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Monday 8 November 2021

One day in August


Back in October, Palladium published a very interesting piece by N. S. Lyons on Wang Huning, the senior political theorist of the CCP.

One day in August 2021, Zhao Wei disappeared. For one of China’s best-known actresses to physically vanish from public view would have been enough to cause a stir on its own. But Zhao’s disappearing act was far more thorough: overnight, she was erased from the internet. Her Weibo social media page, with its 86 million followers, went offline, as did fan sites dedicated to her. Searches for her many films and television shows returned no results on streaming sites. Zhao’s name was scrubbed from the credits of projects she had appeared in or directed, replaced with a blank space. Online discussions uttering her name were censored. Suddenly, little trace remained that the 45-year-old celebrity had ever existed.

We may assume that the thinking of Wang Huning was behind the disappearance. The CCP leadership shares his long-held concerns about cultural decline within material prosperity and the immense political damage this could cause.

Zhao and her unfortunate compatriots in the entertainment industry were caught up in something far larger than themselves: a sudden wave of new government policies that are currently upending Chinese life in what state media has characterized as a “profound transformation” of the country. Officially referred to as Chinese President Xi Jinping’s “Common Prosperity” campaign, this transformation is proceeding along two parallel lines: a vast regulatory crackdown roiling the private sector economy and a broader moralistic effort to reengineer Chinese culture from the top down.

But why is this “profound transformation” happening? And why now? Most analysis has focused on one man: Xi and his seemingly endless personal obsession with political control. The overlooked answer, however, is that this is indeed the culmination of decades of thinking and planning by a very powerful man—but that man is not Xi Jinping.

That man is Wang Huning, but top down social engineering is not going too well in China. The whole piece is worth reading for that reason, because top down social engineering on a lesser scale is going on here in the UK too. 

2 comments:

Sam Vega said...

Just disappeared? Name scrubbed from credits? Blank spaces?

What oafish barbarians the Chinese are. Of course,they can afford to be, as there is no opposition and culture of rational scepticism in China. We need to keep ours alive, so that the vested interests in the UK don't descend to murder and disappearing people.

A K Haart said...

Sam - yes that seems to be key, the culture of rational scepticism. Lose that and we lose the lot.