Chinese Communist Party Megathread - Cold War 2: Electric Boogaloo

@MarvinTheParanoidAndroid the reason for collapse, according to those who believe it, is that those who want to see a collapse don’t care for America. They don’t care for any real nation. They only care about power and lining their pockets. If things go to shit, they’ll just fuck off to some gated community or private island where they’re protected by private security away from the rest of us who can’t afford those things.

As for China, they just see the CCP as the favorite to bet on. They see China moving to build debt traps and becoming the one place that dominates trade and industry because China has this thing called “not having real labor laws” and it can be a great place to outsource just to cut some costs and increase profits. And with the CCP swinging its sick around wherever it goes, they see China as the place that’ll serve as the model for the one world government and any other global bodies that’ll run the show.

The elites see the US as going down and America as going up. And when they see America as China’s bitch, they’re gonna look to score some smokes. And get some sweet rewards as reporters and collaborators. And Red Guard.

Jokes on them, China just announced they're doing another Cultural Revolution. They may have also announced war on the U.S.
 
@MarvinTheParanoidAndroid All the more reason to get rich, cash their winnings, then GTFO as quick as possible.



So what you're saying is that Gamers are going to rise up?
Seeing how Chinese game are disconnected at the mere mention of 1989, I’m not sure how much they’ll be able to do.
Yes, Japan learned once that they can't bite off the whole of china. I would hope they wouldn't be foolish enough to try and occupy it again. Let them have manchuria back, and everyone else can divvy it up as they like.
I’d say Xinjiang and Upper Mongolia would be places of contention. And everyone would be fine with Taiwan having the rest.
 
Wow, you guys forget really easily that legally, the USSR owned Tetris at one point.
Here's an interesting little (hour long) documentary about that - what started as a passion project by one guy quickly became a fustercluck, and despite the jokes about it being a communist plot to destroy American productivity and all that, plenty of Russian programmers also were hooked by it. It was just that damned good.

 
Last edited:
There’s only one way I can see this: pandering to /pol/. https://www.outkick.com/sissy-men-need-not-apply-for-television-work-in-china/
China has quietly captured the hearts and minds of American traitors hell bent on collapsing the capitalist union in favor of a more equitable, communistic vision. Interestingly enough, China also prohibits the exact revolutionary behavior that much of the American left seems to covet, and yet their end goals are aligned.

China’s government recently banned “effeminate men” on television, broadening a campaign to promote real “revolutionary” behavior: total control in the name of morality.

President Xi Jinping is calling the measure a “national rejuvenation,” so that Communist control of all aspects of society are better sold to the masses as patriotic and beneficial to their wellbeing. But control is always the determining factor, and everything that the Communist Party does is meant to demand more alignment between government, corporations, and citizens.

According to CCP directives, television broadcasters must “resolutely put an end to sissy men and other abnormal esthetics,” the National Radio and TV Administration said, using an insulting slang term for effeminate men — “niang pao,” or literally, “girlie guns.”

The move towards traditional masculinity reflects a desire to breed strength and resiliency into the culture, while rejecting the soft, mentally weak attitudes that celebrity-driven culture creates.

Chinese broadcasters must also avoid promoting “vulgar internet celebrities” and admiration of wealth and celebrity, the CCP said. Instead, programs should “vigorously promote excellent Chinese traditional culture, revolutionary culture and advanced socialist culture.”
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: дядя Боря

Celebrities Vow to Give up Foreign Passports to Remain in China Market

Two artists who have a huge following in China have announced they will give up their existing nationalities in order to be Chinese citizens, amid a widening purge on celebrity culture by the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Action film actor Nicholas Tse, who was born in Hong Kong, told state broadcaster CCTV on Sunday saying he is in the process of renouncing his Canadian citizenship, amid rumors that a slew of household names in China are under pressure to do the same.

In a video clip from the CCTV6 show The Blue Feather Lounge, Tse, who has held dual citizenship since his parents moved to Vancouver in 1987, is seen saying that he feels he has a "sense of responsibility" to spread Chinese culture around the world.

"I was born in Hong Kong, so I am originally Chinese," he said. "Actually, I have started the application process to renounce my Canadian citizenship."

Rumors have been circulating on Chinese social media platforms since last week that the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT) has listed seven top celebrities, of whom Tse is one, who hold foreign citizenship but were born in Hong Kong or China.

According to unconfirmed reports, the list also includes Jet Li, Zhang Tielin, Crystal Liu, Will Pan, Wang Lee Hom and Mark Chao.

An official who answered the phone at SARFT on Monday told RFA to search for "the relevant laws and regulations" online, but no rules pertaining to celebrity nationalities were visible on its official website at that time.

Crackdown on celebrity culture

Meanwhile, singer, actress and broadcaster Maria Cordero, nicknamed Fat Mama, said she would likely renounce her Portuguese citizenship too.

"If you really want to get work in mainland China, then it's the right thing to do," Cordero told RFA. "If you work there, you should take Chinese citizenship. I have no problem with that."

She said she was aware of the reports that Tse is renouncing his Canadian citizenship.

"I think they are all going to be doing this, one after another," Cordero said. "Unless they decide that they don't want to make that kind of money any more."

Tse's move comes amid a widening clampdown on celebrity culture under CCP general secretary Xi Jinping, with a slew of new regulations coming out of Beijing in recent weeks, targeting "unruly" fan behavior, "sissy" male stars, and warnings that celebrities who don't display the correct attitude to China will no longer be welcome in its increasingly state-controlled markets.

The SARFT recently banned stars with "incorrect political positions," unethical behavior and "effeminate" male styles from television shows and movies, after a string of scandals involving sexual assault, tax evasion and behavior deemed "unpatriotic" by the CCP.

Artists who are "alienated from the CCP and China," were among the categories banned from appearing in films and TV shows, alongside those who "breach standards of social equity" or those who "violate public order and ethics."

The administration also banned TV talent shows, which have been linked to the use of social media to get fans to spend money to boost the ratings of their favorite candidates.

The SARFT also hit out at "effeminate" male styles as well as shows built around scandals, ostentatious wealth and "vulgar" internet celebrities. It warned broadcasters that they should focus on building "positive energy" instead.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: TI-81
They're dumb as shit, even the Ancient Romans understood what bread & circuses were good for, the Chinese are such puritanical retards that they're willing to destroy the very accommodations that keep people from questioning their authority. The USSR would've loved video games the same way they did with meditation; an activity of doing nothing constructive or competitive.

You will be oppressed & miserable about it.

USSR paradigm was much closer to North Korea ... +1 on circuses and parades -1 on bread. If you are focused on survival in an athmosphere of total fear and when your family members can be snitching on you, vidya games is the last thing you'd think about. USSR had vodka ... same deal, escape from reality. They fought it tooth and nail, establishing full on prohibition at one time, but ultimately well regulating it.

Brainwashing is relatively new concept, all though there is a saying that truly conquering a country requires to raise their children. The real leap that CCP took is the scale of purchasing foreign mouthpieces and institutions. Soviet Union played that game, but not really on the scale of CCP's wallet.

While 10-20 years seem like a lot of time for one person's life, on scale of history it's not even a blip. USSR also went through various phases, NEP(new economic order) and Perestroyka when private ownership was somewhat allowed and it spawned a lot of entrepreneurship. NEP was ended, Perestroyka somewhat ended USSR. In any case, these things take long time.

Despite warm/cold cycles with the West, USSR still supplied assload of things, steel, raw materials etc. So rhetoric in the media never really affected trade. Sanctions were always tied to domestic interest, i.e. sanctions imposed by the West onto USSR after invasion of Afganistan lasted well past their withdrawal. Same with Crimea, the sanctions are purely superficial, unless there is financial interest to make them otherwise for non-political reasons.


Also the beauty of the good brainwashing is that slaves never feel oppression. Ask any surviving Soviet boomer and they still claim to this day, that Soviet Unions was awesome and want return of communism. Partially it's because if you didn't feel that way, you'd be dead.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gutpuke and Wood
I'm sure it will work out for Taiwan as well as "one country, two systems" worked out for Hong Kong.
The thing about it is that this is being brought up as Xi goes into overdrive in his efforts to Return to Mao. And then there are the other CCP hardliners in the government along with those who'll go to the ends of the earth for Xi as he works to become the greatest emperoro the CCP Dynasty has ever seen.
 
Also the beauty of the good brainwashing is that slaves never feel oppression. Ask any surviving Soviet boomer and they still claim to this day, that Soviet Unions was awesome and want return of communism. Partially it's because if you didn't feel that way, you'd be dead.

Imagine if instead of the break up, China just introduces their version of capitalism into the USSR and they just follow that example and go with it and they never split, it just rebrands itself like China's model, how fast would people leave and how many skirmishes would occur, would Kazakhstan be the USSR's version of Xinjiang?
 
Imagine if instead of the break up, China just introduces their version of capitalism into the USSR and they just follow that example and go with it and they never split, it just rebrands itself like China's model, how fast would people leave and how many skirmishes would occur, would Kazakhstan be the USSR's version of Xinjiang?

The break up was very much a chain reaction from the comm block states floating away. Most of those states were not as full retard as Soviet Union was, they were close to the West and retained their national identity. I can't see East Germany staying and then Poland staying and then Baltic states staying. The rest was just manipulation trying to keep satellites close.

90s is basically your "capitalism" model, but shit went out of control too fast, too much money to be made there. Eventually after 90s the power coalesced back and we got Putin for 20+ years, same shit as CCP but it's United Russia bullshit, a cursed union of preudo-democracy + religion, but not that different from CCP commies.
 

China’s Top Universities Get Poor Grades For Party Propaganda

Political inspectors sent into universities by the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) have said most higher education institutions aren't doing enough to promote the party's ideology on campus.

An inspection team sent by the CCP Central Committee found a lack of interest on the part of young people and a bureaucratic mentality in higher education were largely to blame for the failure to promote the personal ideology of CCP general secretary Xi Jinping, whose governing style is regularly compared by commentators to the personality cult around late supreme leader Mao Zedong.

The inspectors visited 31 colleges and universities across China, and found little evidence that they were implementing Beijing’s orders, according to a notice on the website of the party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI).

“Ideological and political education is relatively weak,” the notice said, after inspectors visited some of the best-known universities in the country, including Peking and Tsinghua Universities in Beijing, Nanjing University, Fudan University and Jiaotong University in Shanghai.

“There are shortcomings when it comes to building school spirit and [ideological] study ethic,” the notice said, adding, “There are prominent issues [linked to a] bureaucratic mentality. There is insufficient implementation of the party line in the new era.”

Chinese dissident Gong Yujian said the team was like an imperial-era inspection team working on behalf of an emperor.

“To put it bluntly, they are sending out a patrol to put the frighteners on officials further down the hierarchy, to give them a kick, and a warning,” Gong said. “If this doesn’t get rectified, Xi Jinping will be very unhappy.”

“The next step could be a Central Committee investigation team and taskforce,” he said. “They will make use of the CCP disciplinary system as well as the legal system.”

“This inspection team was sent by Xi Jinping as a warning to lower-ranking officials.”

Gong said the insistence on the study of Xi’s ideology was similar to the Mao era.

“We’re just going back to the Mao era now,” he said. “Xi wants to rule the CCP and the whole of China, bring them under one leader, one ideology.”


Largely uninterested

Chen Chien-fu, vice president of the Taiwan Professors Association, said it is telling that young Chinese people seem largely uninterested in Xi Jinping Thought.

“They have had contact with the West, and have come to see CCP ideological education and idols as having little to do with their own concerns,” Chen told RFA. “Xi Jinping clearly thinks there are big obstacles in Chinese society to his cult of personality.”

“So he sent in the central government inspection teams.”

Several lecturers at the universities on the list either declined to comment on Tuesday when contacted by RFA, or hung up the phone.

A lecturer who works in higher education in the southern province of Guangdong, who asked to remain anonymous, said there is a current ban on any teachers or lecturers giving interviews without prior authorization.

While universities have always had compulsory political studies for first-year undergraduates under CCP rule, the departments which ran them are gradually being repurposed as “departments of Marxism,” the lecturer said.

He said part of the current government crackdown on China’s entertainment industry is linked to a perception in Beijing that young people are too taken with celebrity culture and fandom, as well as video games.

For example, Chinese postgraduates carry out around 80 percent of global research into video game culture, with Japan trailing at around 20 percent, the lecturer said.

That is now likely to change.

“I heard that there is a ban on writing about electronic gaming in academic papers from this year,” he said.


Party tightening its grip

The CCP is in the process of tightening its ideological grip on higher education in the country, ordering structural changes that will allow a far greater degree of party control in the day-to-day running of colleges and universities.

Institutions are now required to ensure that their in-house party committee "exercises comprehensive leadership" over their teaching, scientific research, and administration, according to a revised set of rules issued on April 22.

Party branches should also be set up to guide the work of teachers, researchers on specific projects, undergraduate students, and other sub-groups within a university, it said, choosing members with "a strong party spirit."

Their job is to carry out propaganda work and implement the central party line, as decided by Beijing,

Xi's approach stems from a 2013 article titled "Improving Ideological and Political Work Among Young Teachers in Colleges and Universities," and from his reiteration of the "Seven Taboos" that mustn't be discussed in public by servants of the state, including teachers.

The seven banned topics are: universal values of human rights and democratic, constitutional government; press freedom; civil society; citizens' rights; the historical mistakes of the Chinese Communist Party; the financial and political elite; and judicial independence.
 
Our Pro-PRC Youtuber friend had this info:

View attachment 2517776


Is this legit? If so, agree or not? Is this workable?
No. The CCP seeks to eliminate that sort of autonomy, just like in Hong Kong. That's the propaganda they spread to Taiwan right now but after the crackdown on HK autonomy that propaganda is looking a lot more obvious.
Imagine if instead of the break up, China just introduces their version of capitalism into the USSR and they just follow that example and go with it and they never split, it just rebrands itself like China's model, how fast would people leave and how many skirmishes would occur, would Kazakhstan be the USSR's version of Xinjiang?
Kazakhstan and Central Asia were actually very loyal to the USSR. The Russians (and Germans) there didn't want to be outnumbered by the new Muzzie states while the Muzzies loved the gibs from Moscow. They voted to keep the USSR at a higher rate than any other SSR.
 
@Save the Loli I'd say that China's current approach on Taiwan is from Xi Jingping giving zero fucks. He wants all of China's claims under Beijing's banner. He wants all the nations to be his puppets, whether through government sympathizers or debt traps. He wants the CCP dynasty to have an empire that spreads far and wide. He wants to take over the world.
 
  • Feels
Reactions: Super-Chevy454
@Save the Loli I'd say that China's current approach on Taiwan is from Xi Jingping giving zero fucks. He wants all of China's claims under Beijing's banner. He wants all the nations to be his puppets, whether through government sympathizers or debt traps. He wants the CCP dynasty to have an empire that spreads far and wide. He wants to take over the world.
Is it premature to said then Xi the pooh might be the antichrist? :thinking:
 
Back