This article is about the discovering and coming to light of those 300 silos. The actual discovery part I thought wasn't super illuminating. Lots of head-in-sand moments as you would expect. However I found this part about the SFA style windmill cover story interesting:
For me I've always thought the windmill thing was clearly an extremely obvious tongue-in-cheek line and not a serious attempt at obfuscation, a meme if you will. I even remember people like dabao making meme CGs renderings of a windmill (the electricity generating kind) being launched out of a silo spinning blade and all. If you actually use the windmill line in any serious discussion in Chinese playing dumb people would do the wink wink elbow nudge thing and ask if the windmills are intended to capture the east wind.
So it's surprisingly that coming from the other side, there really were people who bought the idea of windmills. If the article is to be believed they're having serious problem reading between the lines of even the most superficial cover stories.
What was equally remarkable was the reaction from Chinese media. Soon after our discovery, several of the more prominent Western pro-China accounts on Twitter, through a hilarious misunderstanding of a labeled image of the area, began claiming that the silo fields ually windfarms. This was because there was indeed a windfarm nearby which Jeffrey and I had dutifully labeled as such, but the pro-China accounts, apparently having never interacted with a map beyond Google Maps, believed that this label had been placed there by some other force and that we were simply misinterpreting a map someone else had provided.
The windfarm story became, via completely organic means, the dominant Chinese cover story and was immediately picked up by the Global Times, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and basically every Chinese Embassy with a real go-getter in charge of their social media accounts. Many of these posts have since been deleted – others are still up. The denial made it all the way to Chinese Central Television, in which several distinguished guests on Chinese news shows called Jeffrey and I ignorant hacks. This cover story even gained some traction in English-language media. I was particularly blindsided by a story written by a senior China-focused imagery specialist that seriously entertained the possibility that these were simply windfarms.
For me I've always thought the windmill thing was clearly an extremely obvious tongue-in-cheek line and not a serious attempt at obfuscation, a meme if you will. I even remember people like dabao making meme CGs renderings of a windmill (the electricity generating kind) being launched out of a silo spinning blade and all. If you actually use the windmill line in any serious discussion in Chinese playing dumb people would do the wink wink elbow nudge thing and ask if the windmills are intended to capture the east wind.
So it's surprisingly that coming from the other side, there really were people who bought the idea of windmills. If the article is to be believed they're having serious problem reading between the lines of even the most superficial cover stories.