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President Xi's digital prison

By Felix Imonti - posted Thursday, 25 October 2018


The tyranny is not much different from what societies have experienced for centuries,. Only the form of the shackles has changed.

As Mao Zedong saw his control over the Communist Party challenged, he unleashed the Cultural Revolution. The Great Leap Forward and other failed economic policies were of little importance. Only his continued leadership of the Chinese Communist Party and the survival of the party as the sole source of power and thought was what Mao considered to be the essence of Chinese society. The Communist Party was the brain and the soul of the people; the state was the muscle.

Watching the violence of the swarming teenagers was the thirteen-year-old Xi Jinping. Today, Xi is applying the lessons learned during the Cultural Revolution between 1966 and 1976 to a society known only in the imaginations of George Orwell in 1984 and Aldous Huxley in Brave New World.

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XI Jinping has spent forty years working his way from obscurity to the chairmanship of the Chinese Communist Party. What he learned from the past was that the CCP would have to hold the society in an inflexible ideological vice. That is taking the form of the Social Credit program that was introduced in 2013 and is to be fully implemented by 2020. Not only is the system intended to hold people in a technical trap it is also designed to have those who subscribe unquestioningly to the program embrace their prison. He is advising the 1.4 billion people of China to pursue their wealth and to enjoy their prosperity while ignoring that they are the silent servants of the God Emperor, Xi Jinping.

Xi did not have to invent the means to control the masses. There was a model already designed and tested in the West in the form of Equifax and the other credit rating firms. The Western credit rating forces everyone to comply with standards of financial behavior. Failure to meet the standards can block someone from acquiring a credit card with all of its advantages or a loan that will allow one to purchase a car or a house.

Xi Jinping is taking it one vital step further. The person being rated must also fit social standards that apply more directly to political stability. Every aspect of one's conduct is measured through the flow of data from private and official sources. If one has associates who are not approved by the authorities, their character is applied to everyone connected to the group. Spend too much time playing computer games or out at the local bar and the rating drops. Fail to fulfill one's obligations at the company or government agency and ratings are slashed.

Failures require punishment to correct undesirable behavior. Access to airline or railway seats can be denied. The higher ranked hotels or restaurants may not want a deadbeat. In the end, it could even cost one a job or deny access for children at a better ranked school. Maintain a high score and it could enable two high scorers on select web dating sites to find happiness for ever more.

What Xi is creating is a society of rigid structures and is extending the system beyond the frontiers. Chinese students abroad are being forced to join Communist Party cells at their universities where they are subjected to continued indoctrination and policing. Chinese companies outside of the country must follow the party guidelines and that is also true for foreign businesses operating in China. Businesses that ignore the Party dictates could find regulations more harshly enforced and access to vital resources blocked.

Everything describes a leader obsessed with order. The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the Asian Infrastructure Development Bank and the revived Silk Road that will tie China to countries near and far are all based upon rigid structures. Whether at home or abroad, Chinese cannot forget that Xi is the leader of the party, the party is the ruler of China and China will dominate the world with the ancient civilization returning to its former prominence as the Middle Kingdom.

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Fulfilling Xi Jinping's dream of a restored China does depend upon maintaining discipline among one billion and four hundred million diverse people. In 2005, there had been concerned within the party ranks with the spread of corruption in a growing sea of riches and the break down of central authority. The Party needed an organization man and Xi was the one chosen.

The imposition of the imprisoning net cannot be managed without the cooperation of business that collects data on everyone. A critical mechanism for the control is the establishment of a cashless society that is well underway. Five hundred million people are using their mobile devices to make payments that amounts to an estimated ten trillion dollars per annum.

All of the financial activities of the clients of Tencent or Alibaba are available to the government as a part of the social credit system. As these financial giants expand offshore they are creating a conduit into the lives of millions of foreigners. The millions of Chinese living outside of China will find that they are still linked to home through their wallets. Beijing can use that leverage over offshore citizens to promote Chinese interests.

A less subtle extension of power over the people comes in the form of re education centers that the government calls vocational training centers. The UN is reporting that a million Uighurs in mainly Zinjiang Province have been imprisoned for intensive re education. The U.S. State Department's 2016 International Religious Freedom Report estimated that there are 650 million Chinese religious believers, which means about half of the population.

The Chinese Communist Party has ninety million members who are prohibited from joining any religious group. The Party holds that a citizen cannot be loyal to two masters and only the Party will lead the nation. There has been an intensification of government attacks on religious institutions. All of this expansion of control is a sign that the Party is frightened at the possibility that other centers of power will rise in the country. Selecting Xi Jinping as the autocratic ruler is a sign that the Communist Party of China is afraid of the Chinese people.

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About the Author

Felix Imonti is a retired director of a private equity firm and currently lives in Canada. He has recently published the book Violent Justice, and regularly writes articles in the fields of economics and international politics.

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Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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