On Wed, 26 Mar 2008 19:40:46 -0700 (PDT), rst0wxyz
<rst0wxyz@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>On Mar 26, 7:01?pm, demoris...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>> On Mar 25, 5:20?pm, bmo...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> > On Mar 23, 5:44?pm, baldeagle <botakea...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>
>> > > On Mar 24, 1:20?am, demoris...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>>
>> > > > > The Chinese prefer their own system of government.. ...
>> > > > > not western flawed political systems, like Democracy,
>> > > > > Communism, Capitalism, Socialism...and many
>> > > > > other failed systems.
>>
>> > > > How do you know that? Did you do a survey or poll of Chinese
>> > > > asking for their preference, weighting each person's opinion
>> > > > equally, then compiling the results? Are you saying a Majority
>> > > > of Chinese don't want democracy?
>>
>> > > How do YOU know that the majority want democracy ?
>> > > You don't know.
>>
>> > He didn't say that they do. So your question is irrelevant.
>>
>> Bill Moore is correct. I was not trying to say what a Majority of
>> Chinese want as a system of government. I wanted baldeagle to claim a
>> Majority of Chinese do not want democracy, so that baldeagle would be
>> using democratic methods (survey, poll, vote) to oppose democracy. My
>> plan succeeded.
>
>When it comes to politics, the majority of the Chinese people don't
>know what they want. It was not up to them for many many centuries.
It could also be the majority of the Chinese people know exactly what
they want, and what they want is what they got, so they simply have
nothing to worry thereby allowing the system to evolve and improve as
it should. Unlike the people of the west who rightly treat their
country's leader as a gangster, Chinese would like to treat their
leader as a trustworthy friend.


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