"O anonimato encoraja o cobarde a expor os seus defeitos."
sábado, 11 de outubro de 2025
New speculations have spread about Xi Jinping's health: could the Chinese leader have suffered a stroke?
Recently, the peculiar changes observed in the appearance and behavior of the President of the People's Republic of China, Xi Jinping, have led to various speculations about his health. According to some observers, it is possible that the country's leader is struggling with a serious illness.
This was reported by the Telegram channel "Chinese Threat". According to
the news, Xi Jinping's constant tilting of his head to the left has led
many to suspect that he may have suffered a serious illness, such as a
stroke.
According to experts, when the motor cortex or basal
ganglia of the human brain is damaged, one side of the neck muscles is
severely strained. As a result, a person's head may involuntarily remain
tilted to one side. It is likely that this condition observed in Xi
Jinping is the result of these physiological problems.
However,
there is no official or medically confirmed evidence to support these
speculations. Chinese officials have not commented on these reports.
However,
this is not the first time that such speculations have appeared.
Previously, international media outlets have published various
speculations about the health of the Chinese leader. In addition, some
political analysts also suspect that such information may be
deliberately spread to change the balance in Chinese domestic politics.
For now, official Beijing is keeping quiet on this topic, and Xi
Jinping continues to regularly participate in various international
events. News about his health is mainly distributed on social networks
and some unofficial channels.
The international community is
waiting for official information on this issue. Especially since the
health of the leader of a large country like China is of great
importance not only within the state, but also on the entire world
political scene.
Mais de 133 mil processos contra AIMA pendentes no tribunal administrativo de Lisboa
Entre
14 de julho e 31 de agosto entraram no Tribunal Administrativo do
Círculo de Lisboa 179 providências cautelares para impedir ordens de
expulsão. O Tribunal Administrativo do Círculo de Lisboa tem pendentes mais de 133 mil processos contra a agência das migrações e entre 14 de julho e 31 de agosto entraram naquele tribunal 179 providências cautelares para impedir ordens de expulsão.
De acordo com dados fornecidos pelo Conselho Superior dos Tribunais Administrativos e Fiscais (CSTAF) à Lusa, estão pendentes no Tribunal Administrativo do Círculo de Lisboa (TACL) “133.429 processos da 6.ª Espécie - Intimação para defesa de direitos, liberdades e garantias” contra a Agência para a Integração, Migrações e Asilo (AIMA).
0:00 / 0:00
Segundo o CSTAF, a média de entrada de novos casos em tribunal ronda os 500 por dia, maioritariamente relacionados com autorizações de residência de imigrantes e intimações para marcação de entrevistas na AIMA no âmbito do processo de legalização em território nacional.
Os dados mostram que este verão foi particularmente ativo e responsável pelo aumento de pendências judiciais nestes processos, uma vez que em junho, num encontro com jornalistas, o CSTAF dava conta de cerca de 50 mil processos pendentes, número que em cerca de três meses quase triplicou.
President Xi Makes Plan for Religion to be “More Communist Friendly”
An article published by Bitter Winter, a magazine on religious liberty and human rights, reported that a session was called by Chinese President Xi Jinping on the 29th of September. In this session, Xi described his plan to make religion “more Communist friendly.”
Xi Jinping’s teaching on how to “Sinicize” the faiths of China was framed as the “systematic advancement of the Sinicization of religions.” He stressed that all religions in China “must change their doctrines, rituals and organizational system to accommodate the Party’s socialist system and socialist values, and integrate religions into Chinese culture and society.”
In their article, Red Is the New Sacred, the magazine quotes Xi Jinping as saying that “red” (as in the color of revolution and loyalty to the Party) is “holiness” and that the Chinese Communist Party is making it the standard for the faiths of China. This merger of political and religious loyalties is “altering the very meaning of faith itself as the CCP combines political orthodoxy with spiritual power.”
This statement carries an inherent paradox: a human government seeks to mold all religions into its image, demanding that belief conforms to the will of the created versus the will of the Creator. It reflects the ancient irony spoken of by the prophet Isaiah—“Shall the clay say to him that fashioneth it, What makest thou?” (Isaiah 45:9). In this effort to make the eternal subject to the political, the Party assumes the role of potter, shaping and judging all faiths under the authority of the state. Yet, in doing so, it exposes the conflict between divine sovereignty and human control—a contest that no amount of ideology, however red or revolutionary, can truly resolve.
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