Sorry for offtopic but this type of lies is irritating. Yes, USA has some human right abuse. Yes, it is much lower than USSR, current Russia or current China.
Fully agree with that, this annoys me as well. But what also annoys me is the narrative that China must be lying about everything, and that China must have millions of Covid death that they are not talking about because it could not possibly be the case that they did a better job at containing the disease than the good old USA is doing (god bless the president).
It is entirely plausible that China did a better job, and all the evidence is pointing in that direction. Despite, or more likely because, all the failings and human rights abuses in their system, China is much better able to keep something like this contained. On top of that they had experience with SARS. No magic or major conspiracy is needed to explain that this was relatively contained in China.
It is clear that western society is at a disadvantage in this situation. We had to wait untill public opinion was ready to accept lockdowns before any drastic action could be taken despite the fact that it was completely obvious that something very bad was happening in china, and as a result we responded too late. Now public opinion may force us to open up the system too soon, whereas china enforced their lockdown to the point where they had all but eleminated the disease within their borders.
On top of that, this crisis is forcing us to keep people confined to their homes, which goes kind of against the whole superior human rights and freedom thing we had going here. The reflex seems to be that if China is doing this rather well, then they must be to blame for all this. This feeds into all the conspiracy theories about engineered viruses, and is not helpful at all, the chinese people are as much a victim of this as we are.
This is also not just China and the US, there are a lot of other countries trying to find a balance, based on their own situation, and experimenting with different rules and restrictions. Rather than trying to shift the blame or say that others have it all wrong, we can learn a lot from looking at those other approaches and the results. Can we open up the schools without negative effects? Can we open up the shops with restrictions? There is a lot of data out there because countries take different approaches. We have to find our way out of this by learning from eachother, and we must find a way to convince people that the restrictions are needed, and that their rights will be restored when this mess is over.
But it won't be easy.