Discontent has been widespread on Chinese social media ever since Shanghai started a rigid lockdown in late March. Now, it is moving into the real world. Sharply falling case numbers have allowed more than half of the city’s 25 million residents to step out of their homes—and many are venting a month’s worth of frustration at being isolated with insufficient food via public acts of disobedience. On Saturday, locals in one district found a government storage site full of vegetables that had rotted rather than being delivered to hungry families and smashed them in the street. In a western suburb, dozens of residents took to the […]