Well, okay, if the NYT isn't good enough for you, then you can't be reached on any reasonable level. Meanwhile you've been unable to present any source at all. I have the NYT, and it is not a sufficient argument on your part simply to say that the NYT is too high-brow and expensive for you. That has never been a debating tactic that worked. "Uhh. That guy had some fancy sources. His whole argument is now invalid!"
"It has not been openly published, but a version was shown to The New York Times and was verified by four sources close to senior officials, including an editor with a party newspaper."
I'm wasting my time when I point out that NYT is banned in China, but I still access it.
You're a close-minded person, eh? You'd make a good Chinese cadre, given a bit of re-education, because you certainly have the attitude. I've never heard of Infowars, but your attitude toward protecting yourself from alternate points of view says it all. I doubt you'll go to the Sydney Morning Herald either.
You're not really listening, are you? Allow me to reiterate: I can't read NYT articles. I haven't been able to read the NYT for over a year now. I was asking you to provide a different source.
As for Infowars, they're a balls-to-the-wall crazy conspiracy theorist site, probably the largest one on the English-speaking internet.
I could point out that NYT articles tend to get syndicated elsewhere and... oh look...
Sydney Morning Herald
And a dozen other free newspapers simply by searching for the important part of the URL.
It's not my job to find your sources for you.
In any case, this document is firstly primarily about political and social reforms, while up until this point we have been speaking of economic reforms. The only reference to that is the denouncement of neo-liberalism, which is not a signification of the return to Maoism. It is a recognition that the PRC must maintain their control over the SOEs, which neither of us has disputed is the case. As before, the SOEs are an institution of state capitalism, not of Maoism.
Crushing dissidents like they are planning to might have severe consequences for the CCP in the long run. I need not remind you of what happened to the USSR when they abandoned the gradual reformist mindset promoted by Khrushchev. Attempting to return to outdated hardliner politics rarely ends well.
Reform is narrowly understood in this context. You know that it is narrowly understood to mean specific things that aren't actually likely to happen.
Do I? I don't think I do. I think I was stating the constant of change in society.