I LOVE HK sign would show return to normalcy | Big Lychee, Various Sectors biglychee.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from biglychee.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Xi Jinping Claims China is a ‘Moderately-Prosperous Society,’ Contradicting CCP Premier Li Keqiang
Posted on
On July 1, Xi Jinping, head of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), declared that China had achieved a moderately prosperous society. At the same time, the Central Financial and Economic Affairs Commission also stated that China’s per capita GDP had exceeded $10,000 in 2019. However, these statements were very different from those of the CCP Premier Li Keqiang last year.
On July 1, Xi declared that China had achieved a “moderately prosperous society.” What is a “moderately prosperous society?” A moderately prosperous society is the “ideal state of societal living conditions,” according to China’s Baidu Encyclopedia. “It is not only about solving the problem of food and clothing but also meeting the needs of urban and rural development in aspects of politics, economy, culture, society, and ecology.”
Xi Jinping Claims China a Moderately-Prosperous Society, Contradicting CCP Premier Li Keqiang theepochtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theepochtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
China: Neijuan - New Wildcat article
We translated this new Wildcat article, written by a comrade who has been living in China for a while. Click here for the original article.
The word ‘Neijuan’ is composed of the characters for ‘inside’ and ‘roll’ or ‘to roll’ and is intuitively understood as something like ‘turning inwards.’ It can be translated as ‘retreat’ or ‘involution’. It means stagnation or stasis due to loss of friction or a process that binds its participants without benefiting them. Involution also means the opposite of evolution.
Neijuan is fashionable right now, like Sang culture a few years ago, or currently (Hunshui)Moyu (‘fishing in muddy waters’, see below). Originally used to describe a self-reinforcing process in agrarian societies that prevents them from progressing, ’Neijuan’ has now become the term that the metropolitan Chinese use to describe the ills of their modern lives, their sense of frantically treading water in a