It seems that, despite arrests and repression, CCP leaders have not completely quashed the movement to sign and disseminate Charter 08. An Australian newspaper reports:
MORE than 3600 people from all walks of Chinese society have now signed
"Charter 08", an internet manifesto calling for the Communist Party to
relinquish its absolute political control.
And blogger Oiwan Lam in Hong Kong also reports "thousands"of signatories at this point. She also delves into some of the criticisms of the Charter, those who refer to it as "a traitor declaration."
Of course, we have to expect that CCP agents and sympathizers will take to the internet and attack anyone who criticizes the Party as "traitors." They are rather like Red Sox fans who, when confronted with the question of which is the greatest baseball team of all time, resort to the unthinking, knee-jerk reaction: "Yankees Suck!". It is more like a primal scream than a rational argument.
But there is a more interesting question here for defenders of CCP dictatorship: how can we know what the preferences of the Chinese people are regarding democracy? The Party itself, and all those associated with it, are so deeply vested in the current authoritarian system that their resistance to democratic change must be seen as politically self-interested. They cannot stand as disinterested transmitters of popular will. Indeed, anyone with a passing knowledge of PRC history knows how disastrous it has been in the not so distant past when Party leaders have arrogated to themselves the unique capacity to give voice to the will of the people. Cultural Revolution anyone?
When Party people thus complain about "traitors" they have no epistemological foundation. A pro-democracy stance would be traitorous only if it violated some fundamental national principle. But how can we know if it does, since full and fair debate on the topic is suppressed by the powers that be? Of course, the CCP doesn't care about epistemology; it cares about power. It is fearful of open and extensive discussion of the principles espoused in Charter 08 because it simply wants to maintain Party dictatorship. It is not confident enough in its claim to represent the people's will to allow that claim to be examined in open and non-coercive public debate. Perhaps Party leaders know, in some manner, that if such free discussion were permitted, their claim to be the spokesmen of the people would come crumbling down.
But who knows? The Party doesn't. And it doesn't want to know what the people's will might be. It simply wants power.
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