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For Firefox users, there is media bias / propaganda / fact check plugin.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
- Consider including the article’s mediabiasfactcheck.com/ link
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For those wondering, "Hurting the feelings of the Chinese people" is an actual phrase (伤害中国人民的感情) it started all the way back in the late 50s.
this last part "感情 ganqing" translated as "feelings" or "emotional attachment", it's actually an important part of chinese culture, esp business culture (similar to this is "guanxi" which is someone's network). These are major parts of chinese culture and relationships with others. this phrase is more like "you're hurting our relationship"
This seems similar to Republicans' current crusade to ban books they believe will hurt the "fabric of the country."
If your nation is that weak it isn't worth saving, it should just die and be replaced by something better. Which is just about anything.
It feels shady the way the media uses this overly literal translation of 'hurt the feelings' all the time in order to make the Chinese sound ridiculous. Could make any foreign language speaker sound ridiculous by cherry picking funny but common phrases and translating them literally.
? It's the best way to translate it, some Chinese words don't have good English translations and vice versa
There's a better translation right here in this thread. "Hurting our relationship" is not so literal and so doesn't sound daft in English.
no, that's not the same thing. "our relationship" does not convey the same emotion that is intended in the chinese word.