Hong Kong, 2019
seen from Czechia

seen from Yemen

seen from Yemen
seen from Russia

seen from Yemen
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Yemen
seen from United States
seen from India
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Maldives
Hong Kong, 2019
Protest and Activism
Activism is a method of campaigning for legislative and social change. Protest is an act of taking part in a campaign to express dissatisfaction about something. In the Arab Springs, social media is used to describe the situation in the Middle East to people around the world. A video shows that Hamza Ali al-Khateeb, a boy named by the authorities, was beaten and killed in Jiza. After it was posted, the video was taken offline, but YouTube employees were still revived. Another video posted by Wael Abbas, an Egyptian counter-torture activist, shows a video in which two police officers sexually abused a bus driver. The governments of Libya and Syria have tried to limit Internet access, but their efforts have been unsuccessful, as the inhabitants of those countries have continued to rally to express unhappiness about what was happening at the time. However, a group of hackers identified as the Syrian Cyber Armed Forces is using social media to suppress oppressive governments by posting dissident contact records, threatening opposition and spreading messages promoting the oppressive regime (Youmanans & York 2012, p. 315-323).
Protests in Hong Kong started in 2019 when a Hong Kong man who murdered his girlfriend in Taiwan was sentenced to be extradited from Beijing to the mainland and tried under Chinese law. The Hong Kongers were angry that their rights as a special economic zone will begin to erode in the years after the transition (Kuo & Yu 2019).
Shao (2019) also points out how the new protests in Hong Kong, which took place in 2019, brought demonstrators to the point of asking Hong Kong to be released from mainland China. But it has increasingly become well past the normal orderly protests, with the ongoing escalation of violence between demonstrators and the Hong Kong police to endanger the lives of ordinary citizens in Hong Kong. There are several news sources on the store. Any news sources say that the police are violent against the protesters, and there are claims that the protesters are violent against the police and destroy public property. This clearly indicates that numerous news sources have their own personal dissemination goals and methods.
The 2014 Umbrella protests is another example of protests in which the Joshua Wong student leader, only 18, used a Bluetooth networking platform known as Firechat, which could be used even though mobile networks is shut down. Joshua and his protest team led protests in favour of the Chinese government's fundamental right to vote (Sigal & Biddle, p. 287-291).
In conclusion, if the reason is to change society for the better, the act of participating in and organizing protests is a positive one. However, we need to be cautious, because things don't necessarily appear to be participating in activities. Even we can be exploited to fight for what we don't or don't want. This would have a negative impact on culture, such that we might have myths or even false influences that may contribute to the deterioration of a once healthy, prosperous society.
References
Youmans, WL & York, JC 2012, ‘Social media and the activist toolkit: User agreements, corporate interests and the information infrastructure of modern social movements’ Journal of Communication ISSN 0021-9916 pp.315-323, viewed 12 October 2020.
Sigal, I & Biddle, E 2015, ‘Our enduring confusion about the power of digital tools in protest’, Open Humanities Press, issn. 1449-1443, pp.287-291, viewed 12 October 2020.
Shao, G 2019, ‘Social media has become a battleground in Hong Kong’s protest’, CNBC, 16th August, viewed 12 October 2020. <https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/16/social-media-has-become-a-battleground-in-hong-kongs-protests.html>
Kuo, L & Yu, V 2019, ‘What are the Hong Kong protests about’, The Guardian, 25th July, viewed 12 October 2020. <https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jun/10/what-are-the-hong-kong-protests-about-explainer>
my cousin started a campaign called voices on skin for the Hong Kong protests and I'm so proud of her.
Voices on skin is basically producing temporary tattoos with slogans about the protest and the idea is that you can support the protests wherever you are. Instead of posters (which are importable if you want to be in other places), tattoos lets you carry the message wherever you go. Gotta admit that's a pretty cool idea and as her cousin, never been prouder.
This was not my city. It was a new beginning, a fresh start, a step towards salvation. I do not expect to remain long, however I can feel that I am needed. I was not born here. I did not learn to walk on this soil. I did not wave goodbye to parents as I set off for my first day of school here. I have not shut my eyes and pressed my lips against the one I love's underneath the moon as we part ways here. But I can feel a wrong in the air surrounding this city. Through the smog, I sense despair. I sense the broken trust of a city which longs only for freedom, but is finding its wings clipped after a promise of the sky. There is a call to arms reaching out from a field of umbrellas, reverberating through the concrete jungle and beyond. And who am I to deny the call? This is now my city. This city is in distress as it tries to make peace with its captors, those who have ensnared this fragile bird within an iron cage. But the bird will sing, and so will I. Do you hear them? Do you hear the people sing? I do. Join in. Help right a wrong And set them free. This was not my city, but it is now. And in this call to arms, I beg you, help us achieve peace. Help us take back our city. Help us Occupy Central.
is it just me, or is the way the HK protest is being covered complete bullshit? again, don't get me wrong, i support the protest. but the news seems to be clamoring to cover it and to point out how "respectful" the protesters are, when for ferguson they couldn't wait to talk about looting and tried to pin the violence on the protesters at every turn. this is striking me as a gross, massive, calculated display of respectability politics. the people (heroes) in ferguson are literally getting kidnapped and assaulted for peacefully protesting the actual fucking murder of mike brown and the failure to arrest his killer. i'd like the shitstains writing negative articles about the chinese coverage of the HK protest to turn the fuck around and look at their coverage of ferguson. preferably right before they jump in a goddamn trashcan.
An interactive guide to the milestones and background of Hong Kong’s #occupycentral movement http://t.co/uNK2qefqZz http://twitter.com/GuardianData/status/517200654537093120
IMAGE: They are tired
IMAGE: They are tired
警察也会累。
苦了百姓,苦了前线,便宜了权威者。
via FanPiece
via FanPiece
via FanPiece
View On WordPress
China just blocked Instagram. Here's what they're hiding.