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Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley discusses the impact the Georgia Senate races will have on America and argues people in the U.S should be upset with Big Tech censorship because it mirrors China s control over the public.
Americans need to wake up about China’s plans to dominate the world, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said on Monday. I think all you have to do is look back several months ago when Biden said China was no competition to us, and that we didn’t need to be worried about them, Haley told Fox & Friends.
Haley recalled when President Trump received pushback from Democrats for implementing a travel ban on China due to the coronavirus outbreak.
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News about the coronavirus-related death of a Chinese doctor who had warned the public about the virus set off a massive propaganda and censorship effort to help the Chinese government regain control of the narrative inside the country about the rapidly growing crisis, according to a report.
The response to the Feb. 7 death of Dr. Li Wenliang and other events during the early days of the virus outbreak are outlined in leaked documents reviewed by ProPublica and the New York Times in a jointly produced article that was published Saturday.
In response to the increasing spread of misinformation regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, UC Berkeley hosted a virtual panel of experts who spoke about how misinformation impacts people’s responses to the pandemic, as well as potential ways to combat this misinformation.
The event was held Dec. 8 and included various campus professors and a former campus research fellow. According to Deirdre Mulligan, a professor at the UC Berkeley School of Information, as the amount of information available about COVID-19 increases, there are bound to be inaccuracies that further polarize the United States.
“The social media companies had created the ingredients for the COVID misinformation and conspiratorial landscape we’re dealing with today,” said Hany Farid, a UC Berkeley School of Information and electrical engineering and computer sciences professor, during the event. “Our online information landscape is just a mess, and we need to start to get a handle on it.”