The alleged loss of the hearts and minds of the younger generation Xi Jinping talking about students Civics class words?

As the two sessions of the Communist Party of China (CPC) are being held, Xi Jinping recently mentioned during a meeting with CPPCC members to strengthen the brainwashing of students by grasping Civic Studies classes, and said the Internet has a negative impact on minors. However, in the reality that the Chinese Communist Party blocks the Internet and does not allow people to see the world freely, netizens expressed dissatisfaction with Xi’s words. An article about Xi Jinping losing the hearts and minds of the younger generation is making the rounds on the Internet.

According to official CCP media reports, Xi said during a joint meeting of members of the medical and health and Education sectors of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) on the 6th that the ideology classes, which intensify brainwashing of students, should be taught not only in the classroom but also in social Life.

Xi declared that the current generation of Chinese young people is also in the midst of changes, and their mentality and thinking are changing. “The post-70s (meaning those born in the 1970s), post-80s, post-90s and post-00s, before they go out to see the world, China can already look at the world flat and is not as earthy as we were back then.”

He also mentioned that “there are still a lot of dirty things on the Internet, and minors are immature in their psychological development and vulnerable to bad influences.”

After Xi’s two quotes were posted to overseas Twitter, they drew heated debate among netizens.

“The wall won’t let you out still walk out, your Family leader heartily afraid that you see the real world, the party’s words should be listened to in reverse.”

“The psychological development of minors is immature, but constantly instilling hatred, abetting children to report their families ‘spying activities’, brainwashing children to love the Party and the country, and directly join the Young Pioneers. The woo-woo on the Internet and on TV is all done or allowed by the Communist Party itself. The media is surnamed the Party, the LAN is still so tightly controlled, and dare I say, I send a picture is blocked.”

“All 1.4 billion people (except for the Internet army by decree) are underage.”

“The so-called ugly is not to his liking, the Ministry of Truth validation is not ugly.”

“On the one hand, they are very confident that the young minors after 00 can see the world equally, and at the same Time, they want to control the young people because they are afraid that they are mentally incompetent and want to close the Internet. Closed how to level view, apparently contradictory opposition to each other.”

Xi’s comments are also reminiscent of recent public Anti-Communist moves by a group of young Chinese.

Wang Jingyu, a 19-year-old Chinese youth who is overseas, was recently chased across the border by Communist authorities for posting on his Weibo account questioning official Communist Party claims about soldiers killed on the China-India border. According to Wang, his Parents in Chongqing have been interrogated and suspended, and he has been threatened with death even though he is overseas.

Wang said he was uncomfortable with official reports from the Chinese Communist Party that were completely fabricated and disregarded the facts, and did not want to live in a country full of lies. He said that the CCP’s education starts from kindergarten with fabrications and deceptions, and that “this evil party will die sooner or later.

Another young man who has expressed his anger against the CCP regime, including Xi Jinping, as vehemently as Wang Jingyu, is Zhang Pancheng, a former security guard at Peking University.

Zhang Pancheng was sentenced to 1.5 years in prison by a Chinese Communist Party court for recording an anti-Communist dictatorship video, and was recently rumored to have been taken away again by public security officials. In the video, Zhang Pancheng is seen walking in the snow in Gansu Province with a backpack on his back, demanding the release of Zhang Zhan, a citizen journalist who was sentenced to four years in prison for “provoking and provoking trouble.

As he walked in the snow, Zhang Pancheng said, “The tyrant is judging us with swords and sticks because he fears freedom as much as he fears fire, and he fears that once we find freedom, his throne will shake and he will suffer. Hold up your heads, brethren, and do not be chagrined; these fetters are the breastplate of our pride.”

Similarly, in March 2019, Li Jiabao, a 21-year-old mainland student from Shandong, China, at Tainan Chia Nan University of Pharmacy and Science in Taiwan, criticized the dictatorship of the Chinese Communist Party authorities live on social media, saying that China is now “darker than before the Xinhai Revolution” and stressing that “freedom is a luxury that even a few powerful people do not have. Freedom is a luxury that even a few powerful people do not have; Chinese citizens have no dignity and are living on the run”.

Another recent case that has attracted attention at Home and abroad is the “Vulgar Wiki” case, in which Niu Tengyu, a 20-year-old operator of the “Vulgar Wiki” website, was accused by the police in Maoming, Guangdong Province, of being the “main culprit” in the leak of Xi Jinping’s family’s personal information. The main culprit was sentenced to 14 years at the end of last year, but parents and those in the know say that Niu Tengyu was the “scapegoat. A total of 24 young people, including Niu Tengyu, were arrested and sentenced at the same time, many of them minors. This is a case of injustice directly related to Xi Jinping, and the protagonists are younger than Xi’s daughter Xi Mingze.

Some analysts believe that Xi’s subordinates are “eliminating” them in a vicious manner, but are sowing the seeds of young people’s resistance to violence.

In fact, there are many more young people who have been fighting against the Communist Party in a low-profile manner for a long time, such as the Chinese Twitter account “China Text Jail Incident Inventory,” which has recently received international media attention and has silently recorded more than 2,000 cases of large and small text jails in the Communist Party. The tweeter, a “post-90s” who shall remain nameless, said to foreign media that he positions himself as “an activist advocating freedom of speech.

These waves of anti-Xi and anti-communist youth seem to have started with the July 4, 2018, spilling of ink on Xi Jinping in Shanghai by a Hunan girl, Dong Yaoqiong, who was subsequently “mentally ill” and tortured, reportedly on charges of “attacking national leaders. “. The video, which cannot be erased from the Internet, shows Dong Shouqiong berating Xi Jinping and calling out the Communist Party’s tyranny.

An article written by commentator Zheng Zhongyuan titled “Xi Jinping’s Crisis is Losing the Hearts and Minds of the Younger Generation” has been making the rounds on the Internet. According to the article, Xi Jinping, the leader of the Communist Party of China, has often talked about “the hearts of the people”. But the recent spate of crackdowns on young people reflects that Xi Jinping is losing the hearts and minds of the people, especially the younger generation, who have traditionally been considered the future of the country.

According to the article, after Xi Jinping became the “core of the Party,” “Xi Thought” was included in the Party’s constitution at the 19th Communist Party Congress, and the “Thought” has since been officially labeled as After that, this “thought” was officially named as “Marxism in the 21st century”. But to this day, Marxism itself is a dead spirit, Xi Jinping in this mess by the dog-headed military mentor Wang Huning to help package out the “Xi Thought”, how far in China can still go? After years of propaganda and brainwashing, the voices of China’s younger generation are more representative because they represent the future.

The author mentions that a post-80s official of a state-owned enterprise once told him that he was tired of “Xi Thought” and that there were many people of his age who thought the same way. The authorities have set up a learning App to learn about Xi Jinping’s thoughts, and people are superficially coping with it, and the top is not getting real loyalty from the bottom. The young official even said bluntly that he joined the party before to find a job and that Xi Jinping was annoying.

The Swiss daily Neue Zürcher Zeitung reported that when young Chinese are asked if they like Xi Jinping, they often don’t answer, but just shake their heads. The younger generation is not interested in so-called socialism, Marxist dogma, etc., the newspaper said. Some of Xi Jinping’s speeches have failed to impress the younger generation.

The China Youth Daily reported the previous year that a survey of Chinese youths found that 87.6 percent of those surveyed identified with Marxism. But according to Zheng Zhongyuan, in China, on the one hand, there is no freedom of thought and speech expression, and people are afraid to reveal their true thoughts, and on the other hand, official institutions are only there to kiss ass, and the results from the so-called public opinion surveys are obviously fake. In other words, Xi Jinping will be in a great situation in the official propaganda, although he has lost the hearts of the people.

According to Zheng Zhongyuan’s article, this year is the 100th anniversary of the CCP’s so-called founding of the party, and the CCP has increased its emphasis on ideology “starting from children”. But year after year, the children of the Chinese Communist Party’s “wall country” grow up and eventually come into contact with the outside world. Once they learn the truth about China’s history and reality, the natural power of universal values can disrupt the evil toxins of brainwashing and indoctrination under totalitarian dictatorship. This is why, over the past three years, more and more young Chinese people have been openly declaring their resistance in defiance of the violent regime.

According to Zheng Zhongyuan, the revolt of young Chinese people also means the defeat of the Chinese Communist Party and the failure of Xi Jinping to hold the future of China.