cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/3750687

For years, posts related to events during World War Two have proliferated on the Chinese internet, with the Japanese invasion during the war remaining a sensitive topic for nationalists on both sides. In China, Japan’s wartime atrocities have long been a sore point as Beijing maintains that Tokyo has never fully apologised.

The online posts are part of a wider phenomenon, which encompasses both xenophobia and attacks on Chinese nationals for being unpatriotic. One argument by analysts is that this digital nationalism has gone mostly unchecked by the Chinese government, with online patriotism fanning flames of anti-foreigner sentiment as well as accusations against Chinese figures.

Some are asking if this has gone too far. […]They see echoes of the violent, state-sponsored campaign against so-called enemies of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that traumatised the country in the 1960 and 1970s. Hundreds of thousands died in purges often led by youth militias known as the Red Guards. Families and neighbours turned on each other.

In a recent essay, author and university professor Zhang Sheng noted that “in the past people summoned the Red Guards, now people summon the ‘little pinks’” – a popular nickname for the virtual army of online nationalists.

[…]

It is not just foreigners facing the ire of cyber-nationalists. In recent months, Chinese public figures and companies have also been castigated for being insufficiently patriotic.

Beverage giant Nongfu Spring is considered a Chinese business success story, with its mineral water bottles a ubiquitous sight across the country’s convenience stores and restaurant tables. But in March, nationalists accused the company of using Japanese elements in its product design. One of its logos was said to resemble a Shinto temple, while the iconic mineral water bottle’s red cap was deemed to be a reference to the Japanese flag.

It resulted in a brief but intense online campaign: some called for a boycott, while videos of people angrily stamping on Nongfu Spring bottles and chucking their drinks down the toilet were all over social media.

Similarly, the author and Nobel Literature Prize laureate Mo Yan was accused of “beautifying” Japanese soldiers and being unpatriotic in his works by a nationalist blogger, who controversially sued the writer for insulting China.

[…]

Even state media has accused online nationalists of “making patriotism a business”. One commentary by CCP mouthpiece People’s Daily said those who “stir up public opinion and add fuel to the flames in order to… gain traffic and make personal gains, should be severely punished”.

But the ruling party has had a hand in stoking the fire, some say.

  • Roflmasterbigpimp@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Oh boy! I can’t wait for .ml-User to show up and explain why this is the fault of the USA and why it’s also totally fair to kill a boy born long after the 2nd WW for crimes he has not committed!

    • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Well, you see, this is what you get when you finally expose the capitalist anal-dildo regime in an educated, empowered, socialist-lesbian atmosphere…

  • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    First, I love the name “little pinks.” Seems way more insulting than tankie. I’m gonna call em that now.

    Second, online Chinese nationalists have always made me chuckle. They get bent so out of shape about the atrocities the Japanese committed against them, but if you mention the millions of Chinese killed through the many actions of the CCP they break and end up with a mashup of “those were justified for peace and safety” and the Japanese have and always will be cruel because of what they did.

    • socsa@piefed.social
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      10 hours ago

      Don’t forget to remind them that Mao himself said the Japanese invasion was the best thing which ever happened to China

  • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    It resulted in a brief but intense online campaign: some called for a boycott, while videos of people angrily stamping on Nongfu Spring bottles and chucking their drinks down the toilet were all over social media.

    Is it nice to know that stupidity knows no borders, or just saddening?

    • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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      16 hours ago

      Ironic that the nationalists, who are so concerned to uphold the myth of their own country’s superiority, always prove themselves to be the exact same brand of ignorant fool found in every country.

      • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Well it makes sense. Nationalism is for people stuck with a primal tribal-like psychology and view of the world. I’d be willing to bet they also trend “conservative” and believe caste systems are the ideal “natural order of things”.

  • dEVbiKub@feddit.nu
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    15 hours ago

    while the iconic mineral water bottle’s red cap was deemed to be a reference to the Japanese flag.

    What’s the main colour of the Chinese flag now again…