If you still want your Mao memorabilia, you better hurry down to Tiananmen Square, Beijing, while you still have the chance.
In China, the State Council is somewhat comparable to the Cabinet. Headed by the Prime Minister and consisting of the heads of the various Ministries (Defense, Commerce, Education, Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Justice, Civil Affairs, State Security, Public Security and so on), it handles the day-to-day running of the country while formulating economic policy.
Its operational procedures are described in a document, conveniently titled "Working Procedures for the State Council". On March 18, an updated version of that document was published, and it has a couple of changes.
First off, the State Council now has to "report any major decisions, major events and important situations" to the Central Committee "in a timely manner." Previous edition sentences like "administration according to law, seeking truth from facts, democracy, openness, pragmatism and integrity" have been scrapped, as has the requirement for the State Council "to correct illegal or inappropriate administrative actions", or to "guide and supervise" the bureaucracy. In other words, its wings have been seriously clipped.
Secondly, any and all references to Marxism/Leninism, Mao Zedong Thought, the thought of Deng Xiaoping and the ideologies of former presidents Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao are now verboten. Only references to Xi Jinping Thought are allowed, as that is "the essence of Chinese culture and the spirit of the times".
To drive the point home, the Central Committee of the CCP launched another nationwide disciplinary campaign among its 96 million members.
This round will check them for loyalty to supreme leader Xi Jinping, weeding out "black sheep" and "two-faced" officials.
(Score: 2) by jelizondo on Monday April 03, @12:58AM (1 child)
I don't know why you mention France.
The British, after their Glorious Revolution and Cromwell, had the Restoration, which brought the Monarchy back. France didn't.
Read the news, French people are on the streets fighting police over an increase in retirement age of two years, while most US citizens don't even have a government provided pension plan...
What change has BLM, Occupy Wall Street and other movements have achieved? None and they will never. So I agree, revolution means a forced change in social structures, but the French did indeed change their structures.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 03, @02:13AM
> most US citizens don't even have a government provided pension plan
Citation needed. SSI https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/chartbooks/fast_facts/2020/fast_facts20.html [ssa.gov] says that nearly 70 million received benefits, this includes disability benefits. Meanwhile WaPo https://www.washingtonpost.com/wellness/2023/02/14/aging-boomers-more-older-americans/ [washingtonpost.com] says that there are currently 55.7 million people age 65 and above.
Seems like most people over 65 have a government pension plan. SSI wasn't meant to cover 100% of needs, but it's not a terrible base to build from.