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yangtomous

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A native of Beichen, Tianjin, Wen Jiabao went to the famous Nankai High School from which his predecessor premier Zhou Enlai graduated. He joined the Communist Party of China (CPC) in April 1965[2] and entered the work force in September 1967.

Wen has a background in engineering and holds a post-graduate degree from the Beijing Institute of Geology.[2] He studied geomechanics in Beijing and began his career in the geology bureau of Gansu province.

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A native of Beichen, Tianjin, Wen Jiabao went to the famous Nankai High School from which his predecessor premier Zhou Enlai graduated. He joined the Communist Party of China (CPC) in April 1965[2] and entered the work force in September 1967.

Wen has a background in engineering and holds a post-graduate degree from the Beijing Institute of Geology.[2] He studied geomechanics in Beijing and began his career in the geology bureau of Gansu province.

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he is a garbage, a super movie star. his goverment make everything's price hike to sky, especially foods and house. the living of comman people are actually worsen. I miss premier ZHU
 
This isn't exactly breaking news. However, most people do not realize the unanimous Han support for the current CCP government of Hu Jintao and Grandpa Wen.

93% Chinese Support Hu Jintao: Global Leadership Poll

"93% Chinese Support Hu Jintao: Global Leadership Poll

June 23, 2008
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1 comments

Global Leadership Poll

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Chinese President Hu Jintao got a 93 percent confidence ranking in the middle kingdom -- which proved that "when you're on the rise, there's an upbeat feeling that leads to a sunnier disposition" -- The Chinese feel that life is working for them!"
 
The team of President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao has deftly steered China through the Great Financial Crisis of 2007-2010 with booming 9% annual economic growth for China. This is their most important responsibility and their performance has exceeded the expectations of most Western analysts.

I don't think anybody can solve all of continental China's social injustice problems by 2013. However, Hu and Wen have shown that they'll do everything possible to ensure that most Chinese have jobs and enjoy a rising standard of living. Social problems take decades to solve. I believe that most people would agree that China's social problems have diminished greatly during the last 30 years of reforms and that life continues to improve.

I trust Premier Wen to do the best that he can in the next few years to rectify "social inequality and injustice."

Here are two examples of China's improving society under the Hu and Wen administration.

Wen Jiabao - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Hu-Wen administration abolished the thousand year old agricultural tax ... by President Hu Jintao outlining China's direction in the next five years. ..."

http://www.pekingduck.org/2005/03/congratu...ou-get-married/

"March 30, 2005
Congratulations, Chinese college students: We’ll let you get married!

I think it’s only when Americans read stories like this that they get a glimpse of just how different the Chinese psyche is from their own.

China said it would lift from September a 50-year ban on college students marrying or bearing children but warned the relaxed regulations should not change academic priorities.

Students of legal marriage age — 22 for males and 20 for females — will no longer need to seek approval from university officials to tie the knot, the Ministry of Education said on its website.

For decades students contemplating marriage or who become pregnant have faced the dilemma of whether to give up studying or delay their wedding, or stay in school and have an abortion.

The regulation came under particularly strong criticism from graduate students, many of whom, under the threat of expulsion, were forced to hold off on reciting marriage vows or starting families.

The new rule follows a law enacted in 2003 that abolished the need for engaged couples to request from employers or superiors a certificate of approval to wed.

Until recent years, Chinese remained beholden to the state for the most basic needs such as provisions for housing, a child’s education or the right to get hitched.

Just a couple of weeks ago I read that the CCP has also made some changes in divorce procedures: You no longer have to get your employer’s permission before receiving an official divorce.

Now, to the Western mind this is almost incomprehensible. Ask your boss for permission to get a divorce? Be thrown out of college for getting married? It’s hard for us to grasp that this could actually have been acceptable for generations and even into the 21st century, and that the Chinese simply accepted it. A whole different outlook as to how society operates and the role of the individual.

Meanwhile, it’s good to see they are breaking free of at least some of those restrictions that serve no purpose except to limit personal freedom. God knows, it’s about time."
 
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/articl...WGjXlAD9EE7RT80

"Economy the focus as China political session ends

By CHARLES HUTZLER (AP) – 2 days ago

BEIJING — China vowed Sunday to remain alert to any renewed signs of economic crisis, but said it will hold the line against critics urging an appreciation of its currency and will not seek an aggressive leading role in world affairs.
...
Speaking just after the country's annual legislative session ended with the approval of a budget that extends job-creation and welfare programs to deal with a rapidly expanding rich-poor gap, Wen said China had to be wary of a "double dip" recession this year as it seeks to balance growth, economic structural adjustments and inflation expectations.

Wen said China "must have firm confidence" in dealing with any economic problems.

"The only way out and hope when facing difficulties lie in our own efforts," he said during a televised news conference lasting more than two hours.

China, the world's third-largest economy, escaped the worst of the global financial crisis by ordering $1.4 trillion in bank lending and government stimulus.

Although economic growth bounced back to 10.7 percent in the final quarter of 2009, authorities say the global outlook is still uncertain, amid worries that the torrent of lending is adding to inflation and fueling a dangerous bubble in stock and real estate prices.

When asked if China would play a bigger role in international affairs, Wen said China is still a developing country and is focused on improving living standards across the country.

Wen said the government will reform its controversial exchange rate controls but will keep its currency "basically stable." He gave no indication when Beijing might allow its yuan to rise against the U.S. dollar — a move sought by Washington and other trading partners.

Critics say the yuan — also known as the renminbi — is kept undervalued, giving China's exporters an unfair price advantage and swelling its trade surplus. China has allowed a roughly 20 percent rise in the currency's value against the dollar since 2005, but re-imposed tight control after the global financial crisis hit.

Beijing has more than $800 billion of its foreign reserves invested in U.S. Treasury securities, and Wen said the value of the U.S. dollar was a "big concern." He said he wanted to see the United States "take concrete steps to reassure investors," but gave no details of what Beijing wanted done.

Wen promised to increase imports to promote trade and appealed to other nations to oppose what he said was rising global protectionism. He complained that some countries were trying to boost exports by weakening their currencies, but did not name any.

The budget passed by the congress called for a 10 percent rise in spending to fuel the economic recovery, with more money for low-cost housing, pensions, and other social programs for the country's 1.3 billion people.

The priorities extend Wen and President Hu Jintao's yearslong efforts to spread the benefits of economic growth more broadly across a rapidly changing society. This year, inflation is a looming challenge, with housing prices soaring and worrying rises in food prices that consume as much as 40 percent of household incomes.

Wen said inflation is a serious concern, along with endemic corruption and a yawning gap between rich and poor that leaves millions of migrant workers and farmers without basic government aid.

"These are enough to affect social stability, and even (affect) the consolidation of state power," he said.

Wen also said he was snubbed at last year's Copenhagen climate change conference and fired back at critics who accuse China of arrogance.

China was blamed by some for undermining efforts to reach a binding agreement at the December conference and Wen was criticized for skipping a meeting of top leaders attended by President Barack Obama.

However, Wen said he was never formally notified of the event and sent Vice Foreign Minister He Yafei to register a protest. Wen said no explanation had been given about the failure to issue a formal invitation.

"So far no one has given us any explanation about this and it still is a mystery," he said.

There were no surprises in the way the nearly 3,000 delegates voted during the legislature's final day. The government work report passed with 97.5 percent of the vote. Delegates made their usual faint display of displeasure over crime and corruption, with negative votes and abstentions counting for 21 percent of the vote on the reports from the Supreme People's Court and national prosecutor's office.

Following nearly two weeks of meetings, delegates also passed an amendment to the election law to improve representation for rural areas. Previously, rural delegates represented four times as many people as their urban counterparts, but the amendment erases the distinction, an acknowledgment of the need to buttress the interests of the dwindling farming population.

National and local legislatures in China generally adopt decisions made behind closed doors by Communist Party leaders, while the bulk of the congress' legislative work is handled by its standing committee. Delegates, who include hundreds of army officers, themselves are carefully vetted by Communist Party officials and selected in a perfunctory election by lower-level committees."
 
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Did I say 93% approval rating for the Hu-Wen administration? I meant to say: "About 97 percent of Chinese think the direction China has taken is correct...."

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010-03...ent_9599782.htm

"Survey: China moving ahead
By Yu Tianyu (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-03-17 06:50

BEIJING: Most Chinese as well as expatriates believe the country is rising and is progressing in the right direction, a survey has found.

The poll on China's image and status, conducted by the China Development Research Foundation (CDRF) and Horizon Research Consultancy Group interviewed 1,754 Chinese aged 18-65 and 313 adult foreigners in seven cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou.

According to the survey, nearly two in three Chinese believe the country is on an upward spiral, while a little more than half of expats think so. About 97 percent of Chinese think the direction China has taken is correct, compared to 81.8 percent for expats.

In addition, nearly all Chinese are confident about the country's future, compared to nine in 10 for expats.

Victor Yuan, chairman of Horizon Group, said the results suggest the nation's achievements in the past decades and its rise - both economically and politically - have helped improve its image among expats and the Chinese.

Yu Lin, a 38-year-old Beijing taxi driver, said: "Many big events, such as the Beijing Olympic Games, have bolstered pride and confidence in our country."

Luee Sun, a purchase executive for departments stores, called China's rise "a great story" which has helped shift the center of gravity of many industries to China.

But Lu Mai, secretary general of CDRF, said some Chinese people are too optimistic, as the survey found that 22.1 percent of the Chinese think the country has risen. "Don't forget that more than 100 million people in China are still living below the poverty line," Lu said.

The survey showed that the most urgent task is to ensure social wealth is distributed more fairly, with 42.3 percent of the Chinese and 30.7 percent of expats of that view.

About 825,000 have more than 10 million yuan ($1.47 million) of wealth each; among them, 51,000 are worth more than 100 million yuan each, according to the Hurun report on China's wealthy.

The per capita disposable income of urban residents was 17,175 yuan in 2009, and the net per capita income of rural residents was 5,153 yuan, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

The survey also found that the most severe social problems faced by China are employment, medical reform and housing prices.

On the international front, most of the respondents - both Chinese and expats - ranked the United States as the No 1 threat to China's development now and in the next decade, followed by Japan, Russia and the European Union.

But the US is also ranked first as the country most important both economically and politically to China now and in the next 10 years."
 
Guynextdoor said:
:lol: Ha! Mr.Marxist's eyes lit up when he saw PRC, Hu & Wen...but on a serious note, I've heard Mr. Wen & Hu talking about political reform. I think chinese people should just take the plunge to become democraatic. It's only anamoly in the existing state of things. Everything else seems to be going (deservingly) well for the chinese people.

I disagree with you on the timing. China should wait until the GDP per capita is closer to $10,000-$15,000 U.S. dollars. Also, China should consider waiting one extra generation. It is not a good idea to let farmers control the country with their votes. It is much better for China to become urbanized and to have an educated majority make the decisions.

However, it would be a mistake to believe that if China becomes democratic then there will be a change in government. Someone has already suggested that the CCP could rename itself as China's Capitalist Party and win huge landslide victories today. Furthermore, you do not want Taiwan's KMT to compete with the CCP for governance of Mainland China.

The ROC has always insisted on the following map of China's territorial claims. The CCP is a known entity. If the KMT comes to power, it will insist that India relinquishes Chinese territory. With KMT's history of being a democratic party, the United States may very well distance itself from any KMT-India dispute. There is no ideological cover for India. As they say, be careful what you wish for.

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The ROC has always insisted on the following map of China's territorial claims. The CCP is a known entity. If the KMT comes to power, it will insist that India relinquishes Chinese territory. With KMT's history of being a democratic party, the United States may very well distance itself from any KMT-India dispute. There is no ideological cover for India. As they say, be careful what you wish for.

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Ah... you omitted the ROC claims in the South China Seas.

Edit: OK, I saw the small prints on ROC claims on the south sea islands.
 
Although just a Tianjiner either,I do not like Mr.Wen especially his way of speaking with slow play-act tones even he put head a little higher while met others.
 
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