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Emily Feng’s Seditious Material and the new West’s love of censorship

Hong Kong police have recently arrested book sellers for having copies of Emily Feng’s, Let Only Red Flowers Bloom. Freelance journalists and three others have been arrested related to the book and for the act of selling, “seditious material.” Emily Feng has been banned from entering China since 2022 due to her previous reporting and now the banned book.

“Seditious Material,” is the title that sounds less than harmful for many Westerners who may view China as a land known of having less freedoms, where independent thinking and writing, are prohibited or heavily guided. The reporter and journalist must obey a strict regime of controls, obeying the States mandates and suggestions. It is after all a one party state. Not a liberal democracy. And, time and time again we are told that Western values celebrates individual rights. Self ownership, which includes free speech.

Transfer those two words, Seditious and Material and press it into those which may suddenly draw an ire of concern for a newly conditioned Western reader, one who may feel freedom of speech has conditions. For example, if a book was accused, “Hate speech”, then some may argue bigotry and intolerance may lead to violence and destroy the homogenised, allowed view of a multi-cultural society, by denying the aspirations and views of some cultures, while elevating the aspirations and views of a limited approved culture, so long as they obey a particular ideological and streamlined, though often changing, regard to a politically correct cultural standards which are determined by elites, politicians and the intelligentsia. Therefore the only culture allowed depends on, and celebrates the State and anything contrary to that is intolerant. Or, in extreme cases those views which seek a particular xenophobia and supremacist view point are not allowed, even if particular regimes which such traits are allowed.

Hate Speech, as ill defined as it is. Is, understood to be dangerous. You have been told by the authorities that it is the domain of angry, violent and dangerous people. Nay, dumb and ill informed people. Racist, misogynistic and intolerant of trans communities are usually the accused culprits. Maybe people who support a banned party or a pariah party, or those who are intolerant and therefore any book which expresses or aligns with that kind of thinking should be banned, burned even and pushed underground. A long with their seditious lines of thinking. That material, is after all seditious material and goes against the grain of the government defined standards of culture.

The same can be said for “Terrorist material”, it must be something akin to the Anarchist cookbook, how to make a neutron bomb out of plastic dishware or, maybe how to make firearms or even words written by mad Mullah’s or antisemitism, or racists, or in the past Marxists. Which is now not viewed in such a counter-culture narrative. Fascism on the other hand is, or even free speech, which would not be pro-fascist by the very nature of fascist inclinations to control such individual rights. Criticism of state policy, or hate infused anger or rage over atrocities. Maybe, it’s Irish Catholic propaganda which only promotes the Fenian cause and is a danger to the stability of the Union. At least it was, and may some day again be. Religious zealot republicans, a danger to law and order.

Nay, the terrorists are those lefties, or draft dodgers, bra burning women’s liberation types, then again it’s the 21st century. The only terrorists are now ‘Mohammedans’ , Islamic extremists. The kind who now rule Syria, though, that’s now an ally. Or, those inspired by the Saudi regimes Wahhabi beliefs, also an ally. Perhaps it’s the Shi’ite radicals of Iranian Khomeinism, dangerous. Or Palestinians who sing songs. Then again, it could just be the above mentioned race supremacists, not Black Panthers, only the white kind. Those who don’t like approved movies. The outlawed material may be footage of soldiers being killed in combat zones, with music playing over it, or the celebration of martyrs. It is determined by whom the dead are, and those doing the killing that validates the distinction of ‘terrorist’ material.

And I say this as Che Guvera’s and Mao Zedong’s books on revolution and guerilla warfare linger nearby. Once banished, and dangerous. Maybe again in time. But, for now, it’s cool corporate and government capitalism to be about the communist killer revolutionaries, they are no longer dangerous or a threat, simply a lifestyle choice, for those in Western opulence.

What about “obscene”, this may invoke thoughts of graphic sexuality, perhaps things which are taboo from incest, bestiality, necrophilia and so on. Words which depict such acts, maybe even drawings. Criminal sexual flights of fancy which are only consumed and produced by dangerous minds, no normal person would indulge or even be curious about such things. Despite the existence of the romantasy genre and countless videos and books, and fairy tales which are wrapped in such obscene deeds, whether to challenge or push boundaries or entertain. No normal person would dare indulge in those kinds of things, they should watch war and read about the glorious killing in battle, the mass slaughter of generations and the bombing of cities, courageous deeds endorsed by the state. Far less destructive and immoral or beastial than fictional depictions of perverse sexual deeds.

Then the ultimate crux, no one dare comes back from the claim of “Child Abuse Material”, this does not include the genocide or mass starvation of children. That’s allowed. Endorsed and in some cases celebrated. This is the words about, or drawings of CA acts, after all who would read or look at such pictures other than the most degenerate and dangerous kinds of people. The possession of such art or form is a clear smoking gun, just as images of dead people in books is evidence that one is a murderer, so too is this evidence that one must in fact rape children. One can not read Lolita without revealing an inner guilt, or lust.

Check his hard drive! Look at his browser history scream those who adore authority and hate freedom. Nuance need not exist. In the clamouring for censorship and prohibitions of fictional depictions one conflates the heinous acts of real rape and abuse with the consumption of drawings and words. A degradation of the destruction such deeds have on the innocent. Words lose meaning and become handles by which to validate censorship and prohibition, and remove liberty. They do not protect children, instead resources are often drained at the expense of finding and protecting real victims. Though, the books are a victory and a validation of authorities moral virtue. When real children are raped, suddenly it’s a complex process, especially if the rapist is, important. And, the mental health of those who would rape a kid, is suddenly a consideration. Nuance matters, except for the violated victims. The professionals who deal with such misery on the other hand are allowed such layers.

The possession of seditious material comes in many forms and guises, it is meant to be repulsive and vulgar to some. Why would anyone want obscene materials and read it? Yet, what is mainstream and accepted may also offer very real offence and pain to those who have no reason, only an opinion or those who have very a real reason. Those who have lost a close member to a serial killer may suffer great indignities while it remains ever fashionable to venerate such murderers and make them celebrities. The consumption of both fiction and non-fiction material on murder often relegate the victims as props to an anti-heroes journey of mayhem. Those who enjoy and are fascinated by murder material never need to rationalise why the morose and morbid excites or interests them.

Yet, such material is normal. Popular. To brutally torture, murder, rape before and after is not seen as obscene when it’s contextualised in fiction and non-fiction. We can even see the photos and footage of the innocent victims with ease, a necrotic tribute to the killers in some pained disdain for innocence. One can open the pages of books of history where women lay wide open, bayonets deep inside of their genitalia, the killers men in uniform. Not just enemy nations, those familiar and allied. Burned babies, mothers whose breasts are hanging from them as a child lays bloated and dead in her arms. Clothing, skin and dignity burned away, whether napalm or phosphorus or infernos of flames.

Because the killers in many cases are the historical “good guys”, it’s accepted. A price the victim pays for a political victory. How one feels when they view such material is not governed or decided, is delight and pride allowed? Arousal even? Would it be seditious to look at the victims of your governments policies and feel disgust? Is that allowed? Is it seditious to say, “killing children is wrong?” Perhaps that’s hate speech, or terrorism? It depends on who is killing the child apparently.

As a genocide is occurring, those who dare witness can see the brutal images of dead children. Dead by many means. Accounts of rape and sexual molestation, including that of children. Sich footage and accounts is not considered “Child Abuse Material” even if some, including the killers and abusers find delight in the content and suffering innocent. It remains as public record and regretfully it’s non-fiction. Real.

Hate, Obscene and Terrorist are words to be branded about by the authorities and their enablers against those who would criticise the murder and abuse of children. The context allows for it to go on, who does the killing matters more than who the victims are in the parlance of political thinking. And, the multi-cultural dimension sheds away into one gentrification of facts, the only cultural that matters is The States.

Emily Feng is just a writer. Her words are criminal. This should be seen as obscene, that a persons thoughts and words are outlawed. The violence of the police and the government masters who would kidnap and destroy people and their property is terrorist in action. If they do not comply, they will be beaten, killed. Those who seek to banish words and books hate freedom. They hate the fact that others have different perspectives and views, multi-opinions, a culture of diverse thoughts and views. And such is an abuse to not just children but any who seek independence and agency. We live in a world where mass murder and the violent coercion to ban things and deny liberty is normal, accepted. The cultural norm. But words, and what was once viewed as pillars for liberal democracy, this foundation by which a prison now is being built on, embraces the deeds and insecurities of a one party state.

Words are not violence, suppressing them is. Remember when you were all Charlie Hebdo and put up the French flag as a celebration of free speech? What changed?

The Kyle Anzalone Show guest Col. Lawrence Wilkerson: Trump Is Losing the War for the Strait of Hormuz

A US president casually threatening to cut off trade with Spain is not normal “tough talk” it’s a signal flare for how unstable alliance management can get when policy is driven by impulse. We walk through Trump’s comments from the NATO summit and what a real break with a NATO partner would mean, then zoom out to the deeper issue underneath the drama: the attempt to force allies toward a 5% of GDP defense spending target and the reality that most countries cannot reach it without huge political and economic fallout.

Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson joins us to connect the dots between Europe’s long reliance on the US security backstop, Spain’s willingness to act independently on the world stage, and why Washington’s pressure campaigns often produce the opposite of compliance. From there, we shift to Iran and the question that hangs over everything in the Middle East right now: what matters more in negotiations, the nuclear program or the Strait of Hormuz? Wilkerson argues Iran’s leverage over global energy transit lanes can dominate the timeline, the price of oil, and the choices available to the United States.

We also dig into the Ukraine war and the limits of wishful thinking in defense industry policy, including claims about letting Ukraine “make Patriots” and what it actually takes to build advanced air defense production under wartime conditions. The conversation ends with a hard look at NATO Article V risks, nuclear escalation scenarios, and how propaganda narratives cannot replace battlefield realities. If you care about NATO, US foreign policy, the Strait of Hormuz, the Iran conflict, and the future of the Ukraine war, this is a must-listen.

Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who follows geopolitics, and leave a rating and review so more people can find the show.

The Kyle Anzalone Show guest Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski: Trump Calls Off Ceasefire with Iran

Trump goes from ceasefire language to “it’s over” in a matter of hours, and the Strait of Hormuz becomes the pressure point again. Host Kyle Anzalone and guest LtCOL Karen Kwiatkowski walk through the reports of Iranian shots at transiting ships, the follow-on CENTCOM strikes, and what it means when a president talks like a full-scale war is on the table while the Pentagon still faces real constraints in ships, air defense, and weapons stockpiles. If you’re trying to understand Iran, US military posture, and how quickly an MOU can unravel, this conversation lays out the incentives and the red flags in plain terms.

We also pull on the thread most people miss: oil prices and energy security. We talk about why tanker flow does not snap back to “normal,” why insurance markets matter as much as missiles, and how Strategic Petroleum Reserve decisions can collide with the public story being told about stability. When leaders float the word “blockade,” shipping firms and underwriters do the math, and the result can be higher costs, slower trade, and more opportunity for miscalculation.

Then we widen the map to Syria and Lebanon, including the stunning normalization of Ahmed al-Sharaa, also known as Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, and the idea of sending battle-hardened fighters toward Hezbollah. From there, we get into Israel’s brewing conflict with Turkey, Trump’s openness to F-35 sales to Erdogan, and why the jet is as much about control and lock-in as it is about performance. We close with a domestic warning about NDAA Section 219 and why calling Congress may be one of the few levers the public still has.

The Kyle Anzalone Show: When Will Russia Win the War?

Ukraine’s air defenses are hitting a wall, and the numbers are terrifying. We walk through Zelensky’s warning that Patriot interceptors are running short, why ballistic missiles are a different problem than drones and cruise missiles, and what it means when Ukraine says it could not stop any of a recent wave of Russian ballistic strikes. The hard question isn’t whether Kyiv “needs more,” it’s whether the US and Europe actually have more to give without leaving themselves exposed elsewhere.

From there, we zoom out to the NATO summit and the politics shaping the war’s next phase. We talk about why NATO leaders appear ready to downplay Ukraine, how Trump’s fallout with allies after the Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz energy fears changed the mood in Europe, and why “we’ll replenish later” rings hollow when Patriot missile production timelines stretch years. We also weigh Trump’s renewed claims that peace is close against evidence that sanctions, weapons pipelines, and intelligence support still push the conflict farther from a settlement.

Then we shift to the Middle East and the rhetoric that makes escalation easier. We react to Netanyahu rejecting the idea of Israel living in a permanent state of war, challenge the “peace deal” framing around the Abraham Accords, and lay out how war talk in Washington slides into something darker, including a public call to bomb a Tehran funeral and a member of Congress denying Palestinians even exist. We close with Mike Johnson’s attempt to spark a new red scare and why war powers and foreign entanglements are the real accountability test. If this breakdown helps, subscribe, share the show, and leave a review so more people can find it.

The Kyle Anzalone Show: As the American Empire Collapses, Can We Salvage a Republic?

The Fourth of July is supposed to feel like a reset, but it hits differently when people look around and see a country that can fund anything abroad while families cut back at home. We start with a viral political message about America’s contradictions, then challenge the instinct to turn Independence Day into a scolding session. For us, the better move is to separate the ideals worth celebrating from the government actions worth opposing and to ask what it would take to return the American empire to a constitutional republic.

From there, we dig into the economic anxiety behind the anger. When millions feel like they have no prospects, politics becomes a fight over villains instead of a fight for opportunity. We talk about the opioid crisis, fentanyl overdoses, and suicides as brutal signals that parts of the country have lost hope. The key question is not whether wealth exists, but whether regular people can realistically climb, start businesses, and build stable lives.

That leads to the heart of our argument: corporate welfare and regulatory capture. Government contracts, subsidies, and a sprawling regulatory code reward the biggest players and punish everyone else. If only giant corporations can afford compliance, lawyers, and lobbying, “free markets” become a slogan while competition quietly dies.

We then connect the domestic squeeze to US foreign policy: NATO burden sharing, the Iran war, the Strait of Hormuz, and a Ukraine poll showing strong public preference for negotiations. Power is shifting, allies are saying “no,” and Washington cannot paper over reality with talking points. If this conversation adds value, subscribe, share the show, and leave a review. What’s one change you think would do the most to rebuild freedom and opportunity?

The Kyle Anzalone Show guest Scott Horton: How Evil Is the American Empire?

Putin says Russia is in a “challenging period,” but the more revealing question is what comes next when a war stops feeling like a crisis and starts running on autopilot. We unpack why Russia can look simultaneously steady and stuck: not prone to emotional swings, yet still locked into a slow, costly grind where drone strikes reach deep targets, NATO proximity raises the stakes, and every month of fighting makes the eventual political settlement harder to swallow.

From there, we zoom in on the Ukraine endgame that rarely gets discussed honestly. If Russia holds territory in the east and south, what happens to the remaining Ukrainian politics when the most Russia-leaning constituencies are effectively removed from future elections? We talk about why that dynamic can empower hardliners, including the rise of Andriy Biletsky and the institutional growth of the former Azov network, and why a “freeze the lines” ceasefire can simply set the stage for the next phase across the Dnieper.

We also connect the dots to Washington’s incentives, including the explicit “Afghanistan” framing some prominent voices used before and after the invasion, and how that mindset treats Ukrainians as expendable inputs in a long proxy war. Then we pivot to the Middle East, breaking down reports and proposals that point toward pressuring Lebanon in ways that could spark a dangerous confrontation with Hezbollah and push a fragile country closer to civil conflict.

If you care about Ukraine, Russia, NATO escalation, neocon strategy, and Middle East spillover risks, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, and tell us what you think: is the world sleepwalking into a wider war?

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