AI-Debiased Article
Rewritten from New York Times — Business 1 min read
39 Mainstream framing L R No clear lean ✓ verified
Why this rating? · 4 signals

Signals flagged in the original

  • loaded language: 'smear campaigns'
  • loaded language: 'death threats'
  • framing: He Became China’s Largest Critic in Exile. Then the Threats Followed Him.
  • editorializing: He is not letting that stop him.

Analyzed by our bias model Full breakdown ↓

Chinese Critic in Exile Faces Threats

Li Ying, a prominent critic of the Chinese government with 2.2 million followers on X, faces ongoing threats and smear campaigns while living in exile. He continues his advocacy despite these challenges.

People
Li Ying

Li Ying, also known as Teacher Li, has gained a following of 2.2 million on X. Although he resides outside of China, he continues to experience smear campaigns and death threats. Despite these challenges, he remains committed to his activities.

Annotating as

No note attached

on this article.

Bias Analysis

Bias score 39/100
wirepublicmainstream flavoredpartisanadvocacy
Inflammatory language 75/100

Bias Indicators Removed

  • loaded language: 'smear campaigns'
  • loaded language: 'death threats'
  • framing: He Became China’s Largest Critic in Exile. Then the Threats Followed Him.
  • editorializing: He is not letting that stop him.

Original vs. Neutral

Original Headline

He Became China’s Largest Critic in Exile. Then the Threats Followed Him.

Neutral Headline

Chinese Critic in Exile Faces Threats