Travel Tips
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They say you have to break a few eggs if you want to make an omelette. What if the Omelette you wanted to make was removing religion from the minds of your people? How do you undo the damaging effects of childhood indoctrination on the human brain. (Without Murdering Everybody)
Once upon a time china used to suffer bombings and terrostic attacks. Just like what happens in the Middle East. They began a crackdown on religious communities that are dangerous to public order. Many leaders have tried this in the past, with varying results. A lot of bloodshed was involved.How do you de-program religion from your populace? It is a disgusting and horrifying process. When other governments have a problem they would like eliminated they usually resort to bombs and killing.
China tried this. There were many terrorist attacks and public unrest. China responded by waging brutal and bloody conflicts on the Xinjiang province.Killing it's own people.
China saw this path to never ending destruction and decided to end it.
Since the incorporation of the region into the People's Republic of China, factors such as the mass state-sponsored migration of Han Chinese from the 1950s to the 1970s, government policies promoting Chinese cultural unity and punishing certain expressions of Uyghur identity, and harsh responses to separatism have contributed to tension between the Uyghurs, and state police and Han Chinese
The camps are providing vocational training to combat extremism.
People outside Xinjiang first began to learn about the camps in 2017. Uighurs abroad grew alarmed as friends and relatives at home dropped out of touch, first deleting phone and social media contacts and then disappearing entirely. Uighur students who returned or were forced back to China after studying in foreign countries likewise vanished upon arriving. When they can get any information at all, Uighurs outside China have learned that police took their relatives and friends to the reeducation camps: “gone to study” is the careful euphemism used on the closely surveilled Chinese messaging app WeChat.
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