cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/3170974

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On Wednesday last week, one of China’s largest tea chains found itself at the center of an online storm after a video emerged of employees for the company apparently wearing cardboard signs and makeshift cardboard handcuffs to enforce workplace discipline — public displays of shame that had disturbing echoes of the country’s political past.

The offending post, made on September 17 to the official Douyin and Xiaohongshu accounts of the Guangdong operations of Good Me (古茗茶饮) — a tea chain with more than 5,000 locations across the country — showed several employees on site at a Good Me shop standing with their heads cast down, their hands bound in front with what appeared to be cardboard cup holders. Handwritten signs around their necks read: “The crime of forgetting to include a straw”; and “The crime of knocking over the teapot.”

[…]

For China’s media and internet authorities, the Cultural Revolution is generally not a subject to be talked about at all. And for many Chinese who remember the period, which was ended by the ouster and arrest in October 1976 of the so-called Gang of Four, it remains a silent source of pain and fear.

[…]

Most comments on the video on both platforms expressed shock and ridicule at what seemed to be extremely unfair and inhumane treatment of employees on the one hand, and an acute lack of good taste on the other. By Wednesday the video had been removed and Good Me was scrambling to contain the damage.

[…]

  • Flying SquidM
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    42 months ago

    Ah yes, not being allowed to ride a train. A standard punishment for financial fraud.

    • Aatube
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      -42 months ago

      Like I said, it’s kind of public shaming indeed. I’m not sure how to feel about it.

      • Flying SquidM
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        22 months ago

        Because everyone knows you can’t ride the train? How?

          • Flying SquidM
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            -12 months ago

            You said being barred from riding trains is public shaming. I’m asking how that is public shaming. How does the public know about it?

            • Aatube
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              -12 months ago

              I was sort of thinking more about the effects: it’s a punishment that only causes kind of–petty discomfort. I’d agree that it’s not really public shaming, hence there’s not really any judicial public shaming in China anymore.