Cultivating the party for private gain
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y í ngs ī zh í D ǎ ng, which means to seek personal gain by combining party members. It's from the story of the golden age: the house of Lords.
The origin of Idioms
Zheng Guanying wrote in his book "Sheng Shi Wei Yan · on the Senate" that "native place can not be separated, plain practice can not be tested, and wisdom and wisdom can not be unified, then cultivating the party for private use and selling names will not benefit."
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate, attribute, or object
Examples
In my opinion, if you want to change someone who is not based on the premise of educational administration, but only on the basis of, I will go away a long time ago. ——Experience 18 by Zou Taofen
Chinese PinYin : yíng sī zhí dǎng
Cultivating the party for private gain
adopt different measures according to circumstances. gǎi bù gǎi yù
The meaning comes from the text. yuán wén shēng yì
reject saying because the speaker is what or who he is. yǐ rén fèi yán
The stars and frost are moving. xīng shuāng lǚ yí
The defeated and the disabled. bài jiàng cán bīng
a magnificent house become a mound of earth-vicissitude. huá wū qiū xū