Reports from Hong Kong media and the blogosphere in China are talking of a radical upset in next weeks change of leadership with hardliners looking to take control of the seven member standing committee.

The return to the failed policies of the past would be disastrous for China economically, socially and politically but the insistence of the current regime to suppress dissent and censor criticism, not for the oft quoted reasons of social stability, but to hide their grubby secrets which range from gross self enrichment to somewhat bizarre sexual behaviors has opened the door for hardliners and anti-reformists to take control.

It is a squandered opportunity. China’s emerging middle class have embraced new technology and the country could have been a world leader and innovator in the use of social media to usher in peaceful social reform if the leadership had really wanted it.

The hardliners are now an attractive alternative  because they offer a return to a time of supposed political stability under Jiang Zemin. It is his appointees who are at the forefront of the move.

It is naive to expect moral decisions from more than a minority of those who wield power. But self interest of the kind that looks further than the next corrupt deal or squalid sexual dalliance should have motivated China’s current leadership at all levels to have tried to secure the recent reforms in place and not allow the door to be opened to the lunatic failed communist past.

The attraction of instant gratifications means the leadership ignored that danger and have blindly gone about illicitly enriching themselves and their families at the same time using the country’s draconian censorship apparatus to hide this malfeasance from the rest of s0ciety.

Instead of grabbing the opportunity of creating a vibrant open and involved society with China’s widespread adoption of the internet and social media, the leadership instead suppressed information and quietly made a fortune.

It is hardly surprising the average Chinese worker is unamused by this sort of behavior which leads to the threat of the greatly feared social upheaval. And well it should be feared. When the communists came to power the first people up against the wall and shot were the officials who had been enriching themselves at the country’s expense.

This is a case of “same meat different gravy”. The titular communists may be in power but they are behaving like their capitalist forebears and could well meet a similar fate.

In this uncertainty it is hardly a shock that the consensus will be to look for a safe haven and the only one on offer is a retreat into the past.

The problem with a blunt instrument like censorship is that it never works. Word gets out sooner or later and recently it has spread far and wide from the Bo Xilai debacle to the more recent revelations about billions of dollars accumulated by  Prime Minister Wen Jiabao and his family revealed  by the New York Times just over a week ago.

But it is hardly new. Former British diplomat Hugh Cortazzi  in May this year wrote about the 3000 Chinese princlings, the children of high ranking officials currently attending grotesquely expensive British schools and universities.

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Details of a more than $6 million donation reportedly from the Chinese Government to Britain’s Cambridge University has been deleted from Chinese websites.

China’s interest in Cambridge is being seen as a use of soft power to infiltrate the cradle of Britains top leaders and intellectuals.

Cambridge, along with Oxford University have traditionally been the first choice of  tertiary institutions for the countries intellectual and monied elite (though in recent times there has been a greater emphasis on attracting foreign fee paying students to subsidize the institutions which has lead to some people claiming there has been a decline in standards).

Alumni include numerous, politicians including prime ministers, nobel laureates, buisness leaders, influential people in religion, the arts and sciences. But most notoriously the British intelligence services.

In the 1920s and 30s it was at Oxbridge, as the two institutions are known, that the Soviet Union recruited some of its most effective and destructive undercover agents whom ensured much of Britain and the United States classified information found its way to Moscow.

While this donation is unlikely to be part of a 21st century repeat of an attempt to penetrate British intelligence services it has still raised questions.

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The China Digital Times has updated its column “Directives From The Ministry Of Truth” with the latest leaked directives from Chinese censors to the nation’s news organizations.

And at the top of the list, in what may be incontrovertable proof  that Chinese censor’s have a sense of irony, are the directives pertaining to use of the internet which apart from the odd exception appears to be generally in violation of China’s own laws and constitution.  

The following examples of censorship instructions, issued to the media and/or Internet companies by various central (and sometimes local) government authorities, have been leaked and distributed online. Chinese journalists and bloggers often refer to those instructions as “Directives from the .” CDT has collected the selections we translate here from a variety of sources and has checked them against official Chinese media reports to confirm their implementation.

Hit the “more” key to see the complete list.

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  There is considerable interest and attention paid to China’s attempts at online censorship but when a prominent government critic was detained this week it showed old fashioned and less sophisticated methods of shutting down free speech were alive and well.

 Best-selling Chinese author and democracy advocate, Yu Jie, told RFA’s mandarin service that he had been detained by security agents on Monday and threatened with imprisonment if he went ahead with plans to publish a book criticizing China’s Prime Minister Wen Jiabao.

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