Fireworks illuminate the night sky during the closing ceremony of the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games at the National Stadium in Beijing, capital of China, February 20, 2022. /Xinhua
Editor's note: Ian Goodrum is a member of the Edgar Snow Newsroom and the International Department of the Communist Party of the United States. The article reflects the author's opinions and not necessarily the views of CGTN.
For the last month, I've felt like I've been living in two worlds.
There was the world I could see, hear, touch with my own eyes and ears. In that world, I was living in Beijing during the 2022 Winter Olympics, and things seemed to be going quite well. I'd occasionally walk by a venue or hotel inside the Olympic "bubble" and notice nothing appeared to be on fire or in any state of emergency.
But then, there was the world of the U.S. media. The way they talked about the Games, you'd think a nuclear bomb had gone off in the middle of the city. No such smoking crater could be found, yet on and on, the litany of grievances went.
There was no end to complaints from incensed journalists who felt personally insulted by an invitation to the biggest sporting event of the season. No potential avenue of attack was spared – even the wildly popular mascot Bing Dwen Dwen found itself in the crosshairs of a ravenous media class with too much time on its hands.
The word "dystopian" was thrown around a lot during the Games. It's the corporate press's favorite term when writing any story even remotely related to China, as it allows the country to be portrayed as a land of despair and misery, one the reader shouldn't even consider visiting or thinking differently about. Of course, if someone actually comes to China and talks to people who live here, they may find what they've had drilled into their head for decades on end was, in fact, a bunch of nonsense. That's unacceptable to a media which thrives on its self-appointed status as the arbiter of truth and reality, so "dystopian" it is.
We saw the worst of this when outlets described the strict protocols meant to shield the rest of Beijing from international personnel potentially arriving with COVID-19. They practically gasped in horror at the notion a country might want to prevent its people from being infected by a deadly virus rather than welcome the virus with open arms. As is the custom with any Western coverage of China's COVID-19 policy, the negative effects on a tiny minority are emphasized to the exclusion of the hundreds of thousands, millions by some projections, of lives China's approach has saved.
Li Xin of China competes during the cross-country skiing women's 30km mass start free of Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at National Cross-Country Skiing Centre in Zhangjiakou, north China's Hebei Province, February 20, 2022. /Xinhua
Facts don't get brought up when it comes to China's epidemic control because they would be inconvenient to the politically effective image of a people under the yoke of an "authoritarian regime." If one stops to compare a cumulative death toll of under 5,000 in a country of 1.4 billion people to smaller populations seeing body counts in the high six figures, the numbers speak for themselves.
But zooming in for a more detailed view shows us just how effective the Olympic policy was. Beijing hasn't seen new local cases outside the Olympic "bubble" for nearly two weeks, according to the city's health commission. That's almost the entirety of the Games. What this means is a city of 20 million people played host to a massive international sports event in the middle of a pandemic and saw almost no spillovers or cracks in its containment protocols. It's an enormous achievement – and one that, naturally, gets no attention from the press. They're too busy complaining about robot bartenders or staff in full protective gear daring to offer them free food. What a grueling experience that must have been.
There are endless examples of bad-faith smears leveled at the Olympics from all corners over the past month. To enumerate each of them would exhaust the bandwidth of this publisher; the sheer volume of insults directed at Eileen Gu (Gu Ailing) alone would take up its own server room.
But we can't pretend to be surprised by this. A hostile press corps, some of whom were coming back to China for the first time in years, was always going to relish the chance to stick the knives in wherever it could. No matter what Beijing did or didn't do to accommodate them, these sainted truth-tellers were going to take any opportunity to paint the Games in a negative light. And take it they did.
Even so, as with China's performance in the realm of virus prevention, the results speak for themselves. The city is wrapping up an Olympics that was a success by any objective measure. It was a zero-emissions, zero-infection spectacle that brought plenty of inspiring stories and moments of athletic brilliance.
All the whinging in the world won't change that, but some people will certainly try.
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