Thread: Keep calling each other ‘comrade’, Chinese Communist Party tells members after.......

Results 1 to 9 of 9

  1. #1
    Wubwubwubabubble Supporter
    Committed User
    Join Date Sep 2002
    Location Sherwood forest
    Posts 2,829
    Rep Power 31

    Default Keep calling each other ‘comrade’, Chinese Communist Party tells members after.......

    http://www.scmp.com/news/china-insid...st-party-tells

    Originally Posted by SCMP
    Keep calling each other ‘comrade’, Chinese Communist Party tells members after rule review

    PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 18 November, 2014, 5:07pm
    UPDATED : Tuesday, 18 November, 2014, 9:29pm

    Chris Luo [email protected]


    The word “comrade” is supposed to reflect consolidation among party members and embody the idea of equality. Photo: AFP

    The Chinese Communist Party has abolished hundreds of “outdated” regulations on discipline after a two-year review – but members will still be told to address each other as “comrade”.

    The party assessed 1,178 documents on its organisation and member discipline issued between 1949 and 2012, Xinhua reported, ruling that more than half were no longer applicable.

    “[The work] is to ensure the consistence and coordination of regulations within the party,” Xinhua cited the party as saying.

    Among 487 regulations to remain in use is a 49-year-old diktat that members call each other “comrade”, a widely used Communist Party term.

    The word “comrade” originates from French and has been frequently adopted by left-wing organisations, most notably, communist parties around the world. It is supposed to reflect consolidation among party members and embody the idea of equality.

    The document issued in 1965 condemned party members who addressed each other with hierarchical titles, denouncing it as a “decadent practice of old society” and “bureaucratism”.

    “In order to correct this unhealthy spirit, [we] reiterate comrade Mao Zedong’s directive, [demanding] all party members address each other as ‘comrades’ with no exceptions,” read the document. It described the use of “comrade” as “a good tradition” prior to the party seizing power.

    The retention of the regulation seems to be in line with a broader push by President Xi Jinping to combat bureaucracy.

    As part of the effort, the southern province of Guangdong’s party disciplinary committee banned its members in a stern directive from addressing each other as “boss”, “buddy”, or “bro” in May. The terms are known to be used in private enterprises, or even mafia circles.
    The committee blamed the practices as a result of “influences of bureaucratism and sectarianism”, and said they “blemished the party and government’s image”.

    The term “comrade” in present day China has become an informal term of reference for gay people. The meaning was introduced from Hong Kong more than two decades ago and is especially popularly nowadays among the younger generation and internet community.
    There is no official recognition of the alternative definition however, and the latest edition of the authoritative Contemporary Chinese Dictionary does not include it.

    Ding Xueliang, a Chinese politics professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, said in an earlier interview with the BBC that was because the definition could be interpreted to some degree as mocking Communist Party members, including state leaders.

    [formerly Cthenthar]

    Revolutionaries don't spend all day on a messageboard. Action is realisation of the polemic.


    "When the lie returns to the mouth of the powerful, our voice of fire will speak again." - quote EZLN

    “Development develops inequality.” ― Eduardo Galeano, Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent
  2. The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Palmares For This Useful Post:


  3. #2
    Join Date Oct 2013
    Location SJ Bay Area
    Posts 682
    Organisation
    Seedlings of the Mexican Invasion
    Rep Power 17

    Default

    I like the word but this makes me like it a little less.
    "Maybe some day... I'll find a way... without you.."
  4. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Bala Perdida For This Useful Post:


  5. #3
    Join Date Dec 2013
    Posts 1,047
    Rep Power 0

    Default

    great post, comrade palmares!!!!

  6. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to consuming negativity For This Useful Post:


  7. #4
    Join Date Nov 2013
    Posts 811
    Rep Power 21

    Default

    It makes sense that they'd be nominal comrades, being nominal Communists.
  8. The Following User Says Thank You to Sabot Cat For This Useful Post:


  9. #5
    Wubwubwubabubble Supporter
    Committed User
    Join Date Sep 2002
    Location Sherwood forest
    Posts 2,829
    Rep Power 31

    Default

    great post, comrade palmares!!!!

    So great comrade, that you didn't thank my post?
    [formerly Cthenthar]

    Revolutionaries don't spend all day on a messageboard. Action is realisation of the polemic.


    "When the lie returns to the mouth of the powerful, our voice of fire will speak again." - quote EZLN

    “Development develops inequality.” ― Eduardo Galeano, Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent
  10. The Following User Says Thank You to Palmares For This Useful Post:


  11. #6
    Join Date Feb 2011
    Posts 3,000
    Rep Power 58

    Default

    Comrades with Chinese characteristics
    Socialist Party of Outer Space
  12. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Sinister Cultural Marxist For This Useful Post:


  13. #7
    Join Date Jul 2014
    Posts 971
    Rep Power 17

    Default

    Hey, at least it's gender neutral(sort of).
    The term “comrade” in present day China has become an informal term of reference for gay people. The meaning was introduced from Hong Kong more than two decades ago and is especially popularly nowadays among the younger generation and internet community. There is no official recognition of the alternative definition however, and the latest edition of the authoritative Contemporary Chinese Dictionary does not include it.
    I wonder if it comes from the socialist fraternity kiss?
  14. #8
    Join Date Oct 2014
    Posts 358
    Rep Power 8

    Default

    I thought that at this point, the use of the word was a sort of inside joke, used by leftists to poke fun at an outdated stereotype.
  15. #9
    Join Date Jan 2012
    Posts 2,005
    Organisation
    LDD
    Rep Power 43

    Default

    Hey, at least it's gender neutral(sort of). I wonder if it comes from the socialist fraternity kiss?
    This reminds me of that Christian side hug song from a 3 or 4 years ago

    Edit: Comrade
    Man is but a goat in the hands of butchers

Similar Threads

  1. Nature of the Chinese Communist Party
    By Positivist in forum News & Ongoing Struggles
    Replies: 16
    Last Post: 12th August 2012, 21:41
  2. 5 Myths About the Chinese Communist Party
    By Nial Fossjet in forum News & Ongoing Struggles
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 9th January 2011, 23:02
  3. Chinese Communist Party Symbol Question
    By Unclebananahead in forum Social and off topic
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 9th January 2011, 22:38
  4. Chinese entreprenuers in the communist party
    By MJM in forum News & Ongoing Struggles
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 6th March 2002, 16:39

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts