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Chinese President Hu Jintao warns

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Chinese President Hu Jintao warns of cultural warfare from West
The West is using cultural warfare to divide China, Chinese President Hu Jintao warned the Communist Party on Monday.

Chinese President Hu Jintao warns of cultural warfare from West


By Peter Simpson in Beijing

5:12PM GMT 02 Jan 2012

Mr Hu called on the 80 million-plus Party members to fight "hostile international powers" and meet the "cultural demands" of the people.

"Hostile international powers are strengthening their efforts to Westernise and divide us," Mr Hu wrote in the latest edition of Communist Party's magazine, Seeking the Truth.

"We must be aware of the seriousness and complexity of the struggles and take powerful measures to prevent and deal with them," he warned in his article.

Mr Hu was writing in the revolutionary magazine used by Chairman Mao to spread his ideology after it was launched in 1958.

"The international culture of the West is strong while we are weak," Mr Hu's article said. "Ideological and cultural fields are their [western forces'] main targets," Mr Hu wrote.
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He also said the Party must meet the "growing spiritual and cultural demands of the people".

The call to arms against the West's perceived collective cultural genocidal policy follows recent Government orders to propaganda officials to push harder China's expensive global "soft power" drive.

The Communist Party is splashing out 45 billion yuan (£4 billion) to expand its overseas media, including a United States and UK edition of the state-run and heavily censored China Daily, the state news agency Xinhua, and China Central Television's (CCTV) multilingual news and culture programming.

Overseas Confucius Institutes have also sprung up to try and win over a sceptical international audience impressed by Beijing's economic success but wary of its harsh authoritarian governance.

Mr Hu's article is also part of general Party rhetoric aimed at countering the growing influence of the internet and increasing commercialism in China – all of which is leading to a more confident and louder public criticism of the government.

Spooked since the start of the Arab Spring uprisings a year ago, Beijing has been further tightening internet and media control in an attempt to "improve positive publicity" and guide public opinion.

Western-style TV programmes such as talent shows – which have proved a huge hit in China – have also been targeted in the crackdown.

In November, the country's media watchdog banned advertisements during television dramas.

However, Western tastes and themes, including festivals such as Christmas and Valentines' Day, are growing in popularity among the middle classes and young, And it's not just western ideology that threatens the Party's desire for strong red culture at home and abroad.

A walk down any main street in a first or second tier Chinese city reveals how China's internet-savvy youth are fast-becoming fashion conscious and are adopting the hairstyle, clothes and musical tastes of their cutting-edge peers – in neighbouring South Korea, Taiwan and Japan.
 
Mr. Hu Jintao is right.

I try my best to wear Shalwar Kameez whenever I get the chance.

I never wear blue jeans. In fact I have never worn blue jeans in my entire life.

Cultural imperialism is stronger than military imperialism. If you are culturally imperialized you start to develop an inferiority complex.

I always try my best to use Pakistani media and products.
 
No one is forcing the Chinese to wear blue jeans, eat KFC, or watch a Hollywood movie. It's called free market choice.

Those things are more like global culture now, not just "American" culture.

Iranian teens also wear jeans, eat KFC, and watch Hollywood, right before they go to an antiAmerican sermon at a hardline mosque.

I disagree with alot of the things written here like singing competitions being Western. They are simply televised karaoke, which was developed in Japan. Televised singing competitions like American Idol was revolutionary in the US, but was long used in China, Japan and South Korea as a means to search for new stars. Alot of things that are labled "western" did not originate in, or become popular in, the west, defined as countries where Europeans or European descendents are the majority.
 
Mr. Hu Jintao is right.

I try my best to wear Shalwar Kameez whenever I get the chance.

I never wear blue jeans. In fact I have never worn blue jeans in my entire life.

Cultural imperialism is stronger than military imperialism. If you are culturally imperialized you start to develop an inferiority complex.

I always try my best to use Pakistani media and products.

i surprise that still you people think like this..
 
Mr. Hu Jintao is right.

I try my best to wear Shalwar Kameez whenever I get the chance.

I never wear blue jeans. In fact I have never worn blue jeans in my entire life.
OMG
Cultural imperialism is stronger than military imperialism. If you are culturally imperialized you start to develop an inferiority complex.

I always try my best to use Pakistani media and products.

OMG i should start wearing dhoti kurta. dear what u say cultural imperialism is nothing but cultural exchange. human can not grow by living like well's frog.
 
Lol. Funny that Mr Hu Jintao thinks that thousands of years of Chinese culture is threatened by Western culture!! Such "warnings" reflect ones own insecurities.

it is indeed threatened. what would be horrible was if we became like post-war Japan, where the new Japanese culture has so much American cultural influence, it is nearly totally different than traditional Japanese culture. They were militarily defeated and occupied, we have no such excuse.

what we differ on is the classification of what exactly is Western. I'd say that some things have just become international norms and you can't resist them. Wearing suits and ties is a part of international business and has been done in China since the Qing Dynasty.

The real question is cultural elements specifically associated with the US in particular and the West in general. I'd be extremely worried if American football, wrestling, imported beer, pickup trucks and everyone wearing t-shirts and jeans (which not even Europeans do) starts becoming popular.

luckily, any stroll around a big Chinese city will find many people wearing fashionable clothes like in Europe and developed Asia, and not fat covering t-shirts and jeans.
 
it is indeed threatened. what would be horrible was if we became like post-war Japan, where the new Japanese culture has so much American cultural influence, it is nearly totally different than traditional Japanese culture. They were militarily defeated and occupied, we have no such excuse.

what we differ on is the classification of what exactly is Western. I'd say that some things have just become international norms and you can't resist them. Wearing suits and ties is a part of international business and has been done in China since the Qing Dynasty.

The real question is cultural elements specifically associated with the US in particular and the West in general. I'd be extremely worried if American football, wrestling, imported beer, pickup trucks and everyone wearing t-shirts and jeans (which not even Europeans do) starts becoming popular.

luckily, any stroll around a big Chinese city will find many people wearing fashionable clothes like in Europe and developed Asia, and not fat covering t-shirts and jeans.

You fail to understand that a land's culture evolves with time and conditions during that period. I am sure that Chinese culture is not exactly what it was say a couple of hundred years ago. Similar is the case with Japan. Although Japan was defeated, they did not discard their culture and it is as distinctly Japanese as it was prior to WWII. Same with China. Our cultures are thousands of years old and have a firm rooting in our traditions and rituals. Advent of modern sports or technology or clothing is not going to change that.
If one equates a rich culture to such trivialities, one has no real understanding of their own culture. Such statements by 'leaders' (Indians included) simply show their personal insecurities.
 
If one equates a rich culture to such trivialities, one has no real understanding of their own culture. Such statements by 'leaders' (Indians included) simply show their personal insecurities.
very well said ...
off topic: why "la petite roche"?
 

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