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In China, 120 million Netizens challenge Communist control.


China is not the police state that its leaders sometimes would like it to be; the Communist Party's monopoly on information is crumbling, and its monopoly on power will follow. The Internet is chipping away at the party, for even 30,000 censors This is an incomplete list of censors of the Roman Republic
  • 312 BC-307 BC - Appius Claudius Caecus (and ?)
  • 304 BC - Quintus Fabius Maximus Rullianus and Publius Decius Mus
  • 293 BC - Publius Cornelius Arvina and Caius Marcius Rutilus
 can't keep up with 120 million Chinese Netizens. With the Internet, China is developing--for the first time in 4,000 years of history--a powerful independent institution that offers checks and balances on the emperors. The Internet is just too big and complex for State Security to control, and so the Web is beginning to assume the watchdog role filled by the news media in freer countries. "They can keep dosing sites, but they never catch up," says one political blogger (1) A person who writes Weblogs. See blog.

(2) (Blogger) A Web site launched in 1999 from Pyra Labs, San Francisco, CA (www.blogger.com) that provides the tools for creating blogs (Weblogs).
 who puts up one blog as soon as another is shut down. In today's China, young people use proxy software to reach forbidden sites and Skype to make phone calls without being tapped. To me, this trend looks unstoppable. I don't see how the Communist Party Communist party, in China
Communist party, in China, ruling party of the world's most populous nation since 1949 and most important Communist party in the world since the disintegration of the USSR in 1991.
 dictatorship dictatorship

Form of government in which one person or an oligarchy possesses absolute power without effective constitutional checks. With constitutional democracy, it is one of the two chief forms of government in use today.
 can tong tong 1  
tr.v. tonged, tong·ing, tongs
To seize, hold, or manipulate with tongs.



[Back-formation from tongs.
 survive the Internet.--Nicholas D. Kristof [6/20/06]
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Title Annotation:OPINION
Author:Kristof, Nicholas D.
Publication:New York Times Upfront
Article Type:Brief article
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Sep 18, 2006
Words:181
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