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Google is “America’s British East India Company”
11 March 2011 By Jim Berkeley
An editorial posted on more than
300 Chinese news sites accuses Google of promoting
American hegemony, comparing its role with that of the
East India Company in extending Britain’s Imperial
reach. China Media Project translates:
When a number of countries in the Middle East
experienced signs of instability due to inflation and
other problems, Google immediately went on the
offensive, even allowing a senior company manager to
directly establish the online general headquarters of
the anti-government movement, fostering successive
protest movements and nakedly interfering with the
internal politics of other nations. These actions of
Google’s are astonishing, and they lead people
naturally to recall the British East India Company.
In the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, the British East
India Company, through the monopolization of trade,
the sale of opium and open plunder, accomplished great
works for England in its development of an “empire on
which the sun never sets.” Marx once said concerning
the British East India Company that there was a
200-year history of the British government carrying
out wars in the name of this company, until this
reached the natural boundaries of India.
In the colonial era, the British East India Company
used the monopolization of trade in the colonies to
traffic opium and assist Britain in building its
hegemony. In the Internet era, Google uses its
monopoly of Internet information search to traffic
American values and assist American in building its
hegemony.
Historian Jeremiah Jenne takes issue with this
interpretation:
Few events from the 19th century have such a grip on
Chinese indignation as the Opium Wars of 1840-1842. In
PRC historiography, the unequal treaties forced upon
the Qing government at the end of the war mark both
the start of the modern era and a “century of
humiliation.” Patriotic education, media, and movies
reinforce this emotionally charged linkage of drugs,
violence, and forced submission in the collective
consciousness ….
Obviously though, the piece is a rather clumsy attempt
to reinforce the image of Google as a de facto arm of
the US government. Never mind that Google doesn’t
operate under royal charter, the key is for the author
to say the words “opium” and “Google” as many times as
possible and then have his essay posted to as many
sites as the People’s Daily editors can manage.
LinkedIn
Blocked in Parts of China; Investigation Under Way
LinkedIn is apparently the latest victim of the Great
Firewall. From Bloomberg:
China, the world’s largest Internet market with 457
million Web users, has shut out sites such as those
operated by Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc. and Google
Inc.’s YouTube since 2009 to block the flow of
information on politically sensitive subjects.
LinkedIn’s focus on business professionals seeking
jobs has shielded it from the same fate as those
sites.
“We can confirm that access to LinkedIn is being
blocked for some in China, and we are currently in the
process of investigating the situation further,” Hani
Durzy, a spokesman for the Mountain View,
California-based company, said in an e- mail. He
didn’t elaborate on a possible cause of the service
disruption.
A LinkedIn user in China this week began posting
comments discussing whether to spread Tunisia’s
Jasmine Revolution to the Asian nation. Yesterday, the
user identified online as “Jasmine Z” set up a group
discussion called “Jasmine Voice” to discuss whether
the revolutions by protesters that brought down
governments in Tunisia and Egypt should be brought to
China. Protesters in the two North African nations
organized using the Facebook and Twitter sites that
are blocked in China.
©
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