You have been unable to present a trustworthy source for this Document Number 9, and as such we have no reason to trust your analysis based off of it.
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. I could point out that NYT articles tend to get syndicated elsewhere and... oh look...
Sydney Morning HeraldAnd a dozen other free newspapers simply by searching for the important part of the URL.
While the NYT article you have pointed to might be alright depending upon sources and authorship, it is probably worth telling you that most people are long since locked out of NYT articles, due to the site having a view limit. Frankly, the fact that the Infowars article about it is more highly rated by search engines suggests the contrary.
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.
Reform is always inevitable for everybody. No civilization ever remains constant for a significant period of time, and in the global age we find ourselves in now the rate of change is only faster still.
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.