
Not to be outdone by other dysfunctional communist dictatorships, China implemented one of the harshest Covid-era policies. Referred to as “Zero Covid,” the national policy saw Chinese people welded into apartment buildings which burned down with the people locked inside, anti-vaxxers dragged out of their homes, held down and forcefully injected with Covid shots and mass concentration camps where citizens were locked in boxes like the cheap items from Temu they manufacture.
A few years on from the China Virus, Beijing has turned its sights on the next target – street crime. Just as the CCP had done with Covid, however, fixing a problem is not actually the goal. Instead, propaganda intended to lull the rest of the world into believing communism is a utopia has become front and center. CCP shills parrot the lie that China is a high-trust society while property crime and even violent crime run rampant on Chinese streets.
“We have had this trend, I’m going to say it was a good six-month trend of propaganda videos coming out from Westerners saying how China is a high-trust society like Japan and [South] Korea,” Matthew Tye, host of The China Show and China Fact Chasers said Friday.
Tye detailed how this CCP propaganda push is part of a communist government program.
“And China has a … lets remember 講好中國故事 [“Telling China’s Stories Well”] is literally a Chinese government program with billions of dollars behind it to change the world’s perception of it to fit the CCP’s narratives,” Tye said.
A study into the communist propaganda program detailed how China made itself the model of what a Covid response should be:
The article critically examines ‘Telling China’s Story Well’ (TCSW), a popular propaganda campaign slogan proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013. Drawing on theories about storytelling and propaganda and using the COVID-19 as a contextualised example, the paper discusses how the slogan was adapted into ‘Telling China’s Anti-pandemic Story Well’ to mobilise domestic and external propaganda of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) during the pandemic. We argue that TCSW should be understood as a well-crafted political watchword which promotes and commands strategic narratives of doing propaganda. It has the rhetorical power to integrate and reinvigorate domestic and external propaganda, and to facilitate their convergence. Adapting this slogan to mobilise propaganda campaigns of national or global importance and interest demonstrates the CCP’s ambition to harness strategic storytelling to improve the coherence, effectiveness and reputation of its propaganda at home and abroad.
The aforementioned study detailed what Alex Jones was saying at the time, that the Covid lockdowns in other countries were modeled after China:
In 2020 the CCP positioned itself to be the model for the rest of the world to follow with Covid lockdowns pic.twitter.com/oHlAk4eDI2
— Sean Seraphim Alexander Miller (@IWArchivist) October 22, 2025
DW News detailed this communist propaganda program as well:
“Tell the story of China well” has been a slogan that Xi Jinping has been calling for a long time since he came to power. The problem is that despite so many years of efforts, various departments, especially the Propaganda Department, have invested a lot of money and labor, but the Chinese story has not been told well according to the wishes of the upper class of China. This makes people have to ask whether the so-called “telling Chinese stories well” is a trap in itself.
Matthew Tye and his co-host Winston Sterzel chronicled a series of recent videos depicting rampant property crime, violent crime, snatch-and-grabs, car attacks, public transit misbehavior, failure to render aid, and domestic violence in China’s zero-trust society.
重慶毛賊網吧偷手機 😄😄😄 pic.twitter.com/pSYpP0X6WX
— 支性難改 (@xibaozi36064237) October 21, 2025
Grab-Hags is why China has no free toilet paper in public restrooms and no self serve anything https://t.co/HvxcSQfwRn
— Winston Sterzel (@serpentza) September 23, 2025
中國。一男子毆打女人 pic.twitter.com/KjMiPYjcvv
— MR.486 (@kiss486) October 20, 2025
网友投稿:2025年10月14日晚23点多,山东聊城一学校门口发生一起献忠事件,造成8死4伤的惨案,中共警方为了平息事态宣称是酒驾所致!但知情人透露37岁杜某因家里拆迁问题上访多年未果,期间惨遭维稳关押虐打!于当晚饮酒后献忠学校晚自习下课时间! pic.twitter.com/RL61ALIXqk
— 破幕推墙 (@POMTQ) October 16, 2025
Another tragic revenge against society attack in China, CCP tried to say it was a drunk driver (as they always do) but turns out the attacker had been beaten for trying to stop forced demolition of his family home. He struck as students finished classes. https://t.co/Wca3xXgYN6
— Winston Sterzel (@serpentza) October 16, 2025
暴力面前旁觀者若無其事,這麼冷血,難以接受! pic.twitter.com/XdevKnXEd7
— 0 (@lammichaeltw) October 15, 2025
I do love an intelligent argument pic.twitter.com/yAz6oUT5RB
— Winston Sterzel (@serpentza) October 9, 2025
服不服,扶不扶!
— 圣光之辉 (@SGZH99) September 24, 2025
82岁老人摔倒斑马线无人扶!
假如你在现场,你会扶吗? pic.twitter.com/ftPekrZjdM
China’s Zero-Trust society is undeniable, no one can ever try and pretend that this isn’t a Chinese societal problem that needs to be fixed https://t.co/r7Aja4bKLR
— Winston Sterzel (@serpentza) September 25, 2025
China's Zero-Trust society is sad an immoral, it's so bad that people are too scared to help this old woman in need… pray you never find yourself injured and in need of help in China 😑 pic.twitter.com/LIOyaG9JKx
— Winston Sterzel (@serpentza) September 24, 2025
A November 2024 article in VOA news detailed the surging violent crime in China:
China’s economic malaise is fueling social tensions that make people more likely to commit violent crimes out of anger or desperation, analysts say, after the country witnessed its deadliest massacre in a decade.
The country has experienced a spate of violent attacks this year, challenging Beijing’s proud reputation for public order and prompting online soul-searching about the state of society.
On Monday, a man plowed a car into crowds at a sports complex in the southern city of Zhuhai, killing 35 and wounding 43, according to official figures.
It followed a string of similar crimes as China struggles to revive economic growth, keep people employed and boost confidence since it ended rigid COVID curbs in late 2022.
“The recent spate of violent attacks in China is a reflection of its worsening social and macroeconomic conditions,” said Hanzhang Liu, an assistant professor of political studies at Pitzer College in the United States.
In July of 2024 CNN detailed a spat of stabbings in China. Foreign Affairs explained a form of violent crime nearly exclusive to China – “revenge against society attacks“. These attacks are characterized by extreme violence on groups of innocent people in public, often children in school. Weapons commonly used in these attacks often include knives and cars.
China Uncensored detailed how a lot of this crime stems from the dismal economic state of the Chinese economy. Infowars recently reported on China’s crumbling economy.
In April 2024 Infowars reported on China’s “Murder Season” – the springtime bloom of killing China experiences each year as the temperatures increase.