Comment by peoplefromibiza
4 years ago
Please explain why this is different from traveling to any other country.
I haven't been to the US since they made it legal for custom officers to search travelers' personal electronics without a warrant and deny entry if you refuse, because, thanks but no thanks.
> Please explain why this is different from traveling to any other country.
My guess is that the "trigger" for "any other country" is much higher.
Criticize the US President all you like on every social network: not a problem.
Save a screenshot of Winnie the Pooh: you're playing with fire.
> Criticize the US President all you like on every social network: not a problem.
given that this [1] already happened in my country, and also this [2] also happened (just to name a couple) and nobody paid, that there are 13,000 American soldiers on my Country's soil and that this [3] man has been POTUS and is probably running again for election, I wouldn't say "not a problem".
US could reach me at my house if they wanted to, OTOH PRC can't do much.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_Cavalese_cable_car_crash
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Omar_case
[3] https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/07/trump-demands-barr-...
> Save a screenshot of Winnie the Pooh: you're playing with fire.
I imagine this is sarcasm.
Winnie the Pooh has never actually put anyone in real troubles.
Here's an example of a chinese Univerity of Minnesota grad student that tweeted Winnie the Pooh (among other things) while in the US, and was later imprisoned in China for it:
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/university-of-minnes...
3 replies →
In China, Winnie the Pooh is illegal, because the dictator looks similar.