IM2
Diamond Member
- Mar 11, 2015
- 115,688
- 149,189
- 3,645
When you look at this thing, you will see some similarity to MAGA.
If you are serious. Pay real close attention to what the Chinese government is trying to force on their citizens.
Elimination of diversity an multiculturalism.
Forcing peple to assimilate into the government's definition of what a Chinese citizen is.
Straight MAGA.
On March 12, China’s legislature adopted the Law on Promoting Ethnic Unity and Progress (Chinese; English translation), a sweeping new statute that codifies Beijing’s approach toward China’s 56 officially recognized ethnic groups. Substantively, the law enshrines a decades-long shift towards aggressive assimilationist policies. Structurally, it reflects a deepening merger of Party ideology and state law that is becoming increasingly prevalent under Xi Jinping.
This new law is the culmination of a policy trajectory that has been building for over a decade, dating back to the 2014 Central Ethnic Work Conference. Under Xi, Beijing is steering away from the post-1949 legal framework of nominal ethnic autonomy (albeit under tight Party control) imported from the Soviet Union. In its place, officials have steadily been pivoting towards what scholars have termed “second-generation ethnic policies”—an aggressive assimilationist approach that emphasizes a common Chinese national identity over accommodation of ethnic differences.
www.cfr.org
If you are serious. Pay real close attention to what the Chinese government is trying to force on their citizens.
Elimination of diversity an multiculturalism.
Forcing peple to assimilate into the government's definition of what a Chinese citizen is.
Straight MAGA.
China’s New Ethnic Unity Law: From Autonomy to Assimilation
A sweeping new national law signals Beijing’s decisive turn away from ethnic autonomy and toward enforced assimilation.On March 12, China’s legislature adopted the Law on Promoting Ethnic Unity and Progress (Chinese; English translation), a sweeping new statute that codifies Beijing’s approach toward China’s 56 officially recognized ethnic groups. Substantively, the law enshrines a decades-long shift towards aggressive assimilationist policies. Structurally, it reflects a deepening merger of Party ideology and state law that is becoming increasingly prevalent under Xi Jinping.
This new law is the culmination of a policy trajectory that has been building for over a decade, dating back to the 2014 Central Ethnic Work Conference. Under Xi, Beijing is steering away from the post-1949 legal framework of nominal ethnic autonomy (albeit under tight Party control) imported from the Soviet Union. In its place, officials have steadily been pivoting towards what scholars have termed “second-generation ethnic policies”—an aggressive assimilationist approach that emphasizes a common Chinese national identity over accommodation of ethnic differences.
China’s New Ethnic Unity Law: From Autonomy to Assimilation | Council on Foreign Relations
A sweeping new national law signals Beijing’s decisive turn away from ethnic autonomy and toward enforced assimilation.