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<A HREF="http://www.pigdog.org/auto/liberty/link/687.html">Pigdog Journal
(Liberty) -- China Uses Info-War </A>
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Om
K
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China Uses Info-War Techniques to Suppress Religious Following
1999-08-03 00:49:08

By El Snatcher
Liberty There are half-eaten animals lying on the sidewalks!
-- Gene

Maybe you haven't heard: the latest craziness happening in China is the
large-scale protests against the recent banning of the heretofore little
known New Age religion known as Falun Gong (pronounced fah-luhn gung).
The Chinese government has launched an all out campaign against the
estimated two million followers in China, including mass arrests, and
BRUTAL propaganda attacks, which have now spilled onto the Internet.

Despite the official ban, tens of thousands of angry followers of the
sect have been proving its popularity by streaming out to large-scale
protests all over China. Tiananmen Square hasn't seen so many protectors
since the 1989 student crackdown. Many of them have been arrested --
some viciously beaten, and dragged into police vans by their hair.

The Chinese government outlawed Falun Gong on July 22, when it feared
the organization was getting too big, and posturing toward political
power. China does not allow independent political organizations of any
kind, fearing eventual challenges to the supreme uber-rule of the
Chinese Communist Party.

Like the followers of Tai Chi, Falun Gong followers do funny exercises
in public parks, and other large outdoor areas. The religion is sort of
an amalgamation of Buddhist and Taoist philosophies, deep breathing
exercises known as Qi Gong, with a dash of martial arts thrown in.

Started by a former clerk and trumpet player named Master Li Hongzhi
(pronounced Hongshee) in 1992, Falun Gong quickly grew in China, and so
did Li's legend. Some of his followers claim he can perform fantastic
feats, such as cure cancer and turn white hair black. By 1995, his
following was so large, and his "energy potency" at such a high level,
that the Chinese authorities chased him out of the country.

Currently he is a U.S. citizen living in New York. It is rumored that he
spent significant time in Canada, where he honed his philosophies and
literature.

Once the decision to suppress the sect was made, the roust was swift and
extreme. At least 100 spiritual leaders of the following were rounded up
all over the country, homes of practitioners ransacked, and nearly two
million books and other Falun Gong materials confiscated and quickly
tossed into pulping machines.

Beijing has ordered the arrest of the Master Li, and purportedly even
offered a $500 million reduction of the United States' trade surplus in
exchange for Li's extradition back to China. Lucky for him, he has a
green card.

The Chinese government has also launched a massive propaganda offensive,
which includes an hour a day of anti-Falun Gong denouncements on Central
China Television (CCTV). The Gongers are accused of spreading
"superstitious, evil thinking," and advocating everything from eschewing
scientific medicine to mass suicide. The followers of Falun Gong deny
the allegations.

Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of this story is how both the
Chinese government and the followers of Falun Gong have been using the
Internet. China immediately shut down every Falun Gong Web site within
its reach, and suspended email access throughout the country for 48
hours after the ban.

There is a large International community of Falun Gong followers,
spreading the word of Master Li, and the latest news and information
about what's going on in China, on Internet forums and swastika-bedecked
Web sites (the swastika seems to be a symbol important to Falun
Gongers), but the Chinese Government is furiously on the Info Warpath.

The Associated Press is reporting that Falun Gong Web sites in the
United States and elsewhere have been under heavy attack by hackers, who
may be in the employ of the Chinese government. One ham-fisted hack
attempt was traced back to the Chinese national police bureau in
Beijing.

There are also anti-Falun Gong Web sites maintained by the Chinese
authorities.

Check it out yourself


Copyright © 1999 Pigdog Journal
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Amen.
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Kris

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