It could be the Cyclops 1:
https://twitter.com/USN_Submariner/status/1670825386433986564
>"free speech" Twitter is actually the US version of Mao's Hundred Flower campaign.
TY Anon.
Hundred Flowers Campaign (Bǎihuā Yùndòng 百花运动)|Bǎihuā Yùndòng 百花运动 (Hundred Flowers Campaign)
In May 1956 Mao Zedong (1893–1976), leader of the People’s Republic of China, announced that the government would relax its strict control over thought and expression. The policy later became known as the Hundred Flowers Campaign, or Hundred Flowers Movement. The new freedoms promised under the campaign, however, lasted only a little more than a year.
As part of the campaign, Mao invited intellectuals to voice their criticism of party and government policies and leaders. The intellectuals, especially educators, had lost faith in the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) after it introduced a Soviet-style education system to China in the early 1950s. Under this system liberal arts education was discarded in favor of science and technology education. Mao thought to win over the alienated intellectuals by giving them a degree of intellectual freedom.
Leaders within the party resisted the possibility of criticism. The intellectuals were reluctant to criticize the government for fear of reprisals. It was only in the spring of 1957, after Mao made a desperate plea to get the campaign moving with the slogan “Let a hundred flowers bloom and a hundred schools of thought contend,” that members of political parties, writers, journalists, teachers, and professionals began to openly criticize Communist rule, government policy, and party members.
just five weeks after the inauguration of the campaign, the party launched the dramatic new Anti-Rightist Campaign that shifted the target of criticism from the Communists to the intellectuals. Critics of the regime were themselves severely criticized by party members. An estimated 500,000–750,000 intellectuals were denounced or blacklisted. Some were arrested, and many were sent to the countryside to “rectify their thinking through labor.” In 1979, three years after the death of Mao, Deng Xiaoping (1904–1997), the new leader of the CCP, finally restored a “decent name” to (i.e., rehabilitated) these vilified intellectuals
https://www.berkshirepublishing.com/chinaconnectu/2012/01/23/hundred-flowers-campaign-b%C7%8Eihua-yundong-%E7%99%BE%E8%8A%B1%E8%BF%90%E5%8A%A8b%C7%8Eihua-yundong-%E7%99%BE%E8%8A%B1%E8%BF%90%E5%8A%A8-hundred-flowers-campaign/