China is Spying on Millions of People. And They Aren’t in China

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After years of constant media fear-mongering, a sizeable number of Americans continue to believe in the disproven “Russiagate” conspiracy theory.

Putin, the story goes, owns Donald Trump and engaged in a massive propaganda campaign via social media, hacking elections, and other collusion forms to ensure that Trump was elected. Now, Putin sits like Cobra Commander in the Kremlin, directed Trump’s actions, and Trump does what he is told.

Yet these same Americans harbor little fear of China, the nation to which America’s economy was sold decades ago (and the one who threatened to withhold all medical exports during a pandemic) and the only real aggressive empire (though admittedly the Russian bear is beginning to wake up) outside of the United States.

Despite China’s imperial ambitions, leftists all across the United States reacted in outrage and mockery when Donald Trump announced plans to ban TikTok, the Chinese owned social media firm. According to them, the idea that China may be using TikTok for nefarious purposes is beyond the scope of reality. It is yet one more conspiracy theory conjured up by Trump and Qanoons.

Trump might not be so wrong after all.

In a new report from VICE (not a Trump or Q sympathizer by any means) “China has Been Doing ‘Mass Surveillance’ on Millions of Citizens in the US, UK, Australia, and India,” Gavin Butler writes:

A Chinese technology company with links to Beijing’s military and intelligence agencies has been compiling personal information on millions of people from the US, UK, Australia, Canada, India, and Japan.

The database was put together by the private firm Zhenhua Data: a Shenzhen-based company that lists the People’s Liberation Army and Chinese Communist Party among its main clients.

Contained therein were the names and personal details of some 2.4 million people, including 35,000 Australians, 40,000 Britons, and many high-profile figures such as senior politicians, royal family members, religious leaders, and military officers.

Those details included dates of birth, addresses, marital status, relatives, political associations, and social media IDs. While a lot of data has been “scraped” from social media and other open-source material, some appears to have been sourced from confidential bank records, job applications, and psychological profiles and is believed to have been acquired via the dark web.

According to the ABC, one intelligence analyst described the giant global database as “Cambridge Analytica on steroids,” At the same time, the Telegraph reported that intelligence sources described the scale of information as “frightening.” Both publications were among the international consortium of media outlets that the database was shared with, including others in Australia, the UK, the US, Canada, Italy, and Germany.

Professor Christopher Balding, the US academic and cybersecurity expert to whom the database was initially leaked, described the revelation as “something akin to discovering the Holy Grail.

“What cannot be underestimated is the breadth and depth of the Chinese surveillance state and its extension around the world,” Balding wrote in a statement on Monday. “The world is only at the beginning stages of [understanding] how much China invests in intelligence and influence operations using the type of raw data we have to understand their targets.”

The intended use of the information contained in the database is not entirely clear. Still, Zhenhua Data—whose official website has since been taken down—claims it provides “services for military, security and foreign propaganda” and describes its mission as influencing the “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.”

The company’s chief executive Wang Xuefeng has also previously used the Chinese social media app WeChat to endorse waging “hybrid warfare.” A term that refers to unconventional methods such as cyber attacks, fake news, and electoral intervention to disrupt and disable an opponent without engaging in open hostilities.

RELATED: Social Media, Universal Basic Income, and Cashless Society: How China’s Social Credit System Is Coming To America

Is China using psychological warfare?

China’s invasive technology has been used against its own people for years – everything from mining data straight from the brains of employees to sending reluctant participants to re-education camps to blocking millions who didn’t measure up in their social credit system from any type of travel. And now they’ve turned their attentions on us.

There are legitimate concerns here for those who sneer at the idea that China has amassed the deeply personal data of so many individuals outside of its borders. Note that China maintains both the personal data of elected officials and that of “regular” citizens.

The issue here is that China can use that data to manipulate those individuals through a professional understanding of their psychology (their desires, drives, biases, etc.). Even more so, it allows China access to data that those officials do not want out. In other words, it makes those officials susceptible to blackmail.

Even “ordinary” citizens could be recruited as Chinese agents to keep some of their most private thoughts or actions secret.

Don’t understand how this could happen? Just watch Black Mirror’s episode, “Shut Up And Dance.”

Given America’s constant kowtowing to China and the American industry’s shipping to that country over the past 40 years, it appears someone is already dancing.

Robert Wheeler

Robert Wheeler

Robert Wheeler has been quietly researching world events for two decades. After witnessing the global network of NGOs and several 'Revolutions' they engineered in a number of different countries, Wheeler began analyzing current events through these lenses.

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  • They’re just mad because China’s doing it. They don’t give a rats ass about our privacy. You could easily replace “China” with google, facebook, nsa, fbi, cia, etc…. and it would read the same, except for the tic toc part, but they all have they’re own apps for spying (legally according to them)

  • It has little to do with “national security”. Those are just trigger words to allow DC to shut down whatever they want. The grifters in DC want the TikTok AI algorithm. They are more concerned that China is winning the technology race and the US is lagging behind. I predict TikTok will not give it up in a sale. They will retain control of it.

    They did the same thing when China showed how far ahead of the US they were in 5G by arresting the Huawei executive and working to ban it’s infrastructure here and in other Western countries. It has little to do with spying. They are trying to buy time for the Western communication giants to catch up and build out their own 5G. Profits for them and not China. Meanwhile, China speeds ahead with new technology that the western companies can only stand there looking at, slack jawed.

    China is already so far ahead that the DC grifters are shitting bricks. Their pet projects in Silicon Valley are sucking hind teat and they are not well suited being number two. Corporations run the US government.

    Both Russia and China are making the US look bad. It would be wise to invest more at home here instead of trying to run the world and the reserve currency dollar with guns and sanctions abroad.

    • Yeah, it’s too bad those grifters aren’t actually listening to, or paying attention to those Americans who actually have the skillsets to know exactly what’s going on and how to jump ahead of the adversaries.

  • So where is the police station in NYC? this site thrives on sensationalism and bs. clik bait garbage is the quality of its coverage on average. We live in NYC. So show us the evidence you liars.

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