chinese herbal medicines and vinegar that would turn out to be ineffective. That frenzy was driven by the lack of accurate information and rumors because of a vacuum in top-down communication. The idea of wei wen, or maintaining stability in China's political system made "conceal as many as possible and keep it at the local level" a natural immediate response to a crisis like this.

That approach to information might work on other kinds of issues, but not when it comes to a potential epidemic. Trying to control information in that case becomes a kind of shackle in the face of something that can progress and change swiftly beyond one's control. Of course, there is one thing that's different than 17 years ago: WeChat. A tool connecting more than a billion users in China should be one the government can use to help keep the public up-to-date, and to debunk false information. Yet it too has become a hotbed for both rumors and information suppression amid China's broader regime of online censorship honed over the past decade. Already, a focus of social media discussion about the current virus crisis has been on how hard it's been to get correct information, and whether officials were slow to respond in the early stages, at least in Wuhan. While some international public health experts have commended China's information sharing as superior to 2003 in the face of a quickly evolving situation, others have expressed doubt that the country is being as transparent as it should be.

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China's Battle With the Wuhan Coronavirus is Shackled by a Toxic Relationship With Information

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  • Face masks (Score:4, Insightful)

    by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @05:01PM (#59653084)

    For one thing, now they'll have to rescind that law banning face masks in Hong Kong.

    • Good point. Anonymity is acceptable when the government thinks your life is on the line vs when you do.
      • Re:Face masks (Score:4, Insightful)

        by ItsJustAPseudonym ( 1259172 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @05:49PM (#59653278)
        Or they could just keep banning the face masks in Hong Kong, because the government wants a good coronavirus distraction in Hong Kong now.
  • About climate change. Look, I know people engage in magical thinking, and really believe that ignoring a problem will make it disappear but the real world doesn't work like that. Pretending things aren't as bad as they are does not make things better, it makes them worse.

    Reality doesn't give a flying fuck about your feelings, snowflake. Climate change will kill you whether you believe in it or not.

    • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

      Reality doesn't give a flying fuck about your feelings, snowflake. Climate change will kill you whether you believe in it or not.

      Hmmm, you clearly haven't lived through even one of the "in twenty years, global warming/climate change is going to destroy the planet" alarmism cycles. Not saying climate change isn't a problem, just that when so many of the predictions are as off as they've been, maybe the alarmists should stop crying wolf. As evidenced, of course, by the fact that we can all get 30 year mortgages _everywhere_.

      • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

        by spun ( 1352 )

        This lie again? Show the proof there have been cycles of climate change panic. Go ahead, I'll wait.

      • Gee it's almost like the development of science and theories is an iterative process! I'm with you, those corrupt scientists should have gotten it right the first time.
    • Reality doesn't give a flying fuck about your feelings, snowflake. Climate change will kill you whether you believe in it or not.

      I agree. Now, what should we do about it?

      Greta Thunberg says we should listen to the science. I agree with this as well. What does science say? Build more nuclear power plants.
      https://climate.nasa.gov/news/... [nasa.gov]
      https://www.forbes.com/sites/r... [forbes.com]
      https://www.theguardian.com/en... [theguardian.com]
      https://www.reuters.com/articl... [reuters.com]

      In those articles there is also mention of continued reliance on wind and hydro needed to meet our future energy needs.

      My litmus test on how informed someone is on energy policy is their stance on sol

      • by spun ( 1352 )

        Damn straight, modern nuclear is much safer with less waste. It's not a complete, long term solution to the problem but it is the BEST stop gap measure we have.

        We need to crack down not just on the carbon drug abusers, like China, but the major pushers, like Australia.

        • "modern nuclear is much safer with less waste. It's not a complete, long term solution to the problem but it is the BEST stop gap measure we have."

          No, it is not. Renewables plus storage are cheaper and involve less CO2 production than nuclear. That's why nobody is planning new nuclear projects, and everyone is planning new renewables projects.

          • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

            by Mashiki ( 184564 )

            Yes it really is. The reason why nobody is building nuclear projects is because it can take 20+ years to even get the first shovel in the ground because of the anti-nuke nuts and environmentalists. The same people raise their hands in thanks for renewables(wind and solar) which have a huge ecological impact for the materials required to make them, those same people who look like a deer in the headlights when you point this out as well.

            • No, it's a simple cost proposition that nuclear can't win. Period.

              • by spun ( 1352 )

                You are thinking of old school nuclear, with the huge concrete cooling towers. Modern pebble bed reactors are much cheaper than previous generations. You also must count the capacity factor. Nuclear is a 24/7 technology and requires no batteries. Batteries are necessary for renewables (except for hydro, which has it's own huge environmental costs) and batteries are toxic and environmentally destructive, especially lithium batteries.

                When you say renewables are better for the environment, you are cherry pick

        • We need to crack down not just on the carbon drug abusers, like China, but the major pushers, like Australia.

          You're right in your implication that Australia is a major coal producer and exporter. But China also has a very large coal mining industry, in addition to importing a lot of coal (including a lot of Australian coal). Australia could stop exporting coal tomorrow and it woudn't greatly affect China's burning of coal, because they'd rapidly ramp up their own mining.

          The Chinese are very well aware of t

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This is a Pig virus, not a Rat virus.

      Also note that the Rat on the Chinese zodiac is not the Norway Rat that is a pest animal, but the Mountain Rat, a non-pest food animal.

    • Technically, the year of the rat hasn't started yet. It starts only tomorrow. /pedantic

    • Perfect time for a plague, being Chinese year of the rat and all.

      Rats got nothing on squirrels for plague.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Perfect time for a plague, being Chinese year of the rat and all.

      Not quite, but close. Chinese New Year is a big thing in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Enough so that the country shuts down for two weeks - people travel back to their home towns and celebrate, then travel back to where they work or study. This mass migration is similar to say, Thanksgiving in the US, but on a much larger scale.

      And it's even trickier because China has to close down cities because all this mass migration happening around will e

  • Hey, we got that beat, Trump wouldn't know the truth it it shit in his face. Which it does regularly.

  • Mao killed tens of millions with his braindead stupid policies and unhinged cultural revolution. Many still consider him to be a hero. I guess the Chinese government killing hundreds or thousands due to an incompetent and needlessly secretive response to a public health crisis isn't so bad, in comparison.
  • Stop using the word "toxic." "Toxic" refers to a chemical that inherently is damaging to an organism. Any other use is substituting your opinion for fact, pretending that the property is inherent in what is "toxic," when in fact it is just your opinion of what is bad.

As long as we're going to reinvent the wheel again, we might as well try making it round this time. - Mike Dennison

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