鉴赏地址: https://6b.eleuther.ai/
以下是部分鉴赏成果:
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After Xi Jinping stepped down from his position as the President of China, there has been quite a lot of speculation about what his replacement is. At a recent meeting of the National People's Congress, President Xi Jinping was confirmed as the next President of the People's Republic of China. While his predecessor, Hu Jintao, was a politician who had been around for decades and therefore lacked a real personality, the next leader of China will be a political star and a charismatic figure who is known throughout the world.
President Xi has an image of a conservative, serious leader who can handle international politics with tact and diplomatic sophistication, and has a high degree of political acumen, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit
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After Xi Jinping killed himself, the only thing he had left was to blame his own people.
This has been a good week for Xi Jinping. First, he had the Chinese Communist Party’s 18th plenum. Xi didn’t just win the plenum — he triumphed. After years of being sidelined, humiliated, exiled, and humiliated again, the man who would one day be China’s dictator now had all of China’s senior Communist officials in his pocket. That was all Xi needed to finally get rid of Li Keqiang, the Premier he has always hated. Now, after Xi killed himself and had
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Under Xi Jinping's rule, a number of prominent business figures in China, such as Jack Ma, were thrown into prison. Photo: AP
Xi Jinping's China is the land of many ironies. A former party member who worked as a party cadre in rural China during Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution was elevated to power to be the president of the world's most populous country and the global leader of 1.4 billion people, most of whom don't speak the same language. Xi's first foreign trip since taking power in November 2013 was to the United States where he signed a host of trade agreements, many of them aimed at the Chinese market. But the US-China trade relationship is in shambles and the new president is taking a
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Price of slave labor have tripled in China over the course of last week.
A new report out of the Washington Post finds that in just the last five years alone, wages have increased by 60%, while food prices have increased by more than a third. Meanwhile, wages for the average Chinese worker rose by less than 10%, and inflation was less than 10% as well.
The real culprit? For decades, China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China, has kept interest rates very low. Since 2008, when the financial crisis struck, interest rates have barely budged, remaining close to zero, and it has created a massive, inflation-fueled debt bubble that
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Q: Are there any slaves in China?
A: Yes, they are everywhere!
If you are thinking of doing the same you need to understand the following things: Slave is an ordinary person who doesn’t own his/her body. In China, most people call him/her a “labour”, and “labour” has no rights to his/her own body. That is the most common situation in China today. In China, every citizen is a labourer. Some citizens have to go to the labour