2 JULY - Are Hu Jintao, Wen Jiabao, Li Ruihuan, and Zeng Qinghong Reformers or Chinese Deep State? PT 2 (13 JULY - WTF Slut Miriam Adelson removed the Chinese Deep State video)

2 months ago
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MANY CORRUPT CHINESE ARE NOW SINGAPOREANS

PAP Hypocrisy
https://jesscscott.wordpress.com/sg-history/
https://jesscscott.wordpress.com/2015/07/09/familee/
http://joochiatroadonline.blogspot.sg/2017/06/opinion-who-do-i-believe-in-lee-family.html
https://www.theonlinecitizen.com/2013/10/01/pap-elitist-dont-feel-for-the-people-ngiam-tong-dow/

THE ZIOPIGS OWN SINGAPORE AND JIANG ZEMIN GRANDSON IS A SINGAPOREAN.

Jiang Zhicheng
https://www.theepochtimes.com/epochtv/boyu-capital-flees-to-singapore-in-fear-of-ccp-purge-3712883

Jiang Zemin
https://www.theepochtimes.com/article/unmasking-the-family-fortunes-of-jiang-zemin-former-chinese-regime-leader-2960049

A Tyrant Stole One Trillion Dollars From China’s Economy | Jiang Zemin | True Crime Story
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_jyXGq3zt8

Jack Ma Rose linked to Jiang - Alibaba & the 40 thieves
https://www.theepochtimes.com/article/political-connections-turn-sour-for-alibaba-1230089

China is all about Community=Caring
https://putinandxisavetheworld.com/2025/05/23/china-is-all-about-community-caring/

Common Prosperity
https://putinandxisavetheworld.com/2025/06/15/what-is-common-prosperity/

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Chinese leader Xi Purges Top Military Brass
https://www.asiasentinel.com/p/xi-jinping-purges-top-military-brass

China’s Xi says army faces ‘deep-seated’ problems in anti-corruption drive
https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinas-xi-says-army-faces-deep-seated-problems-anti-corruption-drive-2024-06-19/

China Xi Jinping army deep seated problems anti-corruption drive
https://indianexpress.com/article/world/china-xi-jinping-army-deep-seated-problems-anti-corruption-drive-9402288/

In an interview with NTD, a US-based Chinese news organization, on September 19, Yao qualified that Xi may possibly allow Zhang to retire because Xi may not want to offend powerful princelings who back Zhang. These princelings, who are relatives of former Chinese leaders, are linked to Poly Group, a state-owned conglomerate associated with the late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, Yao explained.

China party says nearly 5 million members probed for graft
https://apnews.com/article/health-china-business-covid-economy-6618e65ef6148e0c75fce4dc2a28011f

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BEIJING’S FOUR PILLARS CRACK: HU, ZHANG, AND WEN FORCE XI TO RESIGN—OR FACE REMOVAL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47cOvE8bWfc

First, maintain the Bigger Picture, Xi's Position Pending: Xi must prioritize the overall situation and temporarily retain his position as General Secretary, with a final decision regarding his future to be made the Forth Plenary Session.

Second, establish a Central Advisory Group: This group, consisting of Hu Jintao, Wen Jiabao, Li Ruihuan, and Zeng Qinghong, will have the authority to convene and attend meetings of the Politburo Standing Committee

Third, strengthen Collective Leadership: Major foreign and domestic policies will be jointly decided by the Politburo Standing Committee and the advisory group, avoiding unilateral decisions by any individual.

Fourth, adjust Foreign Policy Strategy: The strategy aims for "harmony with the U.S. and distance from Russia," focusing on securing a trade deal with the U.S. to boost the economy while distancing from Russia.

Trump said when he gets back to power he will break the relationship between Putin and Xi. The ZIOPIGS ultimate goal is to remove Xi to stop BRICS. Did the reformers or revengers they are taking order from their old master the evil ZIOPIGS? Trump said that China MUST Open Up just like the British demanded the Ching Dynasty to Open Up and when they refused it was total war the “OPIUM WAR”.

The 70 Richest Members Of China's 'Congress' Are Worth $90 Billion
https://www.businessinsider.com/the-70-richest-members-of-chinas-congress-are-worth-90-billion-2012-2

Are Hu Jintao, Wen Jiabao, Li Ruihuan, and Zeng Qinghong Reformers or Chinese Deep State?

Li Ruihuan

Li Ruihuan Slams the Table — Accuses Xi Jinping of Six Catastrophic Failures
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwZfib_ehs4

Zeng Qinghong,

CHEN LIANGYU’S FALLOUT: THE DEMISE OF THE SHANGHAI GANG?
https://research.nus.edu.sg/eai/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/BB351.pdf
https://www.hoover.org/sites/default/files/uploads/documents/clm20cl.pdf

With the death of Huang Ju, former party secretary of Shanghai and Politburo Standing Committee member, the possible departure of Zeng Qinghong, former deputy secretary of Shanghai and current Politburo Standing Committee member, and the absence of Jiang Mianheng and You Xigui as deputies to the upcoming 17th National Party Congress, the Shanghai Gang is on the verge of collapse.

The data was derived from the Hurun report, and excludes the wealth details of China’s top political leaders, including President Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao, and their families.

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Wen Jiabao

Wen Jiabao's £1.68bn family wealth: China furious at US exposé
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/oct/26/china-wen-jiabao-family-wealth-revealed
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/1070742/untangling-wen-familys-web-riches

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Hu Jintao

Could Corruption Probe Linked to Son Hurt Hu?
https://time.com/archive/6947422/could-corruption-probe-linked-to-son-hurt-hu/

Then in mid-month came reports that Nuctech, a company whose CEO was until last year the President’s son Hu Haifeng, is the focus of a corruption investigation in Namibia. Investigators in the African nation have reportedly requested that the 38-year-old Hu testify as a witness (though not as a suspect) in a probe into how a lucrative government contract was won by Nuctech, a maker of security-screening devices used in airports and seaports. News of the investigation is so sensitive in China that tight controls imposed on the Internet have been tightened even further. Chinese social-networking sites were blocked (access to overseas sites such as Twitter and Facebook was already barred), and Web censors have cut off Internet searches using keywords and phrases including Hu Haifeng, Namibia and Nuctech, according to the China Digital Times, a news site based at the University of California, Berkeley.

Hu Jintao's Ex-Aide Ling Jihua Accused of Corruption by China
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/china/hu-jintaos-ex-aide-ling-jihua-accused-corruption-china-n395621

China's Hu Jintao warns congress corruption could cause fall of state
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/nov/08/china-hujintao-warning-congress-corruption

Hu's decade of "failed" power
https://chinamediaproject.org/2013/03/27/hu-wen-and-the-decade-of-failed-power/

In the case of Hu Jintao, the bloom was off the rose by 2004. I remember sitting at a table of Chinese journalists in Beijing in December that year. The mood was gloomy. There was talk of a new “Winter” of intensified media controls. Finally, investigative reporter Zhao Shilong (赵世龙) tossed out a hopeful remark that hit the table like a wet rag: “I just wish Hu Jintao would show us his true face,” he said. On the opposite side of the table, Freezing Point deputy editor Lu Yuegang (卢跃刚) scowled, “This is his true face!”

The Last Year of Hu’s Leadership: Hu’s to Blame?
https://jamestown.org/program/the-last-year-of-hus-leadership-hus-to-blame/

Hu’s Pitfalls: Anything but Harmonious

Hu’s gravest pitfall lies in the failure of his mandate for a harmonious society. His rhetoric on the harmonious society resonates poorly—and ironically—as the country’s spending on internal public security has skyrocketed in recent years, overtaking spending on national defense in 2010 and totaling $84 billion (Financial Times, March 6, 2011). This number, which includes internal police forces and protest management, reflects many growing social issues, including increasing income disparity. China’s Gini Coefficient, the standard measurement of income gap, has worsened since 2002 to 0.47 in 2010, far exceeding the 0.4 figure that scholars say indicates a potential for social destabilization. Official corruption also has reached an unprecedented scale during the past few years. This is particularly noticeable in the domain of state-monopolized industries such as railways, petroleum, utilities, banking and telecommunications. China’s official media recently reported that a bureau-level official in China’s Ministry of Railways held Swiss and American bank accounts with assets of US$2.8 billion (The Telegraph, August 1)
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China’s Hu seeks to exert influence long after he leaves power
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/chinas-hu-seeks-to-exert-influence-long-after-he-leaves-power/2012/11/05/4df5c190-1c24-11e2-ba31-3083ca97c314_story.html

The furious competition between the two senior statesmen — and their large role in the patronage system that undergirds Chinese politics — only adds to the pressure on Xi Jinping, who is expected to take over the top job, becoming the first party leader in China’s history forced to contend with two former chiefs hovering over him.

“Hu is trying to do with his successor what Jiang did to Hu and what even earlier Deng Xiaoping did to Jiang,” said an editor of a party publication. “Each generation tries to hold sway over the next.”

Hu has lost at least one major fight, failing to see his protege Li Keqiang named as his successor. Instead, Xi, a compromise candidate with Jiang’s approval, was chosen for the job in 2007, party experts say, and Li was positioned for the lower job of premier.

“Ten years ago, when Hu took power, everybody was wondering what kind of leader Hu would be,” said David Shambaugh, an expert on Chinese affairs at George Washington University. “Now we know the answer. He is an arch-conservative, cautious, risk-averse, stability-obsessed apparatchik.”

Xi Jinping’s role
In many ways, the biggest factors in the future influence of Hu and Jiang will be Xi and his ability to quickly establish his own base of power.

Xi, though a princeling and someone Jiang supported, does not easily fit into any political camp. But many believe he will start his tenure with advantages that neither of his predecessors possessed — deep party connections nurtured through family and a growing sense that the country is in desperate need of reform.

“You have so many situations that now require proactive decision-making, and you have all the recent scandals and crises making many in the party eager to turn the page,” said Robert Kuhn, a businessman with ties to senior Chinese leaders.

“Ironically, because of that, Xi may actually be able to consolidate authority to get things done much faster than either Hu or Jiang in their first days.”

Others, however, say that if the past is any indication, Xi’s predecessors will not give up their influence easily.

“It is a natural thing when you have been the one in charge all along,” one party intellectual said. “It’s a hard habit to give up, especially in Chinese politics.”

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