Operating Mechanism
Memory management
This index follows the same process across different institutions and public issues.
Party Organization and Elite PoliticsState Institutions, Law, and Policy ExecutionSocial Governance, Demography, and WelfareIdeology, Education, and Historical MemoryPropaganda, Culture, and Public OpinionDigital Governance, Censorship, and SurveillanceHuman Rights, Ethnicity, Religion, and RepressionForeign Policy, Taiwan, and Global StrategyOverseas United Front, Influence, and Transnational Repression
Articles
130- Account Bans And Muting: How Platform Punishment Warns SocietyAccount punishment targets one user while teaching observers which topics and relationships carry risk.
- Agenda Setting: Making The Public Debate Only The Allowed PartHow propaganda redirects attention from responsibility, institutions, and rights toward emotion, comparison, and isolated explanations.
- AI Censorship: Political Boundaries As Interaction DesignRefusal, rewriting, withdrawal, and scripted answers place political censorship inside conversation.
- App Stores And Browsers: Censorship At The Entry LayerWhen apps, sites, and tools cannot be installed or reached, access is blocked before content appears.
- How Not To Become A Propaganda Distribution NodeA Reading signals for pre-repost checks, source tracing, screenshot preservation, and emotional cooling.
- The Big-Picture Template: Sacrificing Rights To An Abstract CollectiveHow phrases like big picture, stability, and national interest make individual rights claims seem improper.
- The 709 Lawyers: How A Legal Profession Was Turned Into A ThreatA case study of how rights lawyers, law firms, families, licenses, and media narratives were absorbed into a security campaign.
- Zhang Zhan, Fang Bin, Chen Qiushi: How Public Documentation Was CriminalizedA case study of why documenting the early Wuhan outbreak was treated as public-order risk.
- Early Rain Covenant And Wang Yi: How Faith Space Was Administratively ControlledA case study of how unregistered religious space was absorbed into registration, enforcement, criminal law, and ideology control.
- Hong Kong National-Security Cases: How A Free City Was Institutionally Taken OverA case study of how national-security logic reshaped Hong Kong's media, assembly, elections, associations, and courts.
- Ilham Tohti: Why Moderate Expression Was Still CriminalizedA case study of how moderate discussion, scholarship, and ethnic dialogue were recoded as separatist danger.
- Labor And Feminist Activists: How Public Issues Became Order RisksA case study of how labor rights, gender equality, mutual support gatherings, and public discussion were recoded as subversion.
- Uyghur Scholars And Cultural Figures: How Identity Memory Was SecuritizedA case study of how scholarship, folklore, art, and cultural memory were recoded as national-security risk.
- Xu Zhiyong And Ding Jiaxi: How Civil Society Was SecuritizedA case study of how meetings, advocacy, public responsibility, and constitutional discussion were recoded as subversion.
- The Chained Woman Case: Trafficked Women, Local Complicity, And Information ControlA case study of how local governance, bodily freedom, women's rights, trafficking chains, and information control failed together.
- The Yang Gailan Case: Poverty, Welfare Failure, And Local Responsibility ShiftingA case study of poverty relief, local governance, family distress, and public responsibility that became visible too late.
- Censorship Is Question Control, Not Only DeletionCensorship as question management: search, trends, comments, reposting, and keywords decide whether a question can exist.
- The Central Propaganda Department and Ideological ResponsibilityPropaganda authorities coordinate theory, news, publishing, film, and spiritual-civilization work.
- Citizen Journalists: Why Recording Reality Can Be CriminalizedHow citizen journalists break the official narrative monopoly and are punished through order and rumor language.
- Comment Folding: How Discussion Is Preserved And HiddenComments can remain online while selection, ranking, folding, and author-only visibility remove their influence.
- Comment-Section Water Level: Bots, Paid Posters, And Ordinary UsersHow comment sections manufacture majority feeling through volume, ranking, repeated rhetoric, and emotional pressure.
- People's Communes, Grain Procurement, and Information FailureExplaining how inflated output became a subsistence crisis through procurement and collectivization.
- Covid Heroic Narratives: Reordering Suffering, Sacrifice, and ResponsibilityHeroic narratives can record real labor while moving institutional failure out of public debate.
- The COVID-19 Origins Narrative War: Shifting Responsibility To The United StatesA case study of state media, diplomatic accounts, and conspiracy theories reinforcing one another around COVID-19 origins.
- Cultural-Market Regulation: Publishing, Film, Games, and PerformanceCultural products face content review, licensing, platform distribution, and opinion risk.
- Cultural Revolution Decision Timeline: From the May 16 Circular to the Fall of the Gang of FourOrdering central documents, mass movements, and institutional reconstruction from 1965 to 1976.
- The Boundaries of Cultural Revolution MemoryOfficial narratives condemn turmoil while often limiting inquiry into institutional responsibility, mass organization, and political succession.
- Rehabilitation, Redress, and Memory Management after the Cultural RevolutionAnalyzing rehabilitation, local inquiry, limited accountability, and public narrative.
- The Cultural Revolution: Mass Rebellion, State Reconstruction, and Political PersecutionIntegrating central documents, Red Guards, factional conflict, military intervention, purges, and long-term legacies.
- Estimating Death and Persecution during the Cultural RevolutionComparing gazetteers, internal investigations, local archives, and victim definitions.
- Data Governance And Social Control: Technology In Stability MaintenanceHealth codes, grid data, cameras, and platform records can shift from public service to risk identification and enforcement.
- Case: DeepSeek And The Political Boundaries Of Chinese AIRefusals, templates, withdrawals, and cross-language comparison reveal political boundaries in Chinese AI.
- Timeline of Digital Governance and CensorshipA timeline of network access, real-name systems, platform responsibility, cyberspace regulators, data security, algorithms, and generative AI rules.
- Digital Surveillance and Human Rights: From Cameras and Platforms to Offline ActionA five-stage account of collection, linkage, classification, dispatch, and action.
- Dogpile Public Opinion: Turning One Critic Into A Public EnemyHow comment dogpiles create chilling effects through labels, reporting, screenshots, and relational pressure.
- Education And Language Control: How Identity Is Rewritten From ChildhoodHow schools, preschools, boarding, Mandarin policy, textbooks, and political education reshape minority identity across generations.
- The Ministry of Education and Political CurriculumCurriculum standards, textbook review, teacher responsibility, and campus activities embed political education across age groups.
- Entertainment Censorship: Governing Celebrities, Fans, and WorksEntertainment governance combines content, celebrity morality, fan organization, capital, and platform popularity.
- Entertainment Propaganda: Memes, Short Videos, And Reduced RecognitionHow entertainment content hides political judgment inside humor, music, editing rhythm, and emotional rewards.
- Punishing Families: Why The CCP Targets A Person's Relationship NetworkHow relatives, children, spouses, parents, colleagues, and friends become part of the pressure chain.
- Why Famine Severity Varied across Provinces and CountiesComparing procurement, local leadership, violence, ecology, and mobility.
- Great Famine Mortality: Statistical Perimeters, Ranges, and UncertaintyComparing censuses, vital rates, registration gaps, and local estimates.
- Responsibility, Silence, and Family Memory after the Great FamineAnalyzing cadre accountability, policy adjustment, public narrative, and survivor expression.
- The Qinglang Campaign Against Fan CultureFan-culture governance linked minors, capital, platform traffic, celebrity morality, and organized mobilization.
- Feminist Activists: How Public Issues Are Rewritten As Order RisksHow gender equality, anti-harassment, anti-domestic violence, chained-woman outrage, and civic gatherings become political risk.
- Forced Disappearance: Why Power Makes A Person Temporarily VanishHow disappearance cuts off lawyers, family, media, and public attention, giving the state time without outside scrutiny.
- The Foreign Forces Template: Rewriting Domestic Grievance As External ManipulationHow the foreign-forces frame moves real social conflict away from institutional responsibility.
- Foreign Validation: Trust as Propaganda CapitalHow foreign faces, overseas creators, and external media reduce audience suspicion.
- Fukushima Wastewater And Nationalist MobilizationA case study of how environmental risk, scientific dispute, and nationalist emotion were narrativized around Fukushima wastewater.
- The Great Firewall And Cross-Border Information BoundariesBlocking, connection interference, and platform substitution place Chinese users in a different information environment.
- Great Leap Decision Timeline: From Catch-Up Targets to Economic ReadjustmentReconstructing meetings, campaigns, procurement, and adjustment from 1957 to 1962.
- The Great Leap and Great Famine: Policy, Procurement, and DeathIntegrating central policy, communes, procurement, local violence, demography, and accountability.
- Historical Nihilism: Securitizing Critical HistoryThe label of historical nihilism turns some historical disputes into questions of political position and regime security.
- Hong Kong National Education: Why Curriculum Became an Institutional ConflictThe controversy joined curriculum, school autonomy, social mobilization, and central identity politics.
- Hong Kong Protest Propaganda: Reframing Demands As Riot And Foreign ManipulationA case study of how the CCP reframed political demands, police conflict, and international attention as order and foreign manipulation.
- Trending-List Governance: What Rises And What DisappearsHow trends, search, and recommendation decide the entrances to public attention.
- How To Identify Propaganda ContentA practical method for identifying headline framing, emotional manipulation, accountability diversion, and preset conclusions.
- Human Rights Repression Map: From Cases to SystemA phase-one map for future case work on Xinjiang, Tibet, religion, feminism, labor, lawyers, and dissidents.
- Guide: How To Identify Technical CensorshipUse search, recommendation, comments, accounts, and cross-platform comparison instead of one deleted post.
- Ideological Governance: Who Decides How History and Reality May Be UnderstoodPropaganda, education, cultural markets, academic management, and platform rules jointly define acceptable interpretation.
- Timeline of Ideological and Memory GovernanceA timeline of propaganda institutions, patriotic education, ideological responsibility, cultural regulation, and digital memory control.
- The Insulting-China Template: Turning Regime Criticism Into National OffenseHow the insulting-China frame fuses regime, country, nation, and people, turning critics into collective enemies.
- Internal And External Propaganda: Why One Event Has Two StoriesHow the CCP speaks to domestic audiences through unity and to foreign audiences through reasonableness, development, and misunderstanding.
- Administrative Governance of Mosques and Islamic ClergyVenue alteration, clergy credentials, scripture education, pilgrimage, halal labels, and deradicalization.
- Managing June Fourth Memory: Commemoration, Search, and Public SpaceControl of June Fourth memory spans archives, education, media, search, commemoration, and physical policing.
- Keyword Politics: Which Words Can Be Searched, And Which Must Be AvoidedKeyword censorship changes how people name reality, find evidence, and preserve memory.
- KOL And Expert Endorsement: Borrowed Authority For PropagandaHow influencers, experts, foreign creators, and institutional accounts lend non-official credibility to propaganda.
- Labor Rights: Wage Claims, Strikes, And Fear Of OrganizationWhy wage arrears, injuries, platform work, strikes, absent unions, and stability intervention turn labor rights into security issues.
- Model Citizens and Positive Energy: Rewriting Social Problems as Moral StoriesModel-citizen narratives move institutional problems into stories of sacrifice, gratitude, and resilience.
- The Nationalist Emotion Factory: Pride, Humiliation, And RevengeHow propaganda combines historical humiliation, competition, and achievement into a reusable emotional machine.
- News Blackout: Why Human-Rights Events Are Made To Disappear FirstHow deletion, downranking, account bans, comment controls, unified scripts, and pressure on reporters remove public entrances to rights events.
- The Official Copy System: How Media And Platforms Repeat One LineHow official copy, reposting, title templates, and platform recommendation turn one line into synchronized speech.
- Case: How Platforms Governed Pandemic Help InformationPandemic help posts connected patients and resources but faced rumor control, local-image concerns, and political risk.
- Party-History Institutions: Turning Historical Conclusions Into Political ResourcesParty-history research, archive access, commemorations, and authoritative publications determine which interpretations receive institutional support.
- The Party-School System: Training Cadres in a Common Political LanguageParty schools provide theory education, Party-discipline training, policy interpretation, and cadre networking.
- Patriotic Education: Binding State, Nation, and PartyPatriotic education often places national community, historical memory, and Party leadership in one narrative.
- The Patriotic Education Law: A Unified Legal Framework for Political EducationThe law assigns patriotic-education duties to schools, families, media, cultural venues, and online platforms.
- Petitioners: Why Complainants Become Governed ObjectsHow petitioning absorbs injustice, land seizures, demolition, corruption, and local violence into territorial responsibility.
- Politicized Model Safety: Who Defines SafetyWhen ideological, national, and product safety merge, models can treat public discussion as risk.
- The Positive Energy Template: Turning Suffering Into GratitudeHow positive-energy propaganda repackages victims, disasters, and social pain as touching stories.
- Guide: Preserving, Verifying, And Sharing Suppressed InformationUse primary sources, timestamps, privacy protection, and correction logs to resist forgetting without harming people.
- Group-Chat Censorship: Why Private Space Is Not Necessarily SafeGroup chats connect private relationships, platform monitoring, reporting, and offline identity into a traceable speech environment.
- How The Propaganda System Sets The Frame Before Questions FormHow the CCP propaganda system defines interpretation early and then aligns media, platforms, and local authorities.
- The Propaganda Machine: Attention and Emotion ControlA rewritten overview of the CCP propaganda system, from central media to platforms and pseudo-dissent.
- Timeline of Propaganda and Public-Opinion ControlA timeline of propaganda departments, Party media, cultural censorship, internet governance, Qinglang campaigns, and algorithmic distribution.
- The Interface Between Propaganda And Stability MaintenanceHow public opinion handling connects propaganda, deletion, police talks, local accountability, and risk lists.
- Why Public Mourning Becomes A Stability RiskHow public mourning, flowers, candles, and silence become collective memory and political risk.
- Visibility Control: How Public Events Become Private MemoriesInformation does not need to vanish; losing entrances, aggregation, and follow-up can turn public events into private memory.
- Real Names And Data Trails: How Speech Is Linked To A PersonPhones, devices, IP data, payments, and social graphs connect online speech to identifiable people.
- Recommendation-Feed Censorship: What Appears Without A SearchRecommendation feeds decide what users encounter through candidate pools, account weight, and risk labels.
- Red Guards, Rebel Organizations, and Political AuthorizationAnalyzing how signals from the top bypassed regular organization and activated youth and mass factions.
- Religious Affairs and United Front: Administering SinicizationInterfaces among united front, religious affairs, patriotic associations, local government, and police.
- Religious Freedom: How The CCP Turns Faith Into A Managed ObjectHow registration, venues, clergy, sermons, minors, online communication, and Sinicization turn faith into administration.
- Revolutionary Committees, Military Support, and State ReconstructionTracing how the military and revolutionary committees restored organizational control after mass power seizures.
- Human-Rights Repression Is Not Isolated: How Rights Claims Become Security RisksHow the CCP renames faith, identity, labor, legal defense, public oversight, and speech as security risks.
- Rights Lawyers: Why Legal Defense Is Treated As A Political ThreatWhy lawyers who connect cases, evidence, families, media, and institutional responsibility become a target.
- Timeline of Human-Rights Repression and Social ControlA timeline of labor camps, household and work-unit control, national-security law, ethnic and religious governance, RSDL, and digital surveillance.
- From Rights Defense To Stability Maintenance: How A Civic Claim Is Taken OverHow a complaint, report, gathering, or rights-defense action becomes a stability-maintenance task.
- The Rumor Template: Renaming Unauthorized FactsHow rumor labels shift attention from truth to permission, political consequence, and state authorization.
- Technical And Self-Censorship: How Users Learn To Delete Themselves FirstThe most effective technical censorship enters user habits, making people reduce their own speech before platforms act.
- Shadow Throttling: The Account Remains While Its Reach DisappearsShadow throttling reduces reach through account weight, search exclusion, and recommendation downgrading without a clear ban.
- Shaming Mechanism: Why “Not Patriotic” Beats Factual DebateHow labels such as unpatriotic or worshipping the West replace factual discussion.
- The Short-Video Propaganda Chain: Emotion Travels Faster Than FactsHow short videos use editing, music, reversal, and recommendation to amplify propaganda emotion.
- Case: Sitong Bridge, Search Absence, And Memory ControlThe Sitong Bridge case shows how locations, people, images, and anniversaries enter search and circulation control.
- The Spontaneous Patriotism Template: Organized Mobilization As Public FeelingHow boycotts, flooding, reporting, and dogpiles are packaged as natural patriotic emotion.
- The State-Platform Interface: How Censorship Becomes Product RulesPlatforms are execution interfaces where regulatory demands become product rules, ranking, penalties, and user experience.
- Technical Censorship System Map: Deletion, Throttling, Ranking, And ForgettingModern technical censorship governs entrances, speed, ranking, comments, account weight, and memory, not only deletion.
- How Technical Censorship Converges With Propaganda, Repression, And Rights AbusesTechnical censorship supplies entrances, data, and forgetting mechanisms that connect propaganda, policing, and rights abuses.
- Technical Censorship: The Politics of VisibilityHow deletion, throttling, trending lists, search ranking, and AI moderation control public reality.
- Forced Confessions: How Televised Confession Moves Trial Into PropagandaWhy televised confession is not ordinary reporting, but a political procedure that merges investigation, fear, humiliation, and public conviction.
- Textbooks and Memory Selection: Compressing History Into Testable ConclusionsTextbooks shape historical understanding through space, causation, character judgment, and examination priorities.
- The 1989 Movement and Military Crackdown: An OverviewIntegrating student, worker, and citizen mobilization, leadership conflict, martial law, lethal force, and aftermath.
- 1989 Timeline: Mourning, Hunger Strike, Martial Law, and the June CrackdownOrdering verifiable milestones from April 15 through the subsequent trials.
- Deaths, Injuries, and Arrests in 1989: Evidence LimitsComparing hospital, government, diplomatic, human-rights, and victim-list evidence.
- Martial-Law Decisions, Troop Mobilization, and the Chain into BeijingSeparating political decision, martial-law command, unit orders, and street encounters.
- After the Crackdown: Trials, Political Rectification, and June Fourth Memory ControlTracing arrests, sentences, workplace screening, education, propaganda, and commemorative restrictions.
- Students, Workers, Citizens, and Internal Differences in the 1989 MovementComparing demands, organization, class language, and views of negotiation.
- Tibetan Residential Education: Access, Family Separation, and Language PolicyRemote-school access, parental choice, boarding scale, language of instruction, and cultural effects.
- Tibet: How Cultural Identity Enters National-Security NarrativeHow language, religion, education, reincarnation, exile communities, and cultural memory are placed inside national-unity and security governance.
- Transnational Repression: How The CCP Exports Fear OverseasHow family pressure, passports, cross-border threats, bounties, community penetration, and information operations affect overseas dissent.
- Trending-List Governance: How Public Attention Is ScheduledTrending lists compress platform rules, commercial promotion, and political risk into a schedule of public attention.
- Ideological Responsibility in UniversitiesUniversity Party committees, department leaders, faculty evaluation, and event approval shape research and teaching boundaries.
- Victimhood Narrative: How A Powerful State Presents Itself As BulliedHow the CCP presents itself as a victim of foreign hostility while exercising enormous domestic control.
- Voluntary Sharing: The Cheapest Distribution SystemHow cognitive warfare turns ordinary users into unaware distribution nodes.
- The Western Double Standards Template: Turning Accountability Into ComparisonHow “the West also does it” moves discussion away from CCP accountability into endless comparison.
- Whataboutism: From Rhetoric to Production LineHow the “you are worse” tactic becomes a media, diplomatic, platform, and comment-section system.
- Case: The Information-Suppression Chain Around The White Paper ProtestsBlank paper, footage removal, account bans, and offline investigation show how online censorship connects to repression.
- Xenophobia: How External Enemies Protect Internal PowerHow xenophobic mobilization redirects social frustration outward and replaces internal accountability with emotion.
- Uyghur Child Separation, Boarding Education, and Language ReplacementChild welfare, boarding schools, and Mandarin education after parental detention or exile.
- Xinjiang: How Security Governance Becomes Collective ControlHow counterterrorism, anti-extremism, reeducation, labor transfer, family contact, and digital monitoring absorb group identity into security governance.
Cases
32- Zhang Zhan, Fang Bin, Chen Qiushi: How Public Documentation Was CriminalizedA case study of why documenting the early Wuhan outbreak was treated as public-order risk.
- Hong Kong National-Security Cases: How A Free City Was Institutionally Taken OverA case study of how national-security logic reshaped Hong Kong's media, assembly, elections, associations, and courts.
- Labor And Feminist Activists: How Public Issues Became Order RisksA case study of how labor rights, gender equality, mutual support gatherings, and public discussion were recoded as subversion.
- Uyghur Scholars And Cultural Figures: How Identity Memory Was SecuritizedA case study of how scholarship, folklore, art, and cultural memory were recoded as national-security risk.
- The Chained Woman Case: Trafficked Women, Local Complicity, And Information ControlA case study of how local governance, bodily freedom, women's rights, trafficking chains, and information control failed together.
- The Yang Gailan Case: Poverty, Welfare Failure, And Local Responsibility ShiftingA case study of poverty relief, local governance, family distress, and public responsibility that became visible too late.
- Communal Canteens and Procurement: How Household Exit Options DisappearedAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Communal Canteens and Procurement: How Household Exit Options Disappeared.
- Covid Heroic Narratives: Reordering Suffering, Sacrifice, and ResponsibilityHeroic narratives can record real labor while moving institutional failure out of public debate.
- The COVID-19 Origins Narrative War: Shifting Responsibility To The United StatesA case study of state media, diplomatic accounts, and conspiracy theories reinforcing one another around COVID-19 origins.
- Cultural Revolution Memory: Rehabilitation, Publishing, and Limited Public DiscussionAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Cultural Revolution Memory: Rehabilitation, Publishing, and Limited Public Discussion.
- Red August School Violence: Political Identity in Everyday PersecutionAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Red August School Violence: Political Identity in Everyday Persecution.
- DeepSeek Answer WithdrawalHow an AI product can make political boundaries visible through refusal, rewriting, or answer removal.
- Case: DeepSeek And The Political Boundaries Of Chinese AIRefusals, templates, withdrawals, and cross-language comparison reveal political boundaries in Chinese AI.
- Dogpile Public Opinion: Turning One Critic Into A Public EnemyHow comment dogpiles create chilling effects through labels, reporting, screenshots, and relational pressure.
- The Qinglang Campaign Against Fan CultureFan-culture governance linked minors, capital, platform traffic, celebrity morality, and organized mobilization.
- Fukushima Wastewater And Nationalist MobilizationA case study of how environmental risk, scientific dispute, and nationalist emotion were narrativized around Fukushima wastewater.
- Guangxi during the Cultural Revolution: Factional War, Collective Killing, and RedressAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Guangxi during the Cultural Revolution: Factional War, Collective Killing, and Redress.
- Hong Kong National Education: Why Curriculum Became an Institutional ConflictThe controversy joined curriculum, school autonomy, social mobilization, and central identity politics.
- Hong Kong Protest Propaganda: Reframing Demands As Riot And Foreign ManipulationA case study of how the CCP reframed political demands, police conflict, and international attention as order and foreign manipulation.
- Arrests and Trials after the Crackdown: Students, Workers, and SentencingAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Arrests and Trials after the Crackdown: Students, Workers, and Sentencing.
- Martial-Law Troops Enter Beijing: Orders, Routes, and Lethal ForceAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Martial-Law Troops Enter Beijing: Orders, Routes, and Lethal Force.
- June Fourth Memory Control: Families, Commemoration, Textbooks, and SearchAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of June Fourth Memory Control: Families, Commemoration, Textbooks, and Search.
- The Nationalist Emotion Factory: Pride, Humiliation, And RevengeHow propaganda combines historical humiliation, competition, and achievement into a reusable emotional machine.
- Case: How Platforms Governed Pandemic Help InformationPandemic help posts connected patients and resources but faced rumor control, local-image concerns, and political risk.
- The Patriotic Education Law: A Unified Legal Framework for Political EducationThe law assigns patriotic-education duties to schools, families, media, cultural venues, and online platforms.
- Why Public Mourning Becomes A Stability RiskHow public mourning, flowers, candles, and silence become collective memory and political risk.
- Case: Sitong Bridge, Search Absence, And Memory ControlThe Sitong Bridge case shows how locations, people, images, and anniversaries enter search and circulation control.
- Victimhood Narrative: How A Powerful State Presents Itself As BulliedHow the CCP presents itself as a victim of foreign hostility while exercising enormous domestic control.
- Trending-List and Search AbsenceHow events can remain real while losing public entrances through search, recommendation, and comment controls.
- X Comment FloodingHow repeated whataboutism and account-weight effects can push a discussion away from accountability.
- The Xinyang Famine: Procurement, Violence, and Later InvestigationAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of The Xinyang Famine: Procurement, Violence, and Later Investigation.
- The Zhang Zhan CaseCitizen reporting on Wuhan was reframed as public-order crime, turning independent memory into a warning to others.