The Century Belongs to China.
The Beacon of Deng Xiaoping Thought Illuminates Democracy.
Freedom Is The Virtue By Which China Prospers.
These are all slogans created by the Chinese government to bolster democratic sentiment at home. In the nearly one hundred years since China's communist dictatorship came into existence, the Chinese nation has blossomed to new heights. By 2030, the woes of the last economic recession have gone away, and the nation has found itself under strong, and relatively speaking,
young leadership.
Democratic Awakening, a liberal political organization whose origins draw from British Hong Kong, is the dominant party, controlling not only the largest share of seats in the National People's Congress, but the
Pan-Yellow Coalition.
For many historians, China has fulfilled Sun Yat-sen's Three Principles with gusto, the last vestiges of Maoism and Chiangism buried beneath a crushing sea of socialism and liberal thought mixing and mingling. The old Democratic Progressive Party, whose contributions to the state include well-beloved
Chairman Yu, have fallen into the periphery as well, unwilling to commit to the Pan-Yellow or Pan-Red movement. Rumors persist of the Kuomintang banding together with the DPP to form
Pan-Blue, but Yin Han, Premier of the Kuomintang, has refused to consort with
liberalism.
But it does remain
The Chinese Century.
