Editor’s note for Thursday, November 18, 2021
A note for Access newsletter readers from Jeremy Goldkorn. Today: The Womenโs Tennis Association continues its support of Peng Shuai amid her apparent disappearance; the CCP's third "historical resolution" means a more assertive and paranoid China.
My thoughts today:
There is a remarkable global backlash underway against the apparent disappearance of tennis star Pรฉng Shuร i ๅฝญๅธ after her #MeToo allegations against former vice premier Zhฤng Gฤolรฌ ๅผ ้ซไธฝ.
The Womenโs Tennis Association (WTA), founded by Billie Jean King โ one of the worldโs earliest vocally feminist athletes โ has been outspoken in its support for Peng over the past two days. This is in stark contrast to other sporting bodies and companies that have tended to throw activists and troublemakers under the bus at the earliest opportunity when it comes to trouble in China.
And itโs not that the WTA has nothing to lose: They hold lucrative events in China such as the Shenzhen Open, and one of their major sponsors is Chinese video streaming site iQiyi.
A more assertive and paranoid China is what we can look forward to: That is one of the takeaways from the Chinese Communist Partyโs โhistorical resolutionโ released this week per Trivium China: โThe resolution paints the world as a threatening placeโฆFor Xi, this means that China needs to be more assertive on the world stage.โ
Another reading of the resolution from the Wall Street Journal says the document shows an โunequivocal stand against Western democracy.โ
As if to back up these interpretations, today Chinese state media reported (in English, Chinese) on a Politburo meeting, chaired by the Chairman of Everything Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ of course, โto review documents including the National Security Strategy.โ The takeaway: China needs more national security. If youโre paying attention, you know what that means.
Our word of the day is Where is Peng Shuai? (ๅฝญๅธ ๅจๅช้ Pรฉng Shuร i zร i nวlว)
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief