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“Be johnned”的版本间的差异

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'''被嫖娼 (bèi piáochāng): be johnned'''
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<h3>''bèi piáochāng'' [[被嫖娼]]</h3>
  
[[File:被嫖娼.jpg|300px|right|thumb|''Being johnned. (Source: Weibo)'']] To be framed for visiting a prostitute. Came into common parlance from the case of muckraker Ou Shaokun, who was detained for five days in March 2015 for allegedly soliciting a prostitute.  
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[[File:被嫖娼.jpg|300px|right|thumb|''Being johnned. (Source: Weibo)'']]To be framed for visiting a prostitute. From the case of muckraker [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/china/ou-shaokun/ Ou Shaokun], who was detained for five days in March 2015 for allegedly soliciting a prostitute.  
  
 
Ou Shaokun is a Guangzhou-based activist known for exposing the personal use of public vehicles by uploading photos of license plates to social media. On March 26, 2015, Ou uploaded several photos to Weibo from Shaoshan, Hunan. A supporter later took him to dinner and karaoke in Changsha with Chen Jialuo. A woman from the karaoke parlor came to Ou's hotel room later that evening. She undressed and they began to kiss when the police raided the room, took photos, and detained Ou. Ou now plans to sue for what he claims was a set-up in revenge for exposing official corruption.  
 
Ou Shaokun is a Guangzhou-based activist known for exposing the personal use of public vehicles by uploading photos of license plates to social media. On March 26, 2015, Ou uploaded several photos to Weibo from Shaoshan, Hunan. A supporter later took him to dinner and karaoke in Changsha with Chen Jialuo. A woman from the karaoke parlor came to Ou's hotel room later that evening. She undressed and they began to kiss when the police raided the room, took photos, and detained Ou. Ou now plans to sue for what he claims was a set-up in revenge for exposing official corruption.  
  
Netizens sicced the "human flesh search engine" on Chen, leading some to [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/04/minitrue-cool-down-on-uncle-ou-shaokun/ suspect that he is the captain of the Changsha Domestic Security Department]. This only added to the sense that "Uncle Ou" had been framed. By adding the [[be X-ed |passive marker 被 bèi]] to the verb "solicit a prostitute" (嫖娼 piáochāng), netizens invented a name for the punishment exacted on Ou.  
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Netizens sicced the [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/10/human-flesh-searching-grassroots-internet-justice/ human flesh search engine] on Chen, leading some to [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/04/minitrue-cool-down-on-uncle-ou-shaokun/ suspect that he is the captain of the Changsha Domestic Security Department]. This only added to the sense that "Uncle Ou" had been framed. By adding the [[passive era|passive marker (''bèi'' )]] to the verb "solicit a prostitute" (''piáochāng'' 嫖娼), netizens invented a name for the punishment exacted on Ou.  
  
Ou's case is similar to that of Chinese-American businessman and Weibo celebrity Charles Xue, who in 2013 was detained for soliciting a prostitute, only to appear on national television confessing to "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2013/09/charles-xue/ irresponsibility in spreading information online]" several days later. The prostitution charge appeared to be an excuse to publicly shame Xue for his outspokenness online.
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Speculation on Uncle Ou's case was discouraged from media coverage, as leaked propaganda directives from [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/04/minitrue-cool-down-on-uncle-ou-shaokun/ April 7] and [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2015/04/minitrue-avoid-vicious-speculation-on-ou-shaokun/ April 27] show. One Weibo user lamented:
 
 
 
 
'''Example of "being johnned":'''
 
  
 
<blockquote>Duanwanjinlüshi (@段万金律师): I heard the case of Uncle Bo '''being johnned''' was banned from reporting. Sigh, even the moonlight will burn you to death. (April 2, 2015)</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>Duanwanjinlüshi (@段万金律师): I heard the case of Uncle Bo '''being johnned''' was banned from reporting. Sigh, even the moonlight will burn you to death. (April 2, 2015)</blockquote>
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<blockquote>听说区伯'''被嫖娼'''案有禁令了,不让媒体报道了,唉,月亮光都能把人晒死。['''[https://freeweibo.com/weibo/3827253861739169 Chinese]''']</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>听说区伯'''被嫖娼'''案有禁令了,不让媒体报道了,唉,月亮光都能把人晒死。['''[https://freeweibo.com/weibo/3827253861739169 Chinese]''']</blockquote>
  
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Ou's case is similar to that of Chinese-American businessman and Weibo celebrity Charles Xue, who in 2013 was detained for soliciting a prostitute, only to appear on national television confessing to "[http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2013/09/charles-xue/ irresponsibility in spreading information online]" several days later. The prostitution charge appeared to be an excuse to publicly shame Xue for his outspokenness online.
  
 
See also [[entrapment]] and [[passive era]].
 
See also [[entrapment]] and [[passive era]].
  
[[Category:Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon]] [[Category: Corruption]]
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[[分类:Lexicon]][[分类:Resistance Discourse]]<!--[[分类:Rule and Law]]-->

2024年9月30日 (一) 22:48的最新版本

bèi piáochāng 被嫖娼

Being johnned. (Source: Weibo)

To be framed for visiting a prostitute. From the case of muckraker Ou Shaokun, who was detained for five days in March 2015 for allegedly soliciting a prostitute.

Ou Shaokun is a Guangzhou-based activist known for exposing the personal use of public vehicles by uploading photos of license plates to social media. On March 26, 2015, Ou uploaded several photos to Weibo from Shaoshan, Hunan. A supporter later took him to dinner and karaoke in Changsha with Chen Jialuo. A woman from the karaoke parlor came to Ou's hotel room later that evening. She undressed and they began to kiss when the police raided the room, took photos, and detained Ou. Ou now plans to sue for what he claims was a set-up in revenge for exposing official corruption.

Netizens sicced the human flesh search engine on Chen, leading some to suspect that he is the captain of the Changsha Domestic Security Department. This only added to the sense that "Uncle Ou" had been framed. By adding the passive marker (bèi 被) to the verb "solicit a prostitute" (piáochāng 嫖娼), netizens invented a name for the punishment exacted on Ou.

Speculation on Uncle Ou's case was discouraged from media coverage, as leaked propaganda directives from April 7 and April 27 show. One Weibo user lamented:

Duanwanjinlüshi (@段万金律师): I heard the case of Uncle Bo being johnned was banned from reporting. Sigh, even the moonlight will burn you to death. (April 2, 2015)

听说区伯被嫖娼案有禁令了,不让媒体报道了,唉,月亮光都能把人晒死。[Chinese]

Ou's case is similar to that of Chinese-American businessman and Weibo celebrity Charles Xue, who in 2013 was detained for soliciting a prostitute, only to appear on national television confessing to "irresponsibility in spreading information online" several days later. The prostitution charge appeared to be an excuse to publicly shame Xue for his outspokenness online.

See also entrapment and passive era.