Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

China Just Launched a New Anti-Espionage Propaganda Campaign, and the Posters Are So Dramatic

Like most propaganda, the Chinese campaign is decidedly over-the-top.

A new propaganda campaign is sweeping through China. The campaign is designed to prevent Chinese citizens from spying for foreign governments.

Like most propaganda, the Chinese campaign is decidedly over-the-top.


Posters in a Beijing subway are specifically designed to inform citizens of potential warning signs, in an effort to prevent them from being tricked into spying against China. The posters identify redheaded academics, tourists, English teachers, and NGO workers as just some of the suspicious individuals who might tempt Chinese citizens into a life of espionage.

This type of propaganda has become increasingly common in China in recent years. It is all part of an effort to breed distrust of foreign entities, while allowing Chinese officials to create a tighter grip on their citizens. Historically, China has always been concerned about hostile foreign governments. In recent years, multiple attempts have been made to engage citizens in active counter-espionage efforts through cash rewards, classes, and an annual national security awareness day.

In April, on National Security Awareness Day, Chinese authorities launched a website in English and Chinese. The site was specifically designed so that citizens could report suspected espionage, warning individuals to “be on alert for friends who wear masks.” Even the country's ministry of education demanded that national security be a part of the national education curriculum.

“These laws target civil society groups as a threat to national security and attempt to create a cloud of suspicion around cooperation between NGOs and individuals inside and outside of China,” said Frances Eve, a researcher for the advocacy group Chinese Human Rights Defenders.

Last year, China broadened its legal definitions of espionage. Now, foreign individuals or organizations can be punished for any behavior deemed to include distorting facts or issuing information that might harm national security.

“The campaigns are centred around the idea that ‘everyone is responsible’ for participating in China’s state security. Participation is aimed at preventing, stopping and punishing behaviour that could compromise state security. It is a state security that is not only about internal or external security. It is also about security of the party, both within … and outside where threats lie mostly in the realm of ideas,” said Samantha Hoffman, an analyst focusing on Chinese state security.

All of this is not to say that China is completely paranoid. Spies do exist within China. According to the New York Times, between 2010-2011 more than a dozen CIA sources were identified within China. These individuals were imprisoned or killed. Those deaths marked one of the worst US intelligence breaches in decades and effectively crippled US espionage efforts in China.

The Chinese government has claimed that as many as 115,675 foreign spies were working in China in 2016. Allegedly, the spies were mostly from Germany, Japan and the United States. This has been widely circulated, but never been attributed or proven. The constant barrage of propaganda about espionage is likely a smokescreen designed to distract citizens from the government's practice of tightening control over media, academia and society overall.

More from News

Donald Trump
Mark Mirko/Connecticut Public via Getty Images

Trump's Commencement Speech Claim That The U.S. Is 'Hot' Right Now Turns Into Hilariously Brutal Self-Own

President Donald Trump's attempt to smear the Biden administration turned into a self-own while he spoke at the commencement ceremony for the U.S. Coast Guard Academy this week.

Trump spoke as several hundred protesters gathered outside Coast Guard Academy campus in New London, Connecticut. During the nearly hour-long address to cadets and their families, he alternated between praising the graduating class of 2026 and revisiting familiar themes about what he described as the country’s recovery after a period of decline.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @tiktoktimmay8's TikTok video
@tiktoktimmay8/TikTok

Dad Brutally Reviews Perfumes During Daughter's Birthday Party At Ulta In Hilarious Viral TikTok

For those who did not know, having a birthday party at Ulta Beauty is now a possibility. Complete with skincare sessions, mini-makeovers, discounts, and goodie bags, it's kind of perfect for teens and tweens who are enthusiastic about makeup and skincare.

But while the birthday party is going on, what is a bored parent to do?

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @dadgummit10's TikTok video
@dadgummit10/TikTok

Guy Goes Viral After Bombing Job Interview With Hilarious Answer To 'What's Your Weakness?'—And Oof

Let's face it: every single one of us has flopped at least one job interview. Whether we knew in the moment that it wasn't going well, or it only hit us later how spectacularly we'd missed the mark, we've all been there.

But at least most of us can say that we didn't freeze up and start spouting facts about our favorite snack.

Keep ReadingShow less
Photographer taking photos of newlyweds
Erstudiostok/Getty Images

Couple's Engagement Photo Goes Viral For Its Unintentional Optical Illusion—And We Can't Stop Laughing

When two people are planning to get married, there are countless details to consider, often to create an incredibly beautiful and aesthetic wedding.

One detail that most couples take very seriously is the photographer who will take the wedding photos and help create an engagement announcement.

Keep ReadingShow less
Redditor imfrom_mars_'s photo of a textbook that includes a ChatGPT prompt
u/imfrom_mars_/Reddit

ChatGPT Response Appears To Make It Into School Textbook—And We're Doomed

Students are being actively discouraged from using ChatGPT and other AI-generation tools, as they are expected to learn their educational concepts and be able to put them into practice. They are also not supposed to use these tools while writing papers or during at-home tests.

Given how expensive grade school and college textbooks are, it is reasonable that educational writers and content professionals should be held to the same standards. Wouldn't it make sense for them to use the knowledge of their field, rather than what's been fed into ChatGPT, to make a textbook a worthwhile purchase for students?

Keep ReadingShow less