-
China is crashing towards a childless
society, while, surprise surprise,
-
the Chinese government is finding ways to make the
situation even more dystopian than it already is.
-
Welcome to China Uncensored. I’m Chris Chappell.
-
Well, it’s time to take a break from
fighting YouTube censorship.
-
..so we can fight Apple’s censorship.
-
I’m not
kidding. For the last few months,
-
we’ve been building you an
exclusive China Uncensored app.
-
Or at least, we designed it, programmed
it, and submitted it to Apple for review.
-
They typically approve or reject an
app within 48 hours, a week at most.
-
We submitted our app for review more than a
month ago, on January 24.
-
After two weeks, we hadn’t gotten a response,
-
so
we applied to expedite Apple’s processing.
-
Still no response. Weird. So
we pulled that version and resubmitted it,
-
hoping it would land with a new reviewer.
-
Still,
no response. Now it’s been more than a month.
-
No one from Apple has contacted us, and they
won’t approve or even reject our app—
-
which they probably won’t do, because they have no
legitimate cause to reject our app.
-
We tried everything we could.
-
And
now we’re concerned that Apple is actually censoring us
-
. But they
don’t want to explicitly say so,
-
so they’re ghosting us. An Apple
a day is keeping us away.
-
You might ask, But Chris, aren’t
you being paranoid? Maybe.
-
Except Apple has censored China Uncensored before.
-
Back in 2017, we built an app for Apple TV.
-
Apple approved it, but then immediately
blocked it in mainland China, Hong Kong,
-
and Taiwan. Their excuse?
-
“Apps must comply with all
-
legal requirements in any location
where you make them available”.
-
Well, our app did comply with
the laws in Hong Kong and Taiwan.
-
But it took 10,000 of you signing
this online petition to Apple to
-
pressure them to uncensor us.
-
Which was kind of
important since Uncensored is our whole thing.
-
So here’s what I want you to do now.
-
Sign our new petition calling on Apple
-
to NOT CENSOR the China Uncensored
App! The link is in the description.
-
But hey, maybe it’s all just a big
misunderstanding or just a simple
-
technical delay. That would be great. In
which case, the petition is just expressing
-
your enthusiastic support for the coming China
Uncensored iOS app. So thank you for signing.
-
Now back to the episode.
-
Chinese leader Xi Jinping is great with kids.
-
He gives them important lessons,
-
He shows them how to use a bucket safely,
-
and he even tackles them, just for a bit of fun.
-
Plus he sometimes sends them and their
families off to camps for free. What fun!
-
In fact, Xi’s many interactions with
-
Chinese children have landed him the
nickname “Grandpa Xi” in Chinese state media.
-
And that’s the only nickname he
has.
-
The rest definitely aren’t censored.
-
And Grandpa Xi and his government
are so stoked about children that
-
they want Chinese people to have more of them.
-
To achieve that, in recent years,
the Chinese authorities have rolled out
-
all sorts of incentives to try
to encourage Chinese baby-making,
-
from subsidies and tax breaks for families
-
to free fertility treatments
for couples trying to conceive.
-
Some local officials might have gone to the
task with a bit too much enthusiasm, though,
-
like those calling women to ask
whether they are pregnant, and,
-
if not, when they’re planning to be.
-
Which shouldn’t be a surprise.
Given how the CCP treats Taiwan,
-
you can tell they don’t respect boundaries.
-
Yet, despite all the various
attempts, it’s not working.
-
China’s birth rate is declining fast,
-
resulting in the national population
falling three years in a row now,
-
and it has set the stage for
China to become a severely aging society by 2035.
-
And that’s coming
from my favorite Chinese state-run media,
-
Global Times, and the CCP health authority,
-
so the situation might be even worse!
-
Hm, maybe if women get calls by even
more strangers from the government
-
asking probing questions, that’ll
put them in a baby-making mood.
-
The situation even appears to be accelerating,
-
as it came out recently that Chinese marriage rates
-
took a record-setting plunge in 2024 –
-
dropping by about a fifth compared to 2023.
-
That was an even deeper drop than during COVID,
-
leaving marriage numbers at their lowest
since record-keeping began in 1986.
-
And with family life in China centered around
the institution of marriage,
-
no weddings means no babies.
-
But as Chinese society races towards zero births,
-
it’s not just the prospect of an
aging society that’s raising alarms.
-
In fact, China is heading for a geographic
and ethnic sea change
-
the likes of which Grandpa Xi and his government have never
seen.
-
And really really don’t want to see.
-
You see, if there’s one thing Xi likes almost as much as growing the Chinese family,
-
it’s growing the Chinese countryside.
-
Literally. Here he is inspecting a vegetable
field in Hubei Province in late 2024 and
-
telling farmers how to do stuff.
-
Man, he just
loves telling people how to spread their seed.
-
But they love him for it in the rural areas,
-
as this very natural clapping scene suggests.
-
Such trips to the provinces are
part of Xi’s push to breathe new
-
life into the Chinese countryside
– a central mission of his.
-
Chinese development in the cities,
-
especially on the country’s east coast,
has long outpaced the development
-
in the countryside, creating one of the
largest rural-urban income gaps in the world.
-
At the same time, large parts of rural China are
plagued by issues such as soil degradation
-
and deindustrialization.
-
Do, uh… you have any helpful advice
for that, Grandpa Xi? Any at all?
-
But the declining birthrate is now putting
Xi’s rural development plans under threat.
-
It actually used to be that higher birth
numbers in rural China compensated for
-
the lower birth rates in the Chinese
cities, but that is no longer the case.
-
Today, births among young people in rural areas
-
are dropping more rapidly than
among their urban counterparts.
-
On top of that, Chinese people continue to
migrate from the countryside to the cities,
-
contributing to some rural areas
becoming severely depopulated –
-
a phenomenon referred to in China as
“hollowed out” towns and villages.
-
And it’s especially bad in some
of the regions bordering China’s neighboring countries
-
. These towns are
more hollow than one of the CCP’s promises.
-
Not far from the Chinese border
with Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam,
-
which is formed by the two
southern provinces of Yunnan
-
and Guangxi,
-
there have been accounts of border towns
and villages turning into ghost towns
-
after locals either died out or abandoned them
for better living elsewhere.
-
Which is bleak, but at least not as bleak as back
when places became ghost towns
-
because all the locals starved
to death.
-
Ain’t communism grand?
-
In the north, along the Chinese
border with Mongolia and Russia,
-
the situation is even more dire.
-
There, the population of the
region of Inner Mongolia fell
-
from almost 25 million people in
2010 to just 24 million in 2022,
-
and the province of Heilongjiang
went from more than 38 million people in 2010
-
to less than 32 million in 2020.
-
These declines have raised deep
concerns among the Chinese authorities,
-
with one government adviser
saying in November that
-
“to bolster national security amid
a countrywide demographic slide,
-
China should turn its eyes to the declining
populations of its towns bordering Central Asia”,
-
while the ever glorious Global
Times said last year that Inner Mongolia
-
is the "northern gateway" and
the "moat" of the capital city Beijing
-
that shoulders a major political
responsibility
-
in safeguarding national security and border stability.
-
The Global Times also reported that the
leader of Inner Mongolia had vowed to
-
implement “comprehensive measures to attract
more people to settle and live in border areas,
-
and ensure human shields- I mean
national unity and border security”.
-
While the population decline is
immense, it isn’t exactly clear, though,
-
what sort of immediate national
security threats could emerge from it.
-
After all, it’s rare to see Mongolian hordes
come riding down from the north these days,
-
and that’s what the Great Wall proudly
rises to protect against, anyway.
-
However, the Chinese Communist Party is
notoriously obsessed with appearing strong,
-
and having large stretches of the northern regions
looking like this doesn’t exactly signal strength.
-
Certainly not like Grandpa Xi’s super tough rough
housing.
-
What a tough guy! And an awesome grandpa!
-
China does have some real
reasons to want to appear strong.
-
For example, in the late 19th century,
-
when
China also looked weak on its northern front,
-
Russia seized the opportunity to
annex vast areas of Chinese territory.
-
Given the state of the China-Russia
relationship in the 21st century,
-
it seems unlikely that the Russians
would make a similar move again,
-
but then, few thought that Putin would
be crazy enough to invade Ukraine,
-
so, who knows. His promises are also
just as hollow as those ghost towns.
-
In China’s southern borderlands,
-
though, the potential effects of
depopulation are much more immediate.
-
In the south, the Chinese government has
long struggled to assert and maintain control
-
, especially along the nearly
1,400-mile-long border with Myanmar.
-
Not only is the cross-border area a patchwork
of ethnic minorities,
-
the dense jungle and mountainous terrain
-
also make large stretches
of the region difficult to traverse and monitor.
-
This makes the region a hotbed for illicit trade
and smuggling –
-
including people smuggling,
-
in which crime syndicates based in Myanmar have
lured Chinese people into the war-torn country,
-
where tens of thousands are currently
enslaved and forced to work as cyber scammers.
-
Of course, this explains why people
might want to leave the area,
-
but when locals begin rapidly disappearing,
-
either into Chinese cities or into Myanmar
-
scam centers, there’s not much left in
the towns to maintain a strong border.
-
But not to worry – Xi has an excellent way
to solve all of China’s rural problems.
-
He has called for Chinese youths to make
greater contributions to rural revitalization.
-
This sentiment was mirrored by an action plan
announced in 2023
-
by the local government in Guangdong Province
-
that aims to send 300,000
college students to the countryside by this year
-
. Which I’m sure is just what they
were hoping to gain from going to college.
-
This plan would have the added bonus of getting
unemployed youth out of the cities,
-
where they might stir up trouble and unrest
-
and start getting
crazy ideas about autonomy and freedom of speech.
-
The whole thing is also a fun throwback to the
Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s,
-
when millions of Chinese young people were sent to
the countryside to educate and be educated.
-
Oh, and a whole bunch of people
were killed.
-
You know… fun!
-
Xi himself has often spoken fondly about the time
he himself spent in a rural village back then.
-
Those were indeed splendid days,
-
with Chinese youths gathering to exercise
with hammers
-
on Chinese cultural treasures
-
and making oversized necklaces for
their friends and loved ones… fun!
-
But it’s not just decline and depopulation that
-
seem to be spurring desperate moves by the
Chinese authorities.
-
It’s the demographic shifts that come with it.
-
And I’m not
just talking about an aging society.
-
Because, while Han Chinese are experiencing
massively declining birth rates,
-
it’s a different matter for the more than 125 million people
-
that make up China’s 55 ethnic minority groups.
-
Regions such as Inner Mongolia,
-
Gansu Province,
-
and Guizhou Province…
-
have all experienced population decline
in recent years among Han Chinese,
-
but this was partly counterbalanced by
higher birth rates
-
among minority groups.
-
Across China, 13 percent of all newborns
had minority background in 2000
-
, and their population as a whole was estimated
-
to make up
almost 9 percent of the total population by 2020,
-
which is quite a change from the 1960s,
-
when they made up less than 6 percent.
-
Of course, Xi is super happy
with all minority groups,
-
and even sends some of them and their families
off to camps for free to thank them… fun!
-
Now, we do have to be a bit careful with
these numbers.
-
After all, they’re all based
-
on official Chinese figures, which, according
to researchers, aren’t always the most reliable,
-
due to low quality data collection
-
, incentives
for local governments to either inflate or deflate
-
certain population numbers, and the sensitivity
of the issue for the Chinese leadership.
-
This means that the actual minority population
of China and its growth could be higher
-
than what the official data shows,
-
which sounds like
a good thing, given that many minority groups
-
live in the border regions where Chinese
officials are fussing about depopulation.
-
But the Chinese authorities don’t
seem to be rejoicing about it.
-
For example, one of China’s fastest growing
minority groups,
-
the Turkic-speaking Uyghurs,
-
saw their birth rate almost cut
in half between 2017 and 2019,
-
according to the government’s own numbers.
-
That sudden drop coincided with an
intensified crackdown on the Uyghur people,
-
with mounting evidence indicating that many Uyghur
women have been coerced into taking birth control
-
and subjected to forced sterilization.
-
Which — and I’m no scientist or anything
-
— doesn’t sound like it’ll help
in the whole baby-making whatchamacallit.
-
Although few have experienced the same
draconian measures as the Uyghurs,
-
other Chinese minorities have been targeted, too,
-
including the Mongolians, who have
had their language banned in schools,
-
as well as the Tibetans, whose
children are increasingly getting
-
sent to Mandarin-dominated boarding schools,
-
while Tibetan educators are disappearing.
-
And measures that weaken children’s ties to
their parents’ culture
-
don’t sound like a strategy you use if you want people to have more
kids
-
It’s become more difficult for us to know
the effect of such policies,
-
however, as the authorities have stopped publishing statistics
on the birth rates of separate non-Han groups.
-
For…some reason.
-
But there are clearly a lot of signs that the
Chinese leadership are looking to restrict minorities
-
rather than tap into China’s ethnic
mosaic to alleviate the depopulation issue.
-
That’s not really a shock, as Xi is less the
poster boy for minority empowerment
-
and more the kind of guy that stresses Chinese
uniformity under the rule of the CCP.
-
But such posturing risks dealing a
heavy blow to China’s national birth rate
-
at a time when it’s already in free fall.
-
And with the current generation of young
Chinese people being small already as a
-
consequence of the one-child policy,
it’s unlikely that there are enough
-
unemployed youths in the cities to
revitalize the countryside and plug
-
all the expanding population
gaps in the border regions –
-
unless robot college graduates count.
-
So, despite the Chinese government’s
desperate attempts to lift the birthrate,
-
the leadership seems to be willing
to sacrifice population growth
-
at the altar of ethnic dominance for the Han Chinese.
-
I guess at least, as China approaches zero
births, the CCP is trying to make sure that
-
all of China across ethnic groups is
heading towards dystopia together.
-
While that certainly sounds grand,
it’s less “Grandpa Xi” grand
-
and more “Grandstanding Xi” grand.
-
And before you go, don’t forget to sign
my petition.
-
Apple—which just so happens to rely on the China market
-
for more
than $50 billion in revenue per year,
-
could be censoring the China Uncensored App,
-
by refusing to either approve it or reject it.
-
So click below and sign this petition to tell
Apple to not censor the China Uncensored App!
-
Once again, I’m Chris Chappell. See you next time.