In his perpetual rebelliousness, writer Han Han said he was going to test the system by sexting to both male and female friends and see which texts were blocked. He wrote: "I've never seen anyone enraged by a sex message. There are only two reasons why one may be annoyed by such a message: One, it's not funny; two, it's one you just read and forwarded to your friend."
But he suspects - sarcastically - there will be a survey showing "90 percent support" for the crackdown because sexting has distracted students from concentrating on their exams for post-graduate study or their civil servant applications.
The hilarious cellphone ad for a hard-core sex service, which Han describes, is the kind of thing the government possibly intends to wipe out but slips through the cracks because it does not contain any bad words.
A really interesting experiment I can devise would be the composition of text messages that use propaganda terms yet would totally violate our moral codes when placed in a special context. Someone I knew from grad school used to trot out political slogans and - with a wink - turn them into smut. I wonder what the telecom censors can do about them.
Every generation of youngsters is a target of protection from unhealthy content. In the 1980s, Michael Jackson was not allowed to perform in China partly because he loved to "grope himself" on stage. In the 1950s, Elvis Presley gyrated to screaming teenagers and to the discomfort of their parents. Someone whisked by a time machine from two generations ago might frown upon even the most puritanical form of dating and mating extant today.
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