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Chinese Communist dictator Xi Jinping asserted to regime officials that Marxism and socialism must be life purposes.
During the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Communist Party of China, Xi spoke about the responsibilities of the organization’s members. The celebrations began on Monday night at the Beijing Olympic Stadium.
At the beginning of the event, the leader affirmed “all party comrades should take their faith in Marxism and socialism with Chinese characteristics as their life’s purposes.”
According to one of the regime-funded portals, Xinhua News, Xi assured that every Communist Party member can achieve goals for the Party and the people in the “great cause of national rejuvenation”.
The dictator called on Party officials to advance to the second centenary of the quest to build a modern socialist country.
Prior to the ceremony, Xi and other senior officials gathered to award outstanding Party members, exemplary workers and leaders of lower-level tentacle organizations.
The Communist Party of China also celebrated the ninety-five million-member mark. Official sources in the Beijing regime stated that membership was up 3.5% over the figure reported at the end of 2019, and about twenty times higher than the figure in 1949 when the People’s Republic of China (PRC) was founded.
More than two million people joined the Communist Party in the first half of this year.
The CGTN (public television of the Chinese regime) reported that more than twenty-seven million members are women, reaching 28.8% of the party’s ranks. Minorities also have a notable presence in the organization, gathering more than seven million members (7.5% in total). The majority of party members (almost fifty million or 52%) have earned a college degree or higher.
The remaining figures reveal that nearly 61 million joined the Party between 1978 and 2012, and nearly 20 million current members joined the Party after 2012.
Rafael Valera, Venezuelan, student of Political Science, political exile in São Paulo, Brazil since 2017 // Rafael Valera, venezolano, es estudiante de Ciencias Políticas y exiliado político en São Paulo, Brasil desde 2017