Image via WikipediaThe impending revolution in
China can have a different outcome than that in most places. The revolution in China could conclude with the
Chinese Communist Party continuing to be in power.
By summer, if not earlier, China will be rattling too. And this is not going to be something confined to one square in
Beijing. The unrest will sweep the country at large, in big cities and small towns alike.
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The Chinese Communist Party is going to have to exercise maximum restraint. If the CCP chooses to do what the generals in
Burma did, if the CCP goes down the
Gaddafi road, then the Chinese Communist Party itself is going to be thrown into the dustbins of history.
But it does not have to be that way. The Chinese Communist Party has undertaken major economic reforms over decades to lift hundreds of millions out of poverty. Now it is time for fundamental political reform.
The reform will have to come in the form of amendments to the
Chinese constitution that will guarantee human rights, and yes that includes free speech, and yes that includes religious freedom, and amendments that will make it legal to organize political parties in China, and amendments that will allow for a federal China so the people in
Tibet can finally breathe after half a century of utter disrespect.
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The Chinese Communist Party should not so much as think in terms of a bloodbath. That path leads to irrelevance for the CCP, and much unnecessary chaos for China.
Image by Matthew Stewart | Photographer via Flickr
I believe the Chinese Communist Party has the option to take a non military response to the impending revolution and guide it in a way that does not disturb China's stellar economic performance.
But I'd be the first to say China does not need a democracy like they have in America. In America they don't have
campaign finance reform which makes for a rather silly democracy. The Chinese should architect a
multi-party democracy that starts with total campaign finance reform.
China: 2 PM, Sunday
Et Tu, China?