Even on U.S. Campuses, China Cracks Down on Students Who Speak Out
China,Free Speech,Oppression,World,Asia,National Security,Human Rights
On the bucolic campus of Purdue University in Indiana, deep in America’s heartland and 7,000 miles from his home in China, Zhihao Kong thought he could finally express himself.
In a rush of adrenaline last year, the graduate student posted an open letter on a dissident website praising the heroism of the students killed in the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989.
The blowback, he said, was fast and frightening. His parents called from China, crying. Officers of the Ministry of State Security, the feared civilian spy agency, had warned them about his activism in the United States.
“They told us to make you stop or we are all in trouble,” his parents said.
Related Coverage
AllSides Picks
Bias
Left and Center Media Quiet on DOJ’s Reported Investigation of Top Left-Wing Activist
Andy Gorel
July 1st, 2026
Youth Voices
Profits From Ignorance: The Campaign Finance Case That Went Unnoticed
Alexsa Sanz
July 13th, 2026