JayAtl
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China's state-run TV tries to put a positive spin on toxic haze.
Buildings in Lianyungang, China, are shrouded in smog on Dec. 8, 2013
Read more: China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com
You can’t make this stuff up. On Sunday, with swaths of eastern China shrouded in a polluted haze, Chinese state media decided to release a list of five “surprising benefits” of smog. Here, courtesy of Wang Lei, an editor for China Central Television’s website, are five good things about bad air:
1. It unifies the Chinese people.
2. It makes China more equal.
3. It raises citizen awareness of the cost of China’s economic development.
4. It makes people funnier.
5. It makes people more knowledgeable (of things like meteorology and the English word haze).
I’d like to think the piece as well-intentioned satire. Perhaps it was. But the article, which has since been pulled, was followed by another piece of pollution promotion. On Monday, the Global Times published a piece that said air pollution might help the Chinese military by obscuring sight lines, reducing the effectiveness of surveillance and weapons systems.
Read more: China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com






Smog? It bolsters military defence, says Chinese nationalist newspaper


http://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/1376804/smog-it-bolsters-military-defence-says-chinese-nationalist-newspaper

Buildings in Lianyungang, China, are shrouded in smog on Dec. 8, 2013
Read more: China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com
You can’t make this stuff up. On Sunday, with swaths of eastern China shrouded in a polluted haze, Chinese state media decided to release a list of five “surprising benefits” of smog. Here, courtesy of Wang Lei, an editor for China Central Television’s website, are five good things about bad air:
1. It unifies the Chinese people.
2. It makes China more equal.
3. It raises citizen awareness of the cost of China’s economic development.
4. It makes people funnier.
5. It makes people more knowledgeable (of things like meteorology and the English word haze).
I’d like to think the piece as well-intentioned satire. Perhaps it was. But the article, which has since been pulled, was followed by another piece of pollution promotion. On Monday, the Global Times published a piece that said air pollution might help the Chinese military by obscuring sight lines, reducing the effectiveness of surveillance and weapons systems.
Read more: China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com China's Smog Has Benefits, State Media Outlet Says | TIME.com






Smog? It bolsters military defence, says Chinese nationalist newspaper



http://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/1376804/smog-it-bolsters-military-defence-says-chinese-nationalist-newspaper
“Smog may affect people’s health and daily lives … but on the battlefield, it can serve as a defensive advantage in military operations,” said an article on thewebsite of Global Times, a nationalist newspaper affiliated to the Communist Party’s mouthpiece thePeople’s Daily.
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