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“King Who Pacified the West”的版本间的差异

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The “West” in Bo’s nickname refers to the western city of Chongqing, where Bo was Party Secretary.  Under Bo’s ambitious initiatives, Chongqing was given the nickname of [[Tomato]] (Xīhóngshì 西红柿), which sounds like “red city of the West.”  Many of Bo’s initiatives, like the promotion of “red” Maoist songs, attempted to hearken back to an earlier era and appease leftists who felt that China’s reforms had betrayed its communist ideology.
 
The “West” in Bo’s nickname refers to the western city of Chongqing, where Bo was Party Secretary.  Under Bo’s ambitious initiatives, Chongqing was given the nickname of [[Tomato]] (Xīhóngshì 西红柿), which sounds like “red city of the West.”  Many of Bo’s initiatives, like the promotion of “red” Maoist songs, attempted to hearken back to an earlier era and appease leftists who felt that China’s reforms had betrayed its communist ideology.
  
The historical “King Who Pacified the West,” [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_Sangui Wu Sangui], betrayed the Ming Dynasty to usher in the Qing – only to betray the Qing later in his life.
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The historical “King Who Pacified the West,” [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_Sangui Wu Sangui], betrayed the Ming Dynasty to usher in the Qing–only to betray the Qing later in his life.
  
 
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2012年8月14日 (二) 19:43的版本

平西王 (píngxīwáng): The King Who Pacified the West

Pingxiwang.jpg

This is a nickname for Bo Xilai, the former Politburo member and Party Secretary of Chongqing who was removed from his posts in March and April 2012 after his former police chief, Wang Lijun, attempted to defect to the United States and his wife, Gu Kailai, became the subject of a murder investigation.

The “West” in Bo’s nickname refers to the western city of Chongqing, where Bo was Party Secretary. Under Bo’s ambitious initiatives, Chongqing was given the nickname of Tomato (Xīhóngshì 西红柿), which sounds like “red city of the West.” Many of Bo’s initiatives, like the promotion of “red” Maoist songs, attempted to hearken back to an earlier era and appease leftists who felt that China’s reforms had betrayed its communist ideology.

The historical “King Who Pacified the West,” Wu Sangui, betrayed the Ming Dynasty to usher in the Qing–only to betray the Qing later in his life.

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