Sample size: 58 people
18 in the U.K., 28 in Turkey, and 12 in Thailand.
The authors wish to extend their gratitude to the individuals and organisations who supported this research by providing concrete feedback for revisions on the report, offering suggestions and advice at the planning stages, and offering ongoing collaborative and moral support while conducting this research: Elise Anderson, Campaign for Uyghurs, Freedom House, Tim Grose, Ondřej Klimeš, Julie Millsap, David O’Brien, the Rights Practice, Radio Free Asia, Isabella Rodriguez, David Stroup, Hannah Theaker, Emily Upson, the Uyghur Human Rights Project, the Uyghur Transitional Justice Database, the World Uyghur Congress, the Xinjiang Documentation Project, the Xinjiang Victims’ Database, and Adrian Zenz.
Author
Yes, very trustable! /s
Maybe the one leaving the basement should be you.
Winnie the Pooh is very popular in China and available everywhere. Pooh related images are easily found on Chinese search engines like Baidu, Sogu, etc. This is trivially verifiable simply by going to www.baidu.com and searching for "Winnie the pooh". ex 1 ex 2 ex 3
In addition, media featuring Winnie the Pooh is available for streaming on many of the most popular streaming platforms in China. ex 1 ex 2 ex 3
Winnie the Pooh toys and videos are sold everywhere in China ex
There's literally a “The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh” ride in Shanghai Disneyland. Link
Douban (China's IMDB) page for Christopher Robin. Link
Bilibili (China's Youtube) page searching for "Winnie The Pooh". Link
If western news media is willing to lie about something as silly as this, can you imagine what else they lie about when it comes to China?