News

Why? When Xi Jinping visited Barack Obama at the White House in 2013, a social-media wag remarked on how the pair resembled Pooh and Tigger, the bear’s fictional buddy.
The patch shows a Formosan black bear, which is native to Taiwan, holding Taiwan’s flag while punching Winnie the Pooh, which Chinese dissidents have increasingly used to mock Xi.
Over the past few months, unprecedented developments point to the potential, and potentially imminent, fall of China’s ...
Taiwanese rush to buy patches being worn by their air force pilots that depict a Formosan black bear punching Winnie the Pooh, as a defiant symbol of the island's resistance to Chinese war games.
People in Taiwan are rushing to buy anti-Xi Jinping badges being worn by their air force pilots. The patches depict a Formosan black bear punching Winnie the Pooh, representing China's President ...
Amid this, Taiwan's defense ministry published a photo of a patch worn by fighter pilots. The patch depicts a cartoon Winnie the Pooh getting punched by a bear — a dig at Xi Jinping.
The film featuring a murderous Pooh bear has been pulled from theaters in Hong Kong and Macau without explanation. Some say it's a result of China's censorship of memes related to leader Xi Jinping.
In the video, Xi is seen wearing a robe with a cartoon bear that resembles Winnie the Pooh, a character that has been used to mock the Chinese leader for over a decade. In 2013, Xi was the subject ...
Residents of Taiwan are rushing to buy a patch worn by members of its air force that mocks Chinese President Xi Jinping over his supposed resemblance to Winnie the Pooh.