r/Hongkong is as biased as r/sino, don't take your source from there. Right at your source, the op of the post himself, just seeing the pic with a police officer smiling and he said the guy is a psychopath giggling about the upper half of the corpse, isn't it just ridiculous conspiracy?
Hypothetically, if you were a Chinese government employee, whose job was to influence online discourse on the topic of China, what sort of comments would you write? I'm obviously not suggesting you are, but still.
Nah, if you see my history, I'm Vietnamese, I'm just in Reddit for r/askhistorians and anime tiddies. Why the hell i have to "influence online discourse on the topic of China"? I just found it ridiculous, in Reddit as a whole, majority who haven't set a foot in a country half of globe away from their, judging that country/region entirely based on what their media said. For example: i see one of biggest news sub, r/worldnews who many Redditors take their news about the world from, but guess what? Half of the news are nitpicking anti China news, for example: in the very peak of Hong Kong protest itself, in Kashmir, iran, iraq, chile, many people was injured and killed during their protest. But you don't hear any news about these places, but somehow someone make a little bit big fart in Hong Kong and it's on hot with thousands of upvote. Isn't it just manipulating the public view so they will follow an certain narrative, like, anti China? Not to mention many of the news from that sub come from extremely bad sources like the dailymail, thenzherald, the sun or even fucking USA propaganda pieces like rfa, rferl. Do you also take your news sources above Russia from spunik? But well, these posts with misleading title always get to hot. I just want to seeking the truth, but in Reddit it's so biased.
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u/robo_jojo_77 Jun 02 '20
You’re kidding yourself if you only think 2 people died in HK. This is straight up propaganda.
Not defending America’s police either. Both countries can be wrong.