Editor’s note for Monday, May 10, 2021
A note from the editor of today's The China Project Access newsletter.

My thoughts today:
Things arenโt getting any better for those who like to speak their minds in China:
Wรกng Xรฌng ็ๅ ด, founder of a string of internet companies including food delivery giant Meituan, โsparked a social media frenzy and a sell-off of its stock, after posting a millennium-old Chinese poem seen as an unsubtle jab at the government,โ reports the South China Morning Post๏ผ
The 42-year-old internet entrepreneur, whose company is under investigation for possible breaches of Chinaโs antitrust laws, posted a poem on Sunday that was written during the late Tang dynasty about the burning of books by Chinaโs first emperor Qรญn Shวhuรกng ็งฆๅง็. The poem is usually interpreted as an anti-establishment clarion call.
Wang made his deleted poem post on Fanfou, a Twitter clone he founded more than a decade ago which was shut down during a government clampdown on social media in 2009. When Fanfou reopened in 2010, it never returned to popularity, but Wang has continued to post there as โthe billionaire mayor of Chinaโs glorious digital ghost town.โ
The poem and stock sell off come as the government continues its crackdown on big tech companies, with Meituan very much in its sights.
Also in the news, Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ replied to a letter from the editors of The Journal of Chinese Humanities (ๆๅฒๅฒ) in a missive promoted by state media (in English, Chinese) as emphasizing the promotion of Chinese culture and civilization. But, says Bill Bishop in todayโs Sinocism newsletter: โThose with a deeper understanding of CCP history may see more signals about the intensifying anti-Americanism in Xiโs New Era.โ
Our word of the day is On the Book-Burning Pit (็ไนฆๅ fรฉn shลซ kฤng), a poem by Zhฤng Jiรฉ ็ซ ็ขฃ.
Our annual Womenโs Conference happens May 12 and 13. ACCESS Members can receive free entry on May 12 or 50% off entry on May 13 by using the promo code WC21ACCESS.
One of our featured speakers is Wei Sun Christianson, Managing Director of Asia Pacific and CEO of China for Morgan Stanley: Read a Q&A with her here.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief