𝗔𝗱𝗮𝗺 𝗧𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗻
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𝗔𝗱𝗮𝗺 𝗧𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗻
@TuranAdam
Uyghur/East Turkistan Rights Advocate, President @ETAAOrg, @StateIVLP Alumni, BA @UniofAdelaide, MA/Honours @Flinders, My dad is the victim of #UyghurGenocide



NOW - Trump says it's good to have 500,000 foreign Chinese students in the U.S. and for China to purchase U.S. farmland; otherwise, colleges and farm prices would collapse: "I frankly think that it's good that people come from other countries and they learn our culture."

5月1日、ウズベキスタンに到着してすぐに、サイードフ外務大臣を表敬しました。 ウズベク語でお話ししています。 サイードフ外務大臣とは、約90分にわたり、重要鉱物やエネルギー資源、経済安全保障、地域情勢などについて幅広い議論を行い、今後も更なる関係強化に向け、二国間のあらゆるレベルで緊密に連携していくことで一致しました。自身のルーツがあるウズベキスタンにおいて、中央アジアへの公式訪問を開始できたことを大変光栄に思います。昨年12月に開催された「中央アジア+日本」対話(CA+JAD)首脳会合の成果を踏まえ、自身のルーツも活かしつつ、各国との更なる関係・連携強化に努めてまいります。

Anti-China idiots disrupt speech by China offical in Australia, crowd erupts in applause after they're ejected. More Australians lately are getting sick of these thugs who are either paid activists or attention seekers out for social media views.

Aussie Polish guy I knew in high school visited the Uyghur city of Kashgar in Xinjiang and got followed by a team of five Chinese plain clothes security police. He’s a really left wing pro-Gaza guy, we aren’t even friends anymore, he hates me over Palestine stuff. Anyway, here’s what he wrote on Instagram: “Whilst travelling in Kashgar on my first day we realised we were being trailed by a Chinese plain clothes police officer. In fact it was not one but actually a team of at least 5. They would follow us in two separate fake taxis all around town for the 3 days we were there, whilst having one guy constantly sit outside our accomodation to check when we came and went. Funnily enough though they would wave back when we waved at them. I think they knew it was silly as we did. Luckily enough I was able to get a few photos of our first Chinese police follower from our day in the Kashgar Old Town.”

The world's serial rights abusers include: 🇮🇶 Iraq 🇨🇺 Cuba 🇶🇦 Qatar 🇨🇳 China 🇧🇮 Burundi The U.N. Human Rights Council's members include: 🇮🇶 Iraq 🇨🇺 Cuba 🇶🇦 Qatar 🇨🇳 China 🇧🇮 Burundi (This is not an April Fools joke — this is reality.)



This is disgraceful. It is accepting Uyghur concentration camps as simply "the world as it is."



Lets talk “Professor Jiang” and why is he suddenly everywhere? Who is he? The man behind the “Predictive History” channel is Jiang Xueqin (江学勤). He is not a tenured professor at a major Chinese university, but an educator who has taught at international schools in China and has been involved in curriculum development and writing. The “professor” label used online is, at best, loosely applied. His YouTube channel “Predictive History” has grown rapidly, producing polished English-language geopolitical content for a global audience. Here’s where it gets interesting. YouTube is officially blocked in mainland China. Yet his content is consistently uploaded, high production quality, and clearly targeted at Western viewers. That does not prove anything on its own, but it does raise a basic structural question about how and from where this operation is run. Now look at the messaging. Across videos, the themes are highly consistent: - U.S. decline is inevitable - China’s system is more stable and long-term oriented - Western alliances are weak or hypocritical - A China-led multipolar world is both natural and preferable These positions closely mirror narratives promoted by the Chinese Communist Party in its external messaging. At the same time, there is little to no direct criticism of Beijing on politically sensitive issues — something that is notable given how tightly speech is controlled inside China. So you end up with a pattern: A “professor” without a clear traditional academic footprint. Content produced for Western platforms that are blocked in China. Messaging that consistently aligns with state narratives. And growing visibility at a time when information competition is intensifying. None of this proves coordination. But it does raise a legitimate question: Is this simply an independent commentator who happens to align with Beijing’s worldview or part of a broader ecosystem shaping how China is understood abroad? And more importantly, how should audiences evaluate credibility when labels like “professor” are used so loosely in geopolitical discourse? #China #CCP #InformationWarfare #Geopolitics #MediaLiteracy #Influence #YouTube #Narratives






