Never Kneel: China Tap Korean War and AI Memes to Back On Trump
* China says “will not kneel” on US rates in propaganda video * Likens that surrender to Trump’s rates to ‘drink poison’ * Chinese internet use to share tariff memes on social media. * Messages -of -born risks that weaken China says Chinese official by Joe Cash Beijing, China is dropping his propaganda machines at US rates, and performing a video box, using cold war trading to lambs to lambs. Simple Message – Bullying capitulation is dangerous, and we will not withdraw. Beijing has made little effort to contain his anger on the rates, which he believes is equivalent to bullying and will do nothing to address issues such as fentanyl abuse and cannot stop the rise of the world’s second largest economy. The Foreign Ministry released a video on Tuesday, complete with a voice-over in the US-accent-English, on its social media freeds compared to US President Donald Trump’s 145% tariffs to ‘drink poison’. “China will not kneel because we know that we stand up to ourselves the possibility of cooperation keeps alive while we jeopardize it,” says the narrative about footage of a Chinese Mig-15 fighter shooting a US ray in the Korean war. “Imperialists are always arrogant. If they show a little reason, it’s just because they are forced to do it,” it added, this time about footage of signing the ceasefire ending the war. China’s top diplomat Wang Yi on Monday compared Trump’s trade policy with ‘the open return of the jungle’ at a meeting of foreign ministers from developing countries in Brazil. “If we choose to keep quiet or compromise, it will only strengthen the bully further,” Wang told his Brics Bloc counterparts, according to a lecture in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. One Chinese official, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said Beijing’s opinion is that the returns or compromise would now only weaken China in the future and Trump could change the conditions later. Messages like “Don’t Kneel” transfer them to a domestic and international audience, the person said. On Chinese social media, where sensors are something sensitive, such as alleged abuse of human rights, there are abundance tariff memes. “The king came up with new rates! Farmers, little farmers, listen! ‘ Start the lyrics to an UP-Tempo, Electro-Beat Song on Douyin, the Chinese version of Tiktok, citing remarks by Vice President JD Vance who used the term ‘small farmers’ to refer to Chinese people earlier this month. “Rates for you, even if you’re not a human being!” The song continues, with a photo of a penguin, after US levies have been applied to uninhabited Antarctic islands. One Ai-generated image on WeChat shows Trump, Vance and Tesla boss Elon Musk who gather sneakers and cheap flip-flops in a factory. Another one shows a photo of Trump next to the snout of a pig. Not all Chinese perspectives on social media are positive for Beijing. At Zhihu, China’s equivalent to Quora was many of the answers to a question about the video of the Foreign Ministry was negative. “Our foreign propaganda section is really weak in terms of ability. If you don’t know how to do propaganda, just don’t,” one user wrote. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without edits to text. First Published: 30 Apr 2025, 11:11 am Ist