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|    sci.military.naval    |    Navies of the world, past, present and f    |    118,642 messages    |
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|    Message 117,588 of 118,642    |
|    David P to All    |
|    =?UTF-8?Q?China=E2=80=99s_Young_People_C    |
|    06 Jun 23 22:57:27    |
      From: imbibe@mindspring.com              China’s Young People Can’t Find Jobs. Xi Jinping Says to ‘Eat       Bitterness.’       By Li Yuan, May 30, 2023, NY Times              China’s young people are facing record-high unemployment as the country’s       recovery from the pandemic is fluttering. They’re struggling professionally       and emotionally. Yet the Communist Party and the country’s top leader, Xi       Jinping, are telling        them to stop thinking they are above doing manual work or moving to the       countryside. They should learn to “eat bitterness,” Mr. Xi instructed,       using a colloquial expression that means to endure hardships.              Many young Chinese aren’t buying it. They argue that they studied hard to       get a college or graduate school degree only to find a shrinking job market,       falling pay scale and longer work hours. Now the government is telling them to       put up with hardships.        But for what?              “Asking us to eat bitterness is like a deception, a way of hoping that we       will unconditionally dedicate ourselves and undertake tasks that they       themselves are unwilling to do,” Ms. Li said.              People like Ms. Li were lectured by their parents and teachers about the       virtues of hardship. Now they are hearing it from the head of state.              “The countless instances of success in life demonstrate that in one’s       youth, choosing to eat bitterness is also choosing to reap rewards,” Mr. Xi       was quoted in a front-page article in the official People’s Daily on the       Youth Day in May.              The article, about Mr. Xi’s expectations of the young generation, mentioned       “eat bitterness” five times. He has also repeatedly urged young people to       “seek self-inflicted hardships,” using his own experience of working in       the countryside during        the Cultural Revolution.              “Why would he want young people to give up a peaceful and stable life and       instead seek suffering?” Cai Shenkun, an independent political commentator,       wrote in a Twitter post, calling Mr. Xi’s proposal “a contemptuous act       toward young people.”              “What kind of intention is behind this?” he asked. “Where does he want       to lead the Chinese youth?”              https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/30/business/china-youth-unemployment.html              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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