Anonymous ID: eee992 Nov. 7, 2021, 5:38 a.m. No.14943511   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3570 >>3667 >>3831 >>3970 >>4170

Hawaii Man Indicted for Violating the Atomic Energy Act, Obstruction of Agency Proceedings, Making False Statements and Bank Fraud

 

Kazee is charged with making false statements to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, obstruction of the NRC’s proceedings, violating the Atomic Energy Act , and bank fraud. The defendant will be scheduled for his initial court appearance before a U.S. Magistrate Judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaii. If convicted, he faces up to 42 years in prison.

 

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/hawaii-man-indicted-violating-atomic-energy-act-obstruction-agency-proceedings-making-false

Anonymous ID: eee992 Nov. 7, 2021, 7:38 a.m. No.14944176   🗄️.is 🔗kun

To Steer China’s Future, Xi Is Rewriting Its Past

 

A new official summation of Communist Party history is likely to exalt Xi Jinping as a peer of Mao and Deng, fortifying his claim to a new phase in power.

 

Communist Party biographers have worshipfully chronicled his rise, though he has given no hint of retiring. The party’s newest official history devotes over a quarter of its 531 pages to his nine years in power.

 

No Chinese leader in recent times has been more fixated than Mr. Xi on history and his place in it, and as he approaches a crucial juncture in his rule, that preoccupation with the past is now central to his political agenda. A high-level meeting opening in Beijing on Monday will issue a “resolution” officially reassessing the party’s 100-year history that is likely to cement his status as an epoch-making leader alongside Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping.

 

While ostensibly about historical issues, the Central Committee’s resolution — practically holy writ for officials — will shape China’s politics and society for decades to come.

 

The touchstone document on the party’s past, only the third of its kind, is sure to become the focus of an intense indoctrination campaign. It will dictate how the authorities teach China’s modern history in textbooks, films, television shows and classrooms. It will embolden censors and police officers applying sharpened laws against any who mock, or even question, the communist cause and its “martyrs.” Even in China, where the party’s power is all but absolute, it will remind officials and citizens that Mr. Xi is defining their times, and demanding their loyalty.

 

“This is about creating a new timescape for China around the Communist Party and Xi in which he is riding the wave of the past towards the future,” said Geremie R. Barmé, a historian of China based in New Zealand. “It is not really a resolution about past history, but a resolution about future leadership.”

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/07/world/asia/china-xi-jinping.html