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China's political system is more flexible than US democracy

Known but I thought you said yourself Viet only to tease Chinese here.
Didn't knew u really are:tup:

BTW Are u in America since ur childhood ??? just asking
The Chinese here believe that the Chinese is INHERENTLY superior to the other Asian ethnic groups and is 'authorized' by Heavens to speak for Asia. It galls them to no ends that a 'lowly' Viet dared to challenge them, first about the Chinese military, whose claims they made borderline on defying the laws of physics, then by refusing to acknowledge their superiority and exposed them for what they are: racists to the core.
 
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worlds most dangrous place for women to live,
worlds largest child labour force
worlds largest corruption force
worlds largest poverty and slums combined with worlds biggest weapon importer

so yes you need to come out delusion, maybe a week or a month visit to China like most of your fella i see here in China will help you a bit.

without the political flexibility and self-criticisms we have the world wouldnt witness the greatest economical and social improvement for last 3 decades, instead they would witness another soviet style fall.

Did I ask you about India???
1st of all kid u should learn spelling of dangerous
Now check these
A quarter of Chinese women suffer domestic abuse | Reuters
25% women suffer domestic abuse: Poll|Society|chinadaily.com.cn

For child labor
BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | Chinese child abuse 'widespread'
A grim tale of child abuse in China - Los Angeles Times


Yes we have poverty and corruption but we are trying to solve it and recent results are nice.
About Weapon importing we prefer importing as compared to stealing and copying.:sarcastic:

At least we don't hide under American flag to bash America like gpit.
 
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The Chinese here believe that the Chinese is INHERENTLY superior to the other Asian ethnic groups and is 'authorized' by Heavens to speak for Asia. It galls them to no ends that a 'lowly' Viet dared to challenge them, first about the Chinese military, whose claims they made borderline on defying the laws of physics, then by refusing to acknowledge their superiority and exposed them for what they are: racists to the core.

could not have nailed it better- they do think themselves to be so superior to other races that their govt finds it necessary to control media and information that a chinese can consume. I thought treating someone as a child was not a sign of the persons superiority ala " dont show our people 'X' news or give them acesss to X on the net because it will melt away their fragile minds- how else can you see it?
 
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Why China Does Capitalism Better than the U.S.
By Tony Karon Thursday, Jan. 20, 2011

One of the great ironies revealed by the global recession that began in 2008 is that Communist Party–ruled China may be doing a better job managing capitalism's crisis than the democratically elected U.S. government. Beijing's stimulus spending was larger, infinitely more effective at overcoming the slowdown and directed at laying the infrastructural tracks for further economic expansion.

As Western democracies shuffle wheezily forward, China's economy roars along at a steady clip, having lifted some half a billion people out of poverty over the past three decades and rapidly created the world's largest middle class to provide an engine for long-term domestic consumer demand. Sure, there's massive social inequality, but there always is in a capitalist system. (Income inequality rates in the U.S. are some of the worst in the industrialized world, and more Americans are falling into poverty than are being raised out of it. The number of Americans officially designated as living in poverty in 2009 — 43 million — was the highest in the 51 years that records have been kept.)

Beijing is also doing a far more effective job than Washington of tooling its economy to meet future challenges — at least according to historian Francis Fukuyama, erstwhile neoconservative intellectual heavyweight. "President Hu Jintao's rare state visit to Washington this week comes at a time when many Chinese see their weathering of the financial crisis as a vindication of their own system, and the beginning of an era in which U.S.-style liberal ideas will no longer be dominant," wrote Fukuyama in Monday's Financial Times under a headline stating that the U.S. had little to teach China. "State-owned enterprises are back in vogue, and were the chosen mechanism through which Beijing administered its massive stimulus."

Today Chinese leaders are more inclined to scold the U.S. — its debtor to the tune of close to a trillion dollars — than to emulate it, and Fukuyama noted that polls show that a larger percentage of Chinese believe their country is headed in the right direction, compared with Americans. China's success in navigating the economic crisis, wrote Fukuyama, was based on the ability of its authoritarian political system to "make large, complex decisions quickly, and ... make them relatively well, at least in economic policy."

These are startling observations from a writer who, 19 years ago, famously proclaimed that the collapse of the Soviet Union heralded "the end of history as such ... That is, the end point of mankind's ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government."

Fukuyama has had the good grace and intellectual honesty to admit he was wrong. And he's no apologist for Chinese authoritarianism, calling out its abuses and corruption, and making clear that he believes the absence of democracy will eventually hobble China's progress. Still, as he noted in the Financial Times, while they don't hold elections, China's communist leaders are nonetheless responsive to public opinion. (Of course they are! A party brought to power by a peasant rebellion knows full well the destructive potential of the rage of working people.) But the regime claims solid support from the Chinese middle class, and hedges against social explosion by directing resources and investment to more marginal parts of the country.

China's leaders, of course, never subscribed to Fukuyama's "end of history" maxim; the Marxism on which they were reared would have taught them that there is no contingent relationship between capitalism and democracy, and they only had to look at neighbors such as Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore to see economic success stories under authoritarian rule — although the prosperity thus achieved played a major role in transforming Taiwan and South Korea into the noisy democracies they are today. Nor were Beijing's leaders under any illusions that the free market could take care of such basic needs as education, health care and infrastructure necessary to keep the system as a whole growing.

But Fukuyama also made a point about the comparative inability of the U.S. system to respond decisively to a long-term crisis. "China adapts quickly, making difficult decisions and implementing them effectively," Fukuyama wrote. "Americans pride themselves on constitutional checks and balances, based on a political culture that distrusts centralised government. This system has ensured individual liberty and a vibrant private sector, but it has now become polarised and ideologically rigid. At present it shows little appetite for dealing with the long-term fiscal challenges the U.S. faces. Democracy in America may have an inherent legitimacy that the Chinese system lacks, but it will not be much of a model to anyone if the government is divided against itself and cannot govern."

Money has emerged as the electoral trump card in the U.S. political system, and corporations have a Supreme Court–recognized right to use their considerable financial muscle to promote candidates and policies favorable to their business operations and to resist policies and shut out candidates deemed inimical to their business interests. So whether it's health reform or the stimulus package, the power of special interests in the U.S. system invariably produces either gridlock or mishmash legislation crafted to please the narrow interests of a variety of competing interests rather than the aggregated interests of the economy and society as a whole. Efficient and rational decisionmaking it's not. Nor does it appear capable of tackling long-term problems.

China is the extreme opposite, of course. It can ride roughshod over the lives of its citizens (e.g., building a dam that requires the forced relocation of 1.5 million people who have no channels through which to protest). But China's system is unlikely to give corporations the power to veto or shape government decisionmaking to suit their bottom lines at the expense of the needs of the system as a whole in the way that, to choose but one example, U.S. pharmaceutical companies are able to wield political influence to deny the government the right to negotiate drug prices for the public health system. Fukuyama seems to be warning that, in Darwinian terms, the Chinese system may be more adaptive than the land of the free.
 
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Many people believe the Western democracy is superior to a one-party system because the rotation of political power gives government the flexibility to make needed policy changes. But China’s one-party system has proven over time to be remarkably adaptable to changing times.

China's one-party system: The ruling clique flexibly keeps its privileges; the zombies cheerfully walking never don't see the edge of the abyss. The 'Cultural Revolution' has increased the number of them.
About American bipartisanship: "... bipartisan political "duelling" is indeed a fascinating spectacle for the politically naive, and it does indeed distract from any kind of serious critique (dare we say "panem et circenses"?), but the winner is invariably in favour of the impresario, backed up by the money of the unwitting masses. What were once useful past political movements have degenerated into ruses. Now, with little effective difference in approach, the so-called "business model" connives at maintaining the financial status quo, the "Big Money", and is also cautious not to allow "strangers" into the powerful "club". - "Self-balancing political system" :wave:
 
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The new life for Democracy: a multipolar self-balancing model of government of 5 independent political parties with the movable centre joint decisions would put an end to ideological enmity and consolidate society. The New Model of Government. Ideology FOR People. The Newest Model of Government. Ideology FOR People.
 
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