“Good good good sure sure sure right right right yes yes yes,” someone wrote on Weibo, China’s equivalent to Twitter.
The post may not sound like it was written in a bad mood, but on the tightly controlled Chinese internet, the seemingly positive message is one of many ways the Chinese people display their defiance toward the Chinese Communist Party.
Chinese people continued their protests on the internet on Dec. 1 as the heavy police presence in Shanghai and other major Chinese cities muted the unprecedented public outburst against the Chinese regime and its COVID-19 restrictions.
Last weekend, protests swept the country. From the buzzing metropolis of Shanghai to the remote county of Korla, demonstrators could be seen chanting slogans against the regime’s draconian COVID curbs and demanding freedom. The mass protests have been dubbed the “White Paper Revolution” due to the many young demonstrators holding up a blank sheet of white A4 paper….