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Famous Chinese Dissident: U.S. ‘Already In The Authoritarian State. You Just Don’t Know It’

“… people trying to be unified in a certain political correctness. That is very dangerous.”

Appearing on PBS’ “Firing Line” with host Margaret Hoover, Chinese activist Ai Weiwei, an artist who was taken into custody in the past and whose father, a poet, was persecuted during Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution, warned, “In the United States, with today’s condition, you can easily have an authoritarian. In many ways, you’re already in the authoritarian state. You just don’t know it,” adding, “Many things happening today in U.S. can be compared to Cultural Revolution in China. … Like people trying to be unified in a certain political correctness. That is very dangerous.”

“The artist first became ‘a nail in the eye, a spike in the flesh, gravel in the shoe’ of the Chinese Communist party when he orchestrated the gathering and publication of the names of 4,851 children who died in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. Their deaths, Ai writes, were a direct consequence of corruption and the unsafe construction of school buildings,” The Guardian reported.

“The government hit back,” The Los Angeles Times noted, adding:

When he was in Chengdu to testify on behalf of fellow activist Tan Zuoren, police barged into his hotel room and struck Ai on the head. Weeks later he was hospitalized with a severe headache, the result of intracranial bleeding that became life-threatening. Doctors had to drill through his skull to drain the blood. Police installed surveillance cameras around his compound outside Beijing, and in 2011 the government bulldozed his Shanghai studio. Soon afterward, they arrested him.

Hoover started her interview by noting that Ai “went from helping to create the iconic Bird’s Nest Stadium for the 2008 Summer Olympics to becoming a captive of the Chinese government” and that he had a recently published memoir entitled “1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows” in which he detailed not only his but also his father’s exile as well as imprisonment.

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