UN Xi Jinping set to become next Mao Zedong - Term limits to be removed from constitution

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/25/world/asia/china-xi-jinping.html

Not that it really matters since China is a one party dictatorship anyway, it's going back to being a one man, cult of personality dictatorship.

BEIJING — China’s Communist Party cleared the way for President Xi Jinping to stay in power, perhaps indefinitely, by proposing that the nation’s Constitution be changed to abolish a two-term limit on the presidency.

The Communist Party Central Committee, a council of senior officials from the ruling party, “proposed to remove the expression that the President and Vice-President of the People’s Republic of China ‘shall serve no more than two consecutive terms’ from the country’s Constitution,” the Xinhua News Agency said on its English-language website.

Since each term is five years in length, the Constitution had limited Mr. Xi, who became president in 2013, to 10 years in office.

The announcement was not immediately reported by Xinhua’s Chinese-language service or other Chinese-language news media in China, a development that was all the more puzzling because the Central Committee is not due to meet until Monday.

Even if prematurely announced, the move appears to be the most dramatic sign that Mr. Xi harbors ambitions to stay in power longer than his two immediate predecessors, Hu Jintao and Jiang Zemin, both of whom stepped down after two terms.

It also confirmed that Mr. Xi has amassed enough power to rewrite the rules that constrained recent Chinese leaders, and that were aimed at preventing the reappearance of the cult of personality that had surrounded the People’s Republic’s founding father, Mao Zedong.
 
Last edited:
If he really wants to rule China for life, he might as well declare himself emperor.
 
Maybe if this guy slaughters 70 million of his own citizens it will finally slow down the wave of smug leftists who endlessly praise communism.

He fucked the country by ensuring that it'd be an undeveloped country with a shrinking population. How do you escape a hole like that?
 
When does a government become a dictatorship? Can you call Xi a dictator now?
 
  • Agree
Reactions: AnOminous
my dude, have you ever worked with israelis or saudis?

Israelis are awesome.

And I wouldn't dare say otherwise because I like sleeping peacefully at night. As opposed to, like, dying.

Saudis suck diseased dog dicks.

Maybe if this guy slaughters 70 million of his own citizens it will finally slow down the wave of smug leftists who endlessly praise communism.

I think you underestimate the ability of the modern American left to sweep literally anything under the carpet so long as the perp hates America enough.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Marvin
When does a government become a dictatorship? Can you call Xi a dictator now?

China has always been a dictatorship, the way they used to pick leaders was the single party would hold a meeting every so often and play favorites on who should be the next chairman, which iirc only was implemented when Deng was in power. All they did was just roll back that reform.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Trilby
I feel really sorry for all of the educated, modern Chinese people who are trapped in the country of their birth. They really have no say in what's going on. At least VPNs and proxy services are allowing them to stay in contact with the outside world.
 
I feel really sorry for all of the educated, modern Chinese people who are trapped in the country of their birth. They really have no say in what's going on. At least VPNs and proxy services are allowing them to stay in contact with the outside world.
Aside from those that get to go through college exchange programs with the west. A college I went to in the late 90's had a lot of them in the engineering dept.
 
Well, I'll admit that it's the basic assumption that they will pan out in a similar way.
In the 80s you couldn't go into a bookstore without finding books on how the Japanese are going to rule the world come 2000... and then the bubble burst.

And just to highlight how utterly insane Japan's economy was doing at the height of the bubble:
The area of the imperial palace in Tokyo had a real estate value that exceeded the combined real estate value of all of Florida. Or Canada.
The real estate of all of Japan was worth as much as the entire USA combined. Which was incidently a third of the global combined price of real estate, if I'm not mistaken.

It is true, China might be able to avoid a bubble by being smart and keeping their economy sustainable, but with their massive real estate bubble, it's already too late for that I guess.
China could house almost the entire population of Germany in their currently empty megacities.

The question is: Can the government prevent this from blowing up in their faces?

As I said, I don't think it will pan out the exact same as with Japan, but it will be similar, I would say. At some point, the economy will stagnate and something big will happen to put a damper on it. Their large advantage is the huge size of their population, which is a giant domestic market that can sustain their economy, but it's also a weakness, since that huge market needs a lot of upkeep.
But since I'm not a fortune teller, I couldn't say what exactly is going to happen. Maybe the Chinese will actually manage to avoid an economical disaster, but whatever will happen, they are going to be a huge global player in a couple years time.

The reaction from foreign nations to that changed situation is something entirely different and I suppose it's somewhat predictable.
It will be that of an incredulous "What? The Chinese have taken over entire global markets? But they are just building cheap crap for a slave labor!" from a lot of normies since most people just assume what was true in the 80s and 90s is true today.
And then, they'll come up with some super fancy reasons such as the root of chinese success being some obscure book from 1000 years ago or so. Not necessarily cause they believe it, but since you can sell a lot of books with this method.

A short sidenote concerning foreign investments in China and how unfavorable that can be for foreign companies in the long run:
A friend of mine works for a company that has some facilities in China that they opened up together with some other company from Germany.
After some time, these two companies wanted to withdraw some assets from China since they were getting uneasy over how they were treated by the Chinese government. The other company started to set everything up to withdraw... and suddenly a couple of official lawyer guys show up at their German facility in China and declare that the entire thing is confiscated and put under Chinese management - just like that.

In that regard, the Chinese are very smart. They do not really open up their markets for anyone, they just enable people to pour money into Chinese infrastructure and to build a couple factories and so on, but in the long run, the moment these companies become unwelcome, their assets just get repossessed by the Chinese.
LOL, China =/= Japan. Japan has always been a First World country since the Meiji Restoration, and maybe even before, and apart from that little hiccup during WWII, and subsequent American occupation and Cold War election influence, a democracy with free markets. The closest comparison around the same time is actually West Germany, when everybody was like "it's WWII over again!"

China is a borderline Third World shithole country where half the population still lives on farms without electricity or clean water, has sex with horses, and industries are owned by the state or affiliated institutions to control the country's economy and fuck with international markets.

But seriously, Chiang Kai Shek did nothing wrong.
Chiang Kai-shek was a retard who tried and failed to be an opportunist, first appealing to the Germans and Japanese, and later flipping to us in attempt to exert sovereignty while also fighting communists. He couldn't even rule mainland China with American gibs after Japanese surrender, let alone Taiwan democratically.

I liked the part when he flood the Yellow River to stop the Japanese Imperial Army from advancing, while killing almost 900,000 of his own people in the process. The Japanese simply went around and captured Wuhan, and he ordered Changsha to be burned down out of spite.
 
Last edited:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/wary-taiwan-eyes-growing-shadow-chinas-xi-055253650.html

https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/B.hq4dyFQYXCZiQwHmMgmQ--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTY0MDtoPTQ0My43NQ--/https://sneed.yimg.com/uu/api/res/1.2/3I41bjlo7_CB3fIJKWKKmQ--~B/aD03MTA7dz0xMDI0O3NtPTE7YXBwaWQ9eXRhY2h5b24-/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/afp.com/cd30812d671167cab6000ab10dc73b78b07f9c30.jpg

Wary Taiwan eyes growing shadow of China's Xi

President Xi Jinping's vision of a resurgent Chinese nation raises a huge red flag for democratic rival Taiwan, with the pressure set to rise now Xi has a lifetime to realise his ambitions.

China sees Taiwan as a renegade province and has long stated its desire for reunification, an ambition strongly opposed by the self-ruling island, which has an elected government, freedom of speech and a deep-seated sense of its own identity.

But with plans to abolish China's presidential term limits, paving the way for a decades-long rule by Xi and making him the most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, analysts predict Taiwan will face a squeeze on multiple fronts, from the economy to defence and diplomatic ties.

"Taiwan is Xi Jinping's major ambition. He is obsessed by reunification because it will be his place in history, his claim to immortality," said Hong Kong-based political analyst Willy Lam.

Bringing Taiwan back into the fold is key to Xi's vision of China as a global superpower and by doing so he would achieve something even Mao had not, Lam added, describing the island as a symbol of colonial humiliation for China.

Taiwan was ruled for 50 years by the Japanese until the end of World War II and is protected by the United States, its major ally.

- Carrot and stick -

China's rubber-stamp parliament is expected to approve a constitutional amendment to scrap the two-term limit for the presidency on Sunday.

In a report to the opening session of the annual National People's Congress in Beijing on Monday, Premier Li Keqiang warned China would not tolerate any "separatist schemes" in Taiwan and would "advance China's peaceful reunification".

Solving what he calls the "Taiwan issue" is every Chinese leader's wish, said Beijing-based political commentator Hua Po, although he believes Xi will turn his attentions to domestic issues first.

"After he has achieved internal stability, he will take more tough and efficient measures against Taiwan," said Hua, who said those could include armed force.

However, most observers believe China will stop short of military intervention, which would prompt a reaction from the US and damage its international image.

Instead they predict Beijing will continue its aggressive military posturing -- in the past year it has upped drills around the island and Taiwan has pledged to boost its defence force against the rising threat.

There will also be renewed diplomatic and economic pressure. China has wooed more of Taiwan's dwindling number of global allies in the past two years.

Jonathan Sullivan, director of the China Policy Institute at Nottingham University, says Beijing will combine tough measures with a charm offensive, nurturing relationships with Taiwanese politicians and businesses, as well as launching an "information campaign" to show Taiwanese people their vulnerabilities.

"China has more leverage than it has thus far chosen to use -- although Taiwan is by no means helpless and simply waiting to be annexed," Sullivan said.

"It will continue to be carrot and stick."

- Entrenched divide -

Xi's rhetoric against challenges to Chinese sovereignty has also targeted semi-autonomous Hong Kong, where the emergence of activists calling for independence from the mainland has incensed Beijing.

Monday's NPC report skipped key phrases on the extent to which Hong Kong governs itself, terms which have traditionally been included.

Political freedoms are increasingly under threat in the city with candidates linked to calls for independence or self-determination barred from standing for office.

Taiwan has never formally declared independence from the mainland despite being self-ruling since 1949 and China has said it would respond with force to any attempted split.

Relations have soured in the past two years under President Tsai Ing-wen, who has refused to acknowledge the island is part of "one China" and whose party traditionally supports independence.

Beijing unilaterally cut off official communications with Taiwan shortly after she took office in 2016.

Taiwan will continue to look to its traditional partner the US for backing, but analysts characterise President Donald Trump's policymaking as unpredictable.

Some on the island are concerned it will be used as a pawn as he negotiates with Beijing on issues from trade to North Korea.

But there are signs of moves towards further support -- the US Senate last week passed a bill to encourage visits between Washington and Taipei "at all levels", angering Beijing.

Washington cut formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 1979 in favour of Beijing, but maintains trade relations with the island and sells it weapons.

Analysts see no end to the cross-strait impasse, with little prospect Taiwan will come round to Beijing's way of thinking.

"Xi needs something concrete to justify the extension of his term," says Chang Ya-chung, political analyst at National Taiwan University.

"Taiwan will feel the increasing pressure."
 
Taiwan will continue to look to its traditional partner the US for backing, but analysts characterise President Donald Trump's policymaking as unpredictable.

Some on the island are concerned it will be used as a pawn as he negotiates with Beijing on issues from trade to North Korea.
Obligatory "Trump is an idiot" crap.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Trilby
Back