Columbia Student Group May Be Overseas Extension of Communist Regime

communism-chinaThe long-named Columbia University Chinese Student and Scholars Association: United for China’s Peaceful Rising (CUCSSA) has taken the stance, as of a few weeks ago, that “Anyone who offends China will be executed no matter how far away they are!” and said so on their website for all to see. That’s what ‘peaceful rising’ means in Mandarin, right? Someone translate for me.

Luckily for most of us, the Epoch Times tells us that ‘anyone’ just means Falun Gong practitioners. The Columbia University Falun Dafa Club is understandably upset. This was only the latest escalation in CUCSSA’s extremist rhetoric in the months since the Falun Dafa Club hosted a panel discussion in April about China’s spotty human rights record.

The April panel, titled “China’s New Genocide-Organ Harvesting from Live Falun Gong Practitioners,” caused an indignant CUCSSA to try to take disruptive action. They were not yet at the death-threat stage, instead:

The CUCSSA responded by sending out an email to its members the night before that referred to using “flags dyed red in blood to beat” the “high spirits” of Falun Gong. The email also repeated slanders of Falun Gong typically used in the Chinese regime’s propaganda.

The Falun Dafa Club received a copy of the inflammatory e-mail and Columbia University police were on hand the next day when 20 to 30 CUCSSA members showed up carrying large red flags, which they were forced to leave outside the lecture hall.

During the panel discussion CUCSSA students held up small placards attacking Falun Gong using terms borrowed from the Chinese regime’s anti-Falun Gong propaganda, flew paper airplanes in the direction of the speakers, and in other ways acted in a disruptive manner. Two students from the CUCSSA group were prevented from reentering the lecture hall because of their inappropriate behavior.

First question: Were the red flags actually dyed in blood? All of your questions answered after the break. Read the rest of this entry »

Of All the Things China Covets About Princeton, It Covets Most Its HTML (UPDATED)

For reasons deeply unclear to us, foreign countries look up to the Ivy League. Across the globe, aspiring universities are emulating Western-style curricula, credit systems, methods of instruction, — and, um, our web sites. Here’s princeton.edu:

Of All the Things China Covets About Princeton, It Covets Most Its HTML (UPDATED) 

And here’s the philosophy school at China’s Renmin U:

Of All the Things China Covets About Princeton, It Covets Most Its HTML (UPDATED) 

[Kudos to the Daily Princetonian's Jonathan Zebrowski for the find, plus Inside Higher Ed.]

UPDATE 3:15 p.m.: Bizarre: A Penn reader alerts us to this Daily Pennsylvanian story in March 2005, noting that Romania’s Universitatea “Lucian Blaga” din Sibiu (our reach school, weirdly enough) can’t get enough of UPenn.edu’s bedroom blues.