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China’s Internet Reacts to Texas and US Federal Government ‘State of War’
As the battle of wills over immigration continues between the White House and Texas Gov. Greg Abbot, a parallel debate is happening in China, where trending social media posts are backing the Lone Star State’s right to secede from the United States.
On China’s X-like microblogging site Weibo, accounts with more than a million followers were spreading misinformation this week claiming Texas had entered a “state of war” with the federal government. In the comment sections, Chinese netizens met the news with excitement and glee.
American border control authorities said over a quarter of a million migrants attempted to enter the U.S. illegally last month alone, more than any month since 2000.
Abbott declared the crisis an “invasion” and vowed to continue beefing up border security following the Supreme Court’s ruling allowing federal border agents to dismantle Texas’s fortifications.
On China’s highly regulated social media websites on Monday, one Weibo account with nearly 1.2 million followers weaved fact and fiction into a misleading account of the Texas border row, allegeding Abbott was preparing to go to war with U.S. federal authorities.
“If the U.S. really pushes Texas back, then it will be great fun,” the user said, in an apparent expression of schadenfreude. “I hope that both sides will not be cowardly, and they will fight to the end!”
In a follow-up post on Tuesday, the user said he was inspired to “definitely contribute money and effort” to support the cause against America’s “imperialist oppression” in Texas and elsewhere in the world.
The schadenfreude was apparent in many of the comments under his posts.
“Every day you can hear the sound of the American empire crumbling,” one Chinese netizen replied.
Some discussed the history of Texas in the comment sections, its people’s well-known independent streak, and the state’s right to secede from the union.
“Although they are in civil war, it does not prevent their stock market from continuing to reach new highs,” another account observed.
Other Weibo users, however, seemed baffled that more media attention was not being devoted to the alleged splintering of the world’s most powerful country.
“Only a few sporadic media outlets are reporting [on Texas]. On the other hand, domestic media is overwhelmingly covering news of monkeys and cats at Yunnan Zoo,” one wrote.
It is difficult for regular Chinese internet users to independently verify claims due to the online information environment being largely cut off from the outside.
The phenomenon was first spotted by Wenhao Ma, a journalist who specializes in Chinese online propaganda and disinformation for the U.S. government-funded Voice of America news outlet.
On January 22, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 in favor of allowing national border patrol agents to temporarily remove the razor wire and other barriers erected by Texas to curb immigration while its case is circulated through federal courts.
Abbott is engaged in multiple legal battles with the U.S. Department of Justice over his state’s migrant deterrent tactics, including the use of razor wire along parts of the border and a circular saw floating barrier in the Rio Grande river.
The Biden administration has called these tactics “dangerous” and “cruel.”
Attorneys general in over two dozen GOP-controlled states on last week penned an open letter to U.S. President Joe Biden expressing their opposition to recent calls for the federlization of the Texas National Guard, a move otherwise backed by Texas Democrats.
“Texas should be applauded for continuing to try to protect the border despite the federal government now, again, being able to try to destroy the barriers Texas builds,” they said, pointing out the Supreme Court had not expressly ordered Texas to act one way or another.
States including Virginia, South Dakota, Oklahoma and Arkansas have, since last year, sent hundreds of their own National Guard troops to assist Texas’s border authorities.
The Supreme Court ruling sends the case back to the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where it awaits a February 7 hearing. The decision has prompted renewed discussions of secession among American netizens, too.
The hashtag “Texit” has been trending on X (formerly Twitter), a reference to Brexit, the movement behind Britain’s exit from the European Union in 2020.
Vladimir Putin ally Dimitry Medvedev, Russia’s former president and now No. 2 on its Security Council, speculated on Friday that the U.S. might be setting itself up to “fall into the abyss” of a civil war even deadlier than the conflict that left over 600,000 dead from 1861-1865.
“Under President Biden’s lawless border policies, more than 6 million illegal immigrants have crossed our southern border in just 3 years,” Abbott wrote in an open letter on January 24. “That is more than the population of 33 different states in this country.”
Abbott said he had “already declared an invasion” and invoked “Texas’s constitutional authority to defend and protect itself.”
“The Texas National Guard, the Texas Department of Public Safety, and other Texas personnel are acting on that authority, as well as state law, to secure the Texas border,” the governor said.
Newsweek contacted the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., Abbott’s office, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection for comment but did not receive a response before publication.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
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