As expected, the high-level U.S.-China meeting in Alaska on Thursday ended in an unhappy breakup. What attracted the most attention was that Yang Jiechi, a member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and the Director of the Office of the Central Committee for Foreign Affairs, did not follow the original U.S.-China tacit agreement of two-minute opening remarks each, but “raided” the U.S. and lectured the other side at length for a full 17 minutes.
Here, the whistle blower will talk about one of the remarks made by Yang Jiechi in his opening remarks. Yang Jiechi pointed out that “the United States has an American-style democracy and China has a Chinese-style democracy, and the democracy of the United States should be evaluated not only by Americans but also by the people of the world. But a little “back with”, is now sitting next to him the Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, in less than half a month ago March 7, but in a press conference said: “China do well, the Chinese people have the most say; China should do how, the Chinese people are the master. “
The whistle blowers really want to ask Yang Jiechi and Wang Yi, whether the people of a country have the most say in whether it is doing well or not, or whether the people of the world should be the ones to evaluate it? When the Chinese Communist Party talks about its own country, it says that it “adheres to the principle of non-interference in internal affairs”, but when it comes to the United States, it throws away the “golden rule” of “adhering to non-interference in internal affairs”. Yang Jiechi and Wang Yi are China’s top diplomatic officials, but their statements contradict each other.
The Chinese Communist Party has recently drastically changed the electoral system in Hong Kong, and the democratic elements have been completely stifled, yet the Chinese Communist Party insists that this is a “new democratic electoral system with Hong Kong characteristics”. “Should Hong Kong’s autonomy disappear?
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