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The Madness of Chinese Bureaucracy under Xi Jinping

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    Crazy bureaucracy can make life 
    extremely difficult in China,
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    but now, the guy, who’s been making the 
    problem worse,
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    is vowing to fix it.
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    Welcome to China Uncensored. I’m Chris Chappell.
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    Anyone who has ever interacted with bureaucracy
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    knows that the experience is rarely pleasant.
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    But China under the Chinese Communist Party
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    gives a whole new meaning to the 
    term “bureaucracy”
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    . For example, back in 2015, a young woman 
    applied for her teacher’s license.
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    She was told that to get the license,
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    she needed to provide a clean criminal 
    record
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    from her neighborhood committee.
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    Not a bad idea.
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    No one wants to see a 
    criminal teacher.
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    Unless, of course, you’re rewatching Breaking Bad for the 11th time.
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    But when she approached the neighborhood 
    committee,
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    they told her that before they could help her,
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    they first needed to 
    see proof of a clean criminal record…
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    from the local police.
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    The local police, however, first 
    needed to see the right papers
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    from the local criminal records unit
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    before being able to give her the proof.
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    But the local unit first needed to see proof
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    that 
    there was proof of a clean criminal record.
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    I’ve seen people have an easier time tracking 
    down proof of a loving God!
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    Case in point: how Cinnabons smell. Amen.
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    At that absurd point,
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    the woman was out of options.
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    She was stuck in a 
    bureaucratic loop
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    where no government office
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    was willing to take responsibility for something as 
    simple
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    as providing her with her clean criminal record
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    so she could get her teacher’s license.
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    It would have been easier for her to illegally forge proof,
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    thus becoming a criminal 
    while trying to prove she isn’t one.
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    After the case went viral on Chinese social 
    media,
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    one user commented that “every time
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    you walk into a governmental place
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    , there’s 
    a sign saying ‘Serve the People’.
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    But if you actually want to get something done,
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    it’s virtually impossible to arrange it.”
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    Now, obviously, horrendous bureaucracy 
    is not solely a Chinese headache.
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    You can find stories from all over the world
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    about labyrinthine bureaucratic processes.
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    Still, in many ways, China is in a class of 
    its own.
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    Now I know why paper beats rock.
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    China’s population is huge, and, therefore
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    , so 
    is its bureaucracy.
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    In 2015, official Chinese sources estimated conservatively
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    that around 45 
    million people worked in government in China –
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    and it’s probably a lot more now,
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    especially since the 
    government has only expanded its reach since 2015.
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    To make matters worse,
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    the Chinese legal system 
    the bureaucracy is working with
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    is a complex tapestry of laws,
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    norms, and regulations 
    woven together from ancient traditions,
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    Communist doctrines, and modern reforms.
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    Obviously, you’d expect some 
    problems to come out of that,
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    but how about constantly proving you’re alive?
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    That is what Chinese seniors have 
    had to deal with in recent years,
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    as officials require them to regularly 
    return
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    to the municipality that originally issued their identity documents
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    to 
    prove that they are still breathing
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    if they want to access their welfare funds.
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    It makes me tired just thinking about it.
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    A few years back, a video went viral on Weibo
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    showing a 90-year-old man in a wheelchair
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    who had traveled more than 60 miles across the central 
    Hubei Province
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    to prove he was, in fact, not dead.
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    When he arrived, he needed to be helped up the 
    stairs
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    to the social insurance office by three men
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    so he could have his picture taken and give 
    his fingerprints.
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    And he has to go through that every year!
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    It’s almost like they want him to 
    see death as the more convenient option.
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    But seniors aren’t the only ones 
    dealing with this kind of thing.
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    In an equally extreme example
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    , a 
    Beijing resident that wanted to
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    travel abroad had to first prove 
    that his mother
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    was in fact his mother
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    in order to secure the proper 
    papers
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    that would allow him to travel.
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    What did they want, the birth video?
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    That story even attracted the attention of 
    China’s premier at the time, Li Keqiang,
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    who called the case “ridiculous”
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    and used it to harshly criticize the 
    country's excessive regulation and red tape.
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    It’s so bad, I wouldn’t be surprised if 
    they forced Chinese citizens
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    to crawl out of their graves once a year
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    to prove they’re actually dead.
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    But even though Li died in 2023,
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    calling for more common sense 
    laws in China didn’t die with him.
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    In fact, that agenda has been picked up 
    by a man
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    that has always received louder applause
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    than Li – Chinese 
    supreme leader Xi Jinping.
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    In November, one of Xi’s government’s 
    top organs
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    released an announcement
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    about optimizing government services
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    and improving administrative efficiency.
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    Several similar announcements 
    and policy presentations,
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    like this one here,
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    have also been released 
    by Xi and his top people this year.
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    Yup, nothing says optimized and efficient
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    like spending time and money on multiple announcements
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    about how you’re going 
    to improve optimization and efficiency.
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    It makes sense that Xi would take up this 
    project.
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    After all, he still needs to at least pretend a little bit
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    to give the people of 
    China what they need,
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    and this reform is badly needed.
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    The current system is a burden not only 
    on China’s people,
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    but also on Chinese businesses.
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    Recently, for example, an array of restaurants, 
    shops, and factories
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    throughout China’s southern Guangdong Province
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    suddenly simply 
    up and closed their doors for days.
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    The reason?
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    Well, some shop owners put up hilarious 
    closure signs like, “closed today
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    due to marital quarrel,”
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    and “If we can’t make 
    up, we’ll be closed tomorrow, too”...
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    or “closed ‘cause I’m afraid of 
    ghost” next to another sign saying
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    “closed because neighbor’s scared 
    of ghosts, and now I am, too”.
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    The only thing they’re missing is “closed
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    because I can’t prove that I’m 
    alive enough to run a shop.”
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    However, the real reason for the mass 
    closures
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    were rumors that there were going to be large-scale safety
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    and environmental 
    inspections carried out across the region.
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    The standards for safety inspections 
    by Chinese officials
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    are not always clear.
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    And yet, failure to live up to 
    them
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    can result in fines so high that
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    the businesses have to close shop. Permanently.
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    As one shop owner explained on social 
    media about the decision to close up:
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    “If we close shop for three 
    days,
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    we’ll lose 2,000 yuan,
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    but if we open the shop for inspection,
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    we risk being fined 50,000 yuan.”
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    This tendency to issue huge 
    fines
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    has been made worse
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    by the financial challenges facing 
    many local governments lately,
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    with one legal professional in Guangdong 
    telling US media Radio Free Asia that…
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    safety inspections have become another 
    way for local governments to raise money.
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    It’s like how the mafia used 
    to shake businesses down
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    for “protection money,”
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    only instead these 
    businesses were shaken down for money
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    and left with no protection.
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    The mafia 
    is officially more moral than the CCP.
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    The result: it’s better to close 
    up for a few days
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    than to face an inspector who has been instructed
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    to find something to fine you for.
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    Of course, local government offices denied this
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    and quickly issued statements, posted comments,
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    and released videos trying to dispel 
    rumors of fines being handed out.
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    But with all the lies that come out of state-run 
    media
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    and government offices in China,
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    many Chinese people put more faith in rumors they find 
    online
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    than in official government statements.
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    Heck, I’d have more faith in Fleetwood 
    Mac’s Rumours than anything the CCP says.
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    So in response to one government 
    video trying to refute rumors about
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    safety inspections posted on the 
    Chinese version of TikTok, Douyin,
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    some people commented that the whole affair 
    reminded them of back in early 2020,
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    when people were arrested for spreading “rumors”
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    about 
    an outbreak of a new strain of pneumonia in Wuhan.
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    Luckily, that was the end of that pneumonia story.
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    Given the many problems plaguing the 
    Chinese bureaucracy,
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    plenty of people are ecstatic about Xi’s claims
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    that 
    he’s going to slash red tape in China.
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    However, the fact is that Xi 
    is a big part of the reason
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    why China’s bureaucracy is the way it is today.
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    Xi’s had near absolute power in China
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    for 
    more than 10 years now,
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    during which time he has aggressively centralized power around him.
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    And centralization always means more bureaucracy.
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    On top of that, the Chinese government has 
    in recent years
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    demanded that bureaucrats
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    need to be well-versed in Xi’s own 
    philosophy,
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    also known as Xi Jinping Thought,
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    as a way to make sure that 
    everyone sticks to the party line.
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    That means millions of Chinese 
    officials
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    have had to study and take tests on things
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    like Xi’s 
    directives and his speeches.
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    That’d be like if US government officials
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    had 
    to memorize every speech Donald Trump
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    gave on The Apprentice .
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    Congrats on making Donald Trump
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    seem subtle and less narcissistic by comparison.
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    Now, if you think that sounds like 
    straight-up torture, it gets worse.
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    Since the beginning of 2024,
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    this Xi-branded 
    speaker/power bank has been distributed
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    to officials so that they can freely 
    listen to any of 72 essays
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    explaining Xi Jinping Thought
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    on Socialism with 
    Chinese Characteristics for a New Era.
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    I would rather pay a 50k fine 72 
    times
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    than be alone with that thing.
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    These education campaigns about 
    ideology and theory inevitably
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    take time away from other things,
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    like maybe cleaning up the messy bureaucracy
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    or providing better 
    services for the Chinese people.
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    At the same time, since Xi came to power,
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    the Chinese bureaucracy has been 
    rocked
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    by one anti-corruption campaign
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    after another, after another,
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    after– you get the picture.
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    Just recently, Xi called for the Chinese Communist Party
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    to turn the knife inwards to end corruption.
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    As if enough people haven’t 
    been backstabbed already.
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    It’s not that corruption in China’s 
    bureaucracy
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    hasn’t been a big problem that should be dealt with.
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    But according to Reuters,
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    “despite the sweeping crackdowns,
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    the 
    party continues to be plagued by graft.”
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    Maybe because a lot of these so-called 
    anti-corruption purges
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    are actually just yet another way for Xi to 
    centralize power around himself.
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    Add to that, that these purges constantly 
    risk paralyzing the state bureaucracy,
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    as officials can disappear 
    from one day to the next,
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    while those that remain
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    are left fearing 
    whether they will be locked up next.
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    The atmosphere is so bad that some 
    officials take drastic measures,
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    like not answering their work phones
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    or refusing to write instructions on documents
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    in order to avoid the risk of 
    exposing themselves
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    to danger just in case corruption investigators
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    are 
    soon to come to a town near them.
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    For other bureaucrats, dreaded investigations
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    into illegal activities have led them to 
    work very carefully within the rules
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    and leave a detailed paper trail
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    every step 
    of the way in whatever work they carry out.
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    Because of that, many local officials
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    have become overwhelmed with paperwork,
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    and a culture has emerged
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    where leaving 
    a perfect paper trail
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    to satisfy would-be inspectors
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    has become more important 
    than completing actual tasks.
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    In fact, according to the Diplomat,
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    many officials now believe that their
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    only responsibility is paperwork and that the 
    success of any policy has little to do with them.
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    The entire system is basically a giant stationary 
    bike, where no matter how hard you work,
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    you never get anywhere. But without the 
    benefit of shaping and toning your glutes.
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    In such a system where paperwork, ideology, 
    and fear often beat out pragmatism, common
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    sense, and a sense of security, Xi can cut 
    and stab at red tape as much as he wants,
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    but it is difficult to see how that will 
    fix many of the major issues with the
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    Chinese bureaucracy when a lot of them 
    are a reaction to Xi’s leadership style.
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    In this case, paper even beats Xi’s scissors.
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    That’s why the best solution for China’s 
    bureaucracy, the people that work in it,
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    and the people that depend on it, is 
    perhaps for Xi to pack his knives and
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    ideologies away and take a huge step 
    back from the whole governing thing.
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    Maybe he could instead take a walk down to 4-5 
    different public offices dedicated to “serving the
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    people” and invest some time in trying to update 
    his paperwork. After all, can the government be
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    sure that Xi’s mother is actually his mother? 
    And has he even proven that he’s alive this year?
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    Now recently, you might have noticed YouTube 
    trying to make it harder for you to learn
  • 12:50 - 12:55
    what’s really happening in China. Secretly 
    unsubscribing people. Deleting comments.
  • 12:55 - 13:01
    Over the last several weeks, China Uncensored’s 
    views have tanked; meanwhile we’ve seen YouTube
  • 13:01 - 13:07
    promote a lot of pro-China content. Or is 
    this just my imagination? You tell me.
  • 13:07 - 13:12
    Seriously. Please fill out this survey to let 
    us know what you’ve experienced—if everything’s
  • 13:12 - 13:18
    totally normal, or if YouTube is doing some 
    kind of suppression. The link is below.
  • 13:18 - 13:21
    Once again, I’m Chris 
    Chappell. See you next time.
Title:
The Madness of Chinese Bureaucracy under Xi Jinping
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Video Language:
English
Duration:
13:21

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