| Barney | Who's calling? <a href=" http://www.dreambulgarianproperty.com/index.php?p=loaded-slot-machine#wrist ">1000 dollar slot machine winners</a> Xi Jinping is very popular, and heâs eager to make a show of addressing political corruption. He announced a fight against the “four forms of decadence” — formalism, bureaucracy, hedonism and extravagance. The party leadership may be priming itself for a purge — locating local and midlevel officials that are low-hanging fruit: people they can make a public example of without impacting the top of the pyramid. As for the wealthiest, they are undergoing a PR campaign of sorts, trying to display more modesty. (China’s foreign minister just traded in his Audi for the same domestic model that Mao used to drive around in.) Make no mistake — these actions are largely cosmetic. They mitigate public dissent in the short-term, but they donât get at the root of the problem. Why is that? Chinaâs leaders canât fundamentally go after the problem because the problem is them. <a href=" http://www.studio.langford.co.il/?dental-implants-krayot#towers ">ר××¤× ×©×× ××× ×שת××ת ×××ר ש××¢</a> The verdict is the latest setback for the married Chan, who in March was ordered to pay HK$340 million ($43.8 million) in tax arrears, and has been hit by the lengthy and costly legal battle for Wang's estate that he lost in 2011. |
|