Who are China’s “hostile forces”?

                Who are China’s “hostile forces”? The Minister of Education recently insisted that “the education system is the first target for infiltration by hostile forces.” Professor Zhang Ming from Renmin University asked on Weibo: "Since the education sector is the focus of infiltration by hostile forces, can you tell us which countries this hostile force includes? How many teachers are hostile elements in the education sector? Proportion, who are there?" "Hostile forces" in China can always find opportunities to take advantage of it, ranging from ethnic issues to upper-level power struggles, to citizens' rights protection and even explosions, fires, bridge demolitions, urban management beatings, etc. There are always voices coming out that are related to so-called "hostile forces." Including the smog we breathe, the poisonous food we eat, the lack of free compulsory education, the lack of assistance for serious illnesses, the lack of guaranteed pensions, and even the fact that we cannot afford to buy a house, see a doctor, or study, especially from top to bottom. The corruption that is obvious to all in the country may be inseparable from "hostile forces". On July 31 this year, "People's Daily" published an important article by Yuan Peng, director of the American Institute of the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations. The article listed five major "hostile forces" that the United States is using to hinder China's rise, including rights protection. Lawyers, underground religions, dissidents, online leaders, vulnerable groups. According to Director Yuan's analysis, it is estimated that more than 90% of the people in China belong to "hostile forces." The so-called dissidents are nothing more than people who criticize the party and the government or a certain person. During the Mao Zedong period, Liu Shaoqi, Deng Xiaoping and even Zhu Rongji were all dissidents. As for the so-called vulnerable groups, except for the powerful and powerful, billions of people are probably vulnerable groups. Director Yuan's thinking may still be stuck in the era when class struggle was clear between ourselves and the enemy. It is no wonder that his views are actually just those of the powerful. What is a "vulnerable group"? There is no official definition. In 2002, Premier Zhu Rongji mentioned (or restored) the term "vulnerable groups" for the first time in the "Two Sessions" and "Government Work Report" before leaving office. At that time, it mainly affected four types of people: laid-off workers and those "outside the system" people, migrant workers in cities, and early-retired “in-system” personnel. This statement is actually not accurate, and vulnerable groups can be extended to a wider range. From laid-off workers, it can be extended to the unemployed, semi-unemployed and unemployed. The term "unemployed" has been officially used for a long time. It refers to people who have reached the working age but are unable to find a job. Now it is said that it has been included in the scope of the unemployed. After graduating from college, they cannot find a job for a long time and are also unemployed. Semi-employed people generally refer to their unstable occupation and unstable income, sometimes more and sometimes less. These are the same as laid-off workers, who used to be employed but are now unemployed. Their origins are different, but their current situation is the same. From migrant workers in cities, it can be extended to a considerable number of farmers. Migrant workers who work in cities can earn more than farming and have better employment opportunities. But they do the most tiring, painful, dirty and dangerous work, and receive the lowest wages, most of which are in arrears for a long time. Those farmers who have not left the countryside are in an equally difficult situation. They cultivate a small amount of land and can only survive hard. There are also farmers who have lost their fields and have limited compensation, and have long been reduced to vulnerable groups. The so-called "outside the system" people are actually unemployed. They have not lost their jobs, but they have never worked in any unit. These people basically have no income, and rarely do they have it. Apart from relying on their families to support themselves, they have no source of income and no security. Once the support is lost or the breadwinner is laid off, the difficulties will be even greater. There are many such people in cities and rural areas. The "in-system" personnel who retire early refer to the elderly who do not receive much pension (retirement salary). The difficulties can be imagined. The latter two types of people, including a large number of the elderly, weak, sick and disabled, are also vulnerable groups with little or no income. Laid-off workers are the most miserable vulnerable group in this era. They are a product of the reform of state-owned enterprises and government policies. Some of them in their 40s and 50s, from "iron rice bowls" to migrant workers, represent the process of China's reform and opening up and the difficulty of overcoming difficulties. But it is an undeniable fact that their lives are generally difficult. There are more ants living in the city. They are the youngest vulnerable group in contemporary China. They graduated from college and are aged 10 to 10 years old. They are born in the 1980s and 1990s. They are the so-called high-minded people. In the city, they live a humble life like ants, living in groups, moving, running around, working hard, and being weak. They "live" on the edge or in the middle of the city, but it is difficult for them to integrate into the city and buy a house to become a real city dweller. When China's huge social wealth is unknowingly plundered and divided by a few interest groups, this society is full of the weak and the strong, that is, there are no rules, no morality, no conscience, and the vast majority of people are the so-called weak. Groups are excluded from the game of wealth grabbing. When disadvantaged groups are treated as a burden rather than wealth and are abandoned, the foundation of social stability will naturally become increasingly fragile. Although rapid economic growth can beautify China's evolution, it is difficult to convince the vast number of disadvantaged groups who have been deprived of basic interests or ruthlessly abandoned during the rise. It was the dedication, endurance and sacrifice of the disadvantaged groups that brought China's prosperity and development, rather than the disadvantaged groups interfering or affecting China's rise. When interest groups are busy carving up rights and wealth under various banners, disadvantaged groups face the increasingly serious gap between the rich and the poor, social injustice, and judicial injustice. Faced with the antagonism between the rich and the poor, and between officials and civilians caused by the unfair distribution system, The huge contrast between cities and rural areas, coastal areas and inland areas, big cities and small cities! Facing the fact that social justice cannot be upheld, corruption cannot be punished, and the suffering of the people cannot be cared for, the vulnerable groups are not only disappointed and frustrated, but also do not have the right to cry out. Even if they petition or even criticize through normal channels, they are often regarded as Attacking the system can even endanger security. However, under the guise of stability and harmony, the powerful people who try their best to maintain the current system are actually engaging in squalid deeds of robbery and corruption. They have even transferred the huge wealth they plundered overseas, and have emigrated their families and relatives overseas. They have emptied China's social wealth, destroyed China's natural environment, hindered China's normal development, corrupted China's traditional morality, and suppressed a handful of powerful people while reducing nearly a billion people to vulnerable groups. Yuan Peng's anti-corruption campaign against vulnerable groups is a "hostile force." How many regimes in the world dare to treat the vast majority of the people as so-called "hostile forces"? Since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, more than 200 senior officials at the provincial and ministerial levels have been dismissed due to corruption, including party and state leaders and a large number of Central Committee alternate members. These corrupt gangs are the real "hostile forces". Judging from the cases that have been exposed, the "hostile forces" have various ways of amassing wealth. The wealth they have acquired has already exceeded the imagination of the world and exceeded all corrupt officials in Chinese history! Does the Minister of Education realize that the deepest penetration into China’s education system is the most harmful?的就是這樣的“敵對勢力”。

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

精选博文

Who is to blame for China’s mutually harmful society?

At a dinner party, an official talked about the current food safety issues, and seemed to be eloquent and a little angry: I told my daughter...