[Current Affairs Share] Many people are watching the Chinese government's 9.3 military parade. What does this parade really mean?

As the title suggests. Today, the Chinese government held a parade celebrating the 80th anniversary of the victory in the Anti-Fascist War. What does this parade signify? Welcome comrades to share their thoughts!

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I feel like this:

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When seeing this so-called “Anti-Fascist Parade,” I thought of Lenin’s words, which are very appropriate if slightly modified to apply to today’s Chinese government: The victory of anti-fascism in theory forces its enemies to disguise themselves as anti-fascists; this is the dialectical law of history. Today’s Chinese government is the biggest fascist, and its supporters are also fascist regimes, exactly like the Axis powers during World War II. Today’s Chinese government is the leader of this reactionary axis, pushing the world’s people deeper into the abyss of war!

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In the past two days, I have been watching reports from Western bourgeois media. They analyze from many angles, but of course, their reports are mostly very vulgar. We can also look at this military parade from the perspective of the various contradictions in a complex situation. For example, the most obvious is that the Chinese government wants to use this parade to show off its military power and also to prepare for war. At the same time, there are many secondary contradictions, such as the significant internal conflicts within the Chinese revisionist ruling group. On one hand, the Chinese revisionists want to appear “united from top to bottom,” as if the whole nation is proud of this parade and all are shouting “Amazing, my country,” but in reality, their internal struggles are very intense. According to Chinese revisionist custom, the overall commander of the parade is usually the military commander of the military unit where the parade takes place, and Beijing belongs to the Central Theater Command. However, the overall commander of this parade was Han Shengyan, deputy commander of the Western Theater Command, while Wang Qiang, commander of the Central Theater Command, was absent from the reception celebrating the 98th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army two months ago. Various bourgeois media speculate that he has already been “taken down.” Similarly, He Weidong, vice chairman of the Central Military Commission, has also been absent for more than half a year. The specific details of these military leaders’ relationships are often the subject of bourgeois media speculation, but this situation undoubtedly shows that the internal struggles within the Chinese bureaucratic monopoly bourgeoisie are extremely fierce, often involving direct methods of making people disappear. From this perspective, it can also be seen that although Chinese revisionism appears very strong, showing the world its “steel torrent,” in reality, it is very weak. Furthermore, in terms of diplomacy, compared to the September 3rd parade 15 years ago, the foreign guests at this parade were almost exclusively leaders from the Sino-Russian imperialist camp, indicating that relations between imperialist countries and camps are becoming increasingly tense. It is also quite ironic that the Sino-Russian imperialists are generally fascist countries, such as North Korea and Central Asian countries, or basically fascist countries like Russia, yet the theme of this Chinese revisionist parade was still the “80th Anniversary of the Victory of the World Anti-Fascist War,” essentially a group of fascists commemorating the victory of the anti-fascist war.

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They only oppose fascist countries that harm their imperialist interests, not fascism itself. This nature is very obvious.

By the way, the foreign leaders attending the military parade in China can basically match this situation map of the Central and Western regions. Today’s Chinese government really is the Axis Group.

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Revolutionaries or their arrogant talk about organ transplants and eternal life, living up to 150 years:

A clip of a conversation among three people was exposed during a live broadcast on China Central Television. The footage shows Xi Jinping, after welcoming foreign guests at the Forbidden City city tower, walking together with others up the Tiananmen Gate Tower. Xi Jinping is in the middle, with Putin and Kim Jong-un on his left and right sides respectively. During their walk, they communicate through translation, chatting happily. One segment of the translated conversation is particularly clear, for example, Kim Jong-un mentions that he is very pleased to see Xi Jinping again, to which Xi responds, “I am also very pleased, it’s been a long time since we last met.” The next part of the dialogue has no sound until the three discuss age, when the audio becomes clear again. Only Putin’s translation is heard saying, “Biotechnology continues to develop, organs will be constantly transplanted, people will live younger and younger, even achieving immortality”; Xi responds, “It’s hard to predict,” and adds, “In this century, people may live up to 150 years.”

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