Could you please watch this video of a doctor's body being transported in Wuhan with the sound on (that's his wife following the van) and maybe reconsider adding to the suffering of people in Wuhan because you want to feed a political beef in the US? https://twitter.com/i/status/1230038128271822848 …
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Replying to @zeynep
How on earth does it add to the suffering of people in Wuhan by referring to the geographic location of the virus' origin?
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Replying to @johnddavidson
It's their home, and now it's forever associated with something terrible. They are victims of a government they had no choice in. Imagine your name being changed to your worst tormentor. That's what you get called forever on. That's what "I'm from Wuhan" has become.
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Replying to @zeynep @johnddavidson
I'd prefer to weaken the association between their home, and something terrible that happened to them they did not cause, and highlight the things they did actually do—their whistle-blowers, their medical workers... Especially now that it's become a pandemic.
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Replying to @zeynep
The good news is that we can both accurately refer to where the virus came from as a way to push back again CCP propaganda, and also highlight the heroism of the people of Wuhan, as
@FDRLST has tried to do throughout this crisis - https://thefederalist.com/2020/02/13/hear-the-voices-from-wuhan-that-china-has-tried-to-censor/ …1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @johnddavidson @FDRLST
There is no need to call the virus its place of origin, though. Few people will read anything any of us writes about the heroism of people of Wuhan, but this virus needs a name forever. Again, imagine your name being changed to the worst thing that happened to you.
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I guess we'll have to agree to disagree then. I happen to think it's important that the CCP is held accountable and that its propaganda doesn't go unchallenged. Naming the virus' place of origin is one way to call out the CCP's misdeeds in all this.
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Replying to @johnddavidson @FDRLST
That's exactly the opposite of what that's achieving though. You're using the name of the victim to try to get to the perpetrator. It's pretty much opposite of holding the CCP accountable. Wuhan isn't their property or representative.
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CCP propaganda has claimed the virus originated in the US, not China, and that it was introduced to China by the US military. It's important to push back on that and state accurately where this came from. Also think most ppl understand that the ppl of China are victims of the CCP
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This is disingenuous. When Asian Americans are stigmatized by racist fellow Americans it’s clear that calling a virus Chinese is not hurting the CCP as much as it is harming our friends, neighbors, and ourselves.
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I have been writing and tweeting and basically shouting as loudly as possible about not forgetting CCP's role. I think the "Wuhan/Chinese" naming honestly helps them, because people understandably resist further stigmatizing and victimizing people already victimized.
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Agree. Arena many Americans cant distinguish between a people and the unjust, dishonest, authoritarian government/regime ruling them, and some policymakers & pundits are happy to help. Also, the history of naming viruses after places is problematic per
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