The U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s chief Chinese policy adviser, Yu Maochun, was recently expelled from his hometown of Anhui, China, after a meeting of his genealogical family.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s chief China policy advisor, Yu Maochun, was recently removed from the family tree in his hometown of Anhui Province, where the Yu family denounced him as a “traitor”. This follows Yu’s earlier “removal” from the memorial wall at his alma mater, Chongqing Yongchuan Middle School, where he was removed from his seat.
Yu Maochun, who advocates a tough confrontation with China and says the U.S. government should distinguish between the Chinese people and the Chinese Communist regime, moved to Chongqing with his parents when he was a child and is known to have no immediate family in Anhui Province, but clips circulating online earlier this month show a group of Yu clan members from Yu’s hometown in Anhui Province holding a meeting called “Outrage against traitor Yu Maochun,” with the subtitle “Expel Yu Maochun and expel him from the family tree.
A microblogger named “Guan Yao” said that the meeting listed six sins of Yu Maochun, and announced the removal of Yu Maochun from the clan through the media. “Ceremony.” According to a clip of the speech circulating on Weibo, the meeting was to angrily denounce the traitor Yu Maochun and then ask another person to brief him on his “crimes,” but the 31-second clip makes no mention of Yu’s “six sins.
Previously, Bao Pu, former political secretary to the Communist Party’s general secretary, tweeted a video on July 28 showing a stonemason removing three characters from Yu Maochun’s painting with an iron chisel. Baopu posted: “Rewriting history, leave this as proof: ‘Yu Maochun was removed by Chongqing Yongchuan High School as a gaokao scholar'”.
Yu Maochun was a college entrance examination scholar at Chongqing Yongchuan High School, and was admitted to Tianjin Nankai University in 1979. Yongchuan High School had engraved the names of several college entrance examination scholars at the school on a stone tablet on campus, and one of the lines of text was “1979 Arts Yu Maochun.
D. in history from the University of California, Berkeley in 1994. He then became a professor of modern China and military history at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, and later became a member of the Office of the Secretary of State for China Policy. Chief Planning Advisor. The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Times both reported that Yu Maochun, who had experienced the Cultural Revolution, was highly regarded by Pompeo and influential in Washington’s hard-line China policy. He also pointed out that the Chinese people and the Communist regime are not one and the same, and that a distinction must be made in order to deal with them. The Trump administration’s consideration of a travel ban on all members of the Communist Party has been interpreted by the media as a concrete step in the implementation of this concept.
Yu Maochun was praised in the U.S. media, but Chinese netizens were dissatisfied with him, saying that he was “forgetting his roots and becoming Pompeo’s dog-headed mentor,” a “traitor,” and “the most critical anti-China player. It is not the only thing that has happened.” The editor-in-chief of the Global Times, Hu Xijin, also said in a microblogging program that Yu Maochun left China at the age of 22 and only worshiped foreign countries; he was misled by some extreme voices on the Internet, thinking that it was the real cry of the suppressed Chinese people, but the CCP has long been integrated into Chinese society, saying that if it is not clear that attacking the CCP from the outside is attacking China, then it is a pseudo-scholar and political opportunist. “Yu Maochun will certainly be judged by history”.
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