China Sees No Evil, Hears No Evil In Africa China sees no evil, hears no evil in Africa – precisely the kind of posture African dictators, tired of Western lectures, relish. But the problem is not China. It is African leaders who adamantly refuse to learn from their own history, which teaches that every foreign entity that goes to the continent does so to pursue its own interest. In the early parts of the 21
st century, China became an important source of finance for African development. The continent s infrastructure was in disrepair; it had crumpled after decades of abject neglect and destruction from senseless civil wars. A substantial investment was – and still is – needed to rebuild this infrastructure. According to a World Bank Report (2009), the poor state of infrastructure in Sub-Saharan Africa its electricity, water, roads and information and communications technology (ICT) cuts national economic growth by two percentage points every year and reduces productivi
A Witch Hunt Trial Is Underway in the U S /The Liberty web GLOBAL: IRH Press Co Ltd , Happy Science the-liberty.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from the-liberty.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The War on Normal vcyamerica.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vcyamerica.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
CCP ‘Outwardly Strong, but Inwardly Weak’: China Expert
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Noted China expert Roger Garside stated on Monday that the Communist regime of China is “outwardly strong, but inwardly weak” during a discussion on the potential for regime change and democracy in China hosted by the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.
Garside, a British former diplomat who was stationed in China, as well as the author of “China Coup: The Great Leap to Freedom” and “Coming Alive: China After Mao,” called the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) “fearful,” and stated, “The regime which rules China today is totalitarian, not authoritarian.”
He said that while the CCP works to project a strong image, it has a number of foundational weaknesses that are endemic to a totalitarian regime.