Below,
in italics, is an article about how the Chinese are suppose to be
ditching Communism and Mao in favour of the British version of democracy
- or some such nonsense. Please read it and make up your own mind.
Here is my answer to the Chinese agents quoted in this article. In the
famous words of Victor Meldrew, "I don't believe it!" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLNrLI3OBwg
As an article it is interesting but it's all whitewash, IMHO.
The Chinese are inhumane, their leadership consists of psychopathic personalities and they are out to exploit Africa, and everywhere else, hand in hand with the Rothshilds, who are also inhumane, inbred psychopaths, etc. See the work of Thomas Sheridan:-
The Chinese are inhumane, their leadership consists of psychopathic personalities and they are out to exploit Africa, and everywhere else, hand in hand with the Rothshilds, who are also inhumane, inbred psychopaths, etc. See the work of Thomas Sheridan:-
In contrast to this article, which tries to spread the idea that the Chinese are becoming more democratic and like the British, which is highly ironic since most people in Britain have totally failed to realise how China has been and continues to directly influence British politics, the reverse is actually really true. We are rapidly becoming a hell of a lot more like the Chinese. Which is NOT good!
Chinese scholars are vigorously promoting communitarian-ism
(via the "community" movement) in the west through western
universities. THIS HAS BEEN GOING ON FOR YEARS. If you perform a
scholarly online search of
"communitarian law" communitarian leadership" "communitarian policies"
international communitarianism" etc. the number of papers praising
communitarianism, explaining it (trying to!) and
promoting it being submitted by Chinese and Singaporean scholars is
amazingly
high.
Here's more:-
Henry
Tam (a very powerful figure in Whitehall) developed the community
movement for Blair's Third Way and played a part in Obama's "change"
campaign.
Here, Tam speaks in Harvard, USA.
Use slider to go to 32.37 minutes for a brief introduction of Henry Tam, and
then hear him speak.
It
is utterly amazing, this Chinese man has completely altered British and U.S.
politics and yet most British and American people have never heard of him!
Cameron's Big Society is a continuation of Blair's Third Way. The Big Society was developed by Lord Nat Wei, another very empowered Chinese change agent, he didn't have much to do really as Tam had already done all the spade work for him.
Look how "they" make Wei prominent and promote him to a Lord, but keep Tam a little-known figure.
Very clever isn't it?
The Third Way and The Big Society are exactly the same "community-loving, 3rd sector" thing, proof that there is no difference anymore between our political parties. What is going on?
SO WHAT IS COMMUNITARIANISM? WHY IS IT SO DANGEROUS?
Communitarianism is the law of the EU, and the UN. It is facilitating the infiltration of polical life in all countries around the world by dangerous change agents and, in Britain, European countries and America it is destroying the Publc Sector and replacing it with an unaccountable 3rd sector which is going to ROB US ALL OF OUR RIGHTS AND PROPERTY!
For more on Communitarianism look here, http://nord.twu.net/acl/research/agenda21.html
You will not believe you eyes but it is all true!
DO YOU REALLY BELIEVE THIS? :-
UK Telegraph,
‘China embraces 'British Model', ditching Mao for Edmund
Burke.’
David Cameron might
be reassured to know that China's Communist leadership is studying the long arc
of British history with intense interest, even if Russia's Vladimir Putin deems
our small island to be of no account. By Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard
4:30PM BST 08 Sep 2013
"We want to learn from the British model," said Daokui Li, a
member China's upper
chamber or `House of Lords' (CPPCC) and a professor at Beijing's Tsinghua
University.
"Today's leaders in China are looking carefully at the British
style of political change over the last 400 years, analysing the difference
with France," he told me at the annual Ambrosetti gathering of world
policy-makers at Villa d'Este on Lake Como.
"England went through incredible changes: a war against the US;
wars against France; wars against Germany twice, the rise and decline of
empire; and universal suffrage. Yet society remained stable through all this
turmoil, with the same institutions and political structure. We think the
reason is respect for tradition, yet willingness to make changes when
needed."
"It is a contrast with France. We know from De Toqueville's study of the Ancient Regime that if you don't do
reforms, you will end up with a revolution, and that is what will happen in
China if we don't reform in time,"
Professor Li said the 18th
Century Irish philosopher Edmund Burke is now all the rage in Chinese
universities, studied for his critique of violent revolution, and esteemed as
the prophet of stability through timely but controlled change. They are
enamoured by his theories of inheritance, the "living contract"
through the generations, the limits of liberty, and -- a harder sell -- his
small battalions.
Hobbes too is sweeping China's intelligentsia, and so is Hannah Arendt, the
philosopher of the twin totalitarian movements Left and Right. It is a ferment of ideas. Mao is out, even if the Communist Party is
still coy about saying this too publicly.
"We went through the Revolution of 1911 when we overthrew the
emperor, then the May 4th Revolution of 1919, then the Communist Revolution of
1949, and then the Cultural Revolution. We're looking back at our history, and
we are tired of this."
"This is why Bo Xilai scares people. He was embracing Mao's
practice of continuous revolution, and it brings back bad memories."
I was aware that Burke is making a much-deserved come-back in Britain,
propelled by Jesse Norman's splendid book "Edmund Burke:The First
Conservative". But China's enthusiasm for his work has more global
"gearing", as traders say.
The Nobel peace laureate -- and dissident -- Liu Xiaobo is a Burkean, as
were many of those who signed the 2008 human rights charter.
Needless to say, Burke has much in common with Confucius, the ancient
Chinese philosopher of order, tradition, and harmony, now enjoying a revival in
China as a post-Maoist source of authority. Jiang Qing cites Burke extensively
in his classic work on the rise of a new Confucian political order published in
2008: "China: Democracy, or Confucianism?"
You will recognise the words and style if you have read Burke's
masterful Reflections on the French Revolution, the book that unmasked the
squalid character of the Paris Putsch, and shattered the illusions of Jacobin
fellow-travellers across Europe.
''Circumstances (which with some gentlemen pass for nothing) give in
reality to every political principle its distinguishing colour and
discriminating effect. The circumstances are what render every civil and
political scheme beneficial or noxious to mankind.’’
“To avoid, therefore, the evils of inconstancy and versatility, ten
thousand worse than those of obstinacy and the blindest prejudice, we have
consecrated the state, that no man should approach to look into its defects or
corruptions but with due caution; that he should never dream of beginning its
reformation by its subversion; that he should approach to the faults of the
state as to the wounds of a father, with pious awe and trembling solicitude.
By this wise prejudice we are taught to look with horror on those
children of their country who are prompt rashly to hack that aged parent in
pieces and put him into the kettle of magicians, in hopes that by their
poisonous weeds and wild incantations they may regenerate the paternal
constitutions and renovate their father’s life.”
To hack that aged parent to pieces. How resonant that must seem to
survivors of the Cultural Revolution.
Prof Li said the new team of President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang
-- both singing from the same hymn sheet according to him, though not others --
will start reforming the one-child policy, the hukuo code of rural `serfdom',
and much else, before the end of the year. The last team coasted complacently,
he said, relying on post-Lehman stimulus to keep growth going as the old system
festered.
Whether China can really pull it off in an orderly way after letting rip
with the biggest credit bubble in modern market history is a very open
question.
But let us wish them the best of British luck, and celebrate our new
Special Relationship with China.
No actually, let's not!
The
famous UK 2-fingered salute! An insult, in Britain, which goes back a
long way - about 800 years, to when the long bow was the main weapon of
war. When the French captured an British long bowman they would cut of
one or two of
their fingers, so they could no longer use their bow. So at the
beginning of a
battle, the bowman would all wave their two fingers to the French as a
serious threat to show that they still had their bow fingers so watch
out. Now?
It has the same basic meaning which is 'keep on mate and I will attack
you.', which also means "f** off if you know what's good for you . You
have made me angry now and I could be a threat to you."