Chinas road and belt initative.

Facts about the largest and most successful nation in the history of the world; China and how it is transforming everything.

No. This article is not about America. So it is an outlier. In truth, America lost that role decades ago. It lost it when it decided to embrace something other than it’s charter. The moment when the government stopped serving it’s people, it became something else. Nope. This is about China. Communist China to be exact.

What is put forth is going to anger many, but that’s to be expected.

This article is not about America. It is about nations that obey their charter to serve the needs of their people. Over the last century many nations have failed at this charter, and as a result created an internal rise in nationalsim. As such we are covering China, for they are a serious nation that cares for it's people.
This article is not about America. It is about nations that obey their charter to serve the needs of their people. Over the last century many nations have failed at this charter, and as a result created an internal rise in nationalism. As such we are covering China, for they are a serious nation that cares for it’s people.

We are in the midst of titanic changes and shifts on the global stage. These changes will be uncomfortable for some, but will open up amazing opportunities for others. It’s all going to boil down to an awareness of the way things really are, as opposed to what we are instructed to believe.

We look at things as they actually are.

Here, we address this issue. In fact, we address it with the largest and most successful nation in the history of the world; China. Not America.

The size of China’s displacement of the world balance is such that  the world must find a new balance. It is not possible to pretend that  this is just another big player. This is the biggest player in the  history of the world. 

-Lee Kwan Yew. 

China is the biggest player in the history of the world.

This narrative doesn’t fit the nonsense spewed out from the American media by any stretch of the imagination. Yet, it is the truth. American media serves a purpose; to control Americans. Not to inform.

American media serves a purpose; to control Americans. Not to inform.
American media serves a purpose; to control Americans. Not to inform.

In 2003 Godfree Roberts (Check out his site UNZ.com.) published a book charting America’s decline in thirty-six social and economic indicators. It’s a great read, but is out of date. Today, the decline is quite pronounced, and disturbing.

Back in 2003, he mailed copies to the Bush Administration, Congress and department heads. For all effort, he only received one reply. Only one singular reply. No one else even bothered to say “thanks for the book“. It was like talking to a brick wall.

The singular reply was from the Director General of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). He said that the Agency had been providing almost identical information to the government for decades. But no one, apparently was concerned. The administration at that time felt…

  • The global New World Order was a good thing.
  • America is strong and will always be strong.
  • America can bend the rest of the world to fit it’s model of perfection. The CIA, NED and the rest can instigate proxy wars on anyone that steps out of line.

Since then our decline and China’s rise have both accelerated and momentum has carried us so far so quickly that today it is too late. Global competition against China (at this stage) is unrealistic. China is far too strong and far too capable. They are not a nation to trifle with.

Most of the rest of the world realizes this.

The BRI with its multiple proposed pillars extending beyond  infrastructure development (including free trade, financial integration,  people-to-people connections) appears to have the potential to  transform the ever-challenging region between Europe and China.

In this regard it is important to avoid confrontational  ideology and focus on the areas of mutual interest (facilitating a  non-discriminatory regulatory environment, the convergence of  technical/SPS standards, greater cost efficiency and sustainability of  investment projects), as well as avoid imposing ‘either-or’ choices on  the countries along the New Silk Road. 

The long-run objective of facilitating peace and prosperity  in the still problematic regions of Central Asia and the Middle East is  in the common interest of China, the EAEU and the EU.

-  China’s Belt and Road Initiative: opportunity or threat? 

We look at things as they actually are.

Reality vs. Illusion

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If China resembled the caricature our media has drawn for the last seven decades then yes, we can compete against her and be victorious. If they are a real joke… a real third-world shit-hole… and a population of dog-eating communists…well yes. Yes we can compete against her. Easy.

Easy peasy. Lemon squeezy.

The Global Attitudes Spring 2016 survey by US-based Pew Research Center said nearly 60 per cent of the Chinese think that territorial dispute between China and its neighbouring countries could lead to a military conflict, while 45 per cent see the power and influence of the US as a major threat.
The Global Attitudes Spring 2016 survey by US-based Pew Research Center said nearly 60 per cent of the Chinese think that territorial dispute between China and its neighboring countries could lead to a military conflict, while 45 per cent see the power and influence of the US as a major threat.

We could make an example of her.

We could show the world how American democracy can compete against China. China, that evil and backwards third-world shit-hole with her repressive, extractive, authoritarianism. And we could invest our bounty in advanced technologies to ensure that we remain the envy of the world.

We can show the world with our large fine and massive military, our state of the art aircraft carriers, and our space adventures where we capture a dishwasher-sized asteroid and put it in orbit about the moon.

We can show off our state of the art health care, our humane treatment of illegals, and our fair and just government. We could show the world how talented, serious and no-nonsense our freely elected officials are. We could do all this and more.

We could show the world our network of high speed rail, our wonderful and cost effective medical care systems, and our institutes of higher learning that run on merit and produce the brightest and best that the world can offer.

But…

What if our assumptions are all wrong?

Shanghai is a typical Chinese first tier city.

Think about it. What if the media is lying to us? What if FOX news lies just as bad as CNN? What then?

  • What if China is neither repressive, extractive nor authoritarian?
  • What if we have no bounty left to invest? What if it has been squandered by the generations before us and nothing much is left?
  • What if Chinese leaders are more popular, respected and competent than ours?
  • What if her economy is thirty percent bigger and growing three times faster, with one-third the debt burden?
  • What if she is already ahead of us scientifically and technologically?
  • What if she is militarily impregnable, with weapons or mass destruction that rivals (or are superior) to our own?
  • What if China has and possesses more–and more powerful–allies than we do?

What should we do then? What could we do?

Think about this situation. Pause. Think. Look at the facts in a true and real context. Look at the world, the globe, as an ever changing organism with constantly moving lines of power and control. Look at what happens when nations, people, and systems grow and change. Look at China today.

Here’s an inventory:

Government

“If people have no faith in their rulers then the state cannot exist.” 

- Confucius 

As an American, our trust in our government is at its lowest point in history. It is rock bottom, scraping and mired in the sludge at the very bottom of the barrel.

Gallup says most of us rank government as our most pressing problem. All that I can say to that is…”Duh!”.

Although rated worse than any other institution in the country, federal  lawmakers are not alone in facing mass disdain by a US electorate who  increasingly thinks that the system has stopped working.   

- Poll: 80% of Americans Think Government, Banks, Corporate Media are Corrupt  

So in America, the majority of people do not trust the government, the institutions that they represent and support, and the media that reports about their actions. Very precious few American people trust their government and their institutions.

America was founded on the principle that the government was made by the people, and it's sole purpose is to serve the people. If Americans do not trust the government, then that means that it is NOT servicing the people and they are not happy about it. This is a serious concern, and should not be taken lightly.
America was founded on the principle that the government was made by the people, and it’s sole purpose is to serve the people. If Americans do not trust the government, then that means that it is NOT servicing the people and they are not happy about it. This is a serious concern, and should not be taken lightly.

America, by just about every indicator, is a nation that does not serve it’s people. The government functions within an isolated “bubble” much like France was before the French Revolution, or like Russia before the Communist Revolution. People know this, and do not trust the government.

America, by just about every indicator, is a nation that does not serve it's people. The government functions within an isolated "bubble" much like France was before the French Revolution, or like Russia before the Communist Revolution. People know this, and do not trust the government.
America, by just about every indicator, is a nation that does not serve it’s people. The government functions within an isolated “bubble” much like France was before the French Revolution, or like Russia before the Communist Revolution. People know this, and do not trust the government.

Do you? Do you, dear reader, do you trust the American government? Do you believe them? Do you think that they have your best interests at heart?

If the government raised your taxes (again), would it end up improving your life? If they seized all your firearms, would you feel safer at night? If they banned something else, would you believe that your personal life was improved?

Most Americans would say no.

America, by just about every indicator, is a nation that does not serve it's people. The government functions within an isolated "bubble" much like France was before the French Revolution, or like Russia before the Communist Revolution.
America, by just about every indicator, is a nation that does not serve it’s people. The government functions within an isolated “bubble” much like France was before the French Revolution, or like Russia before the Communist Revolution.

Don’t you think this is a problem?

Meanwhile, China’s system of professional, non-factional government has returned it to its traditional role as the Central Kingdom.

Compared to ours, China’s government is forward-looking, decentralized, efficient and thrifty.

For instance, the Government Entrance Examination selects the top 2% of graduates each year and success is the only avenue to power, responsibility.

For instance, the Government  Entrance Examination selects the top 2% of graduates each year and  success is the only avenue to power, responsibility.
The Chinese Government Entrance Examination selects the top 2% of graduates each year and success is the only avenue to power, responsibility.
While in America it is completely different. In America it is well-promoted "blue bloods" (family dynasties) that are promoted and elected by mob rule through corporate media promotion.

The 200 members of the State Council, all promoted on their ability to work cooperatively, have collectively governed billions of people for a combined 5,000 years and their publicly available statistics are jaw-dropping.

  • Most of the Chinese leadership in Beijing have a PhD.
  • Most of the Chinese leadership in Beijing has an IQ over 140.
  • All of the leadership began their careers in the country’s poorest villages.
  • All of the Beijing leadership stayed in their home villages, and were only able to leave once they raised local incomes by 50%.
  • They repeated that performance at every level, including the presidency, as Xi Peng is doing.
Most of the American government are members of a private club of "elites". They have an enormous bureaucracy that services them that are culled by ideology. 

American university and agency entrance exams have done away with placement though merit. In the interests of inclusion and diversity, positions are filled by "other criteria". It "improves" America, don't you know.

As a result, the people of China (contrary to the anti-Chinese propaganda in the American media) trust their government.

Chinese people trust their government because they had bettered their  lives for three generations. The people also have a bright future to  look forward to.
Chinese people trust their government because they had bettered their lives for three generations. The people also have a bright future to look forward to.

China is super patriotic, and who can blame them. Just about everyone is living light-years better than their parents did at their age.

Chinese people trust their government because they had bettered their  lives for three generations. The people also have a bright future to  look forward to.

They know that peace and stability are essential  to achieve what China has achieved and requires strong leadership to do  this. They therefore like a strong leader and they see this in President  Xi Jinping.

They trust their government also because not only  have they delivered but more importantly create an environment whereby  they can improve their lives. The equal opportunity for everyone to  raise their wealth and living standards are all there for people to  witness.

They are now ready to be self sufficient and not  dependent on the US for export to improve their economy and the latter  does not like it. The US is seen by the Chinese people as attempting to  thwart their progress. This is spurring the Chinese people to unite  behind their leaders and providing them with incentive to work harder  and more innovatively to beat the US. 

- Louis Lim. 

China is super patriotic. So most Americans need to forget the media-promoted illusion that the Chinese are ready to leap into the arms of “democracy”. It’s not the case, and is a big lie.

Impromptu show of patriotism in a mall in Hong Kong. While all of Western media are focusing on the radicals storming the subways lines, destroying things, and dressed in Antifa black wearing Antifa black masks, and behaving like BLM radicals, the rest of Hong Kong is more like this. They are proud of their nation, proud of their country, and proud of their heritage.

Leadership

In America, we choose leaders by acclamation–a Greco-Roman custom favoring eloquent rascals–and that is exactly what we have.

Rascals.

Gavin Newsom
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – AUGUST 22: California Lt. Gov. and California gubernatorial candidate Gavin Newsom looks on as he visits the Alice Griffith Apartments on August 22, 2018 in San Francisco, California. Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and San Francisco mayor London Breed toured a low-income housing complex. Newsom leads Republican gubernatorial candidate John Cox by an average of 23 percentage points in recent polls. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

It’s so bad, and so outrageous, that they are no longer trying to hide their crimes. The rich, and powerful know that they can get away with things with impunity. They are no longer giving a care as to what others think.

Meanwhile, as President Trump observed

“China’s leaders are much smarter than ours. It’s like taking the New  England Patriots and Tom Brady and having them play your high school  football team.”

While this is covered above, it should not be overlooked. The Chinese is a true merit-based society. The government is run by intelligent leadership. Not hand-puppets of the oligarchy. And while America has an enormous career bureaucracy, it is nowhere as talented or driven as the Chinese.

Nor are American leaders policed. For in China, all government officials are under observation by the “Corruption Police”.

Three more officials have been given the chop as part of China's anti-corruption drive. The disgraced politicians are the latest in a string of purges of former aides to Zhou Yongkang, China's retired chief of domestic security, fueling speculation that Zhou will eventually face charges. Ji Wenlin, former deputy governor of Hainan, and Yu Gang, former senior official in the Politics and Legal Affairs Commission, have both been expelled from the Communist Party for taking "huge bribes" and committing adultery, announced the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) on Wednesday. Adultery, while not illegal in China, is considered a serious violation of Party regulations. The third official charged with corruption is Tan Hong, a former senior officer in the Ministry of Public Security. All three have close ties to Zhou, working under the security czar at some point during their careers. Zhou was a former member of the Politburo Standing Committee, China's top decision-making body, until he retired in 2012. He was considered one of the most powerful men in China, serving as the head of China's security and police institutions. On China: Tigers and flies  On China: Tigers and flies 01:52 On China: fashion and corruption .
Three more officials have been given the chop as part of China’s anti-corruption drive. The disgraced politicians are the latest in a string of purges of former aides to Zhou Yongkang, China’s retired chief of domestic security, fueling speculation that Zhou will eventually face charges. Ji Wenlin, former deputy governor of Hainan, and Yu Gang, former senior official in the Politics and Legal Affairs Commission, have both been expelled from the Communist Party for taking “huge bribes” and committing adultery, announced the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) on Wednesday. Adultery, while not illegal in China, is considered a serious violation of Party regulations. The third official charged with corruption is Tan Hong, a former senior officer in the Ministry of Public Security. All three have close ties to Zhou, working under the security czar at some point during their careers. Zhou was a former member of the Politburo Standing Committee, China’s top decision-making body, until he retired in 2012. He was considered one of the most powerful men in China, serving as the head of China’s security and police institutions. On China: Tigers and flies On China: Tigers and flies 01:52 On China: fashion and corruption

In America, the opposite is true. In Washington, it’s a free-for-all of corruption and abuse.

However, in China, all government officials, their aides, and support personnel are all under the careful watchful eyes of the “corruption police”. The Chinese do not want rampant corruption to reach the levels of 2004 in China, or what it is in America today. So they have taken aggressive and proactive steps to ensure that this will not happen.

In 2013, some 182,000 officials were disciplined while courts nationwide tried 23,000 corruption cases, according to the CCDI. After coming into power in late 2012, President Xi Jinping banned official extravagance -- from banquets to year-end gifts -- and vowed to target "tigers and flies" alike in his fight against corruption when describing his resolve to spare no one regardless of their position.
In 2013, some 182,000 officials were disciplined while courts nationwide tried 23,000 corruption cases, according to the CCDI. After coming into power in late 2012, President Xi Jinping banned official extravagance — from banquets to year-end gifts — and vowed to target “tigers and flies” alike in his fight against corruption when describing his resolve to spare no one regardless of their position.

Given the high levels of corruption in the American government, one can really wonder American-based criticism of Chinese attempts at curbing corruption.

Since Donald Trump become President there has been exactly zero arrests, and zero prosecutions for the thousands of felonies committed in the last ten years. His DOJ head Jeff Sessions, did nothing. And the current Attorney General, Mr. Barr seems to be heading in the same direction.

Economies.

Today, China generates 20% of global GDP vs. our 15%, its imports and exports are in balance, its trading relationships are excellent, its currency fairly valued, its economy one third larger and growing three times faster, its manufacturing wages at parity with ours and its plans for 2025 are breathtaking.

Share of the world economic output. Including forecasts.
Share of the world economic output. Including forecasts.

Infrastructure.

What is China? New highways, railways, subways and ports and, next year, the fastest, most advanced Internet and entire cities built around 5G. Meanwhile, 6G development is well in progress and there is a race on it’s development and implementation.

The infrastructure comparison is stark, and alerting.

What is America?

Not much. $77,000,000,000 for high speed rail, and all anyone has to show for it is an army of attorneys demanding more fees, fifteen miles of partially completed tracks and a cardboard mock-up.

Why no High-Speed rail in the USA?

China started it’s High Speed Rail plan at the same time as the United States did. Today it is everywhere and super convenient. In America it is no where to be found.

Chinese high speed rail is very commonplace. It goes just about everywhere, and is cheap, clean and affordable.

America can’t even build a simple fence on it’s border. I mean, don’t you know, that’s a purely dysfunctional government you all. (I turn my head and spit on the ground.) It’s all totally fucked up. It’s a train-wreck, and getting worse.

China, well, that bridge that connects Hong Kong to Zhuhai is an amazing civil construction feat that is beyond the abilities of Americans. Fact.

Zhuhai to Hong Kong Bridge.

Geopolitics.

In 2018 China’s 34% world approval rating beat America’s 31% and Gallup says, “As the global balance of soft power continues to shift, it may prove even more difficult for the US to counter this influence.”

They are focusing their attention on Eurasia and, Zbigniew Brzezinski warned…

“Control over Eurasia would almost automatically entail  Africa’s subordination, rendering the Western Hemisphere and Oceania  (Australia) geopolitically peripheral to the world’s central continent.  Seventy-five percent of the world’s people live in Eurasia and most of  the world’s physical wealth is there too, both in its enterprises and  underneath its soil. Eurasia accounts for about three-fourths of the  world’s known energy resources.”

We ceded control of Crimea and the Black Sea to Russia and, increasingly, the Middle East, too.

With the Belt and Road, China and Russia are amalgamating numerous alignments.

  • The Eurasian Economic Union.
(Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,  the Kyrgyz Republic and Russia with Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Moldova  in consideration)
  • The Shanghai Cooperative Organization, SCO.
(Russia,  Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, India, China, and  Pakistan; with Afghanistan, Iran, Mongolia and Belarus as observers and  Armenia, Azerbaijan, Cambodia, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Turkey as dialog  partners)
  • Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, RCEP.
(Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines,  Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Japan, India, South Korea,  Australia and New Zealand). 

Once the Nord Stream II and South Stream pipelines are completed in December, how can the EU resist joining them?

The Belt and Road Initiative is a global development strategy adopted by the Chinese government involving infrastructure development and investments in 152 countries and international organizations in Asia, Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas. The leader of the People's Republic of China, Xi Jinping, originally announced the strategy during official visits to Indonesia and Kazakhstan in 2013.
The Belt and Road Initiative is a global development strategy adopted by the Chinese government involving infrastructure development and investments in 152 countries and international organizations in Asia, Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas. The leader of the People’s Republic of China, Xi Jinping, originally announced the strategy during official visits to Indonesia and Kazakhstan in 2013.

This plan, the Road and Belt Initiative, has been in the works for decades, and it’s implementation has taken years. It’s just another example of how China plans. They do so generationally – 25 years in advance. America plans by financial quarter – three months in advance.

China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is not only the most  ambitious and all-encompassing economic development project in the  history of humanity but also the core of what is likely to be China's  grand strategy for the twenty-first century. It aims to connect China  and Europe in a web of roads, high-speed rail, power lines, ports,  pipelines, fiber-optic lines and other infrastructure with the goal of  stimulating growth in the scores of developing countries in between. New  maritime trade corridors provide China with new shipping alternatives  while offering its less developed western, northern and southwestern  provinces easier access to new markets. While the initiative offers  China great strategic and economic benefits it also offers hope to the  struggling economies of Europe, Asia and Africa.

Yet, despite the  magnitude and promise of the initiative and its interface with almost  every region in which the United States has strategic interests – the  Middle East, South China Sea, India-Pakistan, Eastern Europe and Central  Asia to name a few – Washington has largely ignored it, and in some  cases it even took active measures to undermine it.  

- Dr. Gal Luft

After trying to derail it, the United States decided to create their own version. This United States version is loosely structured on providing funds in USD to member nations in exchange for their “loyalty” to the United States in a slew of areas. So far, as of November 2019, only Australia signed on.

The Chinese Road and Belt Initiative will transform the globe in a better and stable way. It will surround China with growing nations with thriving middle classes that are economically tied to China.

Finances.

The Financial Times says,

“America will need to sell $12 Trillion of bonds in the coming  decade. Who on earth–or in global finance–will buy this looming mountain  of Treasuries, the US borrowing requirement even before Trump’s major  upgrade of America’s weapons systems?" 

Who is willing to buy one billion dollars in US bonds, let alone one trillion dollars worth? Who, which nation, can afford twelve trillion in bonds? Jupiter?

For reasons outside of fiscal responsibility, the United States government has been borrowing money for everyone on the planet. These borrowing needs [will all] eventually have to be financed in the context of already high global dollar debt exposure.

What it does show is what then Senator Barack Obama eloquently described in 2006: “The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the US Government cannot pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies.”  The reality is that at some point, sooner or later, we will have to pay back the money we’re borrowing. The longer we wait to do this, the more painful it will be to do so. The victims of all this are America’s youth. Peter Welch and his 189 cohorts in the House, his allies in the press, and anyone else who supports this fiscal insanity seem to have no moral problem sticking our children and grandchildren with a tab that will dramatically diminish our kids’ future standard of living.  This is intergenerational theft. There’s nothing noble or courageous about it.
What it does show is what then Senator Barack Obama eloquently described in 2006: “The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the US Government cannot pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies.

The reality is that at some point, sooner or later, we will have to pay back the money we’re borrowing. The longer we wait to do this, the more painful it will be to do so. The victims of all this are America’s youth. Peter Welch and his 189 cohorts in the House, his allies in the press, and anyone else who supports this fiscal insanity seem to have no moral problem sticking our children and grandchildren with a tab that will dramatically diminish our kids’ future standard of living. This is intergenerational theft. There’s nothing noble or courageous about it.

One of America’s biggest hedge funds privately concluded that in five years’ time the Treasury will need to sell bonds equivalent to 25 percent of gross domestic product, up from 15 per cent now.

This level of debt has occurred just twice in the past 120 years, first during the second world war and then again during the 2008 financial crisis”.

China's External Debt accounted for 14.4 % of the country's Nominal GDP in 2018, compared with the ratio of 14.5 % in the previous year. China's External Debt: % of Nominal GDP data is updated yearly, available from Dec 1985 to Dec 2018. The data reached an all-time high of 17.1 % in Dec 2014 and a record low of 5.1 % in Dec 1985.
China’s External Debt accounted for 14.4 % of the country’s Nominal GDP in 2018, compared with the ratio of 14.5 % in the previous year. China’s External Debt: % of Nominal GDP data is updated yearly, available from Dec 1985 to Dec 2018. The data reached an all-time high of 17.1 % in Dec 2014 and a record low of 5.1 % in Dec 1985.

Russia and China have no foreign debt (only domestic debt), and at that, China has abundant savings and carries a debt burden one-third America’s or the EU’s.

Science.

Their natural genetic encoded ten IQ point advantage over Americans means that they have 600,000 people with 160 IQ, compared to only 30,000 in America.

Here is the average IQ of more than 80 countries. These numbers came from a work carried out from 2002 to 2006 by Richard Lynn , a British Professor of Psychology, and Tatu Vanhanen , a Finnish Professor of Political Science, who conducted IQ studies in more than 80 countries.
Here is the average IQ of more than 80 countries. These numbers came from a work carried out from 2002 to 2006 by Richard Lynn , a British Professor of Psychology, and Tatu Vanhanen , a Finnish Professor of Political Science, who conducted IQ studies in more than 80 countries. On average, children from Asian countries get about a 107 IQ relative to American norms. Tracking and following through on the comparisons in society and the importance of education, we end up with these trends as illustrated.

China has overtaken the US to become the world’s largest producer of scientific research papers, making up almost a fifth of the total global output, according to a major new report.

China dominates a global ranking of the most-cited research papers published in the 30 hottest technology fields.

China dominates a global ranking of the most-cited research papers  published in the 30 hottest technology fields.
China dominates a global ranking of the most-cited research papers published in the 30 hottest technology fields.

Though the U.S. accounted for 3.9 million research papers overall compared with 2.9 million from China, the Asian country produced the largest share in 23 of the 30 fields that drew the most interest, while America took the crown for the remaining seven.

Presently, China spends more on R&D than Japan, Germany, and South Korea combined, and only trails the United States in terms of gross expenditure. In 2016, China’s spending accounted for roughly 20 percent of global R&D expenditure. According to some estimates, China will overtake the US as the top R&D spender by 2020.
Presently, China spends more on R&D than Japan, Germany, and South Korea combined, and only trails the United States in terms of gross expenditure. In 2016, China’s spending accounted for roughly 20 percent of global R&D expenditure. According to some estimates, China will overtake the US as the top R&D spender by 2020.

As we can infer from the chart, the social groups controlling our surplus used it for non-productive, ego-satisfying purposes which distributed the surpluses to consumption but did not provide more effective methods of production.

In China you must compete and be the best, otherwise you will spend the rest of your life begging in the streets. There are no prizes for fifth or sixth place, and no allowances for minorities or diversity quotas.

China is the most influential country in four of eight core scientific fields, ranking first in computer science, mathematics, materials science and engineering and is rapidly catching up in physics.

The U.S. led in physics, environmental and earth sciences, basic life science and clinical medicine. And each year, the USA lead drops far, far behind.

Pretty good for elementary school students. Try to have an American fifth-grader design and build a robot from scratch.

As impressive as all this is, let me underline a very significant point. After 12 to 16 hours of studying, the typical Chinese student will squeeze in a job, or labor to help with the family. Try to find an American student willing to put up with this kind of pace, or familial expectations.

Young lady working after school, still wearing her school uniform.

Twenty years ago Samuel Huntington said,

“Civilizations grow because they have an instrument of expansion,  a military, religious, political, or economic organization that  accumulates surplus and invests it in productive innovations and they  decline when they stop the application of surplus to new ways of doing  things. In modern terms we say that the rate of investment decreases.  

This happens because the social groups controlling the surplus have a  vested interest in using it for non-productive but ego-satisfying  purposes which distribute the surpluses to consumption but do not  provide more effective methods of production.”

To the rest of the world, Americans are seemingly looking more and more like a parody of idiocracy.

Americans are seemingly looking more and more like a parody of idiocracy."
Americans are seemingly looking more and more like a parody of idiocracy. Our government, based upon the ideas of “modern progressive thought” has allowed a dangerous oligarchy to take over. This has created a global oligarchy that services the top 1% of the world globally. It serves no one else. When another nation, China, improves upon the model, the American reaction is disgust and fear. But, you know, it need not be the case. Learn. Adapt, and adjust.

Technology.

Two thirds of the world’s fastest computers are Chinese but nothing reveals the emptiness of our IP closet more than Chinese dominance of enhanced mobile broadband.

We will take twice as long and spend twice as much integrating a less affordable, functional, compatible, upgradeable system.

5G is the next generation of mobile broadband, which will replace or augment its 4G/LTE predecessor and will set the stage for 6G service. The company that can get ahead in 5G will be able to have more market control over 6G service in the future. The benefits of 5G are faster download and upload speeds, and other measures of network efficiency like latency. These faster download and upload speeds will be essential for processing and moving large amounts of data for services like autonomous vehicles.  Huawei technologies, the Chinese tech company, has been aggressively pursuing 5G dominance, adding the most technical contributions to the 5G standard at international conferences where what 5G is and how it will be implemented is outlined. The company has added more than 11,000 technical contributions to the 5G standard. Swedish telecoms company, Ericsson, has added the second most to the standard, adding over 10,000 technical contributions.
5G is the next generation of mobile broadband, which will replace or augment its 4G/LTE predecessor and will set the stage for 6G service. The company that can get ahead in 5G will be able to have more market control over 6G service in the future.

The benefits of 5G are faster download and upload speeds, and other measures of network efficiency like latency. These faster download and upload speeds will be essential for processing and moving large amounts of data for services like autonomous vehicles.

Huawei technologies, the Chinese tech company, has been aggressively pursuing 5G dominance, adding the most technical contributions to the 5G standard at international conferences where what 5G is and how it will be implemented is outlined. The company has added more than 11,000 technical contributions to the 5G standard. Swedish telecoms company, Ericsson, has added the second most to the standard, adding over 10,000 technical contributions.

Yet our feckless media derided President Trump when he called for America to dominate 6G, despite the publicly known fact that Huawei has had 600 mathematicians, physicists and engineers working on 6G for over a year.

China leads the world in most of the top ten ‘hot’ fields like battery research and accounted for more than seventy percent of all papers on photocatalysts and nucleic-acid-targeted cancer treatment, which ranked 12th and 14th.

The US led in three biotechnology fields, including #7 genome editing and #10 immunotherapy.

China leads the world in basic research and in most technologies, especially hot areas.

China also leads in all fields of…

  • civil engineering
  • sustainable and renewable energy
  • manufacturing
  • supercomputing
  • speech recognition
  • graphenics
  • thorium power
  • pebble bed reactors
  • genomics
  • thermal power
  • ASW missiles
  • drones
  • in-orbit satellite refueling
  • passive array radar
  • metamaterials
  • hyperspectral imaging
  • nanotechnology
  • UHV electricity transmission
  • HSR
  • speech recognition
  • robotics
  • radio-telescopy
  • hypersonic weapons
  • satellite quantum communications
  • quantum secure direct communications
  • quantum controls.
“Approximately 72% of the academic patent families published in QIT  since 2012 have been from Chinese universities. US universities are a  distant second with 12%.” 

China will overtake the US in the most-cited 50% of Artificial Intelligence research papers this year, the top 10% of research papers next year, and the top 1% by 2025.

Six of the eleven AI unicorns are Chinese.

Unicorn (finance) A unicorn is a privately held startup company valued at over $1 billion. The term was coined in 2013 by venture capitalist Aileen Lee, choosing the mythical animal to represent the statistical rarity of such successful ventures. 

- Unicorn (finance) - Wikipedia 

We have no entrants in quantum encryption or face recognition, nor 100 mph maglev subways, nor lossless power transmission. We are so far behind in those fields that it’s not even tying to begin with.

  • Aerospace: China launched more space missions in 2018 than Russia or America and its first indigenous airliner will take to the air this year, despite FAA foot-dragging. It is the world’s leading provider of UAVs and the largest manufacturer and exporter of light combat aircraft. Now that its WS-15 fighter jet engine is in production, its J-20 will out-carry and out-speed our fighters.
China’s newest warplane, the J-20 stealth fighter, will make its first public flight at the Zhuhai Air Show, its manufacturer announced on Monday, as Beijing flexes its long-range military muscles.  The J-20, “which military enthusiasts at home and abroad have watched closely”, will make its first public flight demonstration, said Tan Ruisong, the president of China’s state aerospace company AVIC.  China trailed the world in aerospace technology 20 years ago, he told a press conference, but was now at the leading edge.  Swift, stealthy, and armed with long-range missiles, the new J-20s+ represent a leap forward in China’s ability to project power in Asia and compete in capabilities with the United States.
China’s newest warplane, the J-20 stealth fighter, will make its first public flight at the Zhuhai Air Show, its manufacturer announced on Monday, as Beijing flexes its long-range military muscles. The J-20, “which military enthusiasts at home and abroad have watched closely”, will make its first public flight demonstration, said Tan Ruisong, the president of China’s state aerospace company AVIC. China trailed the world in aerospace technology 20 years ago, he told a press conference, but was now at the leading edge. Swift, stealthy, and armed with long-range missiles, the new J-20s+ represent a leap forward in China’s ability to project power in Asia and compete in capabilities with the United States.
  • Ocean engineering. China is the go-to builder for LNG transporters and naval vessels that require technical expertise (the USN approached it about building a floating dock) It designs, builds and operates the most powerful surface combatants afloat, the Type 55 cruiser, ensuring that its claims in the South China Sea and the East China Sea will not be contested.
At a time when the United States Navy is struggling to determine the future of its Navy, China has been quietly building up its naval forces. The People’s Liberation Army Navy has risen to be the second largest navy in the world by tonnage. It’s not just quantity that China is after, but the also the quality of its ships. Case in point is China’s newest warship to be launched, the Type 55 destroyer. With this warship, China has produced a destroyer larger, more powerful, and far more capable than its predecessors.
At a time when the United States Navy is struggling to determine the future of its Navy, China has been quietly building up its naval forces. The People’s Liberation Army Navy has risen to be the second largest navy in the world by tonnage. It’s not just quantity that China is after, but the also the quality of its ships. Case in point is China’s newest warship to be launched, the Type 55 destroyer. With this warship, China has produced a destroyer larger, more powerful, and far more capable than its predecessors.
  • Advanced railway equipment: China leads in all aspects of railway engineering and wins the bulk of global rail contracts. The first of five low speed maglev lines has completed testing and two more will open this year.
High-speed rail (HSR) in China consists of a network of passenger-dedicated railways designed for speeds of 250–350 km/h (155–217 mph). It is the world's longest high speed railway network, and is also the most extensively used.
High-speed rail (HSR) in China consists of a network of passenger-dedicated railways designed for speeds of 250–350 km/h (155–217 mph). It is the world’s longest high speed railway network, and is also the most extensively used. Over 2,800 pairs of bullet trains numbered by G, D or C run daily connecting over 550 cities in China and covering 33 of the country’s 34 provinces.
  • Energy-saving and new energy vehicles: China leads the world in batteries and electric cars and has more than 20 manufacturers competing to survive.
While Tesla engineers have been gradually adding autonomous capabilities to its electric stable, Chinese firm LeEco has gone one step further and announced a car that can do it right from the off.  The LeSEE, announced last night in China, managed to drive itself out of a shipping container and on to the stage with little more than a few voice commands spoken into a smartphone by CEO Jia Yueting. It even reversed, too.
While Tesla engineers have been gradually adding autonomous capabilities to its electric stable, Chinese firm LeEco has gone one step further and announced a car that can do it right from the off. The LeSEE, announced last night in China, managed to drive itself out of a shipping container and on to the stage with little more than a few voice commands spoken into a smartphone by CEO Jia Yueting. It even reversed, too.
  • Power equipment: China leads the world in basic research and manufacturing of renewable energy and nuclear energy and installed more renewable and nuclear power last year than the rest of the world combined. It owns the market for long distance UHV transmission.
Ultrahigh-voltage (UHV) electricity transmission has been used in China since 2009 to transmit both AC and DC electricity over long distances separating China's energy resources and consumers. Expansion of both AC and DC capacity continues in order to match generation to consumption demands while minimizing transmission losses.
Ultrahigh-voltage (UHV) electricity transmission has been used in China since 2009 to transmit both AC and DC electricity over long distances separating China’s energy resources and consumers. Expansion of both AC and DC capacity continues in order to match generation to consumption demands while minimizing transmission losses.
  • MaterialsScience. China’s share of the most cited nanoscience papers grows 22% annually and overtook the US in 2014. Its contribution–in quantity and quality–is now greater than the rest of the world’s combined. Most of the world’s graphene is manufactured in China, home to most graphene startups and the country is even with us in nanomaterial development.
 China Creates LiFi Nanomaterial to Replace WiFi | News ... 
 Chinese scientists develop nanomaterial to remove diesel ... 
 Chinese scientists find nanomaterial could reduce lead ... 
 Chinese scientists develop new material for treatment of ... 
 Titanium-Dioxide Nanomaterial Market Insights 2019, Global ... 
  • Biomedicine and high-performance medical devices. Judged by papers in 82 high-quality research journals, China is the second leading contributor to biomedical engineering articles after the US and will overtake us in three years.
China has become the top destination for research involving these animals, which are invaluable models for studying human disease. Other countries do not breed the primates in such large numbers or to the standard produced in China.  “Some 95% of papers using transgenic monkeys come from China,” says Bezard, director of the Institute of Neurodegenerative Diseases at the University of Bordeaux, and manager of his own lab at the Institute of Laboratory Animal Sciences, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences. Among recent breakthroughs, researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) have genetically modified cynomolgus monkeys so they exhibit autistic-like behaviours, to better understand what causes the disorder, and how to treat it. CAS scientists have also cloned primates using a technique similar to the one that produced Dolly the sheep. Bezard has used rhesus monkeys to show how brain–computer interfaces can restore leg movement after spinal cord injury.  These developments have coincided with improvements in the regulation and enforcement of international standards in the biosciences in China. Two events were critical to the process: the 2003 SARS outbreak, which put a spotlight on the issue of wildlife and lab animal management, and the creation in China of the world’s first human–rabbit embryos in 2001, which provoked an international public relations crisis for the country.  The Chinese government recognizes that bioscience will play a major role in its global competitiveness. Biomedicine, synthetic biology and regenerative medical techniques are listed as strategic fields and industries in China’s 13th Five-Year Plan. “China doesn’t want to miss the life-science biotech revolution,” says Cao Cong, an innovation studies researcher at the University of Nottingham Ningbo China.
China has become the top destination for research involving these animals, which are invaluable models for studying human disease. Other countries do not breed the primates in such large numbers or to the standard produced in China. “Some 95% of papers using transgenic monkeys come from China,” says Bezard, director of the Institute of Neurodegenerative Diseases at the University of Bordeaux, and manager of his own lab at the Institute of Laboratory Animal Sciences, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences.

Among recent breakthroughs, researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) have genetically modified cynomolgus monkeys so they exhibit autistic-like behaviours, to better understand what causes the disorder, and how to treat it. CAS scientists have also cloned primates using a technique similar to the one that produced Dolly the sheep. Bezard has used rhesus monkeys to show how brain–computer interfaces can restore leg movement after spinal cord injury. These developments have coincided with improvements in the regulation and enforcement of international standards in the biosciences in China.

Two events were critical to the process: the 2003 SARS outbreak, which put a spotlight on the issue of wildlife and lab animal management, and the creation in China of the world’s first human–rabbit embryos in 2001, which provoked an international public relations crisis for the country.

The Chinese government recognizes that bioscience will play a major role in its global competitiveness. Biomedicine, synthetic biology and regenerative medical techniques are listed as strategic fields and industries in China’s 13th Five-Year Plan. “China doesn’t want to miss the life-science biotech revolution,” says Cao Cong, an innovation studies researcher at the University of Nottingham Ningbo China.

Trade.

Midway  in the sixteenth century China became the great repository of the early  modern world’s newly discovered wealth in silver. Long a participant in  international maritime trade, China experienced the consequences of the  greatly enlarged patterns in world trade. In that commerce China was  essentially a seller of high-quality craft manufactures. 

Other countries  could not compete either in quality or price. The colonies of the New  World and the entire Mediterranean sphere of trade, from Portugal and  Spain to the Ottoman Empire, began to complain that the influx of  Chinese goods undermined their economies. 

-F.W. Mote 

China’s most significant trade relationships are with Asia and Europe, with the US third.

Almost no other country in the world has such a strong influence on the multilateral trading system as the United States. But with his “America First” policy, U.S. President Donald Trump is increasingly undermining international trade law. And that comes with huge costs not only for its trading partners but also for the United States itself.
Almost no other country in the world has such a strong influence on the multilateral trading system as the United States. But with his “America First” policy, U.S. President Donald Trump is increasingly undermining international trade law. And that comes with huge costs not only for its trading partners but also for the United States itself.

As Parag Khanna says…

"Beijing must wonder why #3 would launch a trade war against #1.  

Though we are self-sufficient in many things,we may be more dispensable  than we imagine. 

‘America first’ sounds great except when it actually  means ‘America alone’."

China has a multi-generational plan for on-going trade with the rest of the world. As discussed previously, the first step is the “Road and Belt Initative”, but other systems are slowly being put in place.

Meanwhile, the 2016 to 2019 “Trump Trade War” between the United States and China, has proven, beyond a doubt that the United States is NOT a stable trading partner, and other trading partnerships need to be developed.

Social Indicators.

China’s GINI, which never reached our nosebleed levels, is dropping like a stone and extreme poverty will be gone next year, when every Chinese will have a home, a job, plenty of food, education, safe streets, health and old age care.

The Gini index measures the area between the Lorenz curve and a hypothetical line of absolute equality, expressed as a percentage of the maximum area under the line. Thus a Gini index of 0 represents perfect equality, while an index of 100 implies perfect inequality. 

- China GINI index, 2017-2018 - knoema.com 

When this happens there will then be more drug addicts, suicides and executions, more homeless, poor, hungry and imprisoned people in America than in China.

China’s GINI, which never reached our nosebleed levels, is  dropping like a stone and extreme poverty will be gone next year, when  every Chinese will have a home, a job, plenty of food, education, safe  streets, health and old age care.
China’s GINI, which never reached our nosebleed levels, is dropping like a stone and extreme poverty will be gone next year, when every Chinese will have a home, a job, plenty of food, education, safe streets, health and old age care.

500,000,000 urban Chinese will have more net worth and disposable income than the average American, their mothers and infants will be less likely to die in childbirth, their children will graduate from high school three years ahead of–and outlive–our kids.

Chinese upper middle class house and lawn.
Chinese upper middle class house and lawn.

Ninety-eight percent of Chinese listed as ‘poor’ already own their homes (not “have mortgages”, they actually own the homes and the homes are paid off.) and Xi has scheduled 2021-2035 to bringing GINI below Finland’s.

Chinese apartment houses

Education.

No country has so many intelligent, well trained, devoted engineers.

One-fourth of the world’s STEM workers are Chinese, an intellectual workforce eight times larger, growing six times faster and graduating high school students three years ahead of ours.

One-fourth of the world’s STEM workers are Chinese, an intellectual  workforce eight times larger, growing six times faster and graduating  high school students three years ahead of ours.
One-fourth of the world’s STEM workers are Chinese, an intellectual workforce eight times larger, growing six times faster and graduating high school students three years ahead of ours.

By 2025, China will have more technologically skilled workers than the entire OECD–the US, EU, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Israel, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, and Turkey–combined.

The Chinese school system is merit based. You get zero points of diversity, economic hardship, or gender advantage. You succeed or fail. There are no easy outs.

The Chinese school system is merit based. You get zero points of diversity, economic hardship, or gender advantage. You succeed or fail. There are no easy outs.
The Chinese school system is merit based. You get zero points of diversity, economic hardship, or gender advantage. You succeed or fail. There are no easy outs.

Violence.

Low crime, no religious nonsense or Islamic violence. Companies can invest safely without fear of religious unrest, violence or robbery.

In China it is against the law to promote “progressive” change.

When the SJW movement took control of China

In China it is against the law to have any kind of social upheaval. It is also (functionally) against the law to have a lifestyle outside of the traditional conservative Chinese family. If you try to do so, for what ever reason, you risk being arrested and spending the rest of your life in a re-education camp, if not killed outright.

The Chinese do not mess around. Know your history.

Diversity Initatives

Faith in the future.

Faith in the future, nationalism, a belief in building a better China: the Chinese have a strong belief in the future and willingly sacrifice time and effort for the next generation.

Faith in the future, nationalism, a belief in building a better China:  the Chinese have a strong belief in the future and willingly sacrifice  time and effort for the next generation.
Faith in the future, nationalism, a belief in building a better China: the Chinese have a strong belief in the future and willingly sacrifice time and effort for the next generation.

The Chinese are feeling as we did in the 60s, except that their wages and wealth have doubled every decade for seventy years.

Their Market.

There are twice as many people in China than in the US and Europe combined and domestic consumption of China is growing 7% annually thanks to 200 million rural people moving into new cities.

China will have abundant low salary workers in its western provinces for the next 15 years.

Chinese companies are flexible beyond imagination. They can change products, management, focus or whatever literally overnight.

The Chinese are incredibly flexible and their culture has already outlived the Egyptians, the Greeks and the Romans. Western companies are hierarchically organized whereas in Chinese companies decisions are made fast, often on the phone.

Politics.

China is the world’s leading democracy. It’s called “Communist” as a hold-over from the Mr. Mao days, but that time is long, long past. China holds on to the idea that it is “communist” in the same way that Americans still call America a “Republic”. Both have evolved far, far away from their initial charter.

Here is why China is a democracy. You need to study the indicators that define governance of a nation…

In 2005, The Carter Center  began transferring America’s democracy knowhow to China. Today, China’s  democracy is bigger, faster, safer and cheaper than ours and runs  entirely on Chinese intellectual property. 

There’s a potentially huge  market for an improved version. Might Chinese democracy displace America’s? Should we be surprised if the Chinese model becomes  competitive? 

For three thousand years no subject has preoccupied their elite more than governance. From their perspective, Deng’s 1977 comment  about Western democracy, “It’s too soon to tell,” was simple common  sense.

Barely forty years later, perhaps we can  tell. 

Only twenty percent of citizens in newly-democratic Hungary,  Czech Republic, Romania, Latvia, Poland and Bulgaria, trust their  governments. Even fewer Britons trust Parliament and less than ten  percent of us trust Congress. 

Western democracy is losing legitimacy  because governments’ agenda have remained at odds with their citizens’ agenda for decades but, as Margaret Thatcher would have said, there was no alternative. 

- Selling Democracy to China 

Now there is an alternative and, if we compare American democracy to China’s on seven axes we can at least begin the conversation.

  • Constitutional
  • Elective
  • Popular
  • Procedural
  • Operational
  • Substantive
  • Financial

Let’s talk about them a spell.

Constitutionally, China’s constitution stipulates,

“The State organs of the People’s Republic of China apply the principle of democratic centralism. 

The National People’s Congress  and the local people’s congresses at various levels are constituted through democratic elections. 

They are responsible to the people and subject to their supervision. All administrative, judicial and procuratorial organs of the State are created by the people’s congresses  to which they are responsible and by which they are supervised”.  

America’s founders carefully omitted the word ‘democracy’ from all Constitutional documents. As it was initially founded as a Republic. But the 12th and the 17th amendments changed it into a democracy. Thus paving the way for Wilson, FDR, Clinton and Obama to turn America into a medieval-style serfdom functioning as an oligarchy.

Link

At least the Chinese constitution clearly says that it is a democracy.

Electively, China’s bigger, more transparent elections were designed and supervised by The Carter Center which continues to expand the franchise at the behest of Premier Wen Jiabao, who told them in 2012,

“The experience of many villages shows  farmers can succeed in directly electing village committees. If people  can manage a village well they can manage a township and a county. We  must encourage people to experiment boldly and test democracy in  practice”. 

Today, 3,200 democratically elected Congressional representatives must vote, almost unanimously, to approve all senior appointments and all legislation.

In the U.S., wealthy, unelected people propose and fund candidates for election. An unelected Electoral College chooses the chief executive.

Popularly, the Chinese, who still bear scars of recent governance mistakes, will tell you that it was when Mao, Deng and the Qing Emperor ignored experts that they got the country into trouble.

Today, Chinese democracy resembles Proctor and Gamble more than Pericles.

There are more than a thousand polling firms in China and its government spends prolifically on surveys, as author Jeff J. Brown says,

“My Beijing neighborhood committee and town hall are constantly  putting up announcements, inviting groups of people–renters, homeowners,  over seventies, women under forty, those with or without medical  insurance, retirees–to answer surveys. 

The CPC is the world’s biggest  pollster for a reason: China’s democratic ‘dictatorship of the people’  is highly engaged at the day-to-day, citizen-on-the-street level. 

I  know, because I live in a middle class Chinese community and I question  them all the time. I find their government much more responsive and democratic than the dog-and-pony shows back home, and I mean that seriously”.  

Even the imperious Mao would remind colleagues,

“If we don’t  investigate public opinion we have no right to voice our own opinion.  Public opinion is our guideline for action,” 

which is why Five Year Plans are the results of intensive polling. Citizens’ sixty-two percent voter participation suggests that they think their votes count. Princeton’s Gilens and Page, on the other hand, examining the causes of Americans’ fifty-two percent voter participation, found

‘the preferences of the average American  appear to have a near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon  public policy’.

Procedurally, The Chinese engineers, economists, statisticians and sociologists who develop policies practice democracy among themselves and the top seven decision makers–appointed independently of each other and with a collective 200 years governing experience–require at least six votes to send legislation to Congress.

If President Xi claimed that global warming is a hoax he would be regarded as autocratic, not democratic.

If he wants a new climate policy and persuades five colleagues to support it, he can push it into the trials pipeline but, without solid trial data, he can’t propose legislation and the popularly elected, unpaid congress has proven willing to delay leaders’ pet projects for decades.

Data-driven democracy has steadily narrowed the gap between public expectations and government capacity, which is why Chinese support for government policies stands at 96 percent, higher than even Switzerland’s or Singapore’s and far higher than our twenty percent.

Operationally, American presidents resemble the medieval monarchs upon whom their office was modeled, as Abraham Lincoln’s Secretary of State, William Henry Seward, observed,

“We elect a king for four years and give him  absolute power within certain limits which, after all, he can interpret  for himself”. 

Our presidents hire and fire all senior officials, secretly ban fifty thousand citizens from flying, order people kidnapped, tortured, imprisoned and assassinated and take the country to war.

No Chinese leader, not even Mao at his peak, could do any of those things.

The president cannot even choose his prime minister (always his strongest rival for the presidency), can only make decisions with 6–1 or 7–0 support from colleagues and can’t hire or fire officials, elect, assign or suspend members of Congress.

President Obama’s healthcare initiative relied on his popularity and promises whereas, as Stanford VC Robin Daverman explains, China’s initiatives rely on math:

“China is a giant trial  portfolio with millions of trials going on everywhere. 

Today,  innovations in everything from healthcare to poverty reduction,  education, energy, trade and transportation are being trialled in  different communities. 

Every one of China’s 662 cities is experimenting:  

Shanghai with free trade zones, 
Guizhou with poverty reduction,  
twenty-three cities with education reforms, 
Northeastern provinces with  SOE reform: 
pilot schools, 
pilot cities, 
pilot hospitals, 
pilot markets,  
pilot everything. 

Mayors and governors, the Primary Investigators,  share their ‘lab results’ at the Central Party School and publish them  in ‘scientific journals,’ the State-owned newspapers. 

Major policies  undergo ‘clinical trials,’ beginning in small towns that generate and  analyze test data. 

If the stats look good, they’ll add test sites and do  long-term follow-ups. 

They test and tweak for 10-30 years then ask the  3,000-member People’s Congress to review the data and authorize national  trials in three major provinces. 

If a national trial is successful the  State Council [China’s Brains Trust] polishes the plan and takes it back  to the 3,000 Congresspeople for a final vote. 

It’s very transparent  and, if you have good data and I don’t, your bill gets passed and mine  doesn’t. 

People’s Congress votes are nearly unanimous because the  legislation is backed by reams of data. 

This allows China to accomplish a  great deal in a short time: your winning solution will be quickly  propagated throughout the country, you’ll be a front page hero and  you’ll be invited to high-level meetings in Beijing and promoted. 

As you  can imagine, the competition to find solutions is intense”.  

Operationally, data-driven legislation wins hands down.

China is doing this right. America is just running around in circles playing games (politics) and servicing the millions of leeches that live off the system. No wonder nothing can be completed in the USA.

Why no High-Speed rail in the USA?

Substantively, China has won her battle for survival and is now militarily and economically impregnable, so authoritarian giants like Mao and Deng are no longer needed.

Today, researchers, experts, media, academics, stakeholders and obstreperous citizens set the agenda.

Since 2000, China has allowed foreigners to conduct surveys and publish apolitical results without submitting their questionnaires and Harvard’s Tony Saich, who’s been polling there for over a decade reports, in Governing China, that ninety-six per cent of Chinese are satisfied with their national government and, according to Edelman’s 2016 Report, almost ninety percent of Chinese trust it.

World Values Surveys found that eighty-three percent say China is run for their benefit rather than for the benefit of special groups–compared to thirty-eight percent of Americans.

Financially (we exclude financial democracy from polite conversation but the Chinese don’t), ninety-five percent of poor Chinese own their homes and land and the Chinese own, in common, the commanding heights of their economy– banks, insurers and utilities.

And Inequality is being effectively addressed.

In its 2017 study, Global Inequality Dynamics, America’s National Bureau of Economic Research reports that, though the bottom half of Chinese saw their share of national income fall from twenty-seven percent to fifteen percent after 1980, Americans’ share collapsed from twenty percent to twelve percent.

Simultaneously, China’s top one percent captured thirteen percent of all personal income, but America’s elite grabbed twenty percent.

Since those figures were compiled, China has eliminated urban poverty and, the World Bank adds,

“We can reasonably expect the virtual elimination of extreme  poverty in [rural] China by 2022”.  

Every Chinese–not just the poor–has doubled her income every ten years for the past 40 years, an extraordinary improvement in income mobility and the inverse of our experience.

In the U.S., says Stanford’s Raj Chetty,

“rates of absolute mobility have fallen from approximately 90% for  children born in 1940 to 50% for children born in the 1980s. Absolute  income mobility has fallen across the entire income distribution, with  the largest declines for families in the middle class”. 

Whether or not we’re willing to call China’s 20th century system democratic, it’s clear that they’ve improved on our quaint, eighteenth century model.

How long before they start selling the new, improved version of democracy? Yes, the Chiense version of democracy is light-years vastly improved over that clunky oligarchy model that exists in Washington, D.C..

Though this claim enrages many Westerners, regardless of the metric employed, electively, popularly, procedurally, operationally, substantively, financially, and technologically,

Each of four theoretical traditions in the study of American  politics—which can be characterized as theories of Majoritarian  Electoral Democracy, Economic-Elite Domination, and two types of  interest-group pluralism, Majoritarian Pluralism and Biased  Pluralism—offers different predictions about which sets of actors have  how much influence over public policy: average citizens; economic  elites; and organized interest groups, mass-based or business-oriented.

A great deal of empirical research speaks to the policy influence of  one or another set of actors, but until recently it has not been  possible to test these contrasting theoretical predictions against each  other within a single statistical model. We report on an effort to do  so, using a unique data set that includes measures of the key variables  for 1,779 policy issues. 

- Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens 

China is a thriving democracy and America is not.

Defense.

To understand China and how they view defense, you should understand their history. They have over 5000 years on nearly continuous warfare. They have evolved within this reality.

To understand China you must understand that they have evolved though over 5000 years of wars, and bloodshed.

The PLA fields some of the most modern weapon systems in the world at half the cost of America’s defense budget.

Its more modern missiles out-range ours in every weight and class thanks to the tight coupling between their world leading chemists and rocket propellent manufacturers.

Russian weapons systems fill any gaps.

Morale.

A highly cohesive society, the Chinese, by a full 95% support their government’s policies and most are willing to fight for their country. They are fiercely patriotic. No matter what the Western media might say otherwise.

A highly cohesive society, the Chinese, by a full 95% support their government’s policies and most are willing to fight for their country. They are fiercely patriotic. No matter what the Western media might say otherwise.
A highly cohesive society, the Chinese, by a full 95% support their government’s policies and most are willing to fight for their country. They are fiercely patriotic. No matter what the Western media might say otherwise.

The Future.

By 2025, nine provinces will enjoy higher average incomes than the US. By 2040, all will.

By 2025, nine provinces will enjoy higher average incomes than the US. By 2040, all will.
By 2025, nine provinces will enjoy higher average incomes than the US. By 2040, all will.

Conclusion

As large and great as America was, it is now in decline, and the Chinese nation is on the rise. Every indicator, on just about every level, confirms this. It is a fools errand to ignore this fact and to try to stymie this natural progression of the human species.

The smart and intelligent will recognize this and try to personally profit from this growth.

The sunset of the United States as a global empire.

Links about China

Here are some links about my observations on China. I think that you, the reader, might find them to be of interest. Please kindly enjoy.

The US involvement in the HK "Democracy Now" movement.
Uyghurs in Xinjiang
How the USA can win a trade war.
Chinese reaction to the Trump Tariff Wars.
China's Global Leadership
Popular Music of China
The logistics of relocating a facotry from China back to the USA.
Hong Kong and the NED CIA operations.
Chinese weapons systems
Chinese motor sports
End of the Day Potato
Dog Shit
Dancing Grandmothers
Dance Craze
When the SJW movement took control of China
Family Meal
Freedom & Liberty in China
Why are Americans so angry?
Evolution of the USA and China.
Ben Ming Nian
Beware the Expat
Fake Wine
Fat China
Business KTV
How I got married in China.
Chinese apartment houses
Chinese Culture Snapshots
Rural China
Chinese New Year
Trade Wars
How to get work in China if you have HIV.

China and America Comparisons

As an American, I cannot help but compare what my life was in the United States with what it is like living in China. Here we discuss that.

SJW
Playground Comparisons
The Last Straw
Leaving the USA
Diversity Initatives
Democracy
Travel outside
10 Misconceptions about China
Top Ten Misconceptions
A polarized world.
America's sunset.
Trump trade wars  - Phase One
Asshole

The Chinese Business KTV Experience

This is the real deal. Forget about all that nonsense that you find in the British tabloids and an occasional write up in the American liberal press. This is the reality. Read or not.

KTV1
KTV2
KTV3
KTV4
KTV5
KTV6
KTV7
KTV8
KTV9
KTV10
KTV11
KTV12
KTV13
KTV14
KTV15
KTV16
KTV17
KTV18
KTV19
KTV20

Learning About China

Who doesn’t like to look at pretty girls? Ugly girls? Here we discuss what China is like by looking at videos of pretty girls doing things in China.

Pretty Girls 1
Pretty Girls 2
Pretty Girls 3
Pretty Girls 4
Pretty Girls 5

Contemporaneous Chinese Music

This is a series of posts that discuss contemporaneous popular music in China. It is a wide ranging and broad spectrum of travel, and at that, all that I am able to provide is the flimsiest of overviews. However, this series of posts should serve as a great starting place for investigation and enjoyment.

Wolf Disco
Part 1 - Popular Music of China
Part 3 -Popular music of China.
Part 3 - The contemporaneous music of China.
part 3B - The contemporaneous music of China.
Part 4 - The contemporaneous popular music of China.
Part 5 - The contemporaneous music of China.
Part 5B - The popular music of China.
Part 5C - The music of contemporary China.
Part D - The popular music of China.
Part 5E - A happy Joe.
Part 5F - The contemporaneous music of China.
Part 5F - The popular music of China.
Post 6 - The contemporaneous music of China.
Post 7 - The contemporaneous music of China.
Post 8 - The contemporaneous music of China.
Part 9 - The contemporaneous music of China.
Part 10 - Music of China.
Post 11 - The contemporaneous music of China.

Parks in China

The parks in China are very unique. They are enormous and tend to be very mountainous. Here we take a look at this most interesting of subjects.

Parks in China - 1
Pars in China - 2
Parks in China - 3
Visiting a park in China - 4
High Speed Rail in China
Visiting a park in China - 5
Beautiful China part 6
Parks in China - 7
Visiting a park in China - 8

Really Strange China

Here are some posts that discuss a number of things about China that might seem odd, or strange to Westerners. Some of the things are everyday events, while others are just representative of the differences in culture.

Really Strange China 1
Really Strange China 2
Rally Strange China 3
Really Strange China 4
Really Odd China 5
Really Strange China 6
Really Strange China 7
Really Strange China 8
Really Strange China 9
Really Strange China 10
Really Strange China 11
Really Strange China 12
Really strange China 13
Really strange China 14

What is China like?

The purpose of this post is to illustrate that the rest of the world, outside of America, has moved on with their lives. That while they might not be as great as America is, they are doing just fine thank you.

And while America has been squandering it’s money, decimating it’s resources, and just being cavalier with it’s military, the rest of the world has done the opposite. They have husbanded their day to day fortunes, and you can see this in their day-to-day lives.

What is China like - 1
What is China like - 2
What is China Like - 3
What is China like - 4
What is China like - 5
What is China like - 6
What is China like - 8
What is China like - 8
What is China like - 9

Summer in Asia

Let’s take a moment to explore Asia. That includes China, but also includes such places as Vietnam, Thailand, Japan and others…

Summer Snapshots 1
Summer Snapshots 2
Summer Snapshots 3
Summer Snapshots 4
Snapshots Summer 5
Summer Snapshots 6
Summer Snapshot 7
Summer Snapshots 8
Summer Snapshots 9
Summer Snapshots 10
Summer Snapshots 11
Summer Snapshot 12

Some Fun Videos

Here’s a collection of some fun videos taken all over Asia. While there are many videos taken in China, we also have some taken in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Korea and Japan as well. It’s all in fun.

Some fun videos of China - 1
Fun Videos of Asia - 2
Fun videos of Asia - 3
Fun videos of Asia - 4
Fun Videos of Asia - 5
Fun videos of Asia - 6
Fun videos of Asia - 7
Fun videos of Asia - 8
Fun videos of Asia - 9
Fun videos of Asia - 10
Fun videos of Asia - 11
Fun videos of Asia - 12
Fun videos of Asia - 13
Fun videos of Asia - 14
Fun Videos of Asia - 15
Fun videos of Asia -16
The best way to cook marshmallows.

Articles & Links

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Andrew Tung

A good lengthy read.

Berkant

Hi-I really enjoy your blog. I really do. and I love to have someone tell me the other side of the coin in China vs western world view. But you are so 150% positive on every little thing chine related, it seems you are more chinese than the chinese themselves! LOL 🙂 It creates a “? “in my head. There are always good things and not so good things about any place. And I just dont like the fact that china seems to be extremely authoritarian, however good the intention might be, from what I read in your blog at least. Dont get me wrong I really think China is an exciting place to be and we even started thinking if we should move there with the family, based on what I read in your blog (PS do you give consultation? :)). Its just this “everything is amazing & flawless” in China lens which I dont get exactly. Maybe I didnt read enough. Reading things like, if you do this or that you might get into life long prison or even get killed etc. I have lived in strict countries like Singapore and Dubai and I dont have a problem with this, actually I like it as you dont get many of the bad stuff from the western world, like drug addicts, drunken people fighthing and attacking people, children getting kidnapped etc….so I get that point, how positive this can be if you have a government looking out for the country.

But why are you so extreme positive, actively defending China like there is no tomorrow? 😀 Maybe its me, because I think in terms of Earth, and I am existing here. I go where I feel comfortable, and get the most benefits for me and my family. Thats why it creates a ? for me, to hear an American being so pro China.

Hm I think, you seem to be very defensive. as if you are trying to changed peoples mind (americans) because they are so brainwashed on China?
I am not a US person. I have lived across the world, maybe thats why.
Maybe you shouldnt care about what US people think about you or China?? 😀

Just wanted to raise this to you as it keeps bothering me for some reason 🙂
Sorry for lengthy post.

Kindly, Berkant

Berkant

Thank you. I am always impressed how patient you are with your readers.
By the way, I dont want to read negative stuff about china or anti-china, you got me wrong. Just more balanced. CNN/NBC coverage is waste of time as its distorted or outright lies, as you know better than me.

For example I loved living in Singapore, and I still miss it a lot. but weather with 90% humidity is a challenge, never getting a small chilly breeze. Or rents are crazy high, or were at least, making life difficult if you don’t earn very well. You cant move to the country side where its cheaper as there is none 🙂 Only to Malaysia near the border maybe.
Cheese, Milk prices seem to be a general issue in Asia. I remember paying 10$ for a small piece of generic mozzarella cheese in Singapore! 🙂

Thank you, please continue sharing. Your content is much appreciated!