i think it's very interesting that one of the words you used was respect because as everything has been heating up with the trade war and the situation between china and india has been changing on social media more and more i am seeing i guess what i would just describe as anti-indian propaganda uh videos of like look at how filthy and disgusting india is india or indians are flooding countries yeah
And many other things, yeah. And it's very interesting. What do you think is going on with this sudden surge? Chinese propaganda, shall we say? Chinese funded? That is what we are hearing about. You know, it is totally Chinese funded. Why do you think it is Chinese funded and not organic?
It's not organic. It's not organic at all. The thing is that, and there have been, I would say, investigations and all that show it is not organic. But the thing is that from where is the money coming from? The money, it is believed, is mostly coming from China. And we are not saying it just because we think that this is,
one aspect of what is known as China's quote-unquote political warfare. This is an attempt by China to change the narrative, the positive narrative that India is actually about to basically dent that, to dent that in the eyes of Americans in particular, because this is
This you have to give to Mr. Biden when he had said that India, US-India relations are among the most consequential of the 21st century. Now, when that is what China is fighting against, how do you show that the other side is inconsequential? You change people's mind. You know, that is where the battle is played. It's a mind game that is being played. And China is very capable of doing it. And that is what China is doing. And the
racist nonsense that we see on social media nowadays. I mean, this is something somebody says something a little. I've seen one or two positive things about India. And you know how this country we can do business with. There'll be hundreds of trolls or whoever these accounts are. They will come and say, oh, but you have to say that they do not have toilets. But oh, you do not have. And the most racist
utter nonsense that they said over there. So you see that there is a method to the so-called madness that we see. And that method, it is all primarily emanating from China. And China has lots of proxies. Need not necessarily, I mean, if you start tracing those bots or whoever these handles are, it may not directly lead to China, but some way or the other, they always anyhow somehow
lead to either China or China. It's interesting also that I've seen not just more like on social media, like anti-Indian sentiment, but also I have seen on YouTube, especially more like Indian YouTubers who are praising China suddenly. Yes.
Now, because you see, this is again, it all depends on if you start examining who these people are, where their funding is coming from, you might be surprised. This is what I was talking about, the duality.
You know, suddenly there is a push that is coming towards normalizing China, basically, which is a very malignant power, perhaps the most malignant power the world has seen in a very long time. It is basically trying to normalize that China. It is basically trying to normalize India-China relations. So this is what that push is towards.
You know, so they want to open up our market.
But at the same time, they're constantly threatening us. And by the way, here, I just want to mention, Pakistan has a role to play. You know, when we are talking about Pakistan's terrorism and all, Pakistan has been able to convince China, or maybe it did not need much convincing, that this insurgency that is happening in Pakistan's Balochistan region, it is all Indian-inspired. It's a different matter that the Balochistan coalition
quote-unquote insurgency goes back to 1947 when Balochistan was an independent was declared as an independent country then Pakistan took over from that time onwards this is going but Pakistan is kind of painting India as the villain of the peace and basically and CPEC goes through that area China Pakistan economic corridor and China has sunk 65 billion dollars or something like that in that area it's a different matter it is not getting any returns that that that but
money is gone, that CPEC is also not happening and China is in deep, deep trouble in Balochistan. If China and this thing, the buzz is that
This is what they are doing. India has done that. So that is the reason. Another reason, apparently, why China does not, you know, China thinks that India is a very hostile power. But frankly, if you leave us alone, there's no reason for any hostility from us. Simple as that. But then the problem is that the problem is in the nature of the beast. The problem is in communist China. The nature itself is hostile.
It's hugely, hugely problematic. It's dangerous. It's disastrous. It lacks a moral compass. It's unscrupulous. I mean, I think I'll exhaust the dictionary if I start talking. If you talk about the beast in Revelation, you'll get some good adjectives for the Chinese Communist Party. But you mentioned the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. I'm curious about that, plus all the Belt and Road projects China has all over the world.
Especially with the trade war, China's money is drying up. What happens to all of these countries, Pakistan included, that support China when they can't get any money from China?
Let's put it this way, you know, Chris, last year I was on my way to somewhere, there was a layover at an airport in, I mean, the lead airport, their main, Addis Ababa airport, it's called the Bol Airport, their main capital. So as soon as I landed there, I see Chinese lettering everywhere. China has, I mean, kind of added everywhere their name, kind of plastered it to ensure whoever lands in that airport,
It is, they know it's a Chinese airport. Which country is this? Ethiopia. Ethiopia. Addis Ababa airport. It's called the Bol airport. Now over there, I mean, this is kind of tells you what is happening with China's BRI project. But I think there was a layover of five and a half hours over there. In that total layover, I think I have seen maybe one or two flights or maybe even not that. It was empty. It is swanky airport. Empty.
Hardly anyone there and they were playing Indian film songs over there by the way. So the whole point is how many of these are white elephants?
Okay, number one, white elephants. And as we know, most of these BRI projects are China's way of, you know, debt trap. I mean, kind of laying the debt trap for the clients and sucking them in and just taking over the asset. That is what is happening. I mean, BRI is...
non-functional. I mean, particularly this China-Pakistan economic corridor, it is non-functional. It is trying for something in Myanmar also, China-Myanmar economic corridor. That also is not progressing anywhere. I mean, now it is trying through Bangladesh to get into a lot of things. Bangladesh is also now suddenly with the regime change and all. So that's another huge long story. So the whole point is that
China has perhaps spread itself too thin. It will all depend on what China's, how deep China's economic pocket is. And that pocket may not have much depth for a very long time because inside China there is economic problem that is going on. That is what we are hearing. I mean, you guys have been covering this for a long time. You know very well what is happening inside China.
Thank you for watching this short interview clip with Joyita. There's loads more and her insight into what's going on between China, India and the US is incredible. So check out the full hour by going to our website ChinaUncensored.tv. The link is below.