CN A furious Chinese internet takes on privilege

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2025-07-17 22:11:22 UTC
Fan Wang

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Nashi joins a growing list of people facing intense scrutiny in China over their privilege

This was supposed to be a breakout year for Chinese actress Nashi, with major roles in two blockbuster films and a highly anticipated TV drama.

But then in June, the 35-year-old's star crashed as a furore over her exam scores from more than a decade ago sparked a backlash online – and eventually an official investigation into her academic record.

The fallout was immediate. Her name was scrubbed from the credits of the drama, Lychees in Chang'an, and brands began cutting ties.

She joins a growing list of people facing intense scrutiny in China over their privilege, with authorities launching investigations to appease public anger.

In recent months, these viral scandals have hit two actresses, a Harvard graduate, and a doctor from a top Beijing hospital: all young women. They were accused of leveraging family connections to gain unfair advantage.

"There's privilege every year, but this year there's more than ever," says one user on Weibo. Another wrote: "I would love to see more scandals like this. They are truly eye-opening."

Frustrated with rising unemployment and a slowing economy, more and more young Chinese people feel that connections, or guanxi, pay off more than hard work, research shows.

Nashi, for instance, was accused of using her actress mother's connections to enrol in a prestigious drama school.

The programme, which her mother attended in the 1980s, was for ethnic Mongolian students like them. But then old interview clips resurfaced, in which she had said she didn't fulfil a key obligation - she went to study in Norway after graduating, instead of returning to work in Inner Mongolia as required by the programme.

Speculation grew in early June, just as millions of high school seniors sat for the gruelling university entrance exam called Gaokao – the same exam that earned Nashi a spot at the drama school in 2008.

Internet sleuths dug up the lowest scores for that year and suspected they were hers. Did she only go to the drama school because of her mum, they asked. It was a serious enough allegation that officials eventually stepped in to clarify that she had a much higher score.

But it was not enough.

The scandal that started it all​

Internet scandals are hardly unique to China but they have become a much-needed outlet – for anger, questions or just disappointment - in a tightly-censored society.

Independent media is almost non-existent, leaving a lot of room for unchecked speculation and just plain rumours to spread rapidly through China's vast social media universe. And in some cases, users online have done their own investigations to verify allegations and unearth wrongdoing.

That is what happened in April when two doctors - identified only by their surnames, Mr Xiao and Ms Dong – at a top Beijing hospital found themselves caught in a national storm over an alleged love affair.

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Speculation around Nashi grew in early June, just as millions of high school seniors sat for the gruelling university entrance exam called Gaokao

Mr Xiao's wife wrote a letter to his employer accusing him of favouring Ms Dong at work because the two were in a relationship. Among her many allegations was one that eventually cost him his job: she said he had left a sedated patient unattended on the operating table for 40 minutes to defend Ms Dong during a dispute with a nurse.

It was a shocking episode but it quickly became so much more, as attention shifted to Ms Dong. An angry internet found out that she had finished studying to be a doctor in just four years, compared to the minimum of eight years.

They accused her of cheating her way into an elite programme at China's most prestigious medical school, Peking Union Medical College, and plagiarising her graduation thesis.

So intense was the backlash that the National Health Commission investigated and confirmed the allegations. Authorities revoked Ms Dong's licence to practise medicine and her degrees, hoping that would put an end to the controversy.

Her clinical experience – which stretched across various specialties – also came under scrutiny, along with her family's political ties. But officials didn't respond to those accusations, raising further questions about a cover-up.

"There were failures at every step. There's no way they'll dig any deeper," says a young doctor in Qingdao city who did not wish to share her name.

It is not uncommon for people to use "guanxi" to help their children find jobs, she says, but what bothers her is the "deep-rooted unfairness".

Having spent 11 years to become a resident like Ms Dong, she says she and her colleagues had never heard of the programme Ms Dong graduated from: "We were all shocked when we learnt about it. Clearly, it's not meant for ordinary people like us."

This scandal particularly stung in hyper-competitive China where doctors work gruelling hours to earn a residency at top hospitals, or just to hold on to the jobs they do have.

"Why is everything so unfair," she asked, echoing the disillusionment that was widespread in the comments online.

"We work tirelessly treating patients with the utmost care - as if we were their grandchildren. Yet our life is far worse than [Ms] Dong's."

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Harvard graduate Yurong Luanna Jiang's speech at a graduation ceremony went viral on the Chinese internet

It was this discontent that also drove the outrage against Harvard graduate Yurong Luanna Jiang in June.

She drew attention after her speech at a graduation ceremony went viral the same day a US federal judge blocked US President Donald Trump's ban on foreign students at Harvard. When she shared the experience online, she spoke of a difficult childhood, spent "drifting from place to place", and how studying hard had given her everything she now had.

At first she was applauded for calling for unity in a polarised world - even some Chinese people commented saying they were touched by her words. But her social media posts soon irked the Chinese internet, which then began examining her resume and challenging her claim that hard work alone had led to her success.

Her critics did not sympathise with her challenges – they found holes in every story and when she pushed back, they doubled down.

She seemed to be yet another reminder of the narrowing opportunities that faced many young Chinese people.

Sluggish post-Covid growth has brought layoffs, salary cuts and hiring freezes. Millions of graduates are struggling to find jobs, settling for lower-paid work or quitting the race altogether.

One user on RedNote said she had been posting online in anger about these scandals only to find out hours later that a job offer she had accepted was retracted because the company had paused hiring.

"Sure enough, the things you weren't born with, you'll never have in this lifetime," she wrote.

'You know what you know'​

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This anger is not new. For some time now, the Chinese government has been censoring excessive displays of wealth by celebrities and influencers. But there are things that escape even their watchful eye, such as a pair of earrings.

Scandal came for actress Huang Yang Tian Tian when a suspicious internet began speculating that earrings she had recently worn cost more than ¥2.3 million ($320,000; £237,100).

They began questioning how she could afford them and discovered that her father was a civil servant-turned-businessman. Then they found out that he had worked in the local government in Ya'an, which was hit by a devastating earthquake in 2008.

The controversy blew up with more questions about the family's wealth, and insinuations that they had profited from post-quake recovery funds. Authorities denied this and said Ms Huang's earrings, made of glass, were a cheap replica of a luxury pair.

But not everyone believes them. "You know what you know," reads one Weibo comment with more than 1,000 likes. "Were the officials laughing?" another user asks.

While the Chinese Communist Party is concerned enough to launch investigations, their swift response does not seem to be enough.

"The loss of public trust didn't happen in a day or two," writes a user on RedNote. "It's the result of one investigation after another that insults our intelligence, one unresolved incident after another."

Public frustration lingers as the Party tries to grapple with increasing discontent. And its message to young people is they should "eat bitterness", a Chinese phrase for enduring hardship, in the pursuit of "national rejuvenation".

But online, one of the few places where Chinese people still speak openly, that message seems to be ringing hollow as people debate the advantages enjoyed by "the elites", often simply referred to as "they".

"They are the reason why we worked so hard for three generations and are still in misery," a top-liked comment on Weibo reads.

Another comment on RedNote, where no-one in particular is being accused, says: "We earn money one cent at a time, while they embezzle hundreds of millions - and then they teach us that hard work leads to prosperity and that labour is honourable."
 
But then in June, the 35-year-old's star crashed as a furore over her exam scores from more than a decade ago sparked a backlash online – and eventually an official investigation into her academic record.

The fallout was immediate. Her name was scrubbed from the credits of the drama, Lychees in Chang'an, and brands began cutting ties.

She joins a growing list of people facing intense scrutiny in China over their privilege, with authorities launching investigations to appease public anger.

In recent months, these viral scandals have hit two actresses, a Harvard graduate, and a doctor from a top Beijing hospital: all young women. They were accused of leveraging family connections to gain unfair advantage.
You can find Tiktok clips and pics from Chinese students, standing next to ALL the study material they had to use for their exams, it's beyond ridiculous.

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Can't say I blame her, really.
 
Authorities revoked Ms Dong's licence to practise medicine and her degrees, hoping that would put an end to the controversy.
Westoid journos twisting themselves into pretzels to whine about doxxxing when it gets rid of a dangerous charlatan.

Communism for most of its history has been all about securing privileges for the elite few.
What is monarchism then? What is capitalism? Lmao get raped, solzhenitsyn, and take the 23 Steps program.
 
Things in China must be getting really bad if the Communist government starts cracking down. Communism for most of its history has been all about securing privileges for the elite few. China isn't mad that these people are rich and corrupt. It's mad that their lack of discretion is causing the peasants to get all riled up.
"Great idea, wrong species."


Which is amusing, if we consider how Sinos truly behave like bugmen.
 
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Chinks really do take education seriously, I thought it was kind of a meme lol
They care about competition, status and credentials. They don't care about learning as a form of self-improvement.

In the US they typically push their kids into the sports and activities that are considered classy, like orchestra, figure skating, spelling bees, math competitions etc. Their kids end up with great GPAs and strong "well-rounded" applications to college, but it's about checking off the boxes and impressing other people.
 
Is there a third world shithole that isn't run like this? Westerns really have no clue just how bad corruption can get. This entire mentality of lying to get ahead is all over the place in China, When these people come to America, they don't see that we aren't like that, and instead double down on it. Yet another reason to not allow these people in.
Yep. People have no idea how awful corruption is outside of the West
Wait until China's real esate bubble bursts. It's already sagging, down maybe 10-20 percent, but
it's going to drop 80 percent when it really goes boom. The country could devolve into full scale civil war when all these families lose everything they have.
Yeah, the Chinese property bubble blowing will nuke the average Chinese family's life savings.
 
The peasants were already riled up about the shit economy, collapsing infrastructure, natural disasters, and so on. The CCP is trying to channel their anger against people like this to save its own ass.
Exactly, this outrage is just another form of state propaganda. The CCP encourages domestic cancel culture (look up the "human flesh search engine") to divert people's anger away from itself.

Remember, everything in China is fake. The only people on Earth who will lie to you more often and more brazenly are the Indians, and even then it's a close competition.
The difference is that Chinese know they're lying, they see deception as a strategic tool. Pajeets seem to truly believe their lies, witness how their entire country is in denial over their air force getting wrecked by Pakistan.
 
You can find Tiktok clips and pics from Chinese students, standing next to ALL the study material they had to use for their exams, it's beyond ridiculous.

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Can't say I blame her, really.
And yet, every time I had a Chinese student they were utter garbage. I mean, they were great at repeating learned sentences, but they were utter shite at thinking for themselves. Give them a task and they'll always say "Yes" when asked if they understood, check in on them an hour later and they didn't do shit because they didn't actually understand shit and refuse to ask for help if they need.
Fucking hated that attitude.
 
China is a weird fucking place.

People mock America but at least I can see how the sausage is being made. What the fuck is going on in China?
The nation of China as a whole is flat broke and hundreds of millions of Chinese are mad about losing their family + extended family's life savings because the banks shut down to prevent a run on them, it went as well as could be expected. Even police aren't getting paid, the government in China works different than the West: Provincial finances are separate from Beijing's (Beijing is the richest city, being the capital), which are separate from municipalities. The way the small towns and cities and provinces make money is by extorting their citizens, as all the sales tax money goes to Beijing. The only "legitimate" income these smaller entities receive are from leasing property, which is why there are hundreds of thousands of unfinished high-rise apartment / condo structures. The local government leases the land for 69 years to a developer, developer pre-sells apartments to pay the local government, never finishes or delivers the apartment (or delivers a shitty residence that will fall apart or over within 10 years), developer goes bankrupt, money is never to be recovered, local government tears down the unfinished already-sold structures before the 69 year lease has completed and start the same process over again.

The bank of China has set a limit on withdrawals to 200 yuan every two days, if you can even withdraw (many people have their accounts flagged for "review"), so you get to withdraw what amounts to 21 bucks every two days to live on, or trust the government controlled electronic yuan to approve your purchase of rice if they feel like you deserve to eat that day.

There is so much going on in China and none of it is good for the 700k regular citizens.
 
The nation of China as a whole is flat broke and hundreds of millions of Chinese are mad about losing their family + extended family's life savings because the banks shut down to prevent a run on them, it went as well as could be expected. Even police aren't getting paid, the government in China works different than the West: Provincial finances are separate from Beijing's (Beijing is the richest city, being the capital), which are separate from municipalities. The way the small towns and cities and provinces make money is by extorting their citizens, as all the sales tax money goes to Beijing. The only "legitimate" income these smaller entities receive are from leasing property, which is why there are hundreds of thousands of unfinished high-rise apartment / condo structures. The local government leases the land for 69 years to a developer, developer pre-sells apartments to pay the local government, never finishes or delivers the apartment (or delivers a shitty residence that will fall apart or over within 10 years), developer goes bankrupt, money is never to be recovered, local government tears down the unfinished already-sold structures before the 69 year lease has completed and start the same process over again.

The bank of China has set a limit on withdrawals to 200 yuan every two days, if you can even withdraw (many people have their accounts flagged for "review"), so you get to withdraw what amounts to 21 bucks every two days to live on, or trust the government controlled electronic yuan to approve your purchase of rice if they feel like you deserve to eat that day.

There is so much going on in China and none of it is good for the 700k regular citizens.
That sounds like an abject horror show.

Sitting in America, I'm not going to claim that we are doing things perfectly. But holy shit it sounds like we are doing things way better than China. It's like they took a 1,000 year old feudal shithole system and added computers.
 
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It's like they took a 1,000 year old feudal shithole system and added computers.
This is what happens when you advance too quickly, they never really had landline phones even in the 90s, jumped straight to cell phones / skype, which is why their electrical infrastructure is so shitty, not to mention the way they dammed the whole country for hydroelectric power, only for them to open the sleuth gates and flood the cities down-stream every single year, combined with the absolute lack of stormwater drains that function and you are in for a bad time. Anyone in the world would pick Detroit or Flint Michigan (pick the shittiest US city you want) over anywhere in China. This is why the smart ones are fleeing, even crossing the Darian Gap to get here... Tom Homan loves it when the CCP brings it's whole crew, just a bigger piece of cake for him to chew a hole through...
 
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