It was hard to miss on the first of July this year: the Communist Party of China (CPC) celebrated its 100th birthday. A huge crowd of − staged or real, who knows? − Party enthusiasts celebrated on Tiananmen Square in Beijing while Xi Jinping, China’s president, summed up the Party’s achievements during a one-hour long speech. His message was clear: without the Party, China would not be where it is today. The centenary is a crucial milestone in the narrative that the CPC has promoted ever since it came to power in 1949. The Party’s actual story has been more mixed and, as we have seen in part one (The Pledge) and part two (The Turn), includes a number of unanticipated, dramatic twists. Our third and final act, The Prestige, captures the rise of Xi Jinping who over the course of the past decade has steered the country into an eerily familiar direction.
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Hong Kong, one year in
It has been one year since my girlfriend Marlot and I moved to Hong Kong to start our new life as (semi-)expats. Thinking back on the past year, many wonderful experiences come to mind. Life in Hong Kong is, for one thing, very diverse. With one of the highest numbers of millionaires (about one in seven), some 20% of the city’s population lives below the poverty line. Ranked the world’s most liberal economy, Hong Kong has a certain winner-takes-all philosophy: only the very rich can afford the ridiculously expensive real estate, while many working-class families are forced to cramp in tiny apartments. Its surroundings are very mixed, too. From futuristic skyscrapers to deserted islands with clear-water packed with thick jungle − this place really has it all.
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