“New five black categories”的版本间的差异
来自China Digital Space
(Created page with "新黑五类 (xīn hēi wǔ lèi) The new five black categories During the Cultural Revolution period, the five black categories referred to the following five political identit...") |
小 (文本替换 - 替换“Category”为“分类”) |
||
(未显示2个用户的11个中间版本) | |||
第1行: | 第1行: | ||
− | + | <h3>''xīn hēi wǔ lèi'' 新黑五类</h3> | |
− | During the Cultural Revolution | + | [[File:NewFive.jpg|250px|right|thumbnail|''The new five black categories depicted as the 2008 Beijing Olympics mascots. (Weibo) '']] During the Cultural Revolution, the five black categories referred to five political identities: landlords, rich farmers, anti-revolutionaries, bad-influencers, and right-wingers. |
− | On July 31, 2012, the People’s Daily overseas edition editorial simultaneously called for internal reform and warned against U.S. efforts to undermine China from the grassroots. Netizens | + | On July 31, 2012, a [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/08/peoples-daily-chinas-real-challenge-is-the-next-5-10-years/ People’s Daily overseas edition editorial] simultaneously called for internal reform and warned against U.S. efforts to undermine China from the grassroots. Netizens latched on to [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/08/141150/ this passage] in particular: |
− | + | <blockquote>With “Internet freedom” as its slogan, they [the Americans] will attack “top down” governance in order to push forward the traditional model of liberal democracy; through the use of [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/china/rights-defense/ rights lawyers], underground religion, dissidents, Internet leaders, and disadvantaged social groups as the core forces, they will push for a “bottom-up” approach to Chinese governance from the grassroots to lay a foundation for changing China.</blockquote> | |
− | + | <blockquote>以“网络自由”为旗号,改变“自上而下”推进民主自由的传统模式,以维权律师、地下宗教、异见人士、网络领袖、弱势群体为核心,以期通过“自下而上”的方式渗透中国基层,为中国的“改变”创造条件。</blockquote> | |
+ | Activists immediately picked up the five groups listed in the People’s Daily article and dubbed them the “new five black categories.” | ||
− | + | [[分类:Lexicon]][[分类:Censorship and Propaganda]] | |
− | |||
− | [[ |
2023年8月7日 (一) 05:01的最新版本
xīn hēi wǔ lèi 新黑五类
During the Cultural Revolution, the five black categories referred to five political identities: landlords, rich farmers, anti-revolutionaries, bad-influencers, and right-wingers.
On July 31, 2012, a People’s Daily overseas edition editorial simultaneously called for internal reform and warned against U.S. efforts to undermine China from the grassroots. Netizens latched on to this passage in particular:
With “Internet freedom” as its slogan, they [the Americans] will attack “top down” governance in order to push forward the traditional model of liberal democracy; through the use of rights lawyers, underground religion, dissidents, Internet leaders, and disadvantaged social groups as the core forces, they will push for a “bottom-up” approach to Chinese governance from the grassroots to lay a foundation for changing China.
以“网络自由”为旗号,改变“自上而下”推进民主自由的传统模式,以维权律师、地下宗教、异见人士、网络领袖、弱势群体为核心,以期通过“自下而上”的方式渗透中国基层,为中国的“改变”创造条件。
Activists immediately picked up the five groups listed in the People’s Daily article and dubbed them the “new five black categories.”