Genesis
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There has been much talk about China's political liberalization, but to me, that is the wrong question. China is fundamentally different to a pre-democratic West, or any of the other nations that has since adapted the system.
For Asian empires, Japan had the Samurai system that is purely based on birth rights, while the Koreans used a "party" system that is also highly selective in terms of where you were born, and a bit less on whom you were born to. The Qing empire of China used a system that made even soldiers a family business, and thus political liberalization were necessary due to the limitations that were placed on people by birth and not merit. Even Mao China had the same problem.
In the West, the Western system of governance meant birth was of the utmost importance and people of low birth had no chance at political office. In other parts of the world, restrictions based on race, birth and other unfair criteria were the norm.
Today's China is very different. It is a one party state, but that party doesn't exclude based on race, gender, or birth. Nothing about a man's birth would preclude that man from taking part in the political system.
The problem of cronyism, of corruption, of this that and the other thing is a symptom of China being a developing nation, evident by the fact, no other developing nation has managed to rid of these problems, and even developed nations have this problem to a degree.
The only thing that is evident is China doesn't allow voting, while voting has its merits, political liberalization doesn't mean necessarily democratization according to wikipedia. This is often missed in the Western and other democratic country's assessment of China.
Finally, to say whether the CCP is necessary is the wrong question, CCP is China, because it doesn't exclude anyone, it doesn't involve everyone, but it doesn't exclude anyone that doesn't want to be excluded, not joining the communist party is essentially the same as not voting, or even voting but not running.
Which is why it is hilarious and ultimately stupid for some "experts" to say the PLA is not a professional army because it is under political leadership rather than the country. Being loyal to the party is the same as being loyal to a democratic America, because at this point in time the CCP is more of a political system than a political entity.
@LeveragedBuyout
For Asian empires, Japan had the Samurai system that is purely based on birth rights, while the Koreans used a "party" system that is also highly selective in terms of where you were born, and a bit less on whom you were born to. The Qing empire of China used a system that made even soldiers a family business, and thus political liberalization were necessary due to the limitations that were placed on people by birth and not merit. Even Mao China had the same problem.
In the West, the Western system of governance meant birth was of the utmost importance and people of low birth had no chance at political office. In other parts of the world, restrictions based on race, birth and other unfair criteria were the norm.
Today's China is very different. It is a one party state, but that party doesn't exclude based on race, gender, or birth. Nothing about a man's birth would preclude that man from taking part in the political system.
The problem of cronyism, of corruption, of this that and the other thing is a symptom of China being a developing nation, evident by the fact, no other developing nation has managed to rid of these problems, and even developed nations have this problem to a degree.
The only thing that is evident is China doesn't allow voting, while voting has its merits, political liberalization doesn't mean necessarily democratization according to wikipedia. This is often missed in the Western and other democratic country's assessment of China.
Finally, to say whether the CCP is necessary is the wrong question, CCP is China, because it doesn't exclude anyone, it doesn't involve everyone, but it doesn't exclude anyone that doesn't want to be excluded, not joining the communist party is essentially the same as not voting, or even voting but not running.
Which is why it is hilarious and ultimately stupid for some "experts" to say the PLA is not a professional army because it is under political leadership rather than the country. Being loyal to the party is the same as being loyal to a democratic America, because at this point in time the CCP is more of a political system than a political entity.
@LeveragedBuyout