posted on Jun, 5 2003 @ 09:30 PM
Very good article outlining the emerging China that will dominate this century...
... recommended reading...
www.kuro5hin.org...
.... actually just as informative are the rebuttals underneath it
Both are great reading and both give differing and interesting viewpoints
It's China's "New Economy": producing, consuming, and trading in increasingly-free markets the wealth created by a billion individuals. Over the
last two decades China has pursued the globalization we Westerners find controversial and profited enormously for it. What's more, the supposed
disadvantages of globalization have never manifested themselves in China. Its native culture is thriving, foreign investors continue to pour capital
into the country, and even in the midst of the "Asian Flu" China is expanding its foreign trade partnerships. GDP per capita has risen almost 50% in
the last two decades, and as the central government continues to shed local control crime has been decreasing while social diversity increases.
Is this the new land of the free and home of the brave? Not exactly. But China's willingness to embrace cultural and economic prosperity as a social
Good -- rather than as a threat to political power -- is a refreshing change of pace. But what could make this clearer than juxtaposition with
today's United States, a nation doubly at war and itching for more? A nation ruled by a cabal of political fearmongers who are spending more and more
of the country's shrinking wealth for their own political ends every year?
This juxtaposition is instructive to those who understand what truly makes for national greatness. At the moment, the United States appears more
powerful than ever, but this merely confirms its decline: as the US drifts toward mediocrity and irrelevance in economic and cultural markets, it
casts about wildly for symbols of prestige and dominance -- and finds them in expensive, pointless conflicts, hastening its collapse. Capital flight
away from the US, on top of growing alarm over the US dollar's weakness and Washington's steeply-climbing debt, makes for a national State balanced
perilously on the edge of economic ruin, while increasing entanglement abroad ensures that the resource drain will be protracted and bitter. Every
move the US makes seems to mire it deeper in the muck of its ongoing problems, and Washington seems powerless to force itself, let alone the rest of
the world, to conform to responsible policies of governance.
[Edited on 6-6-2003 by Netchicken]
[Edited on 6-6-2003 by Netchicken]