Commentary The Chinese regime’s constitution is vague and arbitrarily enforced by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), just as Xi Jinping prefers. Is a constitution for a communist-run state an oxymoron? After all, what are the commonly understood characteristics, definition, and purpose of a constitution? Is a constitution a document that delineates the carefully crafted power-sharing in a given society and its government that is directly accountable to the “will of the people”—as is the case in most truly democratic countries? Or is a constitution merely a top-down series of regulations imposed by the Communist Party that represents the will of that party only without any accountability at all to the people—as it is in communist China? And what is the difference between swearing oaths of allegiance to either kind? A few days ago, the state-run Chinese press bleated out an appalling propaganda article that focused on Xi’s sworn public oath …