All the three topics discussed in this year's APEC Economic Leaders' Week are of milestone meaning to the region's future.
If our future is not to be dulled by the dead weight of the past, then a clearheaded prioritization of the issues of the 21st century needs to be undertaken. This means keeping Asia - and thus China - at the top of the list in the global conversation. So US President Barack Obama's diplomatic trip to Asia this week is welcome indeed.
This year's "Double Eleven" (Nov 11) shopping frenzy has set new records in China. All e-commerce companies have made preparations for the occasion, and Alibaba, the founder of "Double Eleven Day", attracted hundreds of millions of netizens thanks to its extensive campaign in 200 countries and regions.
To have a foreign boyfriend or not may be a question for many Chinese girls, especially on occasions such as "Single's Day", Nov 11.
Comment on "Young hero of '08 quake stands trial" (China Daily, Nov 4)
Two young cross-talk artists will reportedly perform a show satirizing corruption during the Spring Festival evening gala next year.
Pictures showing the structure of a woman's body in primary school textbooks in Wuhan, Hubei province, have been criticized for being over the top, with some media outlets even calling them "pornography".
The United States' "pivot to Asia" strategy, aimed at reviving its sagging economy after the 2008 global financial crisis, has proved to be an American fantasy to maintain hegemony.
After more than two years of a deepening freeze, relations between Beijing and Tokyo are currently undergoing a thaw.
IF SHAKING HANDS AND TALKING WITH CHINESE President Xi Jinping was all Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe wanted, he got it.
A series of diplomatic moves, including the newly reached consensus between the two countries and pushing to meet President Xi Jinping, have shown that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has pulled back a little from his previous stance.
On the occasion of a high-level event promoting equal access and inclusive development for persons with disability in Beijing on Monday, Zhang Haidi, chairwoman of the China Disabled Persons' Federation, shared her insights on the progress that has been made in promoting and protecting the rights of disabled people with reporter Yang Yao.
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