“...the ruler of China is scared of #WinnieThePooh...So when I heard that Winnie the Pooh was like garlic to a vampire to the Chinese communists, I just thought, what are they on about? You know, so I think the power of the arts to scare the despot,” says Dr. K. #TakeDownTheCCP https://t.co/jynjUFFank
Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker expresses surprise and disbelief that the ruler of China is afraid of Winnie the Pooh, leading to the ban of the character in mainland China. They question the credibility of the ruler for being scared of such a harmless character. The speaker believes that the power of arts, including music, poetry, dancing, and singing, can be a threat to dictatorships. They aim to bring back a rebellious spirit in music to challenge oppressive regimes. The speaker concludes by emphasizing the potential of the arts to dismantle dictatorships.
Speaker 0: You know, for me, the fact that the ruler of China is scared of Winnie the Pooh and that Winnie the Pooh has been banned in mainland China and that any videos any videos of Winnie the Pooh are automatically taken down and China's oceans blew my mind. I think for me, it just Look, ZZ just lost haul credibility when when he's scared of Winnie the Pooh. Look at him. He's a very nice cuddly little thing. Okay.
ZZ might look like Is it? You know? Yeah. Well, it's easy, baby. You know?
I mean, but what do you want about you know, you've totally lost credibility, mate, with me. You're fighting the Winnie the Pooh. So when I heard that Winnie the Pooh was like garlic to a vampire to the Chinese communist, I just thought, what are they on about? You know, so I think the power of the arts to To scare the deaf boys. You know, how popular arts and music, poetry, dancing, and singing is a threat to those And I'm, trying to bring back that rock and roll rebellious spirit into music.
The arts, I think, the power of the arts to crush Dictatorships, I think that that's what came out for me.