Was Xi Jinping held hostage by the Deep State with the Wuhan Lab Leak theory? — Was Covid-19 engineered in a US owned and funded bio-laboratory in Ukraine and later transported to Wuhan to frame China? — What happens now that China and Russia are allied against the western interests in Ukraine?
(media.greatawakening.win)
WUHAN OR UKRAINE?
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (60)
sorted by:
First of all, very few on this board understand the Chinese culture enough to know what actually goes on in China. The mainland Chinese do not think in terms of loyalties or honoring agreements, so even if Xi somehow agreed with Trump to resist the NWO, that agreement is always subject to change. If you ever had any contractual business dealings with mainland Chinese businesses, you know that, to them, negotiations begin AFTER signing the contracts, which is the opposite of our standards here.
Xi has a lot of enemies in China, because he did not belong to any factions within the CCP when he was put in place as the general secretary. In order to not become another Hu Jintao who had no real power, he had to devise a scheme to gradually consolidate power to only himself. He managed to do that, but also created lots of enemies in the process. The virus thing was used against him just like how the Democrats used it against Trump; but in the ancient Chinese strategies guide (could have been Sun-Tzu but I can't remember now), there is such a thing where you basically go along with the enemies' plan and then flip the script at the end. Lockdowns in China was used to round up his political dissidents, and is there any surprises that Jiang Zemin died around the same time Shanghai was locked down?
However, Xi wants to be the Chinese ruler for life, and it doesn't really matter who he allies with to achieve that. The Q theory about the Trump-Putin-Xi alliance is just that, a theory. Xi is the wildcard and the mainland Chinese cannot be trusted, doesn't matter which faction of the CCP they belong to.
I think the cultural point is a great one. Very often, people who are not deeply familiar with other cultures will make general assumptions based on their own cultural tenets.
That said, agree that Xi is a wild card, but at this juncture, I'm naively optimistic. Xi wanting to be Chinese ruler for life is a non-factor, because whether white or black, he has to do that in order to effect the end goal (black or white).
At this point, I am thinking that the targeted end to the whole process is a redefined world of sovereign states that interact and cooperate based on mutual benefit. This is the natural way of things, and it's only when the Cabal, or their predecessors, intervened to manipulate, screw and undermine, that this natural human tendency becomes suppressed.
From a faith perspective, that's where this all seems to be headed. Removal of the malignancy.
"the mainland Chinese cannot be trusted" Methinks such a blanket generalization is informed by painful experience, but isn't quite objective, or accurate.
The Pompeo stance: distrust and verify.
I interact with the Chinese community regularly, and you can notice huge differences between those who are just newly here and those who have been here for years. Those who have been here for a long time tend to be more trustworthy because they have been gradually de-programmed from the communist values instilled after the Cultural Revolution. Those who are newly here or haven't been here for long tend to be very guarded and evaluate their options bases on monetary value alone. Have you ever encountered people trying to re-negotiate another 15% off the agreed upon sale price of a real estate property AFTER an accepted and signed offer? The newly arrived mainland Chinese would do that, if they believe they have an advantage.
It's very worth noting that these people are immigrants. The Chinese mainland is NOT full of immigrants.
China is an interesting place. In my neck of the woods we have oodles of chinese immigrants. Sometimes it feels like they are barbarians, with no sense of our Western ethics or behaviors, politeness and courtesy, etc. And, yes, monetary value seems to have a very high priority.
On the other hand, a very good number of these chinese immigrants are Christians, and they are very good Christians, in a culture that has lost a lot of connection with its Christian roots.
I'd be very hesitant in drawing too many conclusions about the Chinese population in general based on your interactions with immigrants and newcomers. I say this from the position of having been the foreigner in a foreign land for a few decades. In my experience, you cannot really draw too many conclusions until you've lived with a people in THEIR space for at least a few years.