this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2023
149 points (99.3% liked)
chapotraphouse
13535 readers
57 users here now
Banned? DM Wmill to appeal.
No anti-nautilism posts. See: Eco-fascism Primer
Gossip posts go in c/gossip. Don't post low-hanging fruit here after it gets removed from c/gossip
founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
In the article, no one is saying anything bad about this Chinese company having devised a cheaper technique (they're charging $75K USD vs others charging ~$400K USD). The complaint is against decreased oversight and individual hospitals misusing the treatment and causing harm in the name of profit:
The reason why this kind of article gets mocked on Hexbear is because very commonly, when China makes some kind of positive improvement, Western news articles have to attach a "BUT..." afterwards, even if the concern is extremely minor.
The "BUT AT WHAT COST" of the thread name isn't just a meme, it's a common occurrence with articles about China. Here are some examples: https://twitter.com/slipknothooh/status/1433496026795630598?lang=en
An achievement from China can never just stand on its own, it always has to be criticized, whereas achievements from Western nations rarely get this treatment.
I have to disagree, commercial news loves controversy and the negative, they always pull this shit, regardless of country. Even worse, what we have here is a clickbait headline that isn't even descriptive of the article
Come on, you must see a ton of popsci articles like "This invention might end aging forever!" and "School teacher invents new green fuel" and "Why is California leading the world in [whatever]?"
Their point is that Approved countries get fluff pieces like that while China gets, from comparable material, a source of criticism that is deemed important enough to put in the headline.
When controversy or drama happens in the US it's just reported as drama. They don't extrapolate it to the entire nation to help reinforce some narrative that it's a totalitarian state in decline. They articles don't usually start with "In the US...", unlike when anything happens in China.
Sure, US news doesn't paint the US with a broad brush, but it does paint France, Germany, Canada, Mexico, Australia, and pretty much every other country with a broad brush. Internally, commercial media does it to US states, cities, races, religions, political parties, and more
Excluding maybe Mexico, none of those other countries get near the same hostility as China, or the Developing World in general.
the point is that positive news out of China gets given a clickbait title that plays up the controversy while positive news from the west gets given a clickbait title that oversells the promise of the technology. why is this an observable trend in media, I wonder...
Doesn't matter, they're writing titles to deliberately pose China in a bad light and then they're burying the lede.
They know full well what this does, everyone does. Including you, defending it.
What would you describe yourselves as doing right here right now on this site?
correct takes under soy wojaks are my favorite genre of poast