Introduction In 1966, the Chinese Communist Party chairman Mao Zedong began a cultural revolution to strengthen communism. This campaign aims to revitalize China's revolutionary spirit, but it makes China state poverty and isolation. As China has no economic or political stability and growth is isolated, most people call the cultural revolution the "lost top 10". Death of Mao Zedong on September 9, 1976 also brought the end of the Cultural Revolution.
New York Times Newspaper: "The rise of China will definitely be one of the biggest drama in the 21st century" (New York) In recent years, regardless of whether world dominance has shifted from the West, There are countless articles discussing and commenting about. And India. There is no doubt the possibility that global power shifts from west to east is changing as people see economic indicators in particular. China and India have become like this for the past ten years.
Does the Communist Party leadership head towards an authoritarian state, which strongly controls the economy, media control, Internet censorship, that is, the world that dominates the world's new order? Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World", or George Orwell's "1984" in the 21st century, can you see the realization of the dullest vision of the 20th century? Currently, this seems to be far away. However, from a Moscow point of view, a new agreement with the United States is born. Just before he took office, Donald Trump presented an important gift to Russian leaders: he called NATO obsolete and questioned the collective defense principle of the alliance. The situation in Moscow has hardly improved. Maintaining control around Russia is one of the country's greatest concerns and the expansion of NATO to the east is considered a traumatic infringement of this claim.
In the 21st century, the myths of minority groups are increasingly reflected in Asian-American children and become the attention of the US to the emerging domination of Asia (especially China) in the global economy. In the news media, we often compare the test scores of Asian and American children as a future indicator of the regional economy, but the anxiety arising from these comparisons is that of Asian American children It is reflected in consideration and whether they can do well in school. Recent examples of "Panic in Asia" include media storm following Amy Chua's memoir "The Tiger Mom Fighting Hymn" (2011) and white students of UCLA in 2011 to invade the "Asian" campus I am complaining. .