Do everything possible to spread the word, including movies, books, television, radio waves... And the spread of new religions. As long as they aspire to the way we dress, feed, house, travel, entertain and educate, that's half the battle.
The attention of their youth must be diverted from the tradition of government as the center. Focus their minds on sports shows, ***ography, pleasures, games, criminal movies, and religious superstitions.
Two days ago, I wrote an article about Rockets GENERAL manager Daryl Morey.
Unexpectedly, I just finished writing, NBA president Xiao Hua also came out.
There are a lot of online analyses these days, and a friend in the background shared such a conclusion with me.
I feel a little surprised, also sent out for everyone to see -
Finally, the netizen even summed up an American "routine" :
Of course, there is not much basis for this argument. But it raises the question:
On the su***ce, a tweet from Morey may have set off a series of black Swans, but was there a conspiracy behind all this?
What I did not think of is that although this netizen's post is pure inference, but the development after this matter, unfortunately, was in his words.
First NBA commissioner Silver in an interview, open support morey.
"I've read some media suggesting we don't support Morey, but we do."
"We have a lot of influence in China and we have a lot of influence in Hong Kong."
In a manner that verges on arrogance, this is our American "freedom of speech." This is Morey's "freedom of speech."
The subtext is, "I support Morey. What can you Chinese fans do to me?
This is clearly the attitude to further trouble.
Then, CCTV sports issued a statement, "suspend the NBA preseason (China) broadcast arrangements, immediately investigate all cooperation and exchanges involving NBA."
Tencent Sports, which has the exclusive digital media rights to broadcast NBA games for five years, also announced that it would suspend broadcasting arrangements for NBA games.
There are signs, both official and private, that a boycott is beginning.
As a result, as soon as CCTV sports announced the suspension of broadcasting, a reporter asked at the Regular press conference of the Foreign Ministry:
"Is China using the influence of CCTV's decision to cancel broadcasting of THE NBA to impede free speech?"
Look, in less than a few hours, an "obstruction of free speech" cap has been buckled.
Just four minutes after CCTV sports announced the ban, NBA Commissioner Silver spoke out again.
"One of the enduring strengths of the NBA is our diversity of opinions, backgrounds, races and religions."
"People around the world, including from the United States and China, have different views on different issues, and it is not the NBA's job to adjudicate those differences. However, the NBA will not put itself in a position to regulate what players, employees and team owners say or don't say on these issues, and we simply cannot do that."
You just can't do that.
The question is, what does the NBA do about "inappropriate comments" made by others?
You did that when Clippers owner Donald Sterling made inappropriate remarks about black people. Fined him $2.5 million, banned him for life and prompted him to sell the Clippers.
You did that when Eagles GM Jerry Ferry made inappropriate remarks about black people. Ferry was suspended indefinitely and later released by the Eagles.
You did it after Golden State player Kevin Durant made inappropriate remarks about India. Durant publicly apologized on social media for saying "India is at least 20 years behind," or he could face a fine of more than $15 million and a 20-game ban.
Now, Morey openly insulted China's sovereignty by *** inappropriate remarks against China, but you said it was freedom of speech. "You can't do that."
Another ploy to use sport as a political tool to further one's own ulterior motives.
That's something I've seen before.
01
It's certainly not the first time the United States has used sports to influence politics.
Baseball was brought to Japan in 1872 by Wilson, an American who was teaching there.
At that time, Japan was in the Midst of the Meiji Restoration, and there was an almost blind worship of Western culture, and soon the sport became popular in Japanese schools.
In 1878, Hiraoka returned from studying in the United States to form the Shinbashi Baseball team, Japan's first regular baseball team. They wanted to challenge the American sailors on the docks.
By then, American sailors had already played baseball against the Japanese, but mostly in man-machine mode to pass the time.
Now skinny Japanese had to form regular teams to play against them, and the American sailors didn't even bother to play newbridge.
At the end of the day, baseball is physical.
Train, get hung up, keep training, keep getting hung up... It's a daily routine for newbridge baseball.
Finally, in 1896, all baseball fans in Japan received the news they had been waiting for -- the Newbridge baseball team had won.
The pride that an all-Japanese baseball team had won against the americans, the originator of the sport, soon spread across Japan. Source: author: ha ha hey hey 1234567 [要查看本链接请先注册并登录] bilibili
The attention of their youth must be diverted from the tradition of government as the center. Focus their minds on sports shows, ***ography, pleasures, games, criminal movies, and religious superstitions.
Two days ago, I wrote an article about Rockets GENERAL manager Daryl Morey.
Unexpectedly, I just finished writing, NBA president Xiao Hua also came out.
There are a lot of online analyses these days, and a friend in the background shared such a conclusion with me.
I feel a little surprised, also sent out for everyone to see -
Finally, the netizen even summed up an American "routine" :
Of course, there is not much basis for this argument. But it raises the question:
On the su***ce, a tweet from Morey may have set off a series of black Swans, but was there a conspiracy behind all this?
What I did not think of is that although this netizen's post is pure inference, but the development after this matter, unfortunately, was in his words.
First NBA commissioner Silver in an interview, open support morey.
"I've read some media suggesting we don't support Morey, but we do."
"We have a lot of influence in China and we have a lot of influence in Hong Kong."
In a manner that verges on arrogance, this is our American "freedom of speech." This is Morey's "freedom of speech."
The subtext is, "I support Morey. What can you Chinese fans do to me?
This is clearly the attitude to further trouble.
Then, CCTV sports issued a statement, "suspend the NBA preseason (China) broadcast arrangements, immediately investigate all cooperation and exchanges involving NBA."
Tencent Sports, which has the exclusive digital media rights to broadcast NBA games for five years, also announced that it would suspend broadcasting arrangements for NBA games.
There are signs, both official and private, that a boycott is beginning.
As a result, as soon as CCTV sports announced the suspension of broadcasting, a reporter asked at the Regular press conference of the Foreign Ministry:
"Is China using the influence of CCTV's decision to cancel broadcasting of THE NBA to impede free speech?"
Look, in less than a few hours, an "obstruction of free speech" cap has been buckled.
Just four minutes after CCTV sports announced the ban, NBA Commissioner Silver spoke out again.
"One of the enduring strengths of the NBA is our diversity of opinions, backgrounds, races and religions."
"People around the world, including from the United States and China, have different views on different issues, and it is not the NBA's job to adjudicate those differences. However, the NBA will not put itself in a position to regulate what players, employees and team owners say or don't say on these issues, and we simply cannot do that."
You just can't do that.
The question is, what does the NBA do about "inappropriate comments" made by others?
You did that when Clippers owner Donald Sterling made inappropriate remarks about black people. Fined him $2.5 million, banned him for life and prompted him to sell the Clippers.
You did that when Eagles GM Jerry Ferry made inappropriate remarks about black people. Ferry was suspended indefinitely and later released by the Eagles.
You did it after Golden State player Kevin Durant made inappropriate remarks about India. Durant publicly apologized on social media for saying "India is at least 20 years behind," or he could face a fine of more than $15 million and a 20-game ban.
Now, Morey openly insulted China's sovereignty by *** inappropriate remarks against China, but you said it was freedom of speech. "You can't do that."
Another ploy to use sport as a political tool to further one's own ulterior motives.
That's something I've seen before.
01
It's certainly not the first time the United States has used sports to influence politics.
Baseball was brought to Japan in 1872 by Wilson, an American who was teaching there.
At that time, Japan was in the Midst of the Meiji Restoration, and there was an almost blind worship of Western culture, and soon the sport became popular in Japanese schools.
In 1878, Hiraoka returned from studying in the United States to form the Shinbashi Baseball team, Japan's first regular baseball team. They wanted to challenge the American sailors on the docks.
By then, American sailors had already played baseball against the Japanese, but mostly in man-machine mode to pass the time.
Now skinny Japanese had to form regular teams to play against them, and the American sailors didn't even bother to play newbridge.
At the end of the day, baseball is physical.
Train, get hung up, keep training, keep getting hung up... It's a daily routine for newbridge baseball.
Finally, in 1896, all baseball fans in Japan received the news they had been waiting for -- the Newbridge baseball team had won.
The pride that an all-Japanese baseball team had won against the americans, the originator of the sport, soon spread across Japan. Source: author: ha ha hey hey 1234567 [要查看本链接请先注册并登录] bilibili