Outline for the Democratic Nation-Building of China

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—A Plan for the Construction of Social Democracy in China (Discussion Draft)
Lü Honglai
民主建国大纲(英文).webp

Lü Honglai: Outline for the Democratic Nation-Building of China

Table of Contents

I. The Collapse of the CCP Regime is a Prerequisite for the Establishment of a Democratic Nation in China

II. The Nature of Chinese Society After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

III. The Political Reality China Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

IV. The Economic Reality China Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

V. The Cultural Reality China Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

VI. The Reality the CCP's Military Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

VII. The Social Reality China Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

VIII. The Severe Gap Between the Overall Quality of Chinese Citizens and Contemporary Democratic Societies After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

IX. Eight Major National Transformation and Reconstruction Projects Needed in China After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

X. International Takeover After the Collapse of the CCP Regime: A Bridge to Democratization in China

XI. Five Basis and Reasons for International Takeover After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

XII. The Basic Model of International Takeover After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

XIII. The Republic of China: A Beacon and Model of Democracy in the Chinese-speaking World

XIV. The Republic of China Should Be an Active Promoter of International Takeover

XV. Returning to the Republic of China: The Best Path to Democratization in Chinese Society

Foreword

Establishing a modern democratic system in China has been the goal of the Chinese nation for a century. To this end, modern China successively experienced the Beiyang Government established after the Xinhai Revolution, the Republic of China unified after the Northern Expedition, and the People's Republic of China established after the Chinese Civil War. More than a century has passed since then, and China has not only failed to achieve democratic republic, but has instead moved towards a more backward party-state system and a one-party dictatorship. This is a misfortune and a tragedy for the Chinese nation.



The fundamental reason why the Chinese nation has reached this point lies in its cultural backwardness, lack of faith, and outdated ideology. This inevitably leads to the immaturity of the nation as a whole and the inability to form a mature civil society. Even today, it has failed to produce a mature political group capable of undertaking the great cause of national rejuvenation. In particular, ignorance and radicalism have allowed communist utopias to spread rampantly in mainland China, causing unprecedented disaster for the Chinese nation.



1. The collapse of the CCP regime is a prerequisite for the establishment of a democratic nation in China.

The CCP's one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule is the most direct and major political and institutional obstacle to China's realization of a democratic republic and the establishment of a free, democratic, and rule-of-law society. It is a stumbling block to the democratization of Chinese society. Without ending the CCP's one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule, it is impossible to establish a modern democratic society in China, let alone advocate, promote, or promote democracy!



Therefore, ending the CCP's one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule is a prerequisite for China to establish a modern, free, democratic, and rule-of-law society. For details on how to end the CCP's one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule, please refer to the article "A Political Solution to End the CCP's Authoritarian and Dictatorship Rule" on this blog, which will not be elaborated here.



The question now is: after the collapse of the CCP regime and the end of its one-party dictatorship, can China directly establish a democratic republic and enter a modern democratic society? This is a very real question facing every patriot who pursues democratization in Chinese society and strives for the cause of democracy in China. It is also a question concerning the future of democratization in Chinese society and whether China can smoothly build a free, democratic, and rule-of-law society after the end of the CCP's one-party dictatorship.



Some people may be optimistic about this issue, believing that once the CCP regime collapses, the Chinese people will have the right to choose freely and can elect a democratic government through voting. China can then enter a modern democratic society and become a free, democratic, and rule-of-law country.



However, the harsh social reality in China shows that the collapse of the CCP regime only provides a premise and condition for China to build a modern democratic society. The collapse of the CCP regime does not mean that China can directly achieve political democratization or smoothly build a modern free, democratic, and rule-of-law society. This is an issue that Chinese society must seriously face after the collapse of the CCP regime!



Why is it said that the collapse of the CCP regime does not equate to the democratization of Chinese society? Is the collapse of the CCP regime merely a prerequisite for building a modern democratic society in China? Because to establish a modern democratic society in China, simply removing the CCP regime as a roadblock and stumbling block is far from enough.



To establish a modern democratic society in China, we first need citizens and a civil society, as well as a strong sense of rules and a sound legal system as guarantees. It is impossible to build a modern, free, democratic, and rule-of-law society on the ruins of a feudal autocracy, in a society filled with the ideologies of lackeys, slaves, the ignorant masses, and mobs.

Therefore, after the collapse of the CCP regime, it is urgent to eradicate the Party culture, eliminate backward ideas and feudalistic traditional consciousness, thoroughly transform and rebuild the corrupt and backward society left by the CCP rule, and cultivate a new generation of citizens with modern civilized ideas. This is a prerequisite for China to build a modern democratic society and the foundation for establishing a modern democratic society. Otherwise, it will be impossible for China to successfully build a modern democratic society.



Next, we will analyze in detail what kind of society will be left to us after the collapse of the CCP regime, and how to realize the century-old aspirations of the Chinese nation in such a society:



II. The Nature of Chinese Society After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

First, it is essential to understand the nature of Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime, because the current state of society after the collapse of the CCP regime is determined by the nature of society. I think friends who have a little understanding of China and some political common sense know that China is a small-scale peasant society with thousands of years of feudal autocratic rule. It has never experienced a real stage of capitalist development or a real free market economy. It is a feudal, unified society that worships power, is autocratic and dictatorial, and has no rule of law.



After the CCP seized state power in 1949, it further stifled the nascent national industry and commerce. After inciting peasants to brutally plunder the land of rural gentry, it then confiscated all the land seized by the peasants and deprived the people of their means of production and livelihood, forming an unprecedented party-state ownership system. This system impoverished the ordinary people of the country to the point of abject poverty, while simultaneously carrying out forced brainwashing and implementing a cruel one-party dictatorship. Ultimately, it transformed the people at the bottom of Chinese society from the originally simple and kind peasants into the common people, obedient citizens, and ignorant masses of today.



Although China's economy has developed significantly since the reform and opening up, the CCP's refusal to carry out political system reform and its insistence on party control over everything has led to the alienation of power and the prevalence of money-power transactions. This has transformed the traditionally "official-centric" social elite class into a privileged class and a powerful elite class, becoming a vested interest group.



More importantly, the concept of "great unification" that has prevailed in China for thousands of years has evolved from the unification of territory, weights and measures, calendar, and etiquette in the past imperial era to the "great unification era" in the Communist era. Today's China not only wants national unification, government order unification, etiquette unification, ethnic unification, weights and measures unification, and writing unification, but has also gone to the extreme of wanting political unification, economic unification, ideological unification, cultural unification, and propaganda unification.



Today in China, from top to bottom, all localities, departments, and industries must Party, and must accept the absurdity of the Communist Party's absolute unified command, unified decision-making, unified deployment, and unified action.

In conclusion: Due to the rule of the Communist Party, Chinese society today has degenerated into a unified society that is even more backward than feudal autocracy. The basic quality of 1.4 billion Chinese people is far inferior to that of the Qing Dynasty during its feudal traditional society. Under the rule of the CCP, 1.4 billion Chinese people have been transformed into 1.4 billion powerless Communists, and the level of civilization in the entire society is at least a hundred years behind modern civilized society!



III. The Political Situation China Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

Politics is about how to govern a country and the current state of that governance. Because the CCP practices one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule, the collapse of the CCP regime will inevitably lead to the following political situation:



First, because the CCP regime adheres to the principle of the Communist Party leading everything, all levels of government departments and systems in the country must accept the absolute leadership of the Communist Party. The national constitution and laws are rendered meaningless, and the National People's Congress is just a rubber stamp. Therefore, once the CCP regime suddenly collapses, the entire power of the country will be completely paralyzed.



Second, due to the CCP's long-term adherence to one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule, and its brutal suppression of political dissidents and social organizations, the entire Chinese society has no independent political parties or social organizations, and no political alternatives. Under such circumstances, once the CCP regime suddenly collapses, the entire society will be in a power vacuum and anarchy.



Third, due to long-standing ethnic conflicts and contradictions between local and central governments, if the CCP regime were to suddenly collapse, it would inevitably trigger a struggle for independence among various ethnic groups and regions, leading to the rise of local forces, their growing strength and power, and the formation of a situation of regional powers and warlordism. China's political situation may face an uncertain and turbulent period.



Fourth, due to the intensification of internal contradictions within the ruling group, once the CCP regime suddenly collapses, it will inevitably lead to the original departments and regions openly breaking away from the CCP and acting independently. Some powerful figures may even take the opportunity to vie for the highest power in the country, which could lead to the risk of a large-scale civil war.



Fifth, because the CCP's one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule have penetrated into every corner of society, once the CCP suddenly collapses, China will face a society where the remnants of the Communist Party and its influence are widespread. It will have to face nearly 100 million remaining Communist Party members, more than 80 million Communist Youth League members, more than 3 million military personnel and millions of police officers, as well as a large number of brainwashed and educated fools and little pinks.



All of these will become huge political obstacles to the reconstruction and transformation of Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime. We must not be blindly optimistic about this and must be fully prepared.


IV. The Economic Situation China Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

lang=EN style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
宋体;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:0pt;mso-ligatures:
none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>The economy is the foundation of a country, and the principle that the economic base determines the superstructure is a fundamental tenet of political economy. At its core, a society's economic system determines its political system, legal system, ideology, and so on—this is the norm in normal human societies. Modern democratic countries all operate on a free market economy foundation, and their political, legal, and ideological systems are all built upon this foundation.

Under the one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule of the CCP, this fundamental principle of political economy has been completely reversed. China's economic system is entirely determined by its political system, by the CCP's one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule, and serves to maintain political rule. Therefore, China's economy is a typical bureaucratic capitalist economy, with the entire economic lifeline of the country entirely under the control of bureaucratic and crony capital. This is a distorted economic system, and it represents the biggest obstacle to political democratization in China after the collapse of the CCP regime.



The CCP adheres to a system of party control over the economy, making it the sole foundation for its one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule. The sudden collapse of the CCP regime inevitably requires a complete economic collapse; otherwise, a massive one-party dictatorship like the CCP would not easily collapse if its economic foundation remained intact and the economy continued to function normally. Therefore, if the CCP regime were to suddenly collapse, it would leave behind a society with a collapsed economy and an economic mess in dire need of recovery, primarily including:



I. National fiscal depletion, fiscal deficits and bad debts, mounting debt, unpaid military salaries, and unpaid civil servant salaries;

II. Business closures, company bankruptcies, factory closures, a real estate market collapse, and widespread economic depression;

III. A surge in unemployment, with a large unemployed population roaming the country;

IV. Food shortages affecting 1.4 billion people, etc.



In short, once the CCP regime collapses, what it will leave behind, both in terms of economic foundation and economic reality, will be an unmanageable mess that must be fundamentally and thoroughly rebuilt. This will be an extremely difficult challenge!



V. The Cultural Landscape China Will Face After the Collapse of the Chinese Regime

Culture is a nation's spiritual wealth and a reflection of its values. It encompasses knowledge, beliefs, laws, morality, customs, and more. In essence, culture embodies a nation's and people's ideology and behavior. An advanced culture can guide a nation's progress, while a backward and decadent culture becomes an obstacle and burden to social development. So, what kind of cultural situation will the CCP face after its collapse?



First, there is a lack of civic consciousness: After the collapse of the CCP, it will leave behind a society with a general lack of awareness of universal values. The people generally lack civic consciousness and a sense of national ownership. Due to the CCP's one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule, long-term information blockade and brainwashing education, the whole society lacks basic understanding and awareness of freedom, democracy, the rule of law, human rights, separation of powers, judicial independence, nationalization of the military, and universal values, as well as basic understanding and awareness of modern human civilization.



Second, there is the outdated and backward traditional concept of a unified system: national unity, unified government orders, unified leadership, unified decision-making, unified deployment, and unified action have been deeply ingrained in the minds of 1.4 billion Chinese people, while national independence, local autonomy, and federalism have become synonymous with division. Adapting to local conditions, division of labor and responsibility, and clear division of duties have all become means to undermine the Party's unified leadership. This is an important cultural foundation for the autocratic rule in Chinese society and a huge cultural obstacle to China's progress towards a free, democratic, and rule-of-law society.



Third, there is the worship of power: The worship of power in traditional Chinese culture is rooted in the divine right of kings and the hierarchical power and social structure. This worship of power is not only reflected in the political system, the pursuit of power, and the insatiable desire for power, but also in the people's worship of power, the belief that power is above the law, and that any means are acceptable for the sake of power. This is a huge cultural obstacle to the democratization and rule of law in Chinese society.



Fourth, there is a lack of faith: After the collapse of the CCP regime, a society severely lacking in faith will be left behind. Faith is belief, the values and worldview that influence people's behavior. Under the rule of the CCP, the so-called communist ideology and worldview have completely collapsed. Universal values and religions have been severely suppressed and prohibited. People are generally spiritually empty and disorganized. The entire society, including the officialdom and the social elite, has been monopolized by money and material possessions. Money worship and corruption are rampant.



Fifth, collectivism: Collectivism is supreme in Chinese society, the embodiment of absolute correctness, and the standard and model of society. It is mainly manifested in emphasizing the collective and despising the individual, subordinating the individual to society, and requiring the individual to absolutely obey the collective, the nation, and the country. Collectivism has become the most powerful excuse for the CCP to force the people to be absolutely loyal and obedient to the CCP regime, and has become a magic weapon for maintaining the CCP regime.



Sixth, an overemphasis on rule by man and a neglect of rule of law: Chinese tradition is permeated with a culture of rule by man. The Chinese generally pursue honest officials, wise rulers, good officials, and upright officials, while downplaying or even ignoring the rule of law and the checks and balances on power. In officialdom, interpersonal relationships are placed above legal regulations. This culture of "rule by man" is the root cause of power exceeding the law. The desire for upright officials and wise rulers, rather than placing hope in the rule of law, in institutional checks and balances, and in the mutual checks and balances of power, is another huge cultural obstacle to establishing a modern society governed by the rule of law.



The backward culture has led to a general lack of awareness of modern democratic systems among Chinese people. They lack basic understanding of modern democratic systems and the rule of law, as well as ideological beliefs, basic integrity, a basic sense of rules, morality, independent thinking, and a sense of ownership of the country. This results in a huge ideological gap between them and modern democratic societies. These are all invisible ideological and cultural obstacles in China's journey to build a modern civilized society after the collapse of the CCP regime. They are the invisible hand that hinders the democratization and rule of law in Chinese society.



VI. The Current Situation of the CCP's Military Guard After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:仿宋;color:black;mso-color-alt:windowtext'> lang=EN style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
宋体;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:0pt;mso-ligatures:
none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>The CCP is a power-hungry regime, but lacking legitimacy, it relies on the military to maintain its power and rule. The CCP seized state power through the military, and it continues to rely on the military to maintain its rule; the military is the main pillar of the CCP regime.

China's military obeys only the CCP; in effect, it is a party guard. Therefore, if the CCP regime were to suddenly collapse, the CCP's party guard would inevitably face the following situation:



1. Because the CCP operates on the principle of "the Party commands the gun," and the army is only subject to and obeys the Communist Party, if the CCP regime were to suddenly collapse, the army would inevitably be in a state of complete loss of control. In addition, the loss of central government funding would inevitably lead to the failure and paralysis of the entire army's command.



2. If the CCP regime were to suddenly collapse, the various military regions and branches, having lost unified command and support, would inevitably combine with newly emerging political forces or establish their own military governments for their own survival and interests. This would complete the transition from the CCP's SS to a regional armed force, and the entire SS would disintegrate.



3. After the sudden collapse of the CCP, the complete paralysis and disintegration of the military command system will inevitably lead to the uncontrolled proliferation of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons and weapons of mass destruction possessed by the military, posing a huge hidden danger and threat to regional stability and international security.



This means that with the collapse of the CCP regime, the CCP army, which once served as the party's guard, faces the risk of being completely out of control and becoming a major threat to national and regional security. This is something that must be clearly recognized.



VII. The Social Reality China Will Face After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

First, we are facing a society that lacks basic understanding and awareness of the outside world and universal values. Due to the long-term one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule of the CCP, Chinese society is isolated from the outside world. In particular, the CCP's long-term denigration and negative propaganda of freedom, democracy, the rule of law, the separation of powers, judicial independence, and universal values has not only isolated Chinese society from the outside world, but also resulted in the entire society lacking even a basic understanding and awareness of universal values.



Second, the collapse of the CCP regime will leave behind a society without any civil society organizations or political forces: Under the CCP's one-party dictatorship, the CCP severely suppresses civil society organizations and strictly prohibits the existence of all civil society groups and political organizations. Once the CCP regime collapses, it will become a society without any political alternatives, a society that has lost its self-organization, self-management, and self-help functions.



Third, the collapse of the CCP regime will leave behind a society with a persistent and widespread influence of the Communist Party: After the collapse of the Communist Party regime, nearly 100 million Communist Party members, more than 80 million Communist Youth League members, more than 3 million military personnel, and several million police officers will remain in Chinese society, as well as a large number of brainwashed and educated "little pinks". These remnants of the CCP regime will become a huge obstacle to the democratization of Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime!



Fourth, the collapse of the CCP regime will leave behind a society lacking democratic political talent: Due to the CCP's long-term information blockade and brainwashing education, especially its malicious slander of modern democratic society and universal values, once the CCP regime collapses, China will face a shortage of democratic talent. There will be a serious lack of outstanding talents with modern democratic awareness, knowledge of modern democratic rules, rich democratic and legal literacy, and experience in building democratic systems. This will become a huge obstacle to China's social transformation.



Fifth, the collapse of the CCP regime will leave behind a divided society:
Due to the CCP regime's bloody and brutal rule, hundreds of millions of Chinese people have died unnatural deaths, accumulated a large number of wrongful convictions and miscarriages of justice and social grievances, and in particular, the rights of various ethnic minorities have been suppressed and forcibly Sinicized for a long time. Once these long-accumulated social contradictions suddenly disappear when political pressure disappears, it will lead to a serious tearing apart of the entire society and may even lead to long-term social unrest.

The aforementioned harsh social realities are the main social obstacles to the democratization of Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime. These obstacles determine that the path to democratization in Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime will be extremely difficult and tortuous. It is impossible to establish a temporary democratic government after the collapse of the CCP regime and enter a modern democratic society overnight.



Therefore, if there is no adequate ideological preparation or corresponding political contingency plan to deal with the aforementioned nature of Chinese society and the current situation that China will face after the collapse of the CCP regime, the democratization of Chinese society is likely to go through a long and tortuous process, and may even have to pay a heavy price for it. This issue should attract people's high attention and concern from now on.



VIII. The serious gap between the overall quality of Chinese citizens and that of contemporary democratic societies

Above, we analyzed the serious problems China will face in the political, economic, cultural, military, and social fields after the collapse of the CCP regime. All of these problems are directly related to the basic quality of the people. Currently, China exhibits a general lack of national quality, which can be considered a prominent social phenomenon. This includes low levels of civilization, a lack of legal and rule-abiding awareness, a lack of independent thinking ability, a lack of spirit of resistance, and a lack of basic moral cultivation.



This is a real problem that needs to be seriously addressed. Once established, the CCP's one-party dictatorship monopolized all social resources. The people not only completely lost their political rights but were also deprived of all property and freedom rights. State terrorism was used to forcibly reshape the thinking of the entire society and the people, with long-term, systematic, and coercive indoctrination. Therefore, if the CCP regime were to suddenly collapse, what would inevitably be left to Chinese society is a population of 1.4 billion people who have been systematically indoctrinated by the CCP regime—a society whose overall national quality is vastly different from that of modern democratic societies. This is mainly manifested in:



1. Under the one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule of the CCP, culture, information, and news from the civilized world are blocked and censored, completely isolating a person from the outside world from birth.



2. Under the one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule of the CCP, a person lives from birth in a completely closed and isolated society—the only society they can access. Their ideological level, level of civilization, cultural level, moral character, customs, and legal awareness can only be determined by this distorted society, and they grow and develop according to the direction set by this distorted society.



3. Under the one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule of the Chinese Communist Party, Chinese people are exposed to Party culture from birth, indoctrinated with anti-humanity, anti-civilization, and anti-universal values propaganda and teachings, and are taught absolute loyalty and obedience to the Party. This causes contemporary Chinese people to develop in a direction completely opposite to contemporary human civilization from birth, towards a low level of national quality, and therefore naturally exhibit low quality, low morality, and a lack of independent thinking ability.



4. The gap in overall national quality means that this gap is widespread and universal: all social strata, including intellectuals, social elites, and civil servants in China, generally lack democratic awareness and modern legal consciousness. This is a serious social problem that Chinese society must face after the collapse of the CCP regime.



5. More importantly, the overall quality of 1.4 billion people will inevitably determine the basic quality of China's political forces after the collapse of the CCP regime. The gap in the overall quality of 1.4 billion people will inevitably be reflected in China's hastily implemented after the collapse of the Communist Party, the result will inevitably be disastrous.



IX. Eight Major National Transformation and Reconstruction Projects Needed in China After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>We have previously analyzed the social situation China will face after the collapse of the CCP regime. The analysis shows that, as a whole, Chinese society will be significantly different from modern civilized society.lang=EN style='font-size:21.0pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
宋体;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:0pt;mso-ligatures:
none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> It is unimaginable that a generation, brainwashed by the CCP for decades, whose minds are filled with Party culture, the concept of a unified empire, and feudal ideology, and who are completely ignorant of modern Western culture, Western civilization, and the spirit of the rule of law, could build a modern democratic society on the ruins of a society where the remnants of the CCP are everywhere, the economy is in complete collapse, the military is out of control, and the country faces division and disintegration. This is almost a fantasy.
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To build the magnificent edifice of modern democracy, especially within the swamp left by the CCP's authoritarian rule, a solid foundation must first be laid. Otherwise, the higher the edifice is built, the faster it will collapse. This foundation consists of eight fundamental reforms necessary for democratizing Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime, while maintaining social order and stability:



The first major task is to dismantle the centralized system and establish a national administrative system with checks and balances: each ethnic group and region should establish a genuine administrative system with separation of powers, judicial independence, and checks and balances based on its local realities, ensuring the independence and autonomy of each ethnic group and region. A centralized system where everything must be subject to the unified leadership, decision-making, command, and deployment of the central government, and where everyone must maintain consistency with and resolutely obey the central government, is fundamentally opposed to modern democratic systems. Therefore, there can be no true democracy with centralized systems, and the establishment of modern democratic systems requires the complete dismantling of centralized systems.



The second major task is to resolutely ban the Communist Party: Because the CCP practices one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule, its tentacles of rule are everywhere on the 9.6 million square kilometers of land, the remnants of its rule are everywhere, its remaining forces are everywhere, and its ideology is everywhere. It is impossible to establish a truly modern democratic system in such a social environment. Therefore, to establish a modern democratic system, it is necessary to ban the Communist Party, thoroughly investigate and punish its crimes, eliminate its influence, and completely eradicate its remaining forces.



style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
宋体;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:0pt;mso-ligatures:
none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>The third major project is to abolish the so-called state-owned economy and establish a genuine free market economy:
lang=EN style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
宋体;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:0pt;mso-ligatures:
none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>the so-called state-owned economy is the economy owned by officials, which means that power has monopolized the country's economic lifeline, the market, and the national economy and people's livelihood.lang=EN style='font-size:21.0pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
宋体;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:0pt;mso-ligatures:
none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> When the basic necessities of life for ordinary people are monopolized by power, the people are merely slaves to power and cannot become true masters of the country. The economy is the foundation of politics; without economic freedom, there can be no political freedom, and without a market economy, there can be no democratic politics. Therefore, to establish a modern democratic system, it is essential to abolish state-owned and government-owned economies, completely break the monopoly of power over the economy and the market, establish a truly free market economy, return land and means of production to the people, and allow them to become citizens with independent personalities.
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The fourth major project is the nationalization of the military:
this means the military must belong to the state, political parties must withdraw from the military, military personnel must not interfere in politics, the military must become a national defense force and a defender of the nation, and the military must not be subordinate to any specific political figure or group. In other words, the military cannot be loyal to any political party or individual, cannot be subordinate to any political party or individual, cannot be ordered by any political party or individual, and cannot become a tool of political struggle. This is an important hallmark of modern democratic politics. Otherwise, true constitutionalism and democracy are impossible; therefore, the nationalization of the military is essential to achieving political democratization.



The fifth major project establishes a well-developed civil society: Civil society refers to non-governmental organizations, which are various grassroots organizations formed on the basis of shared interests, goals, and values, such as independent trade unions, farmers' associations, and organizations protecting women and children. Civil society plays a crucial role by advocating for and providing public services, representing the voices of vulnerable groups, promoting social development, protecting human rights, and especially in overseeing public power. Civil society is the foundation of civil society, an important channel for citizen participation in national governance, and a significant hallmark of a democratic society.



The sixth major project is to complete the reconstruction of culture: Culture is the spiritual wealth of a nation and a people, and a concentrated embodiment of a society's concepts and values. Culture mainly includes language, customs, religion, values, and legal systems, all of which are closely related to the construction of a democratic system. A society permeated with Party culture and outdated traditional culture cannot possibly establish a modern democratic system. Therefore, it is essential to thoroughly discard the dross of Party culture and traditional culture, and rebuild Chinese culture according to the principles of freedom, equality, fraternity, the rule of law, human rights, and contract, thus removing cultural obstacles to the democratization of Chinese society.



The seventh major project is to achieve independence and autonomy for all ethnic groups and regions: A crucial factor in building a constitutional democratic society in China is enabling all ethnic groups and regions to achieve independence and autonomy. Ethnic and local autonomy is the foundation for the democratization and rule of law of the entire country. It is difficult to imagine a society where even ethnic groups and regions cannot be independent and self-reliant, and where everyone must obey unified leadership, command, decision-making, and action in all matters, allowing the people to enjoy democratic rights, the right to decide national affairs, and to truly be masters of their own destiny. Therefore, after the collapse of the CCP regime, the first priority must be to achieve independence and autonomy for all ethnic groups and regions; this is the foundation for national democratization.



As the beginning and starting point for the independence and autonomy of all ethnic groups and regions, each ethnic group and region must first complete its own independent constitution on the basis of a national referendum, and establish a sound legal system as a legal guarantee for the democratization of its own ethnic group and region.



Only when all ethnic groups and regions have achieved the rule of law can the whole of China achieve the rule of law; only when all ethnic groups and regions have achieved democratization can the whole of China possibly achieve democratization. The democratization and rule of law of all ethnic groups and regions are the foundation for the democratization and rule of law of the whole of China.



style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>The eighth major project is to cultivate a generation of modern citizens with modern democratic consciousness:
lang=EN style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> this is the most important of the eight fundamental reform projects needed for the democratization of Chinese society. To establish a modern democratic society, it is essential to have a generation of modern citizens with modern democratic consciousness, legal awareness, and independent personalities.lang=EN style='font-size:21.0pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> Therefore, after the collapse of the CCP regime, it is necessary to completely end brainwashing education and traditional education, and cultivate a new generation of people with basic social responsibility, basic integrity, independent personality, basic awareness of the rule of law and rules, and adaptability to the democratic system in a fair, just, free, equal, and freedom of belief-based rule-of-law society. Without modern citizens with modern democratic consciousness and independent personality, there can be no modern democratic society.
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The aforementioned eight major projects cannot be completed in a day; they may take ten, twenty years, or even longer. This period represents the transition between the collapse of the CCP regime and the democratization of Chinese society. The so-called transition period is the time of change between two social systems. Given the current situation and major obstacles China will face after the collapse of the CCP regime, ensuring the completion of the "Eight Major Basic Reform Projects Required for the Democratization of Chinese Society" will necessitate the adoption of some extraordinary measures and means. This is a topic that requires further discussion.



Finally, it should be noted that the "Eight Basic Transformation Projects Required for the Democratization of Chinese Society" are indispensable for the democratization of Chinese society. In fact, once the "Eight Basic Transformation Projects Required for the Democratization of Chinese Society" are completed, China will possess the political, social, economic, cultural, and legal foundations for achieving political democratization, and the democratization of China will be a natural outcome.



X. International takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime will serve as a bridge to democratization in China.

Above, we focused on analyzing the political, economic, cultural, defense, and social realities facing Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime. Through this analysis, we can clearly see that after the collapse of the CCP regime, China, whether in politics, economy, culture, society, or the overall quality of its citizens, faces a huge gap compared to contemporary democratic societies. If Chinese society wants to smoothly navigate the transition period after the collapse of the CCP regime, it urgently needs the assistance of democratic countries around the world to maintain social order and help complete the country's transformation and reconstruction.



The eight major national reconstruction projects urgently needed by China after the collapse of the CCP regime, and the democratization of China, are tasks that today's overseas pro-democracy organizations and future local power brokers cannot undertake, nor can they be accomplished solely by the Chinese people themselves. This is not merely a matter of strength and power, but also a matter of capability and competence. Therefore, international takeover is necessary. This is an issue that post-CCP China must seriously confront. The necessity of international takeover is as follows:



First, international takeover aims to maintain basic social order and security: to prevent a power vacuum and anarchy that could lead to social chaos after the collapse of the CCP regime.

Second, international takeover aims to prevent the military from spiraling out of control: to prevent the uncontrolled proliferation of nuclear, biological, and weapons of mass destruction, which could endanger regional and international security.

Third, the international takeover was intended to ensure a smooth transition and transformation of Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime: to prevent social unrest and civil war in China, and to stop conflicts and disputes between ethnic groups and regions.

Fourth, international takeover is an important measure and guarantee for completing the eight major national transformation and reconstruction projects required by China after the collapse of the CCP regime. After the collapse of the CCP regime, it is necessary to thoroughly transform the mess left by the CCP and carry out social reconstruction. These are things that cannot be accomplished by the strength and ability of Chinese society itself.



Fifth, and most importantly, international takeover is a bridge for China to democratize: international takeover itself is the grafting of Western culture, universal values, social civilization, the rule of law, civil society, and democratic system. These are genes that China lacked during its thousands of years of feudal autocracy and one-party totalitarian rule, and must be introduced to China through international takeover.



China is a feudal society with thousands of years of history. After 1949, it suffered from the one-party dictatorship and totalitarian rule of the Communist Party. It is a society completely permeated by feudal traditional culture and Party culture. It is a society whose traditions, thoughts and culture have been seriously polluted. It is a society that has lost the ability to reform itself. International takeover is the most convenient bridge and path for China to become a free, democratic and rule-of-law society!



XI. Five bases and reasons for international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime

First, because the Chinese Communist Party is the largest terrorist organization in humankind today: China is in fact a country held hostage by terrorist organizations, and has become the biggest destroyer of the international order, posing the greatest threat to world security and human society. This is the basis and reason for the need for international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime.



Furthermore, after the collapse of the CCP regime, it is necessary to control and transform the society it has hijacked and ruled, thoroughly eliminate the CCP's remaining forces and influence, remove its security threat to human society, and enable it to return to civilized human society. This is entirely in line with the purposes and principles of the United Nations in maintaining international peace and security, and is the due responsibility and obligation of the international community.



Second, China will have no political replacement after the collapse of the CCP regime:
lang=EN style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> The sudden collapse of the CCP regime will leave behind a complete collapse of the national political structure, total social paralysis, the threat of large-scale civil war and disintegration, the malfunction and paralysis of the entire military command system, the uncontrolled proliferation of nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons and weapons of mass destruction, national fiscal depletion, massive debt, unpaid military and civil servant salaries, business failures, company bankruptcies, factory closures, a housing market crash, and food shortages.lang=EN style='font-size:21.0pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> The interference and sabotage by the remnants of the CCP regime, the serious gap between the overall quality of the people and modern democratic systems, and a series of other serious social problems mean that without the intervention and assistance of external forces, such a society will inevitably suffer from long-term social unrest and internal strife. Therefore, it is imperative for the international community to take over the CCP regime after its collapse.

Third, the eight fundamental reforms required for the democratization of Chinese society necessitate guidance and assistance from the international community:lang=EN style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> Given the significant gap between the overall quality of the Chinese population and that of modern democratic societies, it is difficult for the Chinese people and China's existing, immature political forces alone to shoulder the historical responsibility of social reform in the event of the collapse of the CCP regime. This includes breaking down the great unificationstyle='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:宋体;mso-ascii-font-family:inherit;
mso-hansi-font-family:inherit;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:
0pt;mso-ligatures:none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>,style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>The realization of independence and autonomy for all ethnic groups and regions, the establishment of constitutions and social reconstruction in all ethnic groups and regions, and the cultivation of a new generation with basic social responsibility, basic integrity, independent personality, basic awareness of the rule of law and rules, and adaptability to the democratic system are essential. Therefore, it is imperative for the international community to take over the regime after its collapse.

Fourth, China lacks the political strength and capacity for social reconstruction: Rebuilding a constitutional democracy cannot be achieved through empty principles and slogans such as the separation of powers, the nationalization of the military, and judicial independence. Maintaining national stability and transformation requires strong political power and effective measures and means, which China will not possess after the collapse of the CCP regime. It will then have to rely on the support and assistance of the international community. This is determined by the objective realities of Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime; therefore, international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime is inevitable.



style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>Fifth, China lacks the foundation and experience for social reconstruction:
lang=EN style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>After the collapse of the CCP regime, facing the "current situation China will face after the collapse of the CCP regime" and "the eight basic transformation projects required for the democratization of Chinese society," China needs to quickly and orderly build a free, democratic, and rule-of-law society.lang=EN style='font-size:21.0pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
宋体;mso-bidi-font-family:宋体;color:#1F1F1F;mso-font-kerning:0pt;mso-ligatures:
none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> We can only humbly learn from Western countries, especially the Republic of China, and complete this task with the guidance and assistance of the international community, drawing on the experience of Western democracies and the Republic of China. We can no longer engage in so-called arduous explorations or create any "Chinese characteristics." Therefore, it is imperative for the international community to take over after the collapse of the CCP regime.
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The above facts prove that after the collapse of the CCP regime, facing a society that has been thoroughly domesticated by the Communist Party, a society that has been completely infiltrated by Party culture, and a society that has lost its ability to reform itself, international takeover is the only correct choice and way out!



XII. Basic Models of International Takeover After the Collapse of the CCP Regime

First, let's look at two typical successful examples of international takeovers:

1. The Example and Model of West Germany's Post-War Reconstruction: West Germany's post-war reconstruction was also a miracle and a model. Everyone knows that post-war Germany was devastated and in dire need of reconstruction. However, West Germany, under the occupation and administration of the United States, Britain, and France, successfully implemented demilitarization, de-Nazification, and democratization. Ten years later, in 1955, the United States, Britain, and France ended their occupation of West Germany. By 1959 and 1960, West Germany's economy had surpassed that of France and Britain, respectively. West Germany during the Cold War stood in stark contrast to East Germany under communist rule. This successful model should serve as a reference for Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime.



2. The Example and Model of Post-World War II Japanese Reconstruction: Following the end of World War II, at the request of the Japanese people, the US occupation authorities oversaw "democratization" reforms in Japan's politics, economy, and education. This was a highly successful model. After Japan's defeat and surrender in 1945, it began rebuilding on the ruins of war. In just about ten years, Japan's economy began to develop rapidly. By the 1970s, Japan had become the world's second-largest economy. To this day, Japan remains one of the leading democracies in Asia. This successful model should also be learned from by Chinese society after the collapse of the CCP regime.



The two successful examples and models mentioned above provided two successful models for the international community to take over after the collapse of the CCP regime, and also provided a reference for the social transformation and reconstruction of China in the post-CCP era. More importantly, after the collapse of the CCP regime, China still has the Republic of China as a beacon and model of democratization in the Chinese world. All three pointed out the path and direction for China's social transformation and democratic system construction after the collapse of the CCP regime.



II. The main responsibilities of international takeover include:

1.
Taking over strategic locations and key facilities from the international community after the collapse of the CCP regime; controlling nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction; maintaining China's border security and social order; 2. Assisting the provisional government in fulfilling its administrative responsibilities, establishing a provisional judicial system, formulating necessary provisional laws and regulations, and ensuring their implementation; 3. Handling some emergencies in a timely manner and alleviating public grievances; 4. Preventing military interference in politics; 5. Providing a certain number of democratic political advisors, economic advisors, legal advisors, military advisors, and education experts to assist China in completing social transformation as soon as possible and establishing a constitutional democratic system, etc.



III. Basic Model of International Takeover:

The Republic of China (ROC) would primarily promote and assist in establishing an international takeover body, led by the United Nations and composed of the United States, Japan, and other democratic nations, to transplant the ROC's successful democratic model to mainland China. This would include, under the joint supervision of the international community, re-drafting the constitution, implementing ethnic and local autonomy, rebuilding the mainland's political, economic, and judicial systems, reforming education, implementing the separation of powers, nationalizing the military, redistributing the means of production, and protecting the inviolability of private property.



Fourth, international takeover is based on shared interests:


Some netizens may question why the takeover should primarily be carried out by democratic countries like the US and Japan. How can we guarantee that the US and Japan can successfully take over? It's important to emphasize that the US and Japan have profound connections with mainland China in the political, economic, and military spheres. The collapse of the CCP regime and the stability and democratization of Chinese society are closely related to the interests of the US and Japan. Therefore, helping China maintain stability and complete social transformation after the collapse of the CCP regime, jointly building mainland China into a free, democratic, and rule-of-law society, not only aligns with the shared interests of the US and Japan but is also their inescapable responsibility and obligation.



style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'>First, let's talk about the United States. The CCP regime is the main enemy and competitor of the United States. The collapse of the CCP regime is itself the result of the long-term confrontation and cold war between the United States and China. In order to prevent the CCP regime from making a comeback, the United States naturally has to take over and transform China after the collapse of the CCP regime.lang=EN style='font-size:21.0pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> Secondly, the United States is the world's policeman, bearing the responsibility of maintaining world peace and regional stability. As the world's policeman, the United States cannot sit idly by while the CCP regime collapses and nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction become out of control and proliferate, or while the power vacuum in China poses a security threat to neighboring countries. Thirdly, the United States is the creator of modern democracy. The fact that it was able to transplant modern democracy to a country with 1.4 billion people is also a great success of the modern democracy system created by the United States.lang=EN-US style='font-size:10.5pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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Japan bears an even greater responsibility. First, China and Japan are close neighbors, separated only by a narrow strait. A smooth democratic transition in China would eliminate the direct threat to Japan and ensure lasting friendship between the two peoples. Second, Japan launched its invasion of China during World War II, causing immense suffering and loss to the Chinese people, particularly severely weakening the Republic of China government and allowing the CCP to grow stronger. Japan bears an undeniable responsibility for the fall of mainland China to the Republic of China. Even Mao Zedong acknowledged this.lang=EN style='font-size:21.0pt;font-family:"inherit",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:
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none;mso-ansi-language:EN'> Without the Japanese invasion of China, there would have been no victory for the Communist Party; thirdly, after the CCP's so-called reform and opening up, Japan was one of the countries that provided the most aid to help the CCP become the world's second largest economy, which ultimately made the CCP regime a direct threat to Japan and Taiwan; therefore, from any perspective, the Japanese government has a responsibility and obligation to assist in completing the social reconstruction work in mainland China.

Finally, China is a potentially huge market. The United States and Japan are China's largest trading partners. China's social democratization and marketization of the Chinese economy will bring substantial returns and benefits to neighboring countries, especially the United States and Japan. The democratization of Chinese society will benefit not only the Chinese people, but also the international community, especially the United States and Japan.



XIII, the Republic of China is a beacon and model of democracy in the Chinese-speaking world.

The Republic of China, established after the Xinhai Revolution in 1911, was the first democratic country in Asia, a founding member of the United Nations, and a permanent member of the UN Security Council. In 1949, due to its defeat in the Chinese Civil War, it lost control of mainland China. Since the 1990s, after the lifting of martial law in Taiwan, the Republic of China has rapidly transformed into a modern, multi-party, and freely competitive democracy through continuous political reforms, including constitutional amendments, parliamentary elections, and direct presidential elections.



Today, the Republic of China respects universal values such as freedom, democracy, the rule of law, and human rights. With its political integrity, economic prosperity, advanced technology, and the happy and healthy lives of its people, it has become a beacon and model of democracy in the Chinese-speaking world. The Republic of China's successful democratic experience in Taiwan has accumulated valuable experience for the reconstruction of mainland China after the collapse of the CCP regime, providing a ready-made model for the future democratization of Chinese society.



Benjamin Franklin, one of the authors of the American Declaration of Independence, famously said, "Where liberty is, there is my country." If there were only one China in the world today, I think all discerning people would agree: only freedom and democracy matter. Who would want a regime that is the most autocratic, dictatorial, backward, bloody, and brutal anti-people, anti-human, and anti-civilization regime in the socialist world to represent China?



The reason we emphasize the role of the Republic of China as a beacon and model of democracy for mainland China is twofold: First, the Republic of China is the only legitimate government and the only legitimate representative of China; second, the Republic of China and mainland China belong to the same Chinese nation, share a common language and culture, and the Republic of China's experience in democratization is more suitable for mainland China and easier for Chinese society to accept, without language or cultural barriers. Therefore, the Republic of China today carries the future and hope for China's democratization.



XIV. The Republic of China should become an active promoter of international takeover.

Firstly, the reason why the Republic of China should be an active promoter of international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime, rather than a participant or the main force in the takeover, is because the Republic of China was originally the legitimate representative of China. The occupied areas of mainland China were territories that the Republic of China lost control of. The Republic of China's participation in the takeover was an internal affair of the country. Therefore, the Republic of China was not a participant in international takeover.



Secondly, after the collapse of the CCP regime, the Republic of China, as the sole legitimate representative of China, should legally take over the lost territory that originally belonged to it. However, due to the current limitations of the Republic of China's actual national strength, it is difficult for the Republic of China to take over such a huge mess of 9.6 million square kilometers of land and 140,000 people left behind by the CCP regime with its own military, financial, and resource strength. As the sole legitimate representative of China, the Republic of China has the right to request the international community to assist in management, transformation, and reconstruction. Therefore, the Republic of China should become an active promoter of international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime.



Third, the core objective of international takeover is to rebuild the Republic of China in mainland China. It involves the international community assisting the Republic of China in recovering the mainland and transplanting its own constitution, political system, economic system, education system, judicial system, and democratic achievements to mainland China. After international takeover, the social reform and reconstruction left by the CCP regime will be carried out. In fact, this is to rebuild the Republic of China in mainland China. Therefore, the Republic of China should be an active promoter of international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime!



XV:Returning to the Republic of China is the best path to democratization in Chinese society.

The Republic of China is a model of democracy in the Chinese world today, the first democratic republic in Asia, and the sole legitimate representative of the Chinese nation. The Republic of China and mainland China belong to the same Chinese nation, share the same language and culture. The valuable achievements of the Republic of China's democratization are most suitable for mainland China and most easily accepted by mainland Chinese society. Therefore, returning to the Republic of China is the best way for Chinese society to democratize after the collapse of the CCP regime, and it is also the common aspiration of the Chinese nation.



First, returning to the Republic of China is not simply about the Republic of China occupying and ruling mainland China. The foundation of this return is cultural, ideological, religious, moral, value-based, and social system recognition. Therefore, returning to the Republic of China essentially means recognizing its culture, ideology, beliefs, morality, values, and social system; it means replacing the CCP-imposed party culture with the culture, ideology, beliefs, civilization, and values of the Republic of China; and it means replacing the CCP's one-party dictatorship with freedom, democracy, the rule of law, and human rights.



Second, the period of international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime was the period of reconstruction of the Republic of China in mainland China. The entire takeover process should be the process of mainland China returning to the Republic of China. The social reform during the entire period of international takeover was the process of eliminating party culture and all feudal, autocratic and dictatorial ideologies and cultures. The so-called social reconstruction was to transplant the democratic achievements of the Republic of China today, as well as its advanced political, economic, educational and judicial systems, to mainland China, thereby realizing the century-old ideal of democratic republic in mainland China!



Third, the entire period of international takeover after the collapse of the CCP regime was also a period in which all ethnic groups and regions in mainland China achieved complete independence and autonomy. A free, democratic, and rule-of-law society is built on the foundation that people of all ethnic groups and regions can fully enjoy their right to be masters of their own destiny. A unified society cannot be a truly free, democratic, and rule-of-law society. Therefore, the period of international takeover was also a period of gestation for China to implement a federal system. In the future, a free, democratic, and rule-of-law China will inevitably be a federal republic, a Greater China Federation.



Fourth, we have every confidence and reason to believe that after the collapse of the CCP regime and the subsequent international takeover, when Chinese society faces the world again, it will certainly be a truly free, democratic, and rule-of-law-based Greater China Federal Republic, or several truly free, democratic, and rule-of-law-based federal republics. Just as the Qing Dynasty reformist statesman Zheng Xiaoxu predicted: "The Qing Dynasty perished in the republic, the republic perished in communism, and communism perished in joint rule." History has fortunately proven Mr. Zheng Xiaoxu right!



It is important to emphasize that regarding the democratization of Chinese society, some friends have proposed rebuilding the Republic of China, establishing a provisional democratic government through consultation among various factions after the collapse of the CCP regime, or even achieving democratization through peaceful evolution, peaceful resistance, or armed revolution. These ideas are all divorced from the objective realities of Chinese society and are fundamentally unrealizable fantasies. As for the proposals by some scholars to achieve democratic nation-building in China through one-party leadership, multi-party cooperation, political system reform, and consultative democracy, these are even more wishful thinking!



Others believe that Taiwan's pursuit of independence today constitutes a betrayal of the Republic of China and that it will never reunify with the mainland. This is a grave misconception and a manifestation of a mindset focused on unification. In reality, Taiwan's independence is a fait accompli, setting a precedent and leading the way for mainland China.



Not only should Taiwan become independent, but all ethnic groups and regions in mainland China, including Xinjiang, Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Guangxi, and Hong Kong, should also be independent and autonomous. They should all have the power to manage their own ethnic and regional public affairs and make independent decisions on their own economy, culture, education, finance, and public affairs. Only a union based on independence and autonomy can be a true union based on shared values, common interests, common needs, equality, and voluntariness. Only a country formed in this way can be a true republic.



Closing remarks

After the collapse of the CCP regime, building a free, democratic, and rule-of-law society in China, a large country with 1.4 billion people, a closed and backward nation with thousands of years of feudal autocracy and the one-party totalitarian rule of the Communist Party, and where the remnants of the CCP's influence are ubiquitous, is far from enough to rely solely on the strength and efforts of the Chinese people themselves. It is necessary to rely on the support, assistance, and guidance of the international democratic camp to have any chance of success. This is determined by the special and complex national conditions of Chinese society.



This 《Outline for the Democratic Construction of China》—a plan for the democratization of Chinese society—is a draft plan for social transformation and democratic nation-building, proposed based on a comprehensive summary and analysis of the current state of Chinese society, politics, economy, culture, national defense, and the overall quality of the people after the collapse of the CCP regime. This plan will certainly need further revision, supplementation, and improvement in the future, but it should be a pragmatic and basically feasible plan for the democratic construction of China. We sincerely welcome criticism and corrections from friends from all walks of life.



The first draft was completed on November 11, 2025.

 
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