• keepcarrot [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    18 days ago

    I’ve had quite a few people say I’ve been brainwashed by Chinese or soviet propaganda, a thing I do not encounter often, and then slowly explain the most bog standard white Australian nationalist narrative to me. I wish I was better at confrontational social situations

    • OprahsedCreature@lemmy.ml
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      18 days ago

      I mean, I’ve checked out a few English language Chinese news programs out of curiosity. Not really anything vitriolic I’ve seen, if anything they all seem a bit more chill and relaxed and maybe even a bit boring. It’s obvious that some of it is propaganda but they don’t really bother to hide it behind this facade of “NO SPIN” and “TOTALLY RELIABLE” or controlled oppositional pushback that American corporate news (aka propaganda) feels the need to project.

      • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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        17 days ago

        It’s very easy to not look like propaganda but still push a message that spins things in a certain light.

        Many news agencies practice this, Al Jazeera, RT, the BBC, etc.

        It’s not just east and west, it’s common practice.

        The extreme vitriol we get here in the states is because SHOCK sells domestically but if you want to sell your message globally you say it politely and calmly and often in a soft spoken way.

        The point of foreign facing news is to seem reasonably so you can push another narrative.

        Not necessarily saying “foreign” news is bad, in fact I recommend everyone take a peep but always remember with whatever information you’re consuming someone has their bias in it