Xi Jinping recently exposed himself at a mobilization meeting for Party history study and education that Chinese Communist Party officials are “keen on spreading gossip and anecdotes and relishing overseas publications”. In recent years, similar problems have been reported in the notification of the fall of many CCP officials. Analysis suggests that officials are confused about the current situation due to the internal and external problems of the CCP regime, and therefore want to rely on overseas publications to learn more.
The latest issue of the CCP’s party magazine, Quyi, published a speech by Xi Jinping on Feb. 20 at a mobilization meeting to study and educate the CCP’s history. Xi mentioned the need to be wary of what party officials call “erroneous tendencies” that “deliberately link events in party history with real-life issues and maliciously speculate” and “disbelieve in proper history and believe in wild history, vulgarize and entertain party history, and eagerly spread gossip and anecdotes. In recent years, many CCP officials have fallen from grace.
In recent years, many officials of the Communist Party of China (CPC) have been reported to have collected, purchased and read books and magazines from abroad.
On October 29, 2020, the Hunan Provincial Commission for Discipline Inspection reported that Chen Zehun, a former member of the Standing Committee of the Changsha Municipal Committee, had been convicted of buying and carrying books and magazines with serious political issues from abroad and reading them for a long time.
In addition, the former vice governor of Guizhou Province, Wang Xiaoguang, and the former director of the Chongqing Fengdu County Land and Housing Bureau, Li Qiang Hua, were both officially informed that they were “keen on reading books and magazines with serious political issues outside of China”.
Wu Dehua, former Standing Committee Member of Chongqing Yubei District Committee, was also notified of “buying and storing reactionary magazines and spreading political rumors”. According to the “political circle,” before and after the fall of Chongqing’s former Party Secretary Sun Zhengcai, Wu repeatedly asked people to bring back “reactionary magazines” from outside the country, with the intention of spying on information related to Sun’s case.
The Voice of America revealed that thousands of high-ranking Communist Party officials are so fond of reading books and magazines from abroad that the official Xinhua News Agency has a special department dedicated to collecting and organizing the contents of books and magazines from abroad for Communist Party officials to read.
Why do CCP officials buy books from outside the country?
Why do CCP officials take the risk of buying books and magazines from outside the country? According to an analysis by the French government, most CCP officials do not believe in the reports of the official media. They try to buy books from outside the country either out of curiosity or to find out the real situation.
According to commentator Zheng Zhongyuan, the CCP regime is facing internal and external problems, and information is tightly blocked, so officials at all levels within the CCP are “in a fog” about the current situation, and therefore want to rely on books and magazines from abroad to learn more.
Hu Jia, a Beijing-based human rights activist, believes that the Communist Party’s ban on the circulation and reading of “forbidden books” reflects its fear of political dissidence. The Communist Party believes that the ideas conveyed in a book are more powerful than bullets and can kill it, which is why it is so scared.
The Chinese Communist regime is in trouble on all sides
The Communist Party’s ideological bankruptcy in recent years and Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption efforts to take down many high-ranking Jiang officials have triggered increased power struggles within the party. The U.S.-China trade war broke out in 2018, the CCP’s cyber blockade became more severe, and Xi Jinping’s approach to the trade war has made some CCP liberals quite unhappy.
Since the second half of 2019, the CCP’s crackdown on Hong Kong’s anti-sending center has been in the global spotlight, and international criticism has continued. As we enter 2020, the CCP’s concealment of the epidemic has caused a global pandemic of the CCP virus, and calls for accountability claims have alarmed the CCP. Coupled with China’s economic downturn, people’s livelihoods are withering, and foreign companies are accelerating their withdrawal from China, sparking discontent among the Red Two and the Crown Prince Party.
The Communist Party of China (CPC) pushed through the Hong Kong version of the National Security Law, which led to sanctions from the United States and the abolition of Hong Kong’s special status, and the European Union stopped extradition agreements with Hong Kong except for Portugal and the Czech Republic.
When the new U.S. government took office in 2021, the Chinese Communist Party became even more arrogant, and its war wolves roared all over the world, cursing the U.S., France, Canada, etc. After incurring sanctions from the 27 countries of the European Union and the U.S. and Canada, the Chinese Communist Party counteracted the countries and launched a boycott campaign of international brand names at home.
Faced with the provocations of the CCP and the threats to Western democracy and freedom, countries have become increasingly tough on the CCP. The regime that has usurped power for more than 70 years is now in dire straits.
Currently, not only have more than 30 countries in Europe and the United States announced sanctions against the CCP. On the military level, Britain, France and Germany have announced that they will send ships through the South China Sea to exercise their right to “freedom of navigation. The United States and Canada’s warships have also sailed in the South China Sea.
Military expert Huang Dong told the Hong Kong media that the announcement of warships entering the South China Sea not only demonstrates the military power to the Chinese Communist Party, but also reflects that the entire Western world is in a state of unity, whether it is diplomatic, economic, military or technological will be directed against the Chinese Communist Party, forming a cold war atmosphere.
Huang Dong said that some ASEAN countries including the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, in the Spratly or Xisha Islands sovereignty issues, have sovereignty disputes with the Chinese Communist Party, but because they rely on the Chinese economy, so they are waiting and watching, once they notice that the Chinese Communist Party is under siege, at any time the wall falls on the crowd.
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