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I Suck At Calming Down After Ten Minutes Shirt, hoodie, tank top
Chinese President Xi Jinping wants a reset for his country’s image. In early June he told a Chinese Communist Party meeting that they needed to do a better job selling China. Apparently even he realized that “Wolf Warrior” diplomacy wasn’t working overseas, however much it excited nationalists at home.
Opined Xi: “We must pay attention to grasp the tone, be both open and confident but also modest and humble, and strive to create a credible, lovable and respectable image of China.”
It is a worthy goal. However, it also is utterly unrealistic. It’s a bit like Mao Zedong, in the midst of the Cultural Revolution—part civil war, part party purge, part power struggle—calling on diplomats for the People’s Republic of China to put a prettier face on the torture, imprisonment, and murder of hundreds of thousands of people across the country.
Or it’s like Joseph Stalin, on taking a break from signing lengthy death lists of party faithful and common citizens, urging his foreign minister to present the Soviet Union’s record as respectable and unexceptional. Or Adolf Hitler, the morning after Kristallnacht, the infamous attack on synagogues and Jewish schools, homes, and businesses, instructing his nation’s representatives to present the modest, even humble ambitions of the Reich government.
The problem in this case is not China. It is the People’s Republic of China. It is the regime constructed by Mao and the CCP. And reinforced by Xi Jinping.
The fact that the PRC still calls itself Communist is not itself a worry. After Mao’s death in 1976 China ceased to be anything resembling Marxist. The CCP shifted dramatically under “paramount leader” Deng Xiaoping toward market economics. Although the Tiananmen Square crackdown suppressed pressure for political reform—absent Deng’s almost monomaniacal determination to disperse demonstrators with force the outcome could have been very different—the Chinese people continued to enjoy far greater personal autonomy and economic freedom.
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