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  1. Eric Xun Li, [2] born Li Shimo (Chinese: 李世默; born May 4, 1968 [1]), is a Chinese venture capitalist and political scientist. He founded the Chinese nationalist news site Guancha.cn [ zh ] (Chinese: 观察者网 ), [ 3 ] [ 4 ] and is a board of directors member at the China Europe International Business School , [ 5 ] as well as a trustee of the China Institute at Fudan University . [ 6 ]

  2. www.forbes.com › profile › eric-liEric Li - Forbes

    4 days ago · Eric Li, also known as Li Shufu, is the chairman of Geely Automobile Holdings, one of China's largest automakers and one of the few not controlled by the state. Geely has been expanding globally ...

  3. A well-connected venture capitalist in Shanghai, where he was born, Eric X. Li studied in America (and even worked for Ross Perot's 1992 presidential campaign) before returning home, where he started doubting the idea that China's progress could only follow the path of the West's free-market principles. In a much-discussed op-ed he wrote for ...

  4. Eric X. Li: Now -- (Laughter) (Applause) This story also became a bestseller. According to Freedom House, the number of democracies went from 45 in 1970 to 115 in 2010. In the last 20 years, Western elites tirelessly trotted around the globe selling this prospectus: Multiple parties fight for political power and everyone voting on them is the only path to salvation to the long-suffering ...

  5. Eric Li is the Founder and Chairman of Geely Holding Group. He established Geely Holding Group in 1986 and found success in various industries including refrigerators, decorative materials, motorcycles, etc. In 1997, Geely entered the automotive industry and has since been devoted to the pillar principles of technological innovation and ...

  6. Jun 13, 2013 · June 13, 2013 at 10:45 am EDT. Photo: James Duncan Davidson. Born in Shanghai in 1968, at the height of the Cultural Revolution, Eric X. Li grew up hearing a story: All human societies develop in linear progression, beginning with primitive society, moving through capitalism to socialism and, finally, Communism.

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  8. In late 2019, as the first COVID-19 cases were emerging in Wuhan, the Chinese venture capitalist and media figure Eric Li went for lunch with a Financial Times correspondent in Shanghai. Over a $640, eleven-course meal, Li, who is a founder of Guancha , a leading nationalist online media outlet, took the opportunity to proclaim the end of liberalism in China.