China's New Intellegentsia

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
I would consider this article to be a must read. I find the different schools interesting "New Right", "New Left", "Neo-Comm", etc,.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Sample paragraph.

"Paradoxically, the power of the Chinese intellectual is amplified by China's repressive political system, where there are no opposition parties, no independent trade unions, no public disagreements between politicians and a media that exists to underpin social control rather than promote political accountability. Intellectual debate in this world can become a surrogate for politics—if only because it is more personal, aggressive and emotive than anything that formal politics can muster. While it is true there is no free discussion about ending the Communist party's rule, independence for Tibet or the events of Tiananmen Square, there is a relatively open debate in leading newspapers and academic journals about China's economic model, how to clean up corruption or deal with foreign policy issues like Japan or North Korea. Although the internet is heavily policed, debate is freer here than in the printed word (although one of the most free-thinking bloggers, Hu Jia, was recently arrested). And behind closed doors, academics and thinkers will often talk freely about even the most sensitive topics, such as political reform. The Chinese like to argue about whether it is the intellectuals that influence decision-makers, or whether groups of decision-makers use pet intellectuals as informal mouthpieces to advance their own views. Either way, these debates have become part of the political process, and are used to put ideas in play and expand the options available to Chinese decision-makers. Intellectuals are, for example, regularly asked to brief the politburo in "study sessions"; they prepare reports that feed into the party's five-year plans; and they advise on the government's white papers."
 

Vlad Plasmius

Junior Member
Very nice, though I can't help but be annoyed at the typical Western idiocy. They talk of a Chinese model as being an authoritarian one, and draw a comparison to multi-party representative democracy.
 

Schumacher

Senior Member
Very nice, though I can't help but be annoyed at the typical Western idiocy. They talk of a Chinese model as being an authoritarian one, and draw a comparison to multi-party representative democracy.

Well, not only western, most mainstream commentaries on China, & many other world issues, are quite shallow & severely lacking in good analysis. With intense competition, most news outlets just get maybe interns to cut & paste & then release them as 'news/analysis'.

Back to the article, I think the Chinese leadership are not much influenced by ideology nowadays be it left/right, socialism/market. They just go for what works.
Fortunately, I also see no sign that they're being fooled into the idealistic but flawed one man one vote multi or 2 party system.
What I see is 'democracy' being limited to the low level, perhaps county level where most of the corruption takes place.
Near the top, limited democracy will be used to fill posts based on meritocracy.
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
Well it seems to me that, as Schumacher said, China's leadership goes for what works. They do not care about ideology. To understand China's actions in the world and in domestic policy we must understand the uling class's mostives. I personally believe that their top three perrogatives are 1) Preservation of Communist Party rule 2) Maintaining social stability and 3)Making China more prosperous and powerful on a worldwide scale.

With those three in mind, you can see why China allows this activity to go on but only in secret. The want to be to be "better safe than sorry" on #1 and #2 but realize that they can't accomplish #2 and #3 without it.
 
Top