The Jordan Harbinger Show - 643: Laowhy86 | How the Chinese Social Credit Score System Works Part One
Episode Date: March 29, 2022Laowhy86 (@laowhy86) -- aka Matthew Tye, aka C-Milk -- shared the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of life as an American in China on his YouTube channel for 10 years until he caught the a...ttention of the CCP and barely escaped. This is his story. [This is part one of a two-part episode. Stay tuned for the second part later this week!] What We Discuss with Laowhy86: What the Chinese social credit system is, the factors that increase or diminish someone's score, and the consequences someone with a low score faces. How the Kremlin is cribbing the Chinese Communist Party's propaganda playbook for its own nefarious purposes. Why, after 10 years of having mostly positive things to say about life in China, Laowhy86 suddenly found himself on the run from the authorities and barely escaping the country. How Laowhy86 went from lifestyle vlogging to covering things mainstream journalists couldn't (or wouldn't) touch. Myths perpetrated by the CCP that need to be dispelled. And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/643 Sign up for Six-Minute Networking -- our free networking and relationship development mini course -- at jordanharbinger.com/course! Miss the conversation we had with scambuster Coffeezilla? Catch up with episode 368: Coffeezilla | How to Expose Fake Guru Scams here! Like this show? Please leave us a review here -- even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
Again, it's one of those things that, oh, look, we can stop these, like, bad, rude people
by taking their image when they jaywalk before the crosslight comes on.
And then immediately on a screen next to it, they'll show their face.
In some cases, I've seen show their ID number, their government ID number,
and then say, this person has been fined or deducted points because they jaywalked.
And it's really dystopian and horrifying to see because you know,
So at least someone that with experience of China knows actually what that's being implemented,
what uses that is being implemented for, and not just jaywalking.
Welcome to the show. I'm Jordan Harbinger.
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Today, a good friend of mine and one of the first travel vloggers ever.
One of the first two vloggers living in China in the early odds living there for a decade.
He knows a lot about China and he knows it firsthand.
Again, he's a good friend of mine and a super interesting guy whose content I just love.
He's one of the only YouTubers I actually bother to watch.
Today, we'll uncover the Chinese social credit system, how it really works from the inside.
Matt, Lauwai, has actually read the actual Chinese government documents and translated them for us,
So we're going to discuss that, see how the system works and what it does.
Also, we'll hear how Matt had to literally escape from China,
just barely made it out of the country where he is now somewhat of a wanted man.
And finally, how propaganda methods on YouTube pioneered by the Chinese Communist Party
have been adopted now by the Kremlin,
which is why we're seeing a lot more pro-P propaganda online
that's eerily similar to the pro-CCP disinformation,
the pro-Chinese Communist Party disinformation,
that we're seeing online, especially on video sites like YouTube and other social media.
This is a two-parter with a lot to discuss.
Here we go with Lao Y.
So you've got this green screen, and as people can see if they're watching us,
and I suggested Ian put you in a fich tank, but I've watched your podcast on YouTube.
It's the only, I don't watch things on YouTube.
I certainly don't watch a podcast with two dudes talking to each other,
but your show I will watch most of the time, just because of the topic, yeah.
And, you know, we're friends that always helps.
I don't watch my other friend shows, so I don't know what I'm talking about.
But either way, there's the green screen you guys put like footage of China, just street in China.
Not like necessarily cars, but people riding around on their little bikes are like scooters or walking around in a shopping district.
And since you don't live in China anymore, I was asking how you got that footage.
And tell me what you just said, because that's like a perfect frame for this whole interview somehow.
Yeah, so we have some guys.
We have Chinese people.
We have a couple foreigners.
We have people that are sympathetic to what we're trying to do when we're trying to criticize and bring out the faults of the Chinese government and expose the lack of freedoms there.
And what they'll do is they'll go out with a tripod or their camera or whatever and they'll go film a street scene.
But all of the people like our detractors and people that try to rat us out or rat out people that help us to the Chinese government try to catch them.
What happens is they'll send us like a batch of footage that they've just taken two weeks prior.
And we'll use it two weeks later.
So then like when the cops are running around scrambling to find people who have shot that footage around a certain time that they think it's been shot, they can never catch them.
So it's pretty funny.
It's like this cat and mouse chase.
And we do it with multiple people in different cities around China.
So they still haven't caught anyone.
But they've come pretty close a couple times.
I mean, I guess it could be two weeks or it could be six months.
That's the beauty of it.
You could rotate something that you have that's old just so people aren't like, oh, good.
I look back two weeks.
It's like, no, no, no, no.
We're wasting tons of police officers.
by juggling clips that maybe got filmed for us
and also could be anywhere from 14 days to 14 months old.
Yeah, and some of the stuff is stuff that we took.
We shot, I mean, my buddy,
Winston Serpins Today, the first YouTuber in China,
he shot, I mean, I'm gonna say like probably 50 hours of footage.
Yeah. There's a lot of stuff to use.
Yeah, it's like, yeah, look what's going on
on top my window right now.
And it's like dudes and bell bottoms and stuff,
like rolling by roller skating on those four-wheeled roller skates
in miniskirts like, yeah, this is outside my window right now.
It dates the footage a little, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, someone's got like a G-shock watch that's that big.
I mean, to be honest, though, you'd still see people rocking Sherman Mao T-shirts.
You know, that doesn't date the footage at all.
So thanks for doing the show, man.
It's funny, we started off wanting to do this segment on Russian propaganda, Chinese propaganda.
It turned into a segment on propaganda on YouTube.
And then I was like, this is a good end of a show.
But we need to do the big.
beginning of the show, what am I going to do? And it was like, let's just work the entire weekend and
do a podcast instead of, you know, I don't know, sleeping and relaxing anything. For sure.
But I'm going to start by patting myself on the back, which I rarely do, but I gave you a great
idea for a video. Yeah. A really good one. And I couldn't make it. I wanted to know how the social
credit system in China actually worked. And I don't even know anybody you could answer it. Google
had almost no answers for this. And you were the guy to make it. The only video that's more
popular on your channel, by the way, is what's like your wife tries spicy food for the first time
or something? It's a Chinese girl tries American Chinese food for the first time, you know, the fake
stuff. Right. Yeah, like the sweet and sour or general chow's chicken or whatever. That's the kind of
stuff I used to shoot when I would be like visiting my parents from China to go back home, right? And I'd be
like, I have nothing to shoot. I have no content because I'm not in China. So I would go come up with
these like novel ideas basically. And that ended up being massively viral. Yeah. I feel like that
started a whole thing. Yeah, that is the most popular video that's ever been shot in my hometown of all time,
like ever. Well, I mean, to be fair, you're not exactly from a major city. I won't ask you to
docks yourself, but... No, I'm from upstate New York. There's not a whole lot going on out there.
Yeah. Yeah, exactly. So the point was not how boring your town was, but more about how the social
credit system is only becoming more and more interesting for people, myself and people listening,
because frankly, I'm not alarmist, like, we're going to have that in the United States,
but it's obviously being rolled out all through China, and it's only a matter of time till
every authoritarian regime is like, this is genius and it works really well, let's implement
something like that here. And North Korea, despite being technologically behind, has similar
things that are just done manually and on paper, and it's just a favorite thing with authorities.
I will have introduced you properly by now in the show, but you lived in China for eight plus years.
So you're not just like a dude who has great Google Fu and speaks Mandarin, right?
That's right. Yeah, I lived in China for 10 years. I lived in the south of China. So in Guangdong
province, if you think of Hong Kong, like the mainland part of that part that's connected to that.
Yeah. And I lived in Inner Mongolia, which a lot of people mix up with Mongolia proper. It's
China's Mongolian territory. I lived there for a while. I lived in Taiwan, which is not a part of
China. To be clear.
In between my China days. But yeah, 10 years total in China, saw the ups and downs really had
absolutely no intention of ever trying to cover journalistic type things. Very brief rundown.
I had my own business there. I met Winston, who's not here right now, but he was the first
YouTuber in China. We came together because we were both on YouTube. And there was no one else doing
it, right? So there's people asking us, like, why are you in China? Is it, are you going to die over there?
Like, what is it like? Is it super communist? You know, so we're like, we both kind of came together.
We're making these videos trying to show people that life is not like some alien planet.
It's interesting. And, you know, our family was worried about us. We want to show them that we're okay.
So we came together. We ended up sharing our love for motorcycles. We ended up starting a motorcycle
shop together where we built custom bikes. And because of that, we ended up doing some self-funded
documentaries together where we rode across the entire country and just documented all the good
stuff that we saw. All the documentaries we had seen would be some massively high production BBC
thing or Chinese state media thing. We wanted nothing to do with that stuff. We wanted to go out there
and show people rural China. And when I say rural China, I'm not necessarily talking about like some
backwoods areas. It's just they're not the city centers that everyone's already seen. So we did that
and we predominantly just showed them the amazing parts of China. But in that time, we, we,
We watched China's regime go from kind of this golden period where they wanted to be a world
player.
They wanted to be on the world stage.
They wanted people to look at them and say, hey, China's opening up.
And then go from that into extreme paranoia.
I want to say almost overnight, we started to notice it getting really bad around 2015
and then really peaking around 2017 to where if you were a dude with a camera walking around
the streets of China, even if you're showing the good things, you have police minders,
You have people following you, have people reporting on you,
you have everyone watching your every move.
And that really came to a head when we were filming our second documentary
and it was called Conquering Northern China.
What we were doing was we were filming, again, just people in China,
their daily lives, their normal experiences.
And we were meeting up to some interesting Mongolian tribes.
We met some really cool people that herded reindeer,
awesome stuff like that.
And we were in a town on the Mongolian border with Mongolia proper.
And that night, we were raided by the SWAT team with automatic weapons, body cameras.
There were detectives there.
Wow.
Just so people don't, you know, they have an incentive to go listen to our stories.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, of course, link to the videos.
Like, I watched dozens and dozens and dozens of your videos, but we'll link to the ones that are relevant.
And, of course, the channels and the show notes.
So the concern was is that there was a foreigner in a region that is apparently a highly contested area.
Made a couple phone calls while all of us were getting separately interrogated.
And I called somebody that was pretty high up in the province.
And they, in fact, called their uncle who confirmed that we were in an area that had a lot of separatist violence.
A lot of Mongolian people in this town wanted to be part of Mongolia.
Had nothing to do with China.
And they were pissed off.
Their language is being removed from public schools.
Their culture was being stamped on.
They got harassed by the army all the time, the Chinese army, the PLA.
And they thought that we were some sort of journalists, like rogue journalists that were on the road, masquerading like we're filming cultural stuff,
but actually were going to film that story.
And they were so worried it was going to be the foreigners
that broke the Tibet stories or the Xinjiang stories.
But long story short, it was this culmination of propaganda.
So throughout the entire trip, which, by the way,
let me jump in.
If they had never told you that,
you would never have really paid attention to that.
And the story would have still been under wraps.
But instead, they were like,
let's make a huge deal about this and highlight it
so that they wonder why this happened and investigate.
And now all these skeletons are popping out of the closet,
which is kind of like hilariously ironic.
What an epic film.
Yes.
We were literally filming horse milk.
Okay, they milk horses and they make alcohol out of it.
And that would have stayed that way.
We just needed a place to crash.
And it turns out, of course, because they harass us so much, I ended up when I moved
back to the U.S., doing 10, 20 hours of research on this, calling people, asking questions,
figuring out the region and actually breaking that story.
That was what their nightmare was.
That could have been avoided from day one.
And I found this to be the case over and over again,
because later on the trip, the PLA,
the People's Liberation Army stopped us,
took apart all of our equipment,
took our photos.
I actually snuck a little GoPro footage that.
We actually found that the other day, which is great.
But long story, sure,
I was harassed by the police over and over and over again,
whether it be Swatim, detectives, PLA.
It dawned on me that this was not the China that I moved to.
This was not the China that I was in love with,
that I was showing people.
That actually, in turn, caused me to look more into what the paranoia was
all about. So I would meet people and have more personal conversations about what life is like for them.
And if you get to know someone in China, especially in some of these minority regions where it's not
only Han Chinese people. The Han people are like 90% of the population. If you go to these areas,
it's not like the propaganda. We all live in harmony. We all live in unity and stuff.
The audience probably has heard a lot about, you know, the problems in Xinjiang and the genocide
of the Uyghurs. All this stuff comes about because the Chinese government treats the minority
people like they're not human, right? They belittle them. They don't give them the same opportunities.
You might read on that they get easier entrance exam scores or something like this, like affirmative action
stuff. But by and large, they don't integrate them into society properly. And that causes a lot of
issues. But it's not just that. It doesn't, and a lot of people might turn off at the idea that,
oh, okay, the Chinese government doesn't treat their minorities well, but maybe for the 90% of population,
it's good. No, they marginalize the poor or even, you know, the emerging middle class. People don't
have rights until they're exorbitantly wealthy.
And that became an issue, and that's something I want to speak out upon when I move back
to the U.S., but I don't know if you want to get into how I ended up leaving China.
I will in a bit, but now that we've sort of given this frankly really good intro that I
wouldn't have been able to do myself, so thanks for that.
I'm going to save your, you said leave China, I'm going to say escape China.
I'm going to save that story for a little bit.
I want to talk about one of the more dystopian elements of Chinese society.
And every show I do about China, I've always got to say.
this. It's not about Chinese people. It's about the Chinese regime, the CCP, Chinese Communist
Party in particular. So if you are Asian and you're offended by this, you don't have to be,
unless you work for the Chinese Communist Party, in which case, shame on you. But everybody else is
fine. We're all in the same team here. We're all in the same team here, exactly. Look, the best
thing for China or for Chinese people, I should say, is to live in a more free regime than the one
you're forced to deal with now. Wouldn't be doing this if I didn't have extreme love. Of course. I'm
still going to get a ton of crap for that, but I don't care. At least I can say that I said it and that
it's clear. But one of the more dystopian elements of Chinese modern society is the social credit
system. And that was sort of the initial like, hey, let's make a show about this kind of idea.
So it's not, I originally, before I saw your video, I almost thought it was like the Black
Mirror episode where people are raiding one another. If you've seen that, where it's like,
oh, you know what, she never paid me back for dinner that jerk, you know, two stars or like,
this person is cussing in the middle of them all, one star.
It's not like that.
It's a little bit more, I don't know, formalized, if that's the right word.
Sure.
I think it's really important for people to understand that the social credit system,
when you look at it through the lens of something like pop culture, like Black Mirror,
it becomes, it's not realistic and you're not going to pay attention to it.
That's when you get the memes.
You get the John Cena memes, right?
This whole all became super popular when people were making all these memes about
John Cena and how he was shilling for the Chinese government,
and then his social credit score would go down.
And that stuff's hilarious, absolutely funny.
But in reality, it's not like a glorified Yelp review.
It's not, you're not going around and like writing people out and scanning their face and
putting them into some database and making their credit score to go down.
Not yet.
Because not yet.
When you recommended this topic to me, it put me on a month or two long escapade of trying
to figure out what it was.
And I was tired.
I was tired of watching videos in my research, you know, put out by, I'm not going to name
names, but put out by other journalists and stuff like this that weren't.
lies, but they were very simplified versions that made it sound like this was some widespread
entity that every single person has to do within China. And that kind of pissed me off because
I knew that that wasn't the case. I was talking to people and they were like, we, I don't even
know what that is. Right. One of the things that I initially thought was, hey, it's like a FICO
score and we have credit scores here in the United States. What's the big deal? But as we'll see,
it's more invasive. It's based on a lot of factors that you would never be able to rate someone on
here in the United States and the effects that it has go well beyond whether or not you can borrow money
to buy a house or a car. Right. I like to say it's worse and not as bad as what you think. It's just
different than what you think. So I found out that it had been implemented in a city called Rongchung.
Rongchung is in northern China in a province called Shandong. Shandong is famous for having a lot of
communist projects be tested out. So when I was there multiple times, what I noticed there would be
what you think, these utopian communist villages,
with a hammer and sickle stamp and everything's beautiful and well manicured and taking care of
wildly different than the rest of the country. And for some reason, this I like to call Shandong province
the darling child of the CCP. They love to implement their dreams, their goals on things. And it's
actually pretty picturesque. I mean, that's where you see the wind turbines. That's where you see a lot of
the solar farms. That's where you see a lot of these picture perfect kind of Chinese villages where
the water's clean flowing through. And it's just so diametrically opposed to what you see.
some of the other places. So what I notice is it is Rongchung place is famous for, we went to go film
there. It was famous for having these ancient Chinese houses. It almost looks like a dwarf village
from Lord of the Rings or something where these roofs are made out of seaweed. And they use the seaweed,
they dry it out and they make it into like a hatched roof. And it's very beautiful. But at the same
time, it's also not real. It's something that's been set up for propaganda. It used to be like
that, but the old remnants of that are gone, right? It's used as kind of like a set piece.
We actually found out when we were there that BBC had manufactured a lot of their footage when
they went to go shoot there. We met a guy there who was like the village chief or whatever,
and he took us around. He's like, hey, do you want me to go pay a bunch of people to put some
seafood in the sand and then go pay people to go dig them up for you on camera? And we're like,
why would we do that? We want to film reality, right? And he's like, oh, that's what the BBC did.
And we're like, oh, my God. Really?
Like, oh, this is just a fisherman.
Look, he's found a cra-
Those cockles.
They were looking for cockles.
Wow.
The famous cockle village, you know, is this big thing that they did.
And we were like, no, we'd rather film like, whatever you do a normal daily life.
So we didn't manufacture any footage.
Wow.
So the gas station attendant's like, you mean to tell me, you're going to give me $10 to go out
to the beach, pretend I dug this up and then just start eating it.
So I'm going to make $10 today.
You know, that's so disappointing because I love watching things like wild China and planet
earth and to hear that it's just like, yeah, we can either stay here for a week and wait for something
to happen or pay the guy down the road to make it look like it happen. If that, oh, that's such a
bummer. That was something I learned when we self-funded our documentaries. We didn't know we're doing it.
And we had two camera guys that we were friends with that were really good at shooting stuff. But we were
just, we want to go show what we saw in real life. And that was so different than what,
like, a big production team does. It was disappointing, but it was also interesting to see.
And it's not even BBC thing aside. That's not even necessarily their fault 100%.
It's the reality of how things work in China.
So for BBC to film there, they would have had to get Chinese government party approval to shoot there.
And so what would have happened is they would have had minders go and set things up for them as well.
A lot of what you see from Chinese, like anything media related to China is a big farce.
But Rongchung, the city in general, is, again, this darling child of the Chinese Communist Party.
And they chose that to be the litmus test for how well the social credit system is going to work.
And I found the actual government official documents from the Chinese government and how they were going to implement it and how they are implementing it in Rong Chung.
Wow.
How did you get those?
Well, honestly, I just started looking up, you know, the social credit system on the Chinese internet.
And it wasn't anything that was being hidden.
It hadn't become a stigma yet.
It wasn't really a thing that China wasn't trying to sweep under the rug yet because it's something they're proud of, right?
Right.
So they weren't thinking like, this is totally creepy and weird as hell that we're doing it.
We should hide this.
They were like, look at this great idea to rate everyone based on jaywalking.
In fact, I found it on like a Chinese law blog or something like this, right?
And they actually went later.
They went later to say, like, if you've come here from Lao I-86's video, that's completely
false.
This is absolutely not true.
Like, this is just like a reference paper or something like this.
They were like, because they didn't know it was going to blow up into something like
this, right?
They didn't know it would get so much press.
Again, it was for domestic population reading only.
it was supposed to be something people were proud of.
So what I did was I went through and I just translated verbatim what was in the document.
So you had things like how people lose and gain points.
What they came up with was a system where everyone's been allotted a thousand points.
Think of a video game.
Think of like you're building your character in an RPG.
You're allotted a thousand skill points, right?
And you can either go above that allotment or you can go below that allotment.
And depending on how far you've gone above it or below it,
it, you're rated. You got an A plus plus. You got a B, you got a C, you got all this kind of stuff.
And based on what level you are in society, you're allowed certain privileges or certain
privileges are taken away. So in Rongchung, where they worked on this, you would have things like,
if you're spreading rumors, you'd get points deducted. If you donate your organs, you'll get some points
added on. Your own organs or someone else's that you're related to. That's the thing I don't
understand. It's like, fine. I'm really in the hole on this social credit thing and take a kidney or worse.
I honestly, I couldn't tell you how that works. But anyway, you have a lot of different situations.
Basically, a lot of them revolve around like, did you jaywalk? Did you spit? Did you talk badly about the party
online? A lot of this stuff was related to, did you go on a forum and say something bad about the
Communist Party of China, right? Yeah. All of this revolved around creating a model citizen,
which wasn't necessarily, is this person going to be an altruistic person to help someone
cross the street? More so, is this person going to talk shit about the Chinese government?
And we should punish him if he does. So that's basically how it worked.
You're listening to The Jordan Harbinger Show with our guest, Lau Y86. We'll be right back.
If you're wondering how I managed to book all these great authors, thinkers, and creators
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LaWai. I wrote the ratings down. And I
I want to go through these just briefly.
There's like AAA or AA, which is above baseline.
Like, this guy's great.
A is a model citizen.
And what was shocking to me, and again, I guess it makes sense that they didn't know
that this was going to be stigmatized and blow up.
But there's an advantage getting into schools and in getting jobs, especially government jobs.
And this is the official sort of position, as I understand it, right?
It's not like a speculation.
It's written in the dang document that that is what they're going to do.
Yeah.
So that to me was shocking because usually you'd be like, well,
We'll just wink, wink, wink, nudge, we only let A, AAA, and A apply here.
It's like, no, you should do this because you will get a better chance of getting public education
if you are doing everything the government wants you to do.
So that was kind of insane.
B rating, you're on some kind of probation.
C, government inspectors are coming over to your house and checking on you.
It's locked status for three years, right?
So like it just, no matter how great you are, you can go to every pro-government thing
and donate all your organs,
you're still going to be at a sea level
for three years, no matter what.
And then the lowest one,
which is the blacklist.
The blacklist, which is,
this is amazing to me,
it's public.
So you're getting shamed,
like, at an airport
on a flat screen TV or something like that
because your face will show up.
Or a movie theater.
Or a movie theater?
Okay, yeah,
and it's locked for five years.
The government inspectors are coming over to your house.
You can lose your job.
And I meant to tell you this, man.
My Chinese teachers,
I asked about this.
And most of them said,
they didn't use it because like you said it's only in a couple of cities, but one of them said they
did. And what was really interesting was on WeChat, which is like Facebook plus Instagram,
plus TikTok, plus Snapchat, plus your text messaging app and PayPal all in one over in China,
and Google for that matter. She was chatting with her friend on WeChat and he had his D status
or at least some negative status in WeChat and it said something like this person doesn't pay debts.
Correct. Yes. Yeah. So like that guy that she was friends with owed someone or someone or
some company money, and since he didn't pay, they were like, hey, if you're talking to your friend
here, just so you know, they owe people money and don't pay. They're a scumbag. And she was like,
what is that? And he's like, yeah, it's some crap that I got to deal with now.
You know, what's kind of creepy was the amount of people that saw, they cherry picked, like,
I'm talking about my Western audience, they cherry picked things that they thought were like
based or good. So they would say, like, a lot of people would look at your Chinese teacher's
friend who is kind of locked into that de-status.
where he's getting publicly shamed for owing money.
And they would be like, oh, that's cool.
That means that he won't be scamming people in the future, right?
Right.
And that's the worrying thing was that if China wants to market this properly,
what I see it foresee happening is they're going to run a campaign,
a propaganda campaign with a bunch of Westerners talking about how the social credit system
is not as nefarious as they think.
They'll cherry pick things like, oh, see, they get rewarded for donating charity, right?
But they won't focus on things like, oh, but they get punished for,
talking to their friend at a coffee shop about how Xi Jinping shouldn't have too much power.
Yeah.
It's kind of a slippery slope, right?
Absolutely.
When I was going through these documents, I was astounded at how well thought out it was
and how kind of concrete these things were.
But what I did find out was that this was only implemented in Rongcheng to that degree.
And actually, the social credit system is not some cohesive, unilateral thing from the
central government.
Although it ultimately stems from the central government, it's being experimented with in different
cities with different problems. So they'll take a problem that a certain city has or a perceived
problem the Chinese government thinks that a certain city has. Let's say it's gambling. Let's say it's
protesting. Something that the government doesn't like and they will craft or draft their own
document for that city, for their own schematics, what gives and takes away points. However,
there are baseline things. Like any time that you're talking badly about the government is
definitely going to be a thing that's everywhere, right? Right. One thing I found very
interesting was it's also a way to secretly stop people from kind of posting or talking about
their transgressions with the Chinese government while telling the public that they are allowing
people to do that. And that's because technically in the Chinese constitution, you can go petition
to Beijing. So Beijing's a capital of China. Let's say I have a factory that opened up next to my
house, very common occurrence. The groundwater gets poison and all the kids get cancer. Happens all the time,
actually. And you can't do anything. You go to your local official. They threaten to kill you.
They threaten to punish you, right? This is just some really horrific things that happen in the
Chinese countryside. So what do you do? You get helpless. You go to the provincial government.
They kick you down the road. They're like, yeah, whatever, we'll look into it. Then your last step is
you legally have the right to go to the hall of the people in Beijing and walk up and post your
petition and say, listen, this is going on in my city, please deal with it. So what the social credit
system has done, at least in Rongchung here, is if you go and take your transgressions to the
central government, your social credit score goes down. Right. So if you are actually legitimately
following the Chinese law to go tell Xi Jinping's government that I'm doing, I don't like what's
happened in my village, then you actually get deducted and you become less of a model citizen to do
so. I found that insane. That's crazy backwards because the most civically minded people who are like,
hey, there's kids getting poisoned in the countryside. Nobody knows about it. I've got evidence.
the local authorities are covering it up, they're corrupt, you take that person and you go,
fine, but now you can't send your kids to school, get an education, and you're going to lose
out on getting a passport or being able to travel. But thanks for your report. You're forcing
those people into silence, but that's got to be by design. It's almost like out of sight,
out of mind. Like, look, they never reported it to us, the local authorities, whatever, it's their
job to handle it. And it sort of cuts down on probably paperwork, and also they have plausible
Deniability that they never knew about it if they forced people to report to the corrupt local
officials.
It was actually a great concrete example.
Recently, you guys might have seen the chained woman.
This woman basically in Eastern China, she was chained up.
And this guy that had her chained up, he was famous in his village in Eastern China for having
eight children and being such a hero and raising them all himself.
What actually was happening was he had this woman chained up and she was birthing all these
children and making him famous, right?
So some people that were watching his live streams went over to go check it out, you know, to visit him and say, you know, what's up? How's it going? This is your, you're my hero or whatever. And they found this chained up woman in the back that had been being abused, right? Sexually abused. Oh my God. She had been human trafficked, right? The Chinese government's response, again, people were upset about this, obviously. People in China are humans just like anyone else. They get mad when something like this happens. They think it's an injustice. But they have no recourse, unlike someone in a person.
America, right? So what happened was the initial government response was to hide everything, right?
They said, anybody that goes in and out of the village get their license plate. Anybody that has
been spotted talking to people in this village arrests them, interrogate them. Make sure you find out
who leaked out this information that this woman was chained up, not go save the woman.
Right. Not go figure out how this human trafficking thing happened. That happened way later. And they
they lied about what happened as well. But anyway, that's how China works. When you have a top-down
authoritarian system, at least the way the China operates, is that nobody wants to be held accountable
for anyone's actions. So when the top says, go do this, no one can report back and say, hey, it didn't
work out. They'd lose their job, potentially their life when something like that happens. And that's
kind of how the government's structured within the social credit system is that we don't want to hear
about it. We don't want to hear about your problems. And we don't want to scare people into being
in servitude to their local governments instead of the central government getting their transgressions
or what they're upset with.
Man, I just, that is horrific, of course.
And your channel has a lot of examples like this
and everything's sourced nicely.
I do want to just briefly cover
how you can get your rating to go up and down
because it does seem like, well, wait a minute,
this is a really good idea.
Like on its face before you look deeper and go,
oh, it causes corruption
and it causes people not to report on things
among other injustices.
Like, look, if you return lost money, you get points.
If you report on a dangerous religious cult,
you get points.
Well, wait a minute.
what does that mean?
Right, that's one of those, like, almost anything could be defined as that
if somebody has a hard on for any local church or church leader or religious leader
or non-religious leader, right, spiritual, anything.
Resolving a dispute between neighbors, cool, all right, good neighbors.
Helping cops get criminals, all right?
Now we're getting dodgy again, right?
Because it's like, are we wanting people to narc on everybody just to get their points up
because they're a little bit low?
Donating organs, hopefully your own or somebody that is dead that is closely related
to you. I don't know. We'll put a little asterisk next to that one. If your kid does well in sports
or joins the Army or wins some sort of award, you get points. And if you win something like a medal
in the Olympics or a national award, you get points as well. Those are the big ones. Yeah,
absolutely. And actually, I'm glad you brought this up, Jordan, is the joining the Army thing.
Joining the Army in China is something that people have always looked down on. I mean, I don't want to
use, like, crass language or anything, but people kind of think you're a scumbag if you join the Army.
Really? Yeah.
Unless you're like a super high up general, by the way, if you are a general in the Chinese army, you are probably one of the most powerful people in the country, more so than a lot of government officials.
But if you're some, you know, you're just like 18, 20 years old, you want to join the army, they don't pay for anything. You have to pay for everything yourself, basically. You have to go and do odd jobs, haul lumber.
What? Yeah. You have to do things like that. Yeah. It's a very low position. And it's either the home of children that are getting in trouble in school or really poor people.
that just don't have any options to go to university or something like this.
So to reward people for doing that in this time
where I'm now seeing a lot of propaganda coming out of the central government
that are trying to glorify soldiers and the army
and being in defense of their nation
in a time where they've portrayed to their entire domestic populace
that the West wants everyone dead in China, right?
The U.S. and American people and the American government wants to kill China.
So they've kind of stirred up a lot of nationalism,
a lot of patriotism,
and they're trying every avenue possible to get rid of that.
that stigma that somebody joining the army is actually a low, a low thing.
And there's so much pro-armie propaganda out in China right now, the movies, the TV shows,
you know, everything around the online discussion, they're really trying to push that narrative
in that direction.
It's a little worrying.
It's really tying into that paranoia and nationalism that I saw right before I left.
Man, that's disconcerting, right?
Because whenever you see a major world power start throwing propaganda, like America does this
where it's when they go on recruiting drives, it's like, well, crap, what are we going?
gearing up for now, right? And when you see that from a world power that's opposite to your own,
you see that in Russia, it's like just not a good look, man. Yeah. It's sort of a warm up for a prelude
to conflict. Things you can do that'll bring your rating down. This is a little more interesting,
right? Negative info on we chat about the government. So if you're texting your friend and they
see it because they see everything, right, they're hoovering up that data. If you're talking about
the government, that's no good. Overdrafting your bank card, tax evasion, speeding, parking tickets,
or disruption, underground meetings is a shady one, because what's that? Like, talking about or doing
anything that you don't want other people to know about? Well, that's a little invasive.
That's usually religious, yeah.
Yeah, that's what it sounds like, right? And then, of course, you get, remember, you get points for
narcing on those, so there's that. Correct. Breaking the two-child policy, reporting a grievance
outside your local jurisdiction, which we just talked about. I love this one. Not properly
sorting your recycling. That's a fun one. You know what the great thing about that is?
What? It all ends up in the same place anyways?
Yes.
I mean, I'm not even...
I have video evidence of this.
There are bins in China where it says recycling and garbage and it's the same bag.
If you go on to the other side of it, they'll say garbage and recycling.
They didn't even paint it on properly.
So people are just chucking it all in the same place.
It's so sad, but it's also...
The reason I'm laughing is because I've always had this, like, dumb two-cent conspiracy theory
that a lot of the crap we recycle is already started by a machine,
and they don't really need us to do it.
But it's just a bunch of nonsense.
Or we sort all those numbers and then they just throw 80 to 90% of it away,
which turns out is actually true.
Sure.
Because, you know how the little triangle says like one, two, three, four, five?
They can only do something with like one and four.
The other ones, you could recycle it if you were willing to spend like an unlimited amount
of energy doing it.
And they just don't.
They just landfill it.
But it says it's recyclable.
It's such a sham.
I'm going to do a show about that.
So it's a sham everywhere then.
It's a sham everywhere.
But it's worse if it just goes into the same dang bag.
What's the point?
They just want you to, they want to know that you'll do what they tell you to do.
Throw that in the recycling bin because it's recyclable.
Okay, cool.
And then after that, they're like, whatever, it's still going in the landfill.
It's just really important that people use the garbage and recycling thing as an analogy for how the structure of the Chinese government works.
And that is as long as the leadership got their face, as you say in Chinese, they got their face.
It means they got their reputation.
They bolster their reputation from whatever they put out there, whatever.
Like, oftentimes you'll see cities in China awarded as the green city of China.
China. And it turns out there's like 500 green cities of China and it could be in a polluted
dystopian wasteland with coal factories everywhere. But that leader of that city bribed the right
person to get that award and then they got their face. They got their prestige and they got their
rank higher in the government. And that's a lot of how China operates. And that's a lot of what I
cover is the absolute hypocrisy of that because if you look at Chinese propaganda, it's that everywhere
else in the world is failing while China is succeeding. What they're doing is just projecting exactly
the same weird dystopian lie, you know, propaganda that they practice in their own country.
Yeah, that's interesting.
Because again, people will go, well, what about the United States?
Which one is what aboutism.
But two, the point is you can't go and say everything is great here and never admit to your
mistakes.
I think one of the great things is people will say, well, what about the United States?
What about the United States?
I hear that all the time.
And I'm thinking, nobody complains about America more than Americans.
Literally no one.
Find me a group of anyone anywhere in the world,
maybe aside from North Korea
who just can't stop talking about the Korean War,
find a group that hates elements of America
more than people who live here,
but still love the country.
Like, just find one and you can't do it.
But in China, you're not allowed to do it.
And that is the point that I think,
one of the points that I think we're making here
is you're not allowed to do anything about this
if you live there.
Correct. That's exactly well sent.
And last thing here that can bring your rating down,
not showing up for an online dinner reservation.
And they almost had me with that one, man.
They almost had me with that one.
Would you be screwed to that?
That's one of those where I'm like,
you know,
what if you put your name in the Yelp waiting list
and you just don't show up?
But then I thought, you know,
they just go on to the next party
so it's not that big of a deal.
Yeah.
But on a personal level when people don't show up for things,
I'm like, I want to downgrade your rating as a friend.
I'm doing it in my head.
I just don't have a formal way to put it into practice.
When you're finished with your Chinese lessons
and you achieve fluency,
you can go apply to the CCP,
and they might give you the position
that punishes people
that don't show up for reservations.
That's right.
I'll be like, oh,
you said you were going to be here
to pick up your bubble tea,
but you're not even here,
now I've got to throw this thing away,
negative five.
Yes.
What factors go into this?
Of course, they take your credit, right?
If you overdraft your bank account,
that's just pure credit slash banking stuff.
They must be looking at your rest record, right?
What about your grades and stuff?
Oh, for sure.
I mean, it depends on where you are, again,
and how they're going to implement this in the end.
But I think it's important to point out,
I talked to a bunch of people around from different places fairly recently
to find out what they were doing in certain areas.
And education turns out to be a huge unifying factor in a lot of this.
Not only are they looking at people that they don't want their children to be in certain schools
because those people are considered unsavory by the government.
They want to punish either government officials or citizens that have attributes of their family,
kind of psyche that are against authoritarianism or against a CCP in some way. But also,
just looking at people that are not performing like they should. I mean, this utopian dream that
Xi Jinping has created, where he calls it moderate prosperity. Modern prosperity means everyone
should be, it's kind of a pistake of the American dream, but like worse. It's like everyone
should be at good enough level and everyone should be there and meet each other in the middle,
basically. No one should be super high and no one should be super low. While that's kind of noble,
in its efforts, they do punish people
for not performing to a certain level.
So there was a thing during China's golden period,
I always call it maybe early to mid-2000s
where the kids that were previously
like working their asses off and studying like crazy
and going through the really torturous education system
in China, because there's more money,
there's more influx.
People can go out to McDonald's or something like this.
There was a last incentive to be like,
our family's going to starve if our child doesn't do well.
So more kids were screwing around.
You know, you saw kids going to get tattoos and smoking cigarettes now.
Stuff that was you'd never think of 10, 20 years ago and skipping school and going to hang out at the arcade, right?
All this kind of stuff that you would never picture trying to doing was starting to happen.
So the social credit system really plays into trying to get kids to stop doing that kind of stuff too.
Huge punishments, huge deductions for kids that are not performing as well as they should in school.
And also getting them knocked out of whatever school they're in and put it put into some other subprovincial school.
Man, that's wild to look at your grades, arrests, credit.
You mentioned there's 200 million surveillance cameras, so they're taking, are they taking
data from those somehow?
I mean, I've seen the J-WAT cameras.
Maybe you should tell us about those.
They're at least using that.
Yeah, so facial recognition technology has become pretty ubiquitous around any major
city in China.
So for example, and honestly, a lot of people are proud of it.
To go to a vending machine scans your face, right, which is attached to your Wi-Chat ID,
which again, like you said,
is kind of like Facebook mixed
with everything you've ever heard of
inside your bank account.
And it's deducting money from there
just by looking at your face
after you click the Coke button or whatever.
I've seen a lot of funny memes actually
where there's a chick or a girl
or whatever a dude
trying to push the soda button.
And then he immediately before it scans his face,
you know, ducks down the next person in the line
gets scanned so they get charged for it.
Oh, that's like a funny meme.
That's like Hardy Har, Har, we're under massive surveillance.
Yeah.
But it also works with buses, right?
Instead of your bus ticket or whatever,
instead of scanning your phone QR code
attached to your bank account.
Now, it's facial recognition technology.
I heard a lot of this is pretty janky, to be honest,
but it is being used.
The surveillance cameras are all over China.
They're scanning your license plate.
Some of them are scanning your face,
trying to identify your attributes
to connect you to your social credit score,
to your status and society,
to what you've done online, posted online, that kind of stuff.
And they use that for, well, their excuse is to catch criminals.
What it's actually being used for is people, identifying people that are having illegal meetings
or talking, again, badly about the government.
I can't harp on enough about how much of this boils down to trying to catch people
that are talking badly about the government.
It's really the be-all and end-all of all this stuff.
You can use j-walking or you can talk about letting your dog shit in the park or something.
You tell you're blue in the face.
Like, is that being a source of you,
losing points, but really what they're trying to do is finding dissidents in stopping and preventing
future crimes, so to speak, which is dissent against the Chinese government. So with the jaywalking
cameras, again, it's one of those things that, oh, look, we can stop these like bad, rude people
by taking their image when they jaywalk before the crosslight comes on. And then immediately on a
screen next to it, they'll show their face. In some cases, I've seen show their ID number,
their government IT number,
and then say this person has been fined or deducted points
because they jaywalked.
And it's really dystopian and horrifying to see
because you know,
at least someone that with experience
of China knows actually what that's being implemented,
what use is that is being implemented for,
not just jaywalking.
This is the Jordan Harbinger show
with our guest, Lauai 86.
We'll be right back.
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Please consider supporting those who support this show. Now for the rest of Part 1 with LaWa 86.
Look, the idea that it encourages people not to scam or spit on the ground or pee on a wall,
that sounds great. And it sounds like a handy tool to punish criminals. And a tool that's only
slightly more invasive than a credit score. But the problem is, like you said,
minority report, right? You're being treated badly as a result of your past, even in the future.
It's almost like felons here in the United States. If they were, and they're mistreated in a lot of
ways, but this is like computerized and institutionalized. Like Gordon, you're not supposed to be
able to tell a felon that they can't do a whole bunch of stuff like book a flight. Here's some real
consequences from the social credit score. You're deprioritized for school and
jobs, which is already hard enough, like if you have a criminal record to get a job, even if it has
nothing to do, your crime had nothing to do. If you sold weed in college, now you're having a
hard time getting a job when you're 30 because that's still on your record, right? It's ridiculous.
That's right. You can't book rail tickets. You can't book flights. That doesn't make any sense
to me. Like, that's purely a punishment that just kind of goes in the general category.
Like, you're not bad enough to put in prison. We're just going to make your life a huge pain in the
neck. What's going on there? And I know they've denied a lot. This isn't like some people. It's
It's like millions of people can't book flights in it and train tickets.
I'm glad you said denied because not only have they denied millions of people this privilege,
but they've also denied denying those people.
Okay.
Privilege, right?
They will go out and people make excuses for this and say, hey, there's a reason for this.
They were a flight risk.
They were some sort of participant in terrorist activities or something, so you wouldn't let them
on public transport.
But really, when you look at it, it's a lot of people that are just dissidents.
And I don't even mean dissidents like let take down the CCP standing in front of Beijing
with a placard. You can't do that. You'll ship you away and you'll never be seen again if you do that.
I'm talking about people that in a WeChat group told, hey, be careful, there's cops pulling people
over on so-and-so street, right? Because people have been arrested and deducted for those activities.
And what happens is, is they want to make sure that people that are unsavory to them or speaking out
against the government or doing whatever they behavior they want to punish aren't moving around.
They don't want them to have a safe refuge somewhere else. They want to be able to track them
in their area of hooko.
And hooko is what the government designates you,
where you have to live, where you have to work.
China has this very archaic system.
You can't just pack a bag tomorrow
if I live in Shenzhen and go move to a room chie.
You have to apply.
You have to change your hooko.
So that's your household registration
where you're allowed to live and work, like I said.
And you have to go through this whole rigmarole,
this whole process of doing so.
So I want to make sure that you is a criminal
or someone that they consider unservice stays in that place
so that the local PSB or a public security bureau can make sure that you are behaving, right?
It's just much easier.
It prevents a lot of headaches, right?
The biggest punishment that I've seen that they really want to prevent people from doing is
let's say you are somebody that has a lot of money.
You have party connections, but they really want to make sure that you are not going to
be a risk for capital flight to move all your money to America because a whole lot,
a lot of Chinese government officials, no matter how patriotic you think they're,
are will move abroad and all of their money and family abroad. So what they want is to make sure
they can even like potentially frame people with some sort of economic crime or something and then
prevent them from getting a passport, renewing their passport or getting applying for visas
abroad. So really preventing people from leaving. And that's again, it's a security reason.
Yeah. It's all sort of comes back to national security. The other sort of really gross influences
here, or consequences here, I should say, is one, if you have a high score, you have a lower
weight time in a hospital, which sounds good, like, all right, good, you're rewarding, but with
health, it's a little bit massively unethical, right? Like, okay, fine, if you were able to
skip the car rental line because you had really good credit and they could count on you paying,
that's one thing. But if you have to wait longer to get health care when you are injured,
sick or worse because you are not a quote unquote model citizen. The inverse then is also true,
which is that if you are a, let's say, a blacklisted citizen, they almost don't care about your
health. And I say almost because I'm being generous here, but it's almost how it's written.
They just don't care. Can I just be frank? Yeah. You know, someone lived in China for 10 years.
I can tell you this. If you think the health care system in America is dystopian,
and this is no way, I'm no way shape or form trying to make excuses for the American health care system,
The quality of care is great, but it bankrupts people.
It puts people in really bad positions in their life, especially with the non-insurance.
But let me tell you that China is on a whole different level.
You have to pay before you get treated, right?
So, you know, people make a joke and be like, well, yeah, they'll treat you no matter what in America, but at least, you know, you won't be bankrupted in another country if they treat you.
Okay, whatever.
But in a life or death situation in China, you pay first, right?
And when you talk about having priority for health care based on your social credit score, that's already how China works.
China's been working like that since the inception of the Chinese government.
If I go in with some influential people that I know in China prior to me leaving, and I want a priority treatment, I just have to send somebody very influential or someone in the government or someone that's rich to go talk to somebody and I'm ahead of every single other person online.
That's already how it works, right?
So now it's just legitimized that if you're a nationalist, like a party loving citizen or whatever, that you'll have that priority guaranteed in law.
It's already how it works.
And there's a lot that can dissuade people from being a dissident in this case, but not having access to good health care is also really scary.
Like, imagine you're thinking about saying something negative about the government on WeChat, and you know that your grandmother or your child can't get good health care if you do it.
You're never going to do it.
You're never going to say anything that could be misconstrued as not patriotic.
So they're punishing your kids, right?
Your kids can't get access to schools in education for the political and other crime.
and I put crimes in air quotes here of the parents.
And that's what's really kind of horrific about this as well.
I just, I want people to understand that when I was in China,
you could find people willing to have a conversation with you
about the downfalls of authoritarianism,
the bad principles of the Chinese government
and how it's actually made a lot of people's lives worse.
You could find people to talk to you about that.
What this social credit system has done
and actually just the leadership of the current leadership of China has done
is create a complete ecosystem, a self-sustaining ecosystem of paranoia and self-censorship.
And it's really just changed drastically.
Because like you said, you're going to always have that in the back of your head, that there
are, even if they don't, you know, there's a low chance of getting caught or whatever,
there's always a potential that everything you say or do is tied back to you and will affect
you or your child's life.
Super, super scary.
Like, I could never, this must have worried the crap out of you.
Well, this wasn't around, but this type of thing must have scared you.
I mean, you were raising a child and got married in China.
So you were faced with this kind of thing.
That must have crossed your mind at some point.
Like, when you were there, were you thinking, okay,
when we get older, we have to move to the U.S.
because there's too much crap to deal with over here?
Yeah, when I left in 2018, and like I said,
I saw the writing on the wall, maybe around 2015,
where I was like, I can still make excuses
that China might kind of flip into the good direction again.
And it just wasn't happening.
It was getting to the point where everything I was doing, trying to promote the positive side of China.
I was just getting police interrogations.
I was getting in trouble all the time with no real excuses to why, right?
I was just thinking, if I have to raise my child or have my wife live in a situation like this,
where they're constantly being under a microscope of the Chinese government because I make a living by shooting video,
that's just not a conducive environment.
And again, I just bought a house.
Yeah.
I paid in full for an apartment in China.
I was ready to settle down.
Everything was there.
Like you said, I was married.
I had a kid.
I didn't foresee any of this.
I wouldn't have done any of that stuff.
I wouldn't put down roots if I thought this was going to happen, but it did.
And it was really unfortunate because I think China did a massive disservice to a lot of the people like us, like myself and Winston, Serpins Zaday.
We were diplomats for China.
Or ambassadors.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, not official diplomats.
We're ambassadors for China in a way that we wanted people to not celebrate the Chinese government or something like this, but to show the human side of it.
Because we did, you know, for a lot of time, think that Western coverage of China was unfair until it got to a point where there was, the Western coverage was not only fair in some aspects because of what had happened under Xi Jinping.
But it got to a point where so many things were not talked about.
So a lot of things that we came face to face with that had to be talked about.
And like I said previously, after I moved back, when Chinese people started reaching out
and thanking me profusely for what I was doing, it was really, it showed you the symptom of
what had happened in China.
That kind of political discourse you could have before, the basic freedoms that were
overlooked in this gray area of China in the early to mid-2000s were gone.
And people missed that.
People were very upset at that.
And they were so happy.
There were some people that could speak, read and write Chinese, and could go,
somewhere else and safely talk about what was happening to the Chinese people. So this system
hasn't rolled out through most of China yet, the social credit system, right? It's sort of like a
beta testing thing. Correct. I just wanted to put a button on that. But you're right. You guys showed
the good side of China for 10 plus years. I mean, that was one of the main reasons that I went there
and also, you know, I like China a lot. I really do. And I watched a ton of your travel videos.
And then one day it was like, I left China. And we're going to talk about that in a second here because
you weren't just like, ah, you know what, feeling like I need to get back in the snow of
northern upstate New York, right? This is more like this sort of happened to you. How did this
begin? How did your quick transition out begin? So, yeah, to make it pretty quick,
like I said previously, we were filming our documentary, conquering northern China, and we were
up in a contentious area of Inner Mongolia. When we got followed throughout that and interrogated
over and over and over again.
I knew that something was up
because when we were interrogated by the detectives
two, three thousand miles away from where I live,
they were talking about me and Winston,
my friend Serpents that I, in the hallway,
about, hey, these guys work here.
They previously had a contract
that they left halfway through on.
This is their wife.
This is where they shop.
They were literally going through details about us.
It sounds like you share one.
which you don't.
Just want to clarify that.
Yes.
I'm sorry.
Anyway, very explicit details about us.
And they knew everything about us, right?
And it turns out that anybody, you know, doing what we're doing, not journalism,
just filming.
They have massive files on that, right?
They knew what supermarket I go to.
They knew what restaurants I go to.
They know who I talk with.
They know, you know, my preferences.
They know everything I've done in terms of employment.
They know what businesses I own and all the stuff.
And this is really far away from where I am.
So it's kind of like you can picture like you're in Florida.
You know, you get pulled over for, I don't know, speeding or something.
And they start talking about like that one time that you went to a Barnes & Noble bathroom three years ago in California.
Right.
It was a memorable experience.
Yeah.
But yeah, I can see them being like, why are you always buying so much caffeine-free Diet Coke at Target?
And I'm like, excuse me?
Pardon me?
Exactly.
You creep you out, right?
Yeah.
So this is how the same thing.
story transpired as soon as I got back from that trip, I was 100% sure that there was something
going on internally in China where they really didn't want foreigners going around without state
sanctioned minders telling them what to film and who not to talk to. And because we did everything
ourselves and we kind of operated in this gray zone, if we're not supposed to be interviewing people,
we're not supposed to be traveling around and stuff, but we're going to do it anyway, as long as we
don't step on any toes. It turns out that that was the case because I got a message from
a friend of mine who had told me that there were police
who were actually looking for me in this bar
of a city that I lived in.
That's scary.
They were looking around with my phone,
my printed out photo.
Wow.
Now you might think,
hey, this is a surveillance state.
Why are they walking around looking for you?
Of course, they know where you live, right?
And they do.
But I'd like to highlight the absolute disconnect
with like a local police versus like a national effort.
You in China, when you're a foreigner,
you have to register to,
your employer. And my last employer was at a school that I worked out in a university that I worked at.
Technically, legally, I had to live on their campus, right? So I was registered to their campus as that
that was my place of residence, right? But the apartment that I bought in my wife's name, by the way,
most of the paperwork is in my wife's name. I'm not registered there, right? So if the puny little
local police or whatever are looking around for me, their record is that I'm going to be at the
university, which I found out they had checked. They wanted to see where I was, right? To really fast forward
through things, it turns out that a fan of ours, and I say ours because of all the people
that I have on our channel, stopped a friend of mine in the street and showed him a message.
And I suspect that this person was actually in the Chinese government, but was either
sympathetic to our cause or was hired to do this, but showed him a message that showed that
there were people in multiple departments of the police or government looking for me, right?
And the weird thing was, is I initially suspected it's got to be the traffic department.
You know, I owned a custom motorcycle shop.
Motorcycles are banned.
And a lot of cities in China, they think it makes the city look poor.
It's this whole face thing.
It's weird.
But I rode motorcycles in China, right?
So I was like, okay, it's the traffic department.
They're going to slap me with a fine or something, stop riding bikes in our city, right?
Putting it on YouTube.
But it was actually three departments.
It was the public security bureau.
So the department that's in charge of all the foreigners making sure, like, they're doing
what they should or not doing what they shouldn't.
And it was also the People's Liberation Army.
The Army was looking for you.
That's scary.
So the army wasn't necessarily looking for me when those cops went to that bar to go right for me.
That was the start of something very, very sinister and crazy.
But what happened was on these messages, by the way, which I got later on from an anonymous person that added me on WeChat, they said, as long as you keep me a secret and obviously use some sort of alias or whatever one added me, I'm going to show you something.
So I look at these messages and they are screenshots from the People's Liberation Army, some of the People's Liberation Army, the Traffic Department, like I suspected.
and the PSB, the Public Security Bureau.
And they were looking for me because the PLA said
that I had illegally filmed an army base
in the city that I lived in.
Oh, man.
Now, the ridiculous thing about this
is that I had already been interrogated by police
about flying a drone in the city.
So this has been up in the air for ages.
They've already questioned me about this a billion times.
But when the PLA is reaching out about it
and conspiring with other departments,
it turns out this is going to be something way bigger
than I initially thought.
The ridiculous thing is that the footage that I took
was a huge bird's eye view of the city I was living in.
And that exact same footage was all over the Chinese internet.
If you went on any Chinese, because YouTube's banned in China,
if you went on a Chinese video website,
you could find the exact same shot by a Chinese guy
to the public world to see, right?
Yes, there's a government base, like a spec in there, right?
Just because that's in the middle of the city.
That's what it looks like, right?
So there was nothing technically illegal
that I had done. It wasn't some secret footage that I was unleashing to the world. It was just some
random shot of the city that you could find 100 times over on the Chinese internet. That's when it got
nerve-wracking, right? All this kind of stuff transpired, and I immediately found my wife, and she said,
you need to get out immediately. You need to leave the Chinese mainland border right now while we sort
this out. My wife's fairly connected in the area that she lived in. I've always felt pretty safe there
because of that. We have family members in the government and stuff. They hadn't got wind of
lot of this until later. So I was like, are you sure? Packed a little go bag. The reason she couldn't
come with me or my wife or my kid couldn't come with me is amidst all of this stuff, all of this
writing on the wall that China is getting super paranoid and crazy, I applied for her green card
and she was a couple weeks away from getting it. So her passport was at the American Embassy.
My kids documents were at the American Embassy. They couldn't leave China. So I told them,
get over to another person's house, right? While I get out of here, attempt to get
out of here before this all blows up. So I have Winston, I told you about the guy Serpent
and said, hey, the guy that I work with, he takes me in his car and he lays me down in the
passenger seat and we just drive straight to the Hong Kong border. Now, remember, this is before
Hong Kong's national security law, its own jurisdiction, its own legal system, its own law.
There's still dissidents there. There's still, you know, a lot of freedom there. So I get in line
and I'm freaking out. I'm like, oh my God, like I'm not even with my family. I have to get out of
here and try to sort something out while I'm in Hong Kong, but I don't even know if I'm going to make
it through.
I've got some thoughts on this one, but before I get into that, here's a sample of my interview
with ScamBuster CoffeeZilla, whether you or a loved one is being tempted by sketchy investment
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Here's a quick look inside.
You see an ad and it's of some guru you've seen before, you haven't seen before.
Let's say, Jordan, you're the guru for today.
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It's always free and it's always going to teach me how to get rich.
There's no investment that I initially think I have to make.
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It's never live.
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I was where you are and I bounced around and I made all these mistakes until I found the one secret.
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coach need to do this? You're like sitting there and they're like, hey, this is what you're going to say.
Go ahead, call them right now and let's swipe that card, baby. Let's swipe that car before you leave
this seminar. They're left with a $40,000 collection debt, you know, for a high interest rate that
can't pay it back. They're not making the money they were promised. And then there's a money
back guarantee. There's not a money back guarantee. To hear more about how to expose predatory
shysters for what they are by delving into their shady manipulation tactics, check out episode
368 of the Jordan Harbinger Show with Coffeezilla.
All right, part two of this episode coming up here in a few days.
Links to all things LaWai will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Please use our website links.
If you buy anything from a guest like a book, that always helps support the show.
Transcripts in the show notes, videos of course up on YouTube, advertisers, deals and
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I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram, or you can connect with me on LinkedIn.
I'm teaching you how to connect with great people and manage relationships using the same
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The six-minute networking course is where you'll find it.
That course is free over at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
Dig the well before you get thirsty.
Manage those relationships, build those relationships before you need them.
Most of the guests on the show, subscribe and contribute to the course.
So come join us.
You'll be in smart company where you belong.
This show is created in association with Podcast 1.
My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Millio Campo, Ian Baird, Josh Ballard, and Gabriel Mizrahi.
Remember, we rise by lifting others.
The fee for this show is that you share it with friends and you find something useful or interesting.
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Share this episode with them.
The greatest compliment you can give us is to share the show with those you care about.
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Thanks.
