4 American college instructors stabbed during visit to partner university in China



Four Americans teaching in China were recently stabbed while doing some sightseeing in Jilin City, about 700 miles northeast of Beijing.

On Monday morning, David Zabner and three other Americans were hiking around Beishan Park with one of their Chinese colleagues at nearby Beihua University. The four Americans actually teach at Cornell College, a private school in Iowa, but are currently working at Beihua University, which began partnering with Cornell College for a STEM-related teaching exchange program in 2018.

'I didn’t immediately realize what was happening. I thought my coworkers had been pushed, and he, for some reason was trying to push me.'

During the hike, one of the Americans accidentally bumped into 55-year-old Cui Moumou. As a result of this collision, Cui allegedly stabbed the four Americans as well as another Chinese local who had come to their aid, according to a report from the Jilin City Public Security Bureau, Chuanying Branch.

Graphic video and images of the bloodied victims then went viral on social media, but it seems Chinese officials may have since censored those videos and images, as they no longer appear on Chinese internet, the BBC reported.

In fact, Zabner's name reportedly became publicly known only after his brother, Adam Zabner, a Democrat state representative in Iowa, identified him as one of the victims. "I spoke to David. ... He is recovering from his injuries and doing well," Rep. Zabner said. "My family is incredibly grateful that David survived this attack."

The names of the other victims have not been released. David Zabner has since spoken with Iowa Public Radio to describe the harrowing experience.

"I turned around to find a man brandishing a knife at me. I didn’t immediately realize what was happening. I thought my coworkers had been pushed, and he, for some reason was trying to push me," David Zabner told IPR News. "And then I looked down at my shoulder and realized, 'I'm bleeding. I've been stabbed.'"

"Police told us that [Cui] was unemployed and down on his luck," Zabner added.

Zabner was stabbed in the upper arm. One of his fellow American victims appeared to be bleeding from his back, IPR News reported, citing video evidence. All four Americans remain at a Chinese hospital, recovering from their injuries. They "are no longer in danger of death," the local police report said.

Cui has been arrested, though it's unclear what charges he may be facing.

Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks, a Republican congresswoman from Iowa who represents the district that includes Cornell College, has since called for the four Americans to be brought back to the U.S. as quickly and as safely as possible.

"My office and I are in touch with an impacted #Iowa family," she wrote on X. "We are working through proper channels and requesting to speak with the U.S. Embassy on appropriate matters to ensure that the victims first receive quality care for their injuries and then get out of #China in a medically feasible manner."

National security adviser Jake Sullivan professed to be "deeply concerned" about the incident and extended his best wishes to the victims. "Our team has been in touch with these Americans and our PRC counterparts to ensure that the victims’ needs are met, & appropriate law enforcement steps are being taken," he said on X.

A statement from Cornell College characterized the attack on its instructors as "serious," according to various outlets.

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China alters ending of cult classic 'Fight Club' so that the authorities come out on top



Movie fans were outraged over the weekend after observing China's latest censorship plot, which in this case was the drastic altering of David Fincher's 1999 film, "Fight Club," to make it so that, in the end, the criminals are arrested and the authorities win.

What happened?

In the original version of the cult classic — starring Brad Pitt, Edward Norton, and Helena Bonham Carter — the Narrator, played by Norton, kills off his alter ego Tyler Durden, played by Pitt, setting off a chain of explosions that destroy all bank and credit records, effectively ending consumerism and resetting the economy.

But that's not what viewers experience when watching the film on Tencent Video, a popular Chinese streaming service. In China's altered version, the film's ending is cut short ahead of the explosion scene, and viewers are informed in a short, to-the-point caption that Project Mayhem was foiled by the state and all criminals were arrested.

"Through the clue provided by Tyler, the police rapidly figured out the whole plan and arrested all criminals, successfully preventing the bomb from exploding. After the trial, Tyler was sent to lunatic asylum receiving psychological treatment. He was discharged from the hospital in 2012," the caption read, according to Vice.

FIGHT CLUB\u2019s ending for the Chinese release (on Tencent Video) was changed to this and now I\u2019m waiting for someone to fanfic a sequel based on this censored ending.pic.twitter.com/zYB0bY3Dlp
— Courtney Howard @ #Sundance (@Courtney Howard @ #Sundance) 1643062101

Vice noted it remains unclear whether the ending was altered under self-censorship or by government order, adding that Tencent Video declined to comment on the news.

But a source familiar with the matter reportedly told the news outlet that the film was edited by the copyright owner and approved by the government before it was sold to streaming sites for distribution. Furthermore, the Chinese publisher of the film, Pacific Audio & Video Co., is an affiliate of Guangdong TV, a state-owned television station.

What else?

Hong Kong Free Press noted in its coverage of the news that China has some of the world's strictest censorship rules. The communist country only approves a handful of foreign films for release every year, and often requires that major edits are made.

Film fans reportedly erupted in mockery after viewing the new ending, the Hong Kong news outlet reported.

"This is too outrageous," one viewer commented, while another said the edit is proof that Chinese authorities "don’t just delete scenes, but add to the plot too."

"There is no point watching this film without that scene," another person commented on the Twitter-like site Weibo, according to VICE.

Still another commenter quipped, "Probably 'Ocean’s 11' would have all been arrested. 'The Godfather’s' entire family would end up in jail."

Anything else?

China's censorship practices were also the subject of controversy late last year when Disney drew headlines for removing an anti-China episode from its "Simpsons" catalog in Hong Kong.

In the episode, which was first broadcast in 2005, the fictional cartoon family ridicules the country during a trip to mainland China, where they visit the mummified body of notorious former Chairman Mao Zedong and Beijing's Tiananmen Square.

Fight Club (1999) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers www.youtube.com

Cruz, Sasse, and AOC join letter calling out NBA and requesting suspension of games in China

The following is an excerpt from Blaze Media’s daily Capitol Hill Brief email newsletter:

In an era when almost everything in American politics and culture is exhaustingly divisive, it appears that one of the few unifying issues is opposition to the importation of Chinese government censorship.

A bipartisan letter to the NBA commissioner about the league’s recent China controversy drew the signatures of Republican lawmakers Ted Cruz, Tom Cotton, and Ben Sasse as well as the far-left House firebrand Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

The bipartisan letter, which was spearheaded by New Jersey House Democrat Tom Malinowski, expresses lawmakers’ concerns about the NBA’s recent apology for Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey’s tweet that supported pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong. It also calls on the NBA to suspend its activities in China until the country ends its boycott against the league and the Houston Rockets.

“We are deeply concerned that individuals associated with the league may now engage in self-censorship that is inconsistent with American and the league’s stated values — and that this incident will only encourage further intimidation of American companies and persons by the Chinese government,” the letter reads, adding that the NBA should have anticipated such a challenge when doing business “in a country run by a repressive, single-party government.”

“Unless American businesses aggressively confront this intimidation campaign, the Chinese government will increasingly punish free speech outside China’s borders,” the letter explains. “The most common method is to threaten access to the growing Chinese domestic market for any international company or organization that criticizes, or allows its employees to criticize, Chinese government policies.”

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