Talk:Chinese Communist Party

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Here's some material that perhaps could be worked in somewhere; probably needs some more groundwork on CCP's control of the military. I lost the original source from PRA's site (People's Revolutionary Army). These are the strong arm badboys, or "commisars", who enforce ideological "correctness" in the ranks.

There is a page called "gongchandang" on the site - it means, "Communist Party" in Chinese, and so should be basically part of this page, but some eejit put it as the title of an article on the Nationalists. So currently, there are two articles about the CCP, or with titles that are the same.

Discipline Inspection Commission

The Discipline Inspection Commission of the Central Military Commission (CMC) held a plenary meeting on September 26 to study and discuss the spirit of the 4th Plenum of the 16th Party Central Committee and the Enlarged Meeting of the Central Military Commission and the 4th Plenary Session of the Central Discipline Inspection Commission, and study ways to implement them.
The meeting emphasized that discipline inspection commissions at all levels of the army must take the study and implementation of the spirit of the 4th Plenum of the 16th Central Committee of the Party and the Enlarged Meeting of the Central Military Commission as an important political task and grasp it firmly and do it successfully so as to give full play to their functionary role and provide powerful political, ideological, disciplinary and working-style guarantee. We must earnestly implement Chairman Hu Jintao's important instruction given at the Enlarged Meeting of the Central Military Commission on enhancing the capabilities of Party organizations at various levels of the army, further strengthen the building of discipline inspection commissions at various levels, constantly enhance their discipline inspection capability by centering on the central task of the army, enhance the capability to effectively supervise high- and medium-level cadres, improve the capability of fostering inner-Party democracy and protecting the Party member's rights, enhance the capability of enforcing discipline and handling cases according to law, foster the capability to assist the Party committees to improve the Party's style of work, organize and coordinate the fight against corruption, and do a better job of fighting against corruption and improving the Party's style of work in the army, so as to make new contributions to the army building in an all-round way.


5. Discipline inspection organizations of the Party
Discipline inspection organizations of the Party consist of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, local Party commissions for discipline inspection at various levels and the grassroots Party commissions for discipline inspection.
The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection works under the leadership of the Party Central Committee.
The local Party commissions for discipline inspection at various levels and the grassroots Party commissions for discipline inspection work under the dual leadership of the Party committee at the same level and Party commission for discipline inspection at the next higher level.
The term of each Party commission for discipline inspection is the same as that of the Party committee at the same level.
The plenary session of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection elects its standing committee, secretary and deputy secretaries and reports this to the Party Central Committee for approval.
The plenary sessions of local Party commissions for discipline inspection at various levels elect the standing committee and secretary and deputy secretaries, and the results are passed by the Party committee at the same level and reported to the Party committee at the next higher level for approval.
Whether a discipline inspection commission or discipline inspection members for a grassroots Party committee shall be established or put into position is to be decided by a Party organization at the next higher level in light of specific conditions.
A general Party branch committee and a Party branch committee shall include discipline inspection members.
The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection may, if needed, accredit a discipline inspection group or discipline inspectors to central Party and state organs.
Leaders of the discipline inspection group or discipline inspectors may attend, as non-voting members, related conferences organized by Party leaders of the organ concerned.
Their work must be supported by the Party leaders and organizations of the organ concerned.

Pro-communist whitewash

Cut from article:

It was a political and revolutionary movement which claims to align itself towards Communism, but since the reforms implemented on it by Deng Xiaoping, it has become more of a totalitarian capitalist state.

This is the usual "Communism isn't communist" bullshit.

  • It makes the claim that totalitarianism is incompatible with Communism. Actually, communism is the foremost of the totalitarian systems.
  • It makes the ironic (but false) claim that Chinese Communism only "claims to align itself towards Communism", when in fact it has been one of the two chief examples of Communist empires of the 20th century. We all recall that each Chinese citizen in Red China (i.e., the mainland) was required to keep a copy of Mao's book in his possession at all times.

We need a better article on Communism which shows that totalitarian control of the people was always part of Soviet and Maoist communism.

We must not give in to pro-Communist propaganda which distracts from the FACT that Communism is anti-God, anti-freedom, and anti-life. 120 to 200 million civilians killed by execution or starvation, the Soviet GULAGs, the Chinese forced abortions, censorship, historical revisionism, etc. --Ed Poor 08:21, 13 May 2007 (EDT)

Should we mention the modern drive to capitalism?

Perhaps we should mention the drive towards capitalism in the last few decades within the party, without taking away from a focus on its horrible human rights record? Graham 17:53, 25 September 2007 (EDT)

If you'll define "capitalism", we can discuss this. Were you referring in any way to free market economics? You know, the system in which buyers and sellers are permitted to come to mutually satisfactory arrangements without government interference. Let's say you want to sell your car for $2,000 and I agree. What business is that of the government? (And would you call that Capitalism as if to brand it with a dirty word, or would you call that economic freedom? It's a win-win deal for both parties. --Ed Poor Talk 19:01, 25 September 2007 (EDT)