stock here: this Thai Chi meme is obvious propaganda…..who benefits from some older guy doing Thai Chi on a chair? The CCP only?




- Generic tai chi class promotional graphic showing a stylized silhouette and slogan-style text (could be used in a fitness ad).
- Chinese tai chi training/health culture poster with bold Chinese typography and imagery — typical of class-recruitment posters.
- 30-day tai chi fitness challenge ad with a graphic layout used on social media or web banners.
- Website promotional image from a tai chi workouts/fitness site (often used in marketing pages).
- Cartoon/illustrative tai chi poster — a style often adapted for lighthearted ads or flyers.
If you want actual ads that claim absurd benefits (e.g., “gain massive muscles in 2 weeks”), those are typically AI-generated memes or dynamic video ads on social platforms (e.g., TikTok or YouTube). Many people online (such as practitioners on Reddit) have noted fake ads showing overly muscular figures claiming tai chi will get you “ripped” like a gym routine — a trend seen especially in AI-generated ad campaigns.
If you want, I can find screenshots of those specific types of false-advertising ads or point you to recent examples from social platforms where people have posted them.