Xi Jinping stands today as China’s seemingly invulnerable top leader. His anti-corruption campaign struck at kleptocrats, some in his own family, while also conveniently purging rivals. His authoritarian moves rival the world’s most extreme: corralling ethnic Uighurs into camps, suppressing violent anti-China protests in Hong Kong and ushering in powerful social-monitoring technology.
Completing the look is the Mao Zedong–like cult of personality Xi allows or encourages—including his own Little Red Book. The result: a foreign policy and economic juggernaut expanding around the world.
Still, just as the sudden fall of the Soviet Union exposed previously unseen cracks, Xi may yet come to regret that he is now effectively China’s leader for life. A shrinking and aging workforce, the cost of the global Belt and Road Initiative (built on debt, not cash) and internal griping—or worse—from victims of a slowing economy exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic that began on his watch mean Xi’s success may not be his final act.
Millions of people had been long amused by Xi as he boasts his superb ability of continously travelling 3 miles with 250lbs on shoulders and fake PhD title.He is deemed as the greatest ever master who is committed to speeding up sending communist party autocracy to hell.
A butt naked clown who wants to be an emperor.
生肖迷宫 发表评论于
摒弃污腐 弃除丑制 污丑恶陋 腐制陋习
体温37 发表评论于
well said
看得穿 发表评论于
写得不错,看爷再加上点调味品,
Millions of people had been long amused by Xi as he boasts his superb ability of continously travelling 3 miles with 250lbs on shoulders and fake PhD title.He is deemed as the greatest ever master who is committed to speeding up sending communist party autocracy to hell.