First off - no one has been dragged off, they are merely preventing the exchange operators (that are originally resident in China anyway) from leaving the country until they execute an orderly shutdown. i.e. No holidays for now, we don't want you doing a MarkK. Also, we are talking China here not NK, but don't let the facts get in the way of your point. Btw, you do have "temporary injunctions" in other parts of the world too.
That may all be true in this instance, but previously, executives have been executed for various things. The story I recall was some sort of fraud, but who knows what the real reason was. I don't have a reference handy unfortunately.
you're espousing the benefits of autocratic control. I am describing the trade-off.
Sure, maybe China isn't dragging people off to gulags today but the point is that autocratic control means they can if they want to.
Not almost, there are whooping 48 or 49 naturalized Chinese citizens who got citizenship through means other than marriage since the naturalization law was introduced 1998
I'll remind you of how refreshing it is when I drag your family off the gulag without warrant. Its not "refreshing", its scary.