Chinese Internal Politics

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member
Chinese people (at least most of the middle aged and younger generations) are at least helped in learning English by the fact that they are familiarised with the latin alphabet as part of their basic language education through pinyin. If nothing else, that is step up as a jumping point for learning English.
It's more that foreigners are complaining that their Chinese can't be 1st grade level and make money anymore. They have to act like actual immigrants that learn to speak proper Chinese.

Note that to study at a Chinese university as a foreigner for a degree, you need HSK 6/6, which is maybe middle school level. That's reading 3500+ characters (一级字), being able to write essays, speak and listen at a near native pace and most of all, no longer need a dictionary or translation tool because you can guess based on context what a word or character means and guess based on radicals how an unknown character is read. That's the skill of a typical 14 year old in China. As you might imagine these guys are nowhere near that.

The equivalent is expected of Asian immigrants in the west in English and they still treat you like you're dumb sometimes. Time for the preferential treatment is over.
 

BoeingEngineer

Junior Member
Registered Member
this is the level of Chinese skill they need to go on TV.

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Note that English is one of the hardest languages for Asians to learn, particularly from Han character language systems (Chinese and Japanese). And these guys often fail to even learn rudimentary Spanish, which has something like 40% word similarity with English. US state department estimates that it takes only 600 hours to learn Spanish but 2200+ to learn Chinese, Japanese or Korean. I think the reverse is true as well - it takes 2200+ hours for Asians to learn English. I also think that they're hilarious in rating Vietnamese as easier than Chinese/Japanese/Korean because even though it has Latin letters, it has 60% Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary, tones and complex grammar like honorifics.

this also proves that the average westerners are indeed inferior to Chinese.

their future will only get squashed even more as China advances !!
 

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member

Is it confirmed Wang Yi is staying in office? Will he take over Yang Jiechi's position? I remember reading something about that on SCMP.
Who's China's next FM?
If this is true, Wang Yi staying in office or being promoted is a huge signal. Note his unique properties:

1. native level fluency in Japanese.
2. first foreign minister since Li Zhaoxing to NOT have been a US ambassador
3. a 'wolf warrior' with spine

Wild guess: with the death of Abe and the discrediting of the fascist faction in Japan, along with the collapse of the yen, waning of 'some country's' influence, that country's turn towards Europe (thanks Russia!) and
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, this could be signaling that it is time to help Japan achieve some more independence.
In the Public Opinion Survey on Diplomacy by the Cabinet Office of Japan conducted at the end of 2021, just over 10% of respondents in their 60s and 70s — those with the harshest attitudes toward China — answered that they felt “close, friendly or familiar” with China. On the other end of the spectrum, over 40% of respondents aged 18 to 29 gave the same response. This indicates that the younger generations are more likely to have better perceptions of China.
Today the overall advantage of China over Japan - military, economic and technological - is at the greatest since the Ming Dynasty and still rising. Yet Japanese youth are more pro China than ever. There's a reason for having Wang Yi staying on board.
 

ironborn

Junior Member
Registered Member
For those who can't read it cuz of paywall

Xi Jinping Is a Captive of the Communist Party Too​

It may appear that Xi Jinping has taken over the party, but it’s the other way around.

By Kerry Brown
Updated Oct. 10, 2022 09:15 PM
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To Western eyes, President Xi Jinping of China may appear as the embodiment of tyrannical one-man rule, and for good reason.
Since taking leadership of the Chinese Communist Party a decade ago, he mothballed a power-sharing arrangement among party factions, transforming one of the world’s largest political organizations into a unified whole in which his words, thoughts and visage are everywhere.
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, he used a phrase once uttered by Mao Zedong in describing the party as China’s “east, west, south, north and center.” He may as well have been speaking of himself.
Mr. Xi now stands ready to assume an unprecedented third five-year term as supreme leader during the
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, which will begin on Sunday.
His ability to amass so much unquestioned power has proved unexpected, even unwelcome, to some. It was
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, with good reason, that China was too complex, too vast and too capitalist to avoid some form of political pluralism. Surely social media, a rising middle class and general modernization would lead to that. Instead, Mr. Xi has taken China in the opposite direction and seems able to extend his tentacles even
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But how could this have happened with such relative ease, without bloodshed? It surely cannot be just through the whim of one man.
For all the fixation on Mr. Xi, in the end his life, purpose and politics are not really about him. They are about the Communist Party. There is indeed an autocrat who rules modern China, but it is the party that Mr. Xi serves, not the man. And in a strange way, he is as much a captive of the party as everyone else.
His place in Chinese history rests on whether he can ensure that party rule endures long after his departure so that it can fulfill the party’s fundamental aim: restoring China to its ancient role as a great nation worthy of its Chinese name, “Zhongguo,” “the central country.”
This mission has been in the making ever since the depredations China
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in the 19th and 20th centuries, followed by the collapse of Chinese imperial rule in 1912 and Japan’s savage wartime invasion. The Communist Party picked up the pieces of a broken nation. Mr. Xi’s power derives from the party’s nationalist goal of wiping away those past shames, restoring China’s strength and control over “lost” territories like Taiwan. Revanchism may drive President Vladimir Putin of Russia, but it is the lifeblood of the Chinese Communist Party.
Mr. Xi is the son of a former elite leader, Xi Zhongxun, and learned from him at least one lesson: Keep faith in the party no matter how it treats you.
Caught up in one of the purges of the Mao era, Mr. Xi’s father was
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for years, politically rehabilitated only after Mao died. During the Cultural Revolution, Maoist student militants
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; one of Mr. Xi’s sisters died in the mayhem. Paraded publicly as an enemy of the people, his own mother was forced to denounce him. Mr. Xi eventually spent seven years exiled to the countryside as part of Mao’s exhortation to “learn from the peasants.”
Although hardened by the experience, Mr. Xi kept faith. A friend of his during those troubled times recalled a young man with an aura of destiny, a Communist
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who regarded party leadership as his birthright and had his “eyes on the prize,” according to a classified 2009
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compiled by the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. Convinced that only the party could restore China’s strength, Mr. Xi was not corruptible by material gain, his old friend said. The question was whether he would succumb to the intoxication of power.
By the time he took over in 2012, China’s capitalist transition was complete, but new problems had emerged. The decade under his predecessor, Hu Jintao, was one of missed opportunity, the grand mission of national restoration seemingly forgotten. Corrupt local officials governed their turf like petty tyrants, and protests raged over government heavy-handedness, rampant corruption, poor labor conditions and colossal pollution.
The anti-corruption campaigns that dominated Mr. Xi’s first few years in power were often seen as cover for eliminating opponents. But he was primarily motivated by a larger mission to make the party more efficient and restore its image.
It is striking how little meaningful pushback he has encountered. Formidable as Mao was, even he encountered opposition to his destructive utopian policies. Deng Xiaoping faced resistance to his market reforms and Jiang Zemin contended with forces that wanted even greater reform. But with Mr. Xi, there has been almost no party dissent apart from occasional rumors of internal grumbling and
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Part of the reason is the potency of the nationalist mission, which appeals to Chinese citizens far more than the cold logic of Marxism-Leninism. The displays of patriotic pride during the Beijing Winter Olympics last February were sincere, as were feelings of wounded anger when the United States and others blamed China for the pandemic. Even Chinese who may be averse to Communist Party rule still love their country.
Mr. Xi has been lucky to be able to build on the progress of his forbears. But he has been skillful, too. The internet could have threatened centralized authoritarian rule, but Mr. Xi’s government has used
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to more pervasively assert party power. A technology backwater for much of the 20th century, China now has the world’s most advanced techno-autocracy.
The remarkable muscularity of Mr. Xi’s style is not all about him or his personal aims, ambitions or ego (while he may certainly have these). China is strong again; Mr. Xi’s one responsibility is not to foul that up. And that’s why his leadership is so risk-averse, and dissenters are so energetically crushed. The
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is the most extreme manifestation of his obsession with preserving stability, even at the risk of international criticism and domestic suffering. The same goes for his uncompromising zero-Covid policy.
These and other examples of discipline and control are akin to the directives of a commander preparing for the final climactic battle before victory — China’s restoration as a great power, perhaps even
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as the world’s largest economy someday, can be realized. Mr. Xi and his party colleagues know that a single misstep could ruin everything.
Someday, of course, Mr. Xi will be gone. But his leadership ethos — the vast project of building up the current Chinese leader’s public persona, protecting it from all threats and keeping a laser focus on making China strong, respected, even feared — will remain. Too much has already been invested in it.
Kerry Brown (
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) is director of the Lau China Institute at King’s College, London, and author of several books on Chinese politics. He is a former British foreign service officer.
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