The True Face of the Chinese Communist Party

Commentary The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is marking its 100th anniversary with extra-tight security. Not only are troops deployed into the capital to beef up security, but also bans were imposed against toy-grade flying objects such as drones and even kites. Its Propaganda Department rolled out programs to indoctrinate people with the so-called “revolutionary spirit […]

The True Face of the Chinese Communist Party
Commentary The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is marking its 100th anniversary with extra-tight security. Not only are troops deployed into the capital to beef up security, but also bans were imposed against toy-grade flying objects such as drones and even kites. Its Propaganda Department rolled out programs to indoctrinate people with the so-called “revolutionary spirit of the Party,” such as the "May Fourth spirit" which gave rise to the party, and the "Long March spirit" which epitomized the hardship it had gone through. Such “spirits” were invoked to project a glamorous picture of its own history, yet are full of falsehood. In the early 1920s, the CCP was already nicknamed the “Ruble Party” because people suspected that it was funded entirely by the now-defunct Soviet Union (USSR). Yet evidence was hard to come by in those early days. In 1991 the Soviet Empire collapsed, leading to the declassification of secret ...