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Tuesday, 24 September 2013

How long can the Communist party survive in China?

Posted on 02:10 by Unknown
By Jamil Anderlini

As the economy slows and middle-class discontent grows, it is the question that’s now being asked not only outside but inside the country. Even at the Central Party School there is talk of the unthinkable: the collapse of Chinese communism
Tiananmen Square, Beijing©Eric Gregory Powell
Tiananmen Square, Beijing, last month
Tucked away between China’s top spy school and the ancient imperial summer palace in the west of Beijing lies the only place in the country where the demise of the ruling Communist party can be openly debated without fear of reprisal. But this leafy address is not home to some US-funded liberal think-tank or an underground dissident cell. It is the campus of the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, the elite training academy for the country’s autocratic leaders that is described in official propaganda as a “furnace to foster the spirit of party members”.
The Central Party School was established in 1933 to indoctrinate cadres in Marxism, Leninism and, later, Mao Zedong Thought, and past headmasters have included Mao himself, recently anointed president Xi Jinping and his predecessor Hu Jintao. In keeping with some of the momentous changes that have occurred in Chinese society, the curriculum has been radically revised in recent years. Students still steep themselves in the wisdom of Das Kapital and “Deng Xiaoping Theory” but they are also taught classes in economics, law, religion, military affairs and western political thought. As well as watching anti-corruption documentaries and participating in revolutionary singalongs, the mid-level and high-ranking party cadres who make up the student body are given lessons in opera appreciation and diplomatic etiquette.
How long the heirs to Mao’s 1949 revolution can hang on to power has been a perennial question since the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre and the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Many dire predictions of imminent collapse have come and gone but the party has endured and even thrived, especially since it opened its ranks to capitalists for the first time a decade ago. These days the revolutionary party of the proletariat is probably best described as the world’s largest chamber of commerce and membership is the best way for businesspeople to network and clinch lucrative contracts. A more significant change for an institution founded to enforce ideological purity is its relatively new role as an intellectual free-fire zone, where almost nothing is off-limits for discussion. “We just had a seminar with a big group of very influential party members and they were asking us how long we think the party will be in charge and what we have planned for when it collapses,” says one Party School professor who asked not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to foreign media. “To be honest, this is a question that everyone in China is asking but I’m afraid it is very difficult to answer.”
In less than five years the Chinese Communist party will challenge the Soviet Union (69 or 74 years in power depending on how you count it) and Mexico’s Institutional Revolutionary Party (71 years until 2000) for the longest unbroken rule by any political party. Modernisation theory holds that authoritarian systems tend to democratise as incomes rise, that the creation of a large middle class hastens the process and that economic slowdown following a long period of rapid growth makes that transition more likely. Serious and worsening inequality coupled with high levels of corruption can add to the impetus for change.
All these factors now exist in China but some political ­theorists, including many at the Central Party School, argue that the country is culturally and politically exceptional and the wave of authoritarian collapse still surging through the Arab world will never reach Chinese shores. Others, including influential Chinese intellectuals, distinguished western sinologists and even liberal-minded senior party members, believe these are the final days of the Communist era and the party will be washed away if it does not launch serious political reforms soon.
Professor Lin Zhe©Eric Gregory Powell
Professor Lin Zhe outside the Central Party School. Corruption, she says, could 'lead to the demise of the party'
“One thousand autumns and 10,000 generations”
Chen Shu is a professor of party history, “party-building” and Mao Zedong Thought at the Central Party School and his views reflect orthodox thinking within the upper echelons of the party. For all the intellectual ferment and free exchange of ideas that goes on inside the campus walls foreigners are still forbidden from entering without special permission, a rule that harks back to when the school’s very existence was a state secret. Chen has graciously agreed to meet the FT in a tea house across the road from the Summer Palace but he is impatient when asked what he thinks the future holds for the party.
“Those theories about a China crisis or China collapse are all completely western,” he says, in a tone that makes clear ­“western” is pejorative. “The more pressure placed on Chinese culture and the Communist party, the more united and cohesive they become and the more capable they are of producing miracles.”
Lin Zhe is a Central Party School professor who has spent the past two decades researching how the party tackles corruption in its ranks. At the same tea house she cheerfully predicts the party will celebrate its centenary in power in 2049 and says that it is preparing, as the Chinese saying goes, to rule for “one ­thousand autumns and 10,000 generations”. But both Lin and Chen also caution that the party’s legitimacy is threatened by endemic corruption that has spread to every level in the system. “This problem is very dangerous and, as China’s top leaders have said, it could lead to the demise of the party and the demise of the nation,” Lin says.
Authoritarian resilience
In his 1992 book, The End of History and The Last Man, Francis Fukuyama argued that western liberal democracy represents the final form of human government and the endpoint of ideological evolution. His argument was boosted by the dramatic expansion of democracy during the 20th century. In 1900, no nation in the world had competitive multi-party politics with universal suffrage and only about 12 per cent of humanity lived under a form of government that could be regarded as somewhat democratic, according to the American NGO Freedom House. By the dawn of the 21st century, 120 of the world’s 192 internationally recognised countries were governed by electoral democracies and 60 per cent of the world’s population lived under a democratically elected leadership.
Fukuyama, now a senior fellow at Stanford University, says he is convinced that China will follow the path of most other countries, probably through a gradual liberalisation that eventually yields democracy. But if that does not happen, he says popular uprisings of the kind seen in the Arab spring are also possible.
“China’s political model is just not sustainable because of the rising middle class – the same force that has driven democracy everywhere,” he says. “The new generation in China is very different from the one that left the land and drove the first wave of industrialisation – they’re much better educated and much richer and they have new demands, demands like clean air, clean water, safe food and other issues that can’t just be solved by fast economic growth.”
Estimates of the size of China’s middle class vary depending on the definition used but one thing is certain: it was virtually non-existent two decades ago and is now growing exponentially. The consultancy McKinsey says that what it calls the “upper middle class” – a segment of the population with annual household incomes of between $17,350 and $37,500 – accounted for 14 per cent of urban Chinese households last year but will account for 54 per cent of households in less than a decade.
China has often been held up as evidence to debunk Fukuyama’s theory, with critics arguing that the party’s process of constant reinvention is far more responsive to the needs and demands of its subjects than traditional authoritarian systems. Until a few years ago, David Shambaugh, director of the China Policy Program at George Washington University and a leading expert on China’s political system, was a strong proponent of this view. But he has changed his mind and now believes that the party is in a state of decline that echoes the dying days of Chinese dynasties throughout history.
The signs include a hollow state ideology that society does not believe in but ritualistically feigns compliance with, worsening corruption, failure to provide the public with adequate social welfare and a pervasive public sense of insecurity and frustration. Other signs include increasing social and ethnic unrest, elite factionalism, over-taxation with the proceeds mostly going into officials’ pockets, serious and worsening income inequality and no reliable rule of law.
The Central Party School©Eric Gregory Powell
The Central Party School in Beijing, training academy for China’s political elite
Shambaugh says a powerful indicator of just how little faith exists in the system is the number of wealthy Chinese elites with offshore assets and property, offshore bank accounts and children studying in western universities.
“These individuals are ready to bolt at a moment’s notice, as soon as the political system is in its endgame – but they will remain in China in order to extract every last renminbi possible until that time,” he says. “Their hedging behaviour speaks volumes about the fragile stability of the party state in China today.”
The mummy in the crystal coffin
Hanging directly above Tiananmen – “the gate of heavenly peace” – at the south entrance of the Forbidden City, a giant portrait of Mao Zedong stares out across the eponymous square to the imposing mausoleum where his mummified corpse lies draped in a Communist flag. Every morning of the week except Monday, long lines of Chinese tourists snake across the square as they wait for a glimpse of the great helmsman in his crystal sarcophagus.
A decade ago it was common to witness loud emotional outbursts and swooning pilgrims dropping to their knees in the presence of China’s dead “red emperor”. But on a recent weekday, the dominant sentiment among onlookers seemed to be indifference or mild disappointment. “I waited in line for an hour for that?” said one middle-aged man with a regional Chinese accent. “I’m pretty sure that was just a wax dummy; what a waste of time.”
Probably the most important stimulus for heightened cynicism and questioning of authority has been the rise of mass internet communication. China’s online censorship regime is one of the most restrictive in the world, with Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and countless other online sites and services blocked because of the party’s fear that these could be used to organise political opposition. But an explosion of government-controlled domestic alternatives, in particular the Twitter-like “Weibo” microblogging sites, has still allowed people to partly circumvent party control of public discourse in a way that has never been possible before. This subtle change in attitudes over the past decade represents a deeper shift in Chinese society that is hard to quantify but increasingly obvious. “The party’s ideological foundation is really very hollow,” says Perry Link, a professor at the University of California Riverside and one of the most well-respected western experts on China. “People join the party these days to make connections and get ahead rather than for any kind of socialist ideals.”
As the Chinese economy slows and anger grows at a host of problems stemming from a lack of political inclusion, it is this loss of control over thoughts, ideas and messages that the party really worries about.
“Seven things that cannot be spoken of”
Shen Zhihua is a professor at East China Normal University who specialises in the Soviet Union and is the son of People’s Liberation Army officers who served alongside Mao in the revolution. He spent two years in prison in the early 1980s after he was falsely accused of spying for the CIA. In September 2009, Shen was among a small group of trusted scholars summoned by former Chinese president Jiang Zemin to discuss the fall of the Soviet Union. “Gorbachev betrayed the revolution,” Jiang told the group as he asked them to identify the specific elements that led to the Soviet collapse.
Shen Zhihua©Eric Gregory Powell
Shen Zhihua, East China Normal University
Jiang’s view is the accepted orthodoxy among China’s leaders including president Xi Jinping, according to Shen. In a speech to party members soon after he was made head of the party and military late last year, Xi said that the Soviet empire had crumbled “because nobody was man enough to stand up and resist”.
“I cannot over-emphasise enough the fact that the CCP [Chinese Communist party] ­leadership continues to live under the Soviet shadow – they are hyper-conscious of the reforms Gorbachev undertook and absolutely refuse to go down that path,” says Shambaugh from George Washington University.
Xi’s display of machismo fits with the more assertive stance he has taken on the international stage as China continues to grow into its role as the world’s “second superpower”. But as the new administration flexes its muscles abroad, most prominently in simmering territorial disputes with neighbours to the east, south and west, it paradoxically appears ever more anxious and uncertain at home.
“China has a lot more power militarily, diplomatically and economically than it did in the past and it can tell countries like the UK and US to back off in a way it couldn’t before,” says Prof Link. “But for all this new external power they seem a lot more fragile at home, a lot more concerned about how long they can stay on top of this bubbling cauldron.”
Since his ascension, Xi has presided over a series of harsh crackdowns on dissidents, free speech, ethnic separatists and civil society and has shown absolutely no sign that he is the covert political reformer that some had hoped. “Document Number Nine”, a secret memo that was distributed to cadres in April and leaked through overseas Chinese media, shows how worried the new leadership is about perceived threats to party rule. “Western hostile forces and domestic dissidents are constantly infiltrating the ideological sphere,” the document says. “In order to preserve the party’s grip on power, attention should be paid to the ­mistaken ways of thinking, positions and actions.”
The current system will definitely collapse. The question that really worries me is what will come next
- Perry Link, University of California Riverside
According to the document, the party is engaged in a “fierce” struggle involving seven grave threats that are now referred to in Chinese academic circles as the “seven things that cannot be spoken of”. First on the list is “western constitutional ­democracy” followed by other taboos such as advocating human rights, an independent judiciary, media independence and criticism of the party’s past.
“Many people are extremely disappointed by [Xi’s] words and his actions,” says Shen Zhihua. “But there are some who defend him and say once he has consolidated his power and stabilised the political situation then he will push through reforms.” By this logic, Xi’s authoritarian lurch is more tactical than strategic, a way of rallying the party faithful for the tough reform agenda ahead.
“The more pessimistic, and frankly more realistic, interpretation is that Xi has no fresh ideas so he just quotes Mao and tries to hold on tight to power,” says one reformist “princeling” son of a former senior Chinese leader, who knows Xi well but asked not to be named for fear of political repercussions. “If that is the case, then China has no hope and eventually the anger in society will explode into a popular uprising.”
No more miracles?
In the three decades since Deng Xiaoping launched market-­oriented reform and began opening China to the world, the ­country’s economy has grown by an average of about 10 per cent a year. This spectacular performance has lifted hundreds of ­millions of people out of poverty and led some to argue that China’s “market Leninism” has defied the theory that societies democratise as they get richer. But according to Liu Yu, an ­associate professor of political science at Tsinghua University in Beijing, and Chen Dingding from the University of Macau, ­writing in The Washington Quarterly last year, “those who argue for Chinese exceptionalism overlook the fact that it is too early to tell whether China has proved or disproved modernisation theory.”
China’s per capita GDP was about $9,200 in purchasing power terms in 2012 but, according to Liu and Chen, this has not yet reached the level where countries with similar cultural and ­historical backgrounds began transitioning to democracy. In 1988, democratising South Korea and Taiwan had per capita purchasing power GDP of $12,221 and $14,584 respectively (in 2010 dollar terms), according to Liu and Chen. The levels for the Soviet Union and Hungary in 1989, as they began their political transitions, were $16,976 and $11,257 respectively (2010 dollars).
These numbers suggest continued rapid economic growth in China will put it on the cusp of its own political transformation within just a couple of years. By this logic, the party’s main source of legitimacy since abandoning Maoism – its ability to provide rapid growth and rising living standards – is the very thing that will eventually lead to its loss of absolute political control.
But there are now strong signs that China’s investment-heavy, export-oriented, state-dominated economic model is running out of steam and that growth could slow more sharply than Beijing expects. China’s nominal year-on-year GDP growth rate has slowed from 17 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2011 to about 8 per cent in the second quarter of this year and last year’s growth was the slowest in 13 years. Most economists expect the pace to moderate further over the next few years.
Mao Yushi©Eric Gregory Powell
Mao Yushi, 'godfather of modern Chinese macroeconomics'. He predicts China will face an 'unavoidable' financial crisis
By most measures, Communist China now has one of the most unequal societies on earth, with most of the wealth concentrated in the hands of a small, politically connected elite. If the current slowdown were to morph into an economic crisis or trigger widespread unemployment, most analysts believe the government would quickly face some sort of popular uprising. “In the past two centuries, the last 30 years has been the only extended period without war, famine or mass persecution, a period in which everyone’s lives have been getting better and better,” says Mao Yushi, the 84-year-old economist regarded as the godfather of modern Chinese macroeconomics. “The legitimacy of the regime comes mainly from the success of economic reform but the big problem is that expectations are now very high.”
The old economist was purged repeatedly during the Maoist era. He spent 20 years on and off doing hard labour in the country­side and enduring beatings and humiliation. After his political rehabilitation he went on, in 1993, to found the Unirule Institute, an ­independent economic think-tank, and he remains highly influential among reformers within the party and government.
Mao predicts China will face an “unavoidable” financial crisis in the next one to three years thanks to a huge build-up of bad debt and an enormous property bubble but he thinks this could in turn push the country toward democracy. “I think a financial crisis could actually be good for China as it would force the government to implement economic and ­political reforms,” Mao says. “That is the best-case scenario but the worst case would be a violent uprising followed by a long period of unrest and ­economic decline, like we see in Egypt.”
The negative example of Egypt is constantly invoked these days by both Chinese and western political analysts. Like the former Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak, the Communist party has been highly successful at squashing any organisational force in society before it can take root.
“The current Chinese system will definitely collapse at some point – it could be months, years or decades but when it collapses everyone will say of course it was bound to happen,” says Prof Link. “The question that really worries me is what will come next. The party has wiped out any group it doesn’t control or which doesn’t see the world like it does and there is nothing to take its place.”
The Olympic curse
It is surely just a cute coincidence of history that no authoritarian regime except Mexico’s has lasted more than a decade after hosting a modern Olympic games – think Berlin in 1936, Moscow in 1980, Sarajevo in 1984 and Seoul in 1988. Five years from now the Chinese Communist party, which saw the 2008 Beijing games as its “coming out party” on the world stage, may not only have defied this Olympic curse but also surpassed the life cycle of the Soviet Union and helped debunk democratisation theory.
But even the party’s most ardent defenders concede that China’s leaders cannot rule indefinitely without addressing the demands for political inclusion from a growing middle class that cares more about clean air, clean water, clean government and safe food than GDP growth rates.
After three decades of stellar economic expansion, China’s growth model is starting to run out of steam and if it were to face an abrupt slowdown the party would lose its most convincing source of legitimacy. If the new Chinese president, Xi Jinping, were to seize the initiative and launch meaningful political reforms then China might follow the example of Taiwan and South Korea in the late 1980s and 1990s and orchestrate a peaceful transition to a more pluralistic and democratic system.
On the verdant campus of the Central Party School, some professors are already studying how such a feat could be achieved. But so far Xi has shown no inclination to do anything except tighten the party’s grip on power and punish those who question perpetual one-party rule.
Many people inside and outside the party worry that by trying to suppress growing popular discontent using the same old tools of repression, the new administration may wake up one day to find the masses in the streets. “Xi Jinping and this administration provide the last chance for China to implement a social transformation [to a more liberal political system] that comes from within the party and within the system,” says Shen Zhihua. “Without these reforms there will certainly be a social explosion.”
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  • Chris Smith
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  • Chuck Hagel
  • Circle Surrogacy
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  • Citigroup
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  • Cixi
  • CJ-10
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  • classical music
  • Clifford A. Hart Jr.
  • cloud storage services
  • CNPC
  • coal
  • coal power plant
  • coal-powered heating systems
  • cockroach farming
  • cockroach farms
  • Code 204
  • code of conduct
  • coercive tactics
  • cold-hearted China
  • Collateral Freedom
  • collision course
  • collisions
  • Collum Coal Mine
  • Comite de Apoyo al Tibet
  • Comité de Apoyo al Tíbet
  • Command: Modern Air/Naval Operations
  • Comment Crew
  • Comment Group
  • commercial airlines
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  • Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property
  • commitment to its alliance partners
  • Committee of Concerned Scientists
  • Communist Chinese propaganda
  • Communist one-party dictatorship
  • Communist Party of China
  • Communist Party official
  • competition
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  • computer game
  • concrete blocks
  • concubinage
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  • confidence
  • Confucius Institutes
  • connoisseurs
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  • controversial entries
  • cooking oil
  • copper
  • Cornelis Willem Heuckeroth
  • corporate responsibility
  • corrupt lovers
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  • corruption
  • corruption investigations
  • cosmetics
  • Costa Rica
  • counterfeit cooking oil
  • court intrigues
  • CPMIEC
  • crackdown
  • crackdown on dissent
  • cram classes
  • credit cards
  • Credit Suisse
  • crime gang
  • crimes against humanity
  • criminal doubles
  • criminal review panel
  • criticisms and self-criticisms
  • Croesus of Lydia
  • cronyism
  • cross-cultural marriage
  • Crowdstrike
  • cry of desperation
  • cultural environment
  • cultural genocide
  • cultural hegemony
  • cultural heritage
  • Cultural Revolution
  • culture
  • cup of coffee
  • currency manipulation
  • currying favor
  • cutting in lines
  • cyber espionage campaign
  • cyber-security concerns
  • cyberattacks
  • cyberespionage
  • Cyrus the Great
  • Daily Mail
  • Dalai Lama
  • Dalai Lama
  • Dalian Wanda
  • Dana Rohrabacher
  • Daniel S. Markey
  • Danone
  • daughters
  • Daulat Beg Oldi
  • Daulat Beg Oldie
  • David Cameron
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  • de-Americanized world
  • death threats
  • debris belt
  • debt
  • debt bondage
  • debt ceiling
  • deception
  • Decrypt Weibo
  • defensive measures
  • deluxe brands
  • democracy
  • democratic reforms
  • demographic aggression
  • demographic collapse
  • Deng Xiaoping
  • Deng Zhengjia
  • Dennis Blair
  • Denso
  • denunciations
  • depression
  • designer baby
  • despair
  • detention
  • detention conditions
  • detentions
  • deterrent
  • Deutsche Bank
  • DF-21D
  • DF-21D anti-ship ballistic missile
  • DF-31A
  • Dharamsala
  • DHgate
  • Dianchi College
  • Dianne Feinstein
  • diminishing superpower
  • ding zui
  • Dining for Dignity
  • diplomacy
  • diplomatic incident
  • diplomatic relations
  • diplomatic spat
  • Diru
  • disanzhe
  • disappearance
  • disaster aid
  • disaster relief assistance
  • discrimination
  • disgusting kowtow
  • divorce
  • do-it-yourself ethic
  • Doan Van Vuon
  • doctored picture
  • doctors
  • Document No. 9
  • dogfight
  • dollar-denominated debt
  • domestic turmoil
  • Dongguan
  • Dorje Draktsel
  • drinking water
  • Driru
  • Driru County
  • drone technology
  • drone war
  • drones
  • dual-use military technology
  • due diligence
  • Dumex
  • duty free shops
  • dysfunctional America
  • dysfunctional Washington
  • dysprosium
  • E-2C Hawkeye
  • e-commerce site
  • earthquakes
  • East Asia
  • East Asia Summit
  • East Asian Summit
  • East China Sea
  • East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone
  • East Sea
  • East Turkestan
  • East Turkestan Islamic Movement
  • East Turkestan republics
  • East Turkistan
  • eastern Dnipropetrovsk
  • EB-5 visa
  • eBay
  • economic concessions
  • economic crisis
  • economic development
  • economic growth
  • economic inequality
  • economic interests
  • economic miracle
  • economic mismanagement
  • economic nationalism
  • economic opportunities
  • economic policies
  • economic reforms
  • economic rejuvenation
  • economic slowdown
  • economics professor
  • economy
  • editor in chief
  • education
  • education company
  • eight-year probe
  • electric irons
  • Elephant Hunting
  • embezzlement
  • emergency situation
  • emigration
  • Empire of Lies: The Truth About China in the XXI Century
  • Employing Land-Based Anti-Ship Missiles in the Western Pacific
  • Empress Dowager Cixi: The Concubine Who Launched Modern China
  • Empress in the Palace
  • encrypted-only access
  • endemic corruption
  • ending online censorship
  • Energias de Portugal
  • energy
  • energy deals
  • English name
  • enigma
  • environment
  • environmental cleanup
  • environmental degradation
  • EOS Holdings
  • equity research firm
  • er laopo
  • Eric Schmidt
  • ernai
  • escalation
  • escape routes
  • Esprit Dior
  • ethnic minorities
  • EU
  • Europe
  • European Union
  • European weapons
  • Eva Orner
  • Eve Ensler
  • excess capacity glut
  • exclusive economic zone
  • execution
  • exoplanets
  • Expanded ASEAN Maritime Forum
  • expatriates
  • expensive alcohol
  • expired beef pastries
  • exploding watermelons
  • explosion of credit
  • export
  • export fair
  • export restrictions
  • expulsion
  • extradition treaty
  • extrajudicial detention
  • extravagant lifestyles
  • extreme air pollution
  • Ezra F. Vogel
  • F-15J Eagle
  • F-22 Raptor
  • F-35 Joint Strike Fighters
  • fabricated facts
  • fake eggs
  • fake marriage
  • fake photograph
  • fake photos
  • fakes
  • false confessions
  • falsifiability
  • Falun Gong
  • Fan Yue
  • far blockade
  • farmland
  • farting
  • faux historical continuity
  • FDA
  • FDA incompetence
  • fear
  • federal bribery investigation
  • federal government shutdown
  • Feitian Moutai
  • feminism
  • feng shui
  • fertility
  • film
  • final solution
  • financial crisis
  • financial news sites
  • financial news terminal subscriptions
  • Financial Times
  • financial-information providers
  • FireEye
  • first island chain
  • fish
  • Five Power Defence Arrangements
  • flag
  • flight safety
  • flight-plan data
  • flood
  • Foley Hoag LLP
  • Fonterra Co-operative Group
  • food consumption
  • food production
  • food safety
  • food scandal
  • food scandals
  • food security policy
  • food supply
  • forced evictions
  • forced labor
  • forced marriage
  • foreign business
  • foreign companies
  • foreign correspondent
  • Foreign Correspondents' Club of China
  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
  • foreign financial data services
  • foreign investors
  • foreign journalists
  • foreign media
  • foreign media sites
  • foreign milk powder makers
  • foreign news bureaus
  • foreign news media
  • foreign news organizations
  • foreign press
  • foreign press crackdown
  • foreign reporting
  • foreign-exchange reserves
  • forgeries
  • Framework Agreement on Increased Rotational Presence and Enhanced Defense Cooperation
  • Frank Wolf
  • fraud
  • free markets
  • free speech
  • free trade
  • freedom
  • Freedom House
  • freedom of expression
  • freedom of navigation
  • freedom of overflight
  • freedom of religion
  • Freedom on the Net
  • FreeWeibo
  • French
  • Friedrich A. Hayek
  • fruit-juice manufacturers
  • Fujian
  • Fuling
  • Fullmark Consultants
  • Fundacion Casa del Tibet
  • Futenma Base
  • Fuzhou
  • Gabon
  • Gabriel Lafitte
  • Galkynysh
  • Gambia
  • gangsters
  • Gansu
  • Gao Quanxi
  • Gao Zhisheng
  • garbage
  • gas masks
  • gas pipeline
  • gastrointestinal bleeding
  • gay rights activist
  • Gazprom
  • Gedhun Choekyi Niyma
  • General Political Department
  • genocide
  • genocide charges
  • genuine universal suffrage
  • George Macartney
  • George Osborne
  • Georgetown University
  • German-designed engines
  • ghettoization
  • ghost cities
  • giant bronze tribute
  • gift cards
  • Gion district
  • GitHub
  • GlaxoSmithKline
  • GlaxoSmithKline Plc
  • Global Hawks
  • global leadership
  • global services
  • Global Slavery Index
  • global strategy
  • glow-in-the-dark pork
  • Golden Passport
  • Goldman Sachs
  • Gongmeng
  • GONGO
  • google
  • Google Inc
  • google.com.hk
  • governance
  • government default
  • government export subsidies
  • government inaction
  • government surveillance
  • Grace Geng
  • Great Firewall
  • Great Firewall of China
  • Great Han Chauvinism
  • Great Leap Forward
  • Greatfire
  • GreatFire.org
  • Greece
  • greed
  • group confessions
  • GSK
  • Gu Kailai
  • guangdong
  • Guangzhou
  • Guangzhou National Sex Culture Festival
  • guanxi
  • guanyao
  • Guidebook for Civilised Tourism
  • Guo Feixiong
  • Guo Meimei
  • gutter oil
  • Guy Sorman
  • H-6K
  • H.I.V. infections
  • hacking attacks
  • Halloween decorations
  • Hamas
  • Han hegemony
  • Han Junhong
  • Hangzhou
  • harassment
  • Harbin
  • hardball tactics
  • hardship bonuses
  • harmful children’s products
  • Hayek Association
  • health
  • health care
  • healthcare expenses
  • healthy female virgins
  • Heathrow Airport
  • heavy environmental damage
  • heavy metals
  • hedge fund
  • henan
  • hidden crime
  • hidden financial ties
  • Hidden Lynx
  • high mercury levels
  • Hillary Rodham Clinton
  • hiring practices
  • historical facts
  • historical fiction
  • history
  • HMS Poseidon
  • Holland's Got Talent
  • Home Depot
  • homosexuality
  • Hong Kong
  • Hong Kong University
  • Hongzha-6K
  • horror
  • horse urine
  • horseshoe bats
  • hospitals
  • house arrest
  • household responsibility system
  • HQ-9
  • https
  • Hu Jia
  • Hu Jintao
  • Hua Guofeng
  • Huaming Township
  • Huawei
  • Huizhou
  • human papilloma virus
  • human rights
  • human rights abuses
  • Human Rights Council
  • Human Rights Watch
  • human trafficking
  • human-rights abuses
  • humanitarian aid
  • humanitarian assistance
  • humiliation
  • humor
  • Huynh Thuc Vy
  • hydroelectric power
  • hypocritical nation
  • IBM
  • ICANN
  • ideological rectification
  • idioms
  • Ieodo
  • Ikea
  • illegal immigrants
  • imminent collapse
  • implosion
  • independent judiciary
  • india
  • India-China border
  • Indian press
  • indictment
  • indiscriminate killing
  • inefficiency
  • infant formula
  • influence peddling
  • information gathering
  • Information Technology Agreement
  • inhumane persecutions
  • inhumane prosecutions
  • Inner Mongolia
  • innovation
  • INS Vikramaditya
  • INS Vikrant
  • INS Viraat
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  • instant messaging apps
  • Intercontinental Hotel
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  • International POPs Elimination Network
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  • Internet control
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  • Internet freedom
  • Internet idioms
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  • internet opinion analysts
  • internet rumours
  • internet thought police
  • Interpol
  • intimidation
  • investigative stories
  • investment bankers
  • investors
  • iPhone
  • iPhone app
  • IQAir
  • irreparable environmental harm
  • irresponsible spending
  • Irvine Shipbuilders
  • Isa Yusuf Alptekin
  • Islamic Jihad
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  • Israeli security official
  • Itsunori Onodera
  • J-11
  • J-11B
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  • J.P. Morgan
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  • James Murdoch
  • japan
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  • Japan Airlines
  • Japan Airlines Co.
  • Japan Bank of International Cooperation
  • Japan-China war
  • Japan-U.S. Security Consultative Committee
  • Japan’s Civil Aviation Bureau
  • Japan's lower house
  • Japanese airlines
  • Japanese carmakers
  • Japanese lawmakers
  • Japanese manufacturers
  • Japon
  • Jasmine Revolution
  • JF-17
  • Ji Jianye
  • Ji Yingnan
  • Jia
  • Jia Zhangke
  • Jiang Zemin
  • Jiangsu
  • Jiangyin
  • Jiaxing
  • jihadis
  • Jim Chanos
  • Jimmy Kimmel
  • Jimmy Kimmel Live!
  • Jimmy Lai
  • Jīn Píng Méi
  • Jin Xide
  • jinü
  • JL-2 missile strike
  • jobs
  • Joe Biden
  • John Kerry
  • joint patrols
  • jokes
  • Jonathan Greenert
  • journalists
  • JP Morgan
  • JPMorgan Chase
  • JPMorgan Chase & Co.
  • Julie Bishop
  • Julie Keith
  • Jung Chang
  • Junheng Li
  • Justin Trudeau
  • Kalayaan island group
  • Karicare
  • Kashagan oil field
  • Kashgar
  • Kazakhstan
  • Kempinski Hotel
  • Kepler telescope
  • keyword censorship
  • kidney failure
  • kids
  • kill everyone in China
  • Kmart store
  • kowtow
  • KPMG
  • Kun Huang
  • Kunming
  • Kyoto
  • Kyrgyz workers
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • L-3
  • labor costs
  • labor force
  • labor violations
  • Labrang Monastery
  • lack of coordination
  • lack of transparency
  • LACM
  • Ladakh
  • Lake Beijing
  • land seizures
  • land shortages
  • land-based anti-ship cruise missiles
  • lanthanum
  • Lanzhou New Area
  • Laos
  • lax environmental controls
  • lax food-safety standards
  • layoffs
  • LDOZ
  • lead
  • leadership role
  • leading space polluter
  • Lee Teng-hui
  • Leed International Education Group
  • left-over woman
  • legal warfare
  • legitimacy
  • Lei Zhengfu
  • Leninist corporatism
  • letter of remorse
  • LG Group
  • LG U+
  • LGFV
  • Li Jianli
  • Li Keqiang
  • Li Peng
  • liaison
  • Liang Chao
  • Lianwo 连我
  • Liaoning
  • lies
  • life sentence
  • life-size female dolls
  • Lijia Zhang
  • Lily Chang
  • Lin Xin
  • Line
  • Line application
  • Line of Actual Control
  • line-cutting
  • littering
  • Little Red Book
  • Liu Tienan
  • Liu Xia
  • Liu Xianbin
  • Liu Xiaobo
  • Liu Yazhou
  • Liverpool
  • Lloyds Registry Canada
  • local government debt
  • local government financing vehicles
  • Lockheed Martin
  • locusts
  • lonely Chinese male
  • long-range land attack cruise missile
  • long-range missile defense system
  • Lost in Thailand
  • loudness
  • Louis Vuitton
  • love lives
  • low Earth orbit
  • low-quality tourists
  • loyalty
  • Lu Xun
  • Lunar Defense Obliteration Zone
  • lung cancer
  • Luo Yang
  • lust
  • luxury
  • luxury brands
  • luxury goods
  • luxury goods industry
  • luxury watches
  • LVMH
  • mafia state
  • magnetic powders
  • mainland Chinese
  • mainland dogs
  • Malawi
  • Malaysia
  • malware
  • Mandiant
  • Mao Tse-tung
  • Mao Zedong
  • Mao's Great Famine
  • Maoism
  • Maoist restoration
  • Maoist techniques
  • Maotai
  • map application
  • marine archaeology
  • maritime disputes
  • maritime security cooperation
  • maritime sovereignty
  • Mark Stokes
  • market reforms
  • market stabilization
  • Masanjia Labor Camp
  • mass line
  • mass line rectification campaign
  • mass shootings
  • massive disaster
  • massive online censorship
  • Mattel
  • Matthew Winkler
  • Mauritania
  • Mead Johnson
  • media independence
  • media self-censorship
  • media warfare
  • medical conflicts
  • medical research
  • medicines
  • mega-dams
  • Meiji Holdings
  • Mekong
  • Mekong River
  • melamine
  • Melissa Chan
  • mercury
  • Mersey river
  • Michael A. Turton
  • Michael Forsythe
  • microbloggers
  • microblogging
  • Mid-Autumn Festival
  • Middle East oil
  • Middle School Number Eight
  • Mig-29K
  • migrant worker
  • migrant workers
  • Mike Forsythe
  • military alliance
  • military dominance
  • military occupation
  • milk powder products
  • minimum deterrent military capacity
  • mining industry
  • minyao
  • miracle cure
  • mirror sites
  • mirrored version
  • misallocation of capital
  • misogyny
  • missile defense system
  • missiles
  • mixed marriages
  • mob boss
  • modern slavery
  • modernization strategy
  • MolyCorp Inc.
  • monopoly on rumors
  • mooncakes
  • moral victory
  • Morgan Stanley
  • Mount Fuji
  • Mowa
  • Mowa Village
  • multinationals
  • multiple-unit ownership
  • Munk School of Global Affairs
  • murder
  • Murong Xuecun
  • Museum of Contemporary Art
  • mutual suspicion
  • MV-22 Osprey
  • Nagchu
  • names
  • Nanjing
  • NASA
  • National Arts Centre orchestra
  • National Broadband Network
  • National Court
  • National Day
  • National Endowment for Democracy
  • national habit
  • national holiday
  • National Intelligence Council
  • National Museum of China
  • National Museum of the Philippines
  • national security
  • National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy
  • NATO
  • natural gas
  • naval exercise
  • naval secrets
  • Nazi Germany
  • Nazi-era Germany
  • neo-Maoist rhetoric
  • nepotism
  • Nestle
  • New Century Global Centre
  • New Citizens Movement
  • New Citizens' Movement
  • New Citizens’ Movement
  • New Horizon Capital
  • new reserve currency
  • new rich
  • new type of great-power relations
  • New York Times
  • news distributor
  • news terminals
  • news war
  • Next Media Animation
  • Ni Yulan
  • Niger
  • Nigerians
  • Nike
  • Nikki Aaron
  • nine haves
  • nine-dash line maritime grab
  • Ningguo
  • No Exit From Pakistan: America’s Troubled Relationship With Islamabad
  • No. 8 Middle School
  • Nobel Peace Prize
  • Nomura Holdings Inc.
  • North Korea
  • nose-picking
  • nouveau riche
  • Novatek
  • novel
  • nuclear “countervalue” strategy
  • nuclear attacks
  • nuclear option
  • nuclear strikes
  • nuclear submarines
  • nuclear war
  • nuclear-armed missile submarines
  • Nutricia
  • Nyoma air strip
  • obligations
  • OECD
  • official rumors
  • oil deals
  • one-child policy
  • online dissent
  • online rumor-mongering
  • online rumors
  • OPEC
  • Open Constitution Initiative
  • OpenDoor
  • Operation Aurora
  • Operation Beebus
  • oppression
  • oppressive occupier
  • orbital debris
  • Ordos
  • organ donations
  • organ harvesting from prisoners
  • organ transplants
  • organised prostitution
  • outlandish names
  • outrage
  • overcapacity
  • overseas agricultural project
  • P-3C Orion
  • P-8 Poseidon
  • Pacific Defense Quadrangle
  • Pacific operational geography
  • paintings
  • Pakistan
  • Palestinian terror groups
  • Panchen Lama
  • paper tiger
  • paracel islands
  • paranoid authoritarian government
  • Park Geun-hye
  • party discipline and purity
  • Party Plenum
  • Party's Third Plenum
  • patients’ anger
  • Patriot air defense systems
  • patriotism
  • patriotism campaign
  • Paul Mooney
  • Paul Reichler
  • payment defaults
  • pedophilia
  • Peel Group
  • Peel Holdings
  • peinü
  • Peking
  • Peking University
  • Peking University Cancer Hospital
  • Peng Ming
  • Periplaneta americana
  • Perry Link
  • persecution
  • personal liberty
  • pet food
  • Peter Humphrey
  • Pfizer
  • Pfizer Inc.
  • Phiblex
  • Philippines
  • Photoshop
  • Phuket International Airport
  • physical abuses
  • physical assaults
  • pig trotters
  • Ping An
  • PISA
  • pivot to Asia
  • pivot to Eurasia
  • PLA Navy
  • PLA's National Defence University
  • placebo effect
  • PM 2.5
  • PM2.5
  • poison jerky treats
  • poisonous baby milk
  • police interference
  • police state
  • political corruption
  • political education sessions
  • political freedom
  • political persecution
  • political prisoners
  • political reform
  • political struggle sessions
  • political trust
  • political warfare
  • pollution
  • Poly International Auction company
  • poor behaviour
  • population growth
  • Portland
  • Portugal
  • positivist science
  • potential brides
  • power
  • power struggle
  • Powerful Sex Shop
  • Pranab Mukherjee
  • PRC’s candidacy
  • premature deaths
  • premodern and imperialist expansionism
  • press event
  • press freedom
  • price fixing
  • price-fixing accusations
  • prices
  • princeling
  • Princeton University Press
  • prisoner of conscience
  • pro-democracy manifesto
  • Probe International
  • professional body double
  • profitable industry
  • Program for International Student Assessment
  • Program of International Student Assessment
  • Project 2049 Institute
  • Project Seascape
  • propaganda
  • property bubble
  • property bubbles
  • prostitution
  • protest
  • protests
  • pseudoscience
  • psychological warfare
  • public apology
  • public money
  • public opinion
  • public opinion analysts
  • public skepticism
  • publishing houses
  • Pudong
  • puffer fish
  • qi
  • Qi Baishi
  • Qiao Shi
  • Qihoo 360 Technology Co. Ltd.
  • Qing Dynasty
  • Qing Quentin Huang
  • Qiu Xiaolong
  • quad tiltrotor
  • quantitative easing
  • Quotations from Chairman Mao
  • race
  • Ramada Plaza
  • RAND Corporation
  • rare earth elements
  • Raytheon
  • RCMP
  • re-education
  • re-education through labor
  • Reagan National Defense Forum
  • real estate prices
  • real-estate investments
  • real-name registration
  • Reaper
  • Rebiya Kadeer
  • reckless government spending
  • recklessness
  • reconciliation
  • recovery efforts
  • Red Cross Society of China
  • Red Guards
  • red restoration
  • Reed Bank
  • reeducation through labor
  • reform struggle
  • refurbished Soviet-era vessel
  • regional A2/AD alliance
  • regional security
  • regional security architecture
  • regional stability
  • regional status quo
  • Rei Mizuna
  • rejection of orthodoxy
  • relief effort
  • relief supplies
  • religious repression
  • Ren Zhiqiang
  • RenRen
  • replica
  • reporting
  • repression
  • repressive Web controls
  • reproductive health
  • repugnance
  • residency visa
  • resistance to China
  • resolution
  • resource scarcity
  • responsible state
  • restorative surgery
  • Reuters
  • Reuters Chinese website
  • reverse engineering
  • Revolution to Riches
  • rich Chinese offenders
  • rights activists
  • rising costs
  • rising labor costs
  • risk of conflict
  • rivalry
  • river pollution
  • river systems
  • rivers
  • Rob Hutton
  • Robert Ford
  • Robert Menendez
  • Rosneft
  • rotten apples
  • RQ-4 Global Hawk
  • rule of law
  • rumormongers
  • Rupert Murdoch
  • Russell Hsiao
  • Russia
  • Russian defense technology
  • ruthless tyranny
  • sabotage
  • Sakashima Islands
  • salami slicing
  • Salween
  • Sam Wa
  • Sam Wa Resources Holdings
  • Samsung
  • San Francisco Treaty
  • San Leandro
  • Sao Tome and Principe
  • Sarah Cook
  • SARS epidemic
  • satire
  • scam artists
  • Scarborough Shoal
  • schoolgirl
  • schoolteacher
  • SCO
  • sculpture
  • sea row
  • Sears
  • SEC
  • second island chain
  • Second Thomas Shoal
  • second-class citizens
  • secret salvage
  • secure communications systems
  • security
  • security balance
  • security codes
  • security diamond
  • Security of Information Act
  • security strategy
  • security ties
  • self-castration
  • self-censorship
  • self-criticism
  • self-criticism sessions
  • self-immolation
  • self-immolation protests
  • Senkaku Islands
  • Sensitive Reconnaissance Operations
  • Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
  • sewers
  • sex
  • sex classes
  • sex education
  • sex education courses
  • sex product industry
  • sex scandals
  • sex toys
  • sex workers
  • sexual contact
  • sexual revolution
  • shadow banking
  • Shai Oster
  • Shandong
  • Shanghai
  • Shanghai Cooperation Organization
  • shao guan xian shi
  • shengnü
  • Shenyang
  • Shenzhou space capsule
  • Shi Tao
  • Shichung
  • Shinzo Abe
  • shipwrecks
  • short sellers
  • short-selling
  • shouting
  • show trials
  • shrinking leverage
  • Sichuan
  • Sierra Madre
  • silence
  • Silk Road Economic Belt
  • Silvercorp Metals
  • Sina Weibo
  • Sina Weibo tweets
  • Sino-American conflict
  • Sino-India relations
  • Sino-Indian border
  • Sino-Indian relations
  • Sino-Vietnamese War
  • Sinopec
  • Skynet
  • slaughterhouses
  • small-stick diplomacy
  • smear campaigns
  • smog
  • smog-related cancer
  • social dysfunction
  • social media
  • social media crackdown
  • social media monitoring
  • social morality
  • society
  • Socotra Rock
  • soft power
  • soft-power contest
  • soft-power failure
  • Sora Aoi
  • South China Mall
  • South China Sea ADIZ
  • South Korea
  • South-North Water Diversion project
  • South-to-North Diversion
  • Southeast Asia
  • Southeast Asian pressure
  • Southern European
  • sovereignty
  • space debris
  • space program
  • space science
  • Spain
  • Spain-China relations
  • Spain’s national court
  • spam attacks
  • Spanish court
  • Spanish criminal court
  • Spanish justice
  • Spanish National Court
  • spas
  • spearphishing
  • spending spree
  • spiritual civilization
  • spitter
  • spitting
  • spoiling of the negotiations
  • Spoiling Tibet: China and Resource Nationalism on the Roof of the World
  • Spratly Islands
  • spurious claim
  • stability
  • Starbucks
  • Starbucks latte
  • state capitalism
  • state decadence
  • State Information Office
  • statism
  • Stella Shiu
  • Stephen Cassidy
  • Stephen M. Walt
  • Steven Schwankert
  • strategic bomber
  • strategic partnership
  • strategic quadrangle
  • strategy of harassment
  • street food
  • street vendor’s execution
  • struggle session
  • study sessions
  • Su Ling
  • Su-27
  • Su-33
  • Su-35
  • submarine
  • subpoena
  • substitute criminals
  • suburbia
  • suicide bombers
  • suicides
  • Sunday trading rules
  • superblock
  • Supertyphoon Haiyan
  • supply and demand
  • surrogacy agencies
  • surrogates
  • surveillance
  • surveillance cameras
  • surveillance systems
  • sustainable fishing practices
  • sustainable growth
  • sweeping crackdown on dissent
  • Swiss watchmakers
  • Symantec
  • symbolism
  • taboo
  • taboo topic
  • tailings pond
  • taiwan
  • Tang Shuangning
  • Tang Xiaoning
  • Tank Man
  • Taobao
  • taste for luxury
  • tax evasion
  • tax on second home
  • tea kettles
  • teenage romance
  • teenager
  • teenagers
  • telecom network equipment
  • televised confession
  • televised confessions
  • televised public pre-trial confessions
  • television drama series
  • terra nullius
  • territorial dispute
  • territorial sovereignty
  • territorial tensions
  • terrorism
  • terrorist funding
  • test of wills
  • testimony
  • Thailand
  • Thames Water
  • the final solution of the Chinese question
  • The Long Shadow of Chinese Censorship: How Chinese Media Restrictions Affect News Outlets around the World
  • The Media Kowtow
  • The Network
  • The New York Times
  • The Plum in the Golden Vase
  • The Silent Contest
  • the Tibet House Foundation
  • The Vagina Monologues
  • theft of intellectual property
  • thefts
  • Theodore H. Moran
  • Third Plenum
  • Thomson Reuters
  • thorium
  • threats
  • Three Gorges Corporation
  • Thubten Wangchen
  • Ti-Anna Wang
  • Tiananmen Massacre
  • Tiananmen Square
  • Tiananmen Square attack
  • Tiananmen Square crash
  • Tianducheng
  • Tianjin
  • Tibet
  • Tibet Action Institute
  • Tibet flag
  • Tibet genocide case
  • Tibet Support Committee
  • Tibet's cultural dilution
  • Tibetan exile groups
  • Tibetan National Congress
  • Tibetan plateau
  • Tibetan Support Committee
  • Tibetans
  • Tiger Woman on Wall Street
  • time stamp
  • TiSA
  • toddler
  • Tom Clancy
  • Tombstone: The Untold Story of Mao's Great Famine
  • Tony Abbott
  • top schools
  • Toronto
  • torture
  • total fertility rate
  • totalitarian China
  • totalitarianism
  • tourism
  • toxic air pollution
  • toxic legacy
  • toxic smog
  • toxic substances
  • toy safety
  • TPP
  • trade balance
  • Trade in Services Agreement
  • tradition
  • traffic accident
  • train ride
  • Trans-Pacific Partnership
  • Transparency International
  • trash
  • trashy habits
  • Treasury bonds
  • Treasury securities
  • Treaty of Westphalia
  • Trojan Horse
  • Trojan Moudoor
  • Trojan Naid
  • Trottergate
  • Trường Sa
  • tuhao
  • Turkey
  • Turkmenistan
  • Type 092 Xia-class nuclear powered submarine
  • Typhoon Fitow
  • Typhoon Haiyan
  • tyranny
  • U.N. hearing
  • U.N. resolutions
  • U.S. capitulation
  • U.S. cities
  • U.S. citizenship
  • U.S. congressional panel
  • U.S. Consulate in Chengdu
  • U.S. Director of National Intelligence
  • U.S. dominance
  • U.S. Embassy
  • U.S. fertility clinics
  • U.S. food safety protests
  • U.S. government debt
  • U.S. government shutdown
  • U.S. journalists
  • U.S. media firms
  • U.S. senators
  • U.S. Treasury
  • U.S. Treasury bonds
  • U.S. West Coast
  • U.S. women
  • U.S.-China Business Council
  • U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission
  • U.S.-China Economic Security Review Commission
  • U.S.-Japan Security Treaty
  • UAV
  • Uighur democracy movement
  • Uighurs
  • UK
  • UK infrastructure
  • UK Trade and Industry
  • Ukraine
  • Ullens Center for Contemporary Art
  • UN Committee on the Rights of the Child
  • UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
  • UN Human Rights Council
  • UN human rights review
  • UN sanctions
  • unbridled materialism
  • uncivilized Chinese tourists
  • UNCLOS
  • underground organ sales
  • unemployment
  • unencrypted version
  • Unit 61398
  • united front
  • United Nations arbitration process
  • United Nations Human Rights Council
  • United Nations International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea
  • universal competence
  • universal jurisdiction
  • universal justice principle
  • Universal Periodic Review
  • University of Chicago
  • University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab
  • unmanned arms race
  • unpaid meals
  • unreasonable expansionism
  • unruly behaviour
  • unsophisticated marketing
  • urban management officials
  • urbanism
  • urbanization
  • urinating in swimming pools
  • Urumqi
  • US
  • US anti-terrorism laws
  • US Congress
  • US Food and Drug Administration
  • US government debt
  • US government intelligence adviser
  • US journalists
  • US military preeminence
  • US think-tank
  • US Treasurys
  • US war with China
  • US-China Economic and Security Review Commission
  • US-Japan Security Treaty
  • USA
  • Usmen Hasan
  • USS George Washington
  • Uyghur Human Rights Project
  • Uyghurs
  • Uzi Shaya
  • Vancouver
  • Venice Film Festival
  • very troublesome human rights record
  • veteran Beijing protester
  • vice-mayor
  • video
  • video surveillance technologies
  • vietnam
  • Vietnam’s Communist Party
  • Vietnamese brides
  • Vietnamese-Indian summit
  • villainess
  • Vincent Wu
  • vineyards
  • virginity
  • virgins’ blood
  • visa regulations
  • visa rules
  • visa terrorism
  • vital waterways
  • Voho
  • Voltaire Gazmin
  • wage increases
  • Walk Free Foundation
  • Wall Street Journal
  • Walter Slocombe
  • Wanda
  • Wang Bingzhang
  • Wang Gongquan
  • Wang Hun
  • Wang Jianlin
  • Wang Keping
  • Wang Lijun
  • Wang Xiuying
  • Wang Zhiwen
  • Wangluo
  • war
  • war crimes
  • war games
  • Warner Technology and Investment Corp.
  • warp-speed engine
  • Washington D.C.
  • Washington Post
  • Washington’s muddled response
  • wasting food
  • water
  • water shortages
  • water supply
  • water usage
  • wave of repression
  • wealth migrations
  • wealthy Chinese
  • Web censorship
  • WeChat
  • wedge politics
  • weibo
  • Wellesley College
  • Wen Jiabao
  • Wen Jiabao family empire
  • Wen Ruchun
  • Wen Yunsong
  • Wenchuan quake
  • Wenzhou
  • West Philippine Sea
  • Western businesses
  • western constitutional ­democracy
  • Western culture
  • Western media
  • Western monikers
  • Western news organizations
  • White House
  • Wikimania
  • Wikipedia China
  • Wing Loong
  • wireless network
  • Witherspoon Institute
  • work ethos
  • working-age population
  • World Uyghur Congress
  • world waters
  • world's biggest building
  • world’s leading executioner
  • world’s leading superpower
  • worsening cycle of repression
  • worst online oppressors
  • WTO
  • Wu Dong
  • wumao
  • Wyeth
  • Wyndham Hotel Group
  • Xi Jinping
  • Xi Jinping's family wealth
  • Xia Junfeng
  • Xia Yeliang
  • Xiahe
  • xiaojie
  • xiaosan
  • Ximen Qing
  • Xinhua
  • Xinjiang
  • Xinjiang independence
  • Xinjiang mosque
  • Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps
  • Xu Beihong
  • Xu Ming
  • Xu Qiya
  • Xu Zhiyong
  • Xue Manzi
  • Yahoo
  • Yamazaki Mazak
  • Yang Jisheng
  • Yang Luchuan
  • Yang Zhong
  • Yangzhong
  • Yantian
  • young love
  • Yu Hua
  • Yu Jianming
  • Yunnan
  • Yunnan Tin
  • Yuyao
  • Zambia
  • zaolian
  • Zhang Daqian
  • Zhang Shuguang
  • Zhang Xixi
  • Zhang Xuezhong
  • Zhang Yuhong
  • Zhejiang
  • Zhen Huan
  • Zheng He
  • Zhu Jianrong
  • Zhu Ruifeng
  • Zhu Xingliang
  • Zipingpu dam
  • Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science Technology Co.
  • Zubr landing craft
  • 人艰不拆
  • 喜大普奔
  • 成语
  • 温如春
  • 茉莉花革命
  • 金瓶梅

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (499)
    • ►  December (79)
    • ►  November (181)
    • ►  October (178)
    • ▼  September (61)
      • The China vs. India News War
      • Her Husband’s Execution, Then a Bag of Ashes
      • The Enigma of Chinese Medicine
      • Tibetan Dies After Setting Himself on Fire
      • $3.9 Trillion Of Local Gov Debt In China... And Co...
      • The High Price of Digging Up Dirt in China
      • Puffer-fish statue reignites row over state decade...
      • My Shocking Train Ride Through the Heart of China’...
      • British adventurer's re-education in China
      • Japan would not make a concession on its territori...
      • Ahead of UN human rights review, China activist go...
      • Chicken Processed in China Triggers U.S. Food Safe...
      • China’s Southern European Spending Spree
      • China's Ghost Cities Are Multiplying
      • Corruption and the world's biggest building
      • The Rise of Chinese Space Junk
      • Osprey vs. Bison in the East China Sea
      • Will Chinese Drones Make Conflict More or Less Lik...
      • A Code of Conduct for the South China Sea?
      • China Beige Book Shows Slowdown, Opposite Official...
      • China and the TPP, Part II
      • China and the TPP: The Trojan Horse Option
      • Danone Faces More Bribery Allegations in China
      • U.S. Envoy Affirms Support for Universal Suffrage ...
      • Street Vendor’s Execution Stirs Anger in China
      • Chinese Look Overseas for Surrogates
      • China in push to join US-led $4tn services trade t...
      • China’s Crackdown Prompts Outrage Over Boy’s Arrest
      • How long can the Communist party survive in China?
      • Why big American businesses fail in China
      • Ukraine to become China's largest overseas farmer ...
      • Lynx, Mukden, Mooncakes, and Chinese Hackers
      • A Chill, Ill Wind Blows Across China
      • Bo Xilai Given a Life Term
      • Quan hệ Trung Quốc - Philippines rơi tự do và dấu ...
      • 5 ways the Chinese government will try to control ...
      • The Human Rights Implications of China’s Slowdown
      • Japan May Shoot Down Chinese Drones
      • The Murdochs scale back in China
      • China detains teenager over web post amid social m...
      • In China, mixed marriages can be a labor of love
      • China’s Unmatched Influence in Central Asia
      • Hacking U.S. Secrets, China Pushes for Drones
      • US Investigation Spotlights China's Princelings
      • Moral victory: San Leandro mayor suspends decision...
      • China Makes Life Hard for Multinationals
      • China Intensifies Social-Media Crackdown
      • Hacker group in China linked to big cyber attacks:...
      • The Sources of the Sino-American Spiral
      • Uighurs at Xinjiang mosque have to face China flag...
      • A wave of repression in China
      • Why taste for luxury fuels China corruption
      • Angry Skies: Japanese Jets Scramble as Tensions wi...
      • US, PH launch war games near South China Sea
      • The Drone War Comes to Asia
      • China Finds Resistance to Oil Deals in Africa
      • Japanese Carmakers Struggle With History in China
      • Obama visit seen to boost security ties mid China row
      • Chinese hospital requests virgins’ blood for medic...
      • How China Lost Its Mojo: One Town's Story
      • China's Syria Strategy
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