Protestors plan to confront Ross Perot at UTD Lecture

August 12, 2006 (PRLEAP.COM) Media News
Richardson, TX – In response to Ross Perot’s planned lecture at The University of Texas at Dallas, sponsored by a group of Chinese-American businessmen and academics, the Chinese Traditionalist Socialist Party has planned to confront and protest Ross Perot.

“Most people do not question the Western dogma of wanting to be wealthy and purchasing the latest consumer goods,” said CTSP spokesman Michael Chen. “but what most people do not realize is that the demand for cheaper and more accessible goods has had an affect on the Chinese people, namely forcing them into virtual slave labor with no ability to join labor unions or the existence of worker’s rights laws that American factory workers enjoy.” added Chen.

CTSP estimates that about fifty protesters will show up, based on correspondence with our worldwide membership. Many members are from the fields of engineering, law, medicine, or academia, hailing from all around the world, including China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong.

About The Chinese Traditionalist Socialist Party

The CTSP is a global organization that seeks to unite people of Chinese ethnic heritage with their traditional roots that Western international capitalism has largely destroyed.

Believing that Land and People are inseparable, CTSP wishes to expel the Western invaders and their foreign culture to create a nationalistic state solely for the Chinese people.

Most CTSP members state that while they have been successful participants in the global capitalist system, they began feel something was missing in their lives before being motivated to join. Many members grew up in Americanized immigrant families with little to no Chinese cultural heritage and even adopting Western religions such as Christianity, in many extreme examples.

About Ross Perot

Ross Perot is a wealthy Dallas, TX area businessman who made much of his wealth by creating EDS and Perot Systems. Both are prominent technology companies that profit off of the continued exploitation of Chinese slave labor which continues to make most of the computer parts and components used by Western countries.