Viva_Viet
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CN ideology is “socialism with Chinese characteristics”, its a copy of Lenin new economy policy( NEP) that allowed private sector to run bussiness under Govt control. But as u said, the bourgeoisie always tend to favour the West, thats why after Lenin died, his NEP also gone cos Soviet Govt. couldnt control the private sector. Lenin NEP only appled in short time, thats why many ppl dont know abt it.China will fall into chaos because it has no ideology to keep the people's loyalty. They have nothing that resonates with the masses. At least in the 60s, China had comunism. Now they have nothing. The only ideology that seems to be in China now is chongyangmeiwai. With correct ideology, there will be stability no matter how poor a country is financially. The richness will only empower the west even more. The west has stated many times that they will, in times of crisis, mobilize the 300 million Chinese bourgeoisie against the Deng dynasty just like they did back in 89. The idea that richness will bring loyalty is a joke. Xingjiang's Rebia Kadir was the richest woman in China. Notice her richness did not make her loyal to China. Wealthy Chinese tends to favor the west, so the bigger the bourgeoisie class grows, the more soldiers the west will have against China. Notice how in my previous post I said that China is going against its own interests. The Chinese leaders are waiting for $20k, so they can help China collapse like the USSR. Or as the Chinese will say, feed this pig til he gets fat before you slaughter it.
Without an offensive, China is doomed, but how can you expect a bunch of sell outs to create an offensive? While the west has successfully created problems for China, China has done nothing to create problems for the west. At least in the 60s, China was backing the black power movement. They can't even do that today. What a pity.
What we have today is a one way war, a war in which the west is constantly creating problems for the west, and backing China's enemies. What's China's response you ask? Non interference. That's right ladies and gentlemen. China practices non interference while the west practices full contact inteference. It doesn't take a genius to figure out who will win, or why the west has the lead right now.
They say never bring a gun to a knife fight, and China is precisely bringing a knife. China thinks that if it matches the west's military, it will survive, but that wont be true. The USSR also matched the US militarily, but look what happened to them. If you don't match the west's soft power, you are doomed.
HK is theoretically over the 20k limit, but guess what? In 2014, the west clapped their hands, and Hongers rioted. Why is that? It's because the Chinese don't have the correct ideology, and do not have anything to pursuade Hongers to be patriotic or loyal to their country. The treasonous Chinese leaders have, in 20 years, done nothing to bring HK closer to China. In fact, we can argue that Hongers are more anti Chinese than they were in 1966. Money, cannot, and does not buy stability. Now, I will tell you, if China responded by creating a riot in NY after the 2014 HK riots, then the west may think twice before starting another one, but as far as we know, the west is indeed planning another one that was bigger than the one in 2014, and as far as we know, China can't control it. The ones who masterminded the riots got a slap on the wrist. This can only tell us that China is in a weakened state. If I were to mastermind such an umbrela revolution in Chicago, I'd probably be facing life in prison.
Same problem for CN after copying Lenin NEP now. Private companies like Tencent feel unfair when competing wt state owned enteprises and surprisingly, Tencent secretly support Trump's tariff to weaken state owned enteprises ( and may overthrow Xi in near future wt US's support )
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To such people, Xi appears largely uninterested in economic issues, preferring to focus on making the Chinese Communist Party great again, for example by enhancing the party’s control of state-owned enterprises and inserting its role into the articles of association of companies, including three dozen traded in Hong Kong. Senior officials in Beijing also seem unwilling to expend political capital to push through tough changes.
What’s more, government involvement in some areas, especially the consumer technology sector, has become noticeably more heavy-handed over the past year. In the second quarter, $342 billion gaming and social-media giant Tencent 0700.HK recorded its first year-on-year earnings decline since 2005 as the government implemented a freeze on new video game approvals and launched a crackdown on the industry, in part to combat myopia and addiction among children. Tencent has seen 40 percent of its market value, or some $240 billion, wiped out since January.
Meanwhile Zhang Yiming, the founder of one of China’s hottest new tech enterprises, Beijing ByteDance Technology, offered a public apology earlier this year after officials forced the company to suspend downloads of its most famous app, Toutiao, while another of the company’s smaller products was shut down altogether. Overall, it’s easy to see why many in China’s private sector are downbeat on the policy outlook.
As a result, reformers hope Trump may prove to be an external catalyst for change. If the U.S. president can move the Chinese leadership by wielding the blunt instrument of higher tariffs, the thinking goes, it might spur market openings that party officials would otherwise prefer to avoid. That in turn could help private companies to compete more effectively, especially with state-owned enterprises.
https://www.google.com.vn/amp/s/www.zawya.com/mena/en/story/amp/TR20181121nL4N1XW2GRX2/