Edison Chen
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2013
- Messages
- 2,933
- Reaction score
- 11
- Country
- Location
Of course it is about the vote, or more precisely, the qualification of an individual to have his/her say into his/her government. The broader the voting base and the more in-depth the vote into government, the more democratic the country is perceived. For the West, the voting base is broad and the vote's penetration into government is more than what the average Chinese citizen is allowed. For the US, we have the popular vote for the Presidency. For some European parliamentary system, some PMs are voted by their party members, some are popularly elected. But overall, everyone will judge and be judged based upon inured experience. China is no exception.
Look at the relationship between a government and the citizenry as analogous to that of husband and wife. In any multi-party relationship, and a traditional man-woman marriage does qualify as multi-party because there are two persons involved, there must be a final authority figure, so let us stick with the tradition of that figure being the man (husband) for now. Incidentally, I had a non-American idiot who insists that two does not equal to multi. Freaking moron he was.
Anyway...There is a great difference between contestant policies and contestant ideologies.
To use the marriage analogy, contestant policies is when the husband want steak for every dinner but the wife want chicken and fish for financial and health reasons. Contestant ideologies is when the husband want an 'open marriage' but the wife want absolute fidelity. The latter strikes at the foundation of the relationship.
For the US, contestant ideologies would be democratic vs Marxism. Contestant politics would be Democrat vs Republican. Or in the case of this guy...
Rent Is Too Damn High Party - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nobody at the national level took Jimmy McMillan seriously. But the bottom line is that in the interests of preserving US multi-party politics, he must be allowed to present himself.
The US does not have contestant ideologies, not because we legally banned any ideology, take note that the Communist Party of the USA is free to conduct its businesses openly, but because we expect any ideology that want to challenge the norm to make its case directly to the people because we believe the people should be the source of our government. So if the CPUSA or The Rent Is Too Damn High Party managed to convince enough voters to send a few to either houses of the Congress, we will see a new arena of contestant politics and may be a change in ideology. But before all of this -- the people must be convinced.
Your China does not even allow contestant politics from the people and whatever contestant policies there are inside the Chinese Communist Party, they are debated behind closed doors among the select few. That is like the husband debating the issues with the voices in his own head and declaring his decision -- dry aged prime rib steak every night -- to be 'democratic'.
So yes, your China IS a dictatorship.
We don't like your system, don't talk like I am dying tp enjoy your democracy very much. There is always reasons for something to be like it is, China performs very well with current system, so Chinese adopt the best plan for herself. China is more like a state of centralized power or authorization, and we have been like this since hundreds of years ago, this system has foundation in China. Democracy is an alien thing. China is a society of rule by man, China is not ruled by the law. Still today many Chinese do not have the sense of democracy, some of us don't know how to fulfil social responsibilities, they only hate the corruption while they don't know the right solution is to how to lock the abused power into the cage, they will do worse if they got the power than the current officials. You guys always criticize China for allowing vote power while you have no clue about how the vote will be like in China once it's started, it's gonna like a comedy, while the powerful parties will remain so because they have the control of current system. Now I ask you what's the aim of getting the power of vote? It's to moniter and restrian the power of government. The real problem is how to restrain the abuse of power in China, so vote could be one solution, but definitely not the only one, the best solution is the amendment of constitutions, make common people more familiar with the constitution. If Chinese grow up with proper education or influence a system of justice with the guarantee of law, they will have the conciousness of being the real masters of the country. I am glad after taking down hundreds of corrupted officials, Xi destroyed the obstacles coming from different interest groups, Xi is now popularizing the constitution education to all the middle schools and high schools in China, all the students must learn the constitution, all the new promoted officials must make a vow in front of the constitution, unlike in the old days, the they only report to higher authorities rather than the massives. China is changing to a society of justice, the real justice. Just a piece of vote means BS, means nothing if the most people do not have the correct sense.
Yes, but just because there are institutions and a "system", that does not mean that those in government respond to the will of the people or that people are free to express their opinion about the government. Those provincial leaders and local leaders are the same ones that often face riots when they legally steal land from the people right? That means that people are not actually represented in government and their interest is taken into account by the government since as it is well know, the system is corrupted to the core and responds mainly to money and power.
President Xi has been engaging in an anti corruption drive where he clearly shown that high leaders consolidated power by giving positions and rewards (bribes) to those on their side or to get others on their side, so thereby exposing the mechanism of power in China as it is very clear to anybody without bias, those politicians stay in power and place others in power by instruments of corruption and there is nothing that the chinese people can do about that. If you complain against those in government, then you become a desident and you go to jail.
Its clear that the system does not follow the will of the people and that there is no system of checks and balances in order for people to control the government. If people have no legal way to make any effect on government (other than riots), then clearly this is not a representative system of government and that its called a dictatorship. It stays in power by the use of the organs of security of the state (police, army, censorship, etc, etc). Again, that is a dictatorship. Just because other dictatorships are worse, does not make the chinese system any less of a dictatorship.
Taiwan on the other hand, just 3 days ago, the people showed their displeasure with government and threw out those that they felt didn't represent the interests of the people at the local level and it will exercise that right again in1.5 years with respect to the central government. Its clear that Taiwan's people are in control of their government, that's why that system is called a democracy. The difference between the 2 systems is very clear.