中国のレッスン2: 共産主義者は事を、余りに終らせる
1.3および5,000
Ernie Tadla著
米国の人口。 300,000,000はある。
中国の人口は1.3十億才である。
ちょっとの間停止し、米国のそれぞれの仕事そして責任を考慮しなさい。 ジョージW.大統領。 ブッシュおよび中国の大統領Hu Jintao。 支配の類似する数は驚くほどである。
300,000,000と比較される中国のリーダーが、はい、制御する世界の歴史の固まり経済を育てっている間いかに支配するか批判して速いほとんどの欧米人で1.3十億人の支配の重荷は最も熱く、最も大きいか失われる。
人々は頻繁に中国の堕落について私に尋ねる。
私は質問と答える、「アメリカの堕落を有するか。
中国に米国すべてがある。 多くでだけ。
数学をする。 次に300百万人の私達の民主的な、政治体制の堕落の比率および1.3十億人が付いている中国の比率。 中国に人々、そう論理的にかける4.3ができる4.3倍を期待その堕落ある。
何人かの中国の友人は民主主義が選ばれた政治家は彼の要素および国の最上の利益のために直接働くことを防ぐadversarialシステムであることを指摘した。 政治家が民主的に選ばれるとき、それは彼らの優先順位の落下こうすればことにようである:
1. 仕事を保ち、得るために再選した。
2. 野党が間違った、無能で、安っぽく、そして信用できない100%常にと証明するため。
3. 力でそれを保つために党を融資する議案通過運動者および特殊利益団体を満足させるため。
4. 最後に、そして、彼らは国のためによいかもしれないものが考慮する
It is exciting to watch how the U.S. is approaching the rising profile of China. Traditionally, the bi partisan split is left wing vs. right wing. The left wing, democratic, liberal, right brain spectrum would be more supportive to China. The right wing, Republican, conservative, left brain would be hesitant, yea, resistant accommodating the Red Threat. That is exactly how it is currently being played out. This might, however, be changing.
Enter a new player on the Republican team. Henry Paulson, as U.S. Treasury Secretary and the former chairman of Goldman Sachs, has excellent guanxi with the highest levels of the Chinese government. He made over 70 trips to China as CEO of Goldman Sachs, has paid his dues and earned their trust and respect. When Congress was about to introduce a 27 per cent import tariff on Chinese imports, that vote was delayed. Mr. Paulson has worked hard convincing his Republican buddies on how to do good business with the Chinese. In China, under Confucian influence of respect for hierarchy, consensus, face, and guanxi, a benevolent dictatorship seems to be working. They do have major problems, as every government does:
≺ a restless, impoverished farming population
≺ pollution
≺ a banking and legal system that needs fixing
≺ a full throttle economy that needs cooling off and controlling
China does have its skeletons:
≺ Tibet
≺ Tiananmen Square
≺ Falun Gong
≺ the Cultural Revolution
≺ human rights practices
Of course, they also have personality differences, varying levels of personal ambitions and the polarity of progressive vs. conservative pressures, but not the open divisiveness of partisanship. Even though it is a one-party state, the government is sensitive to the internal murmurings and rumblings of the people, and there are many. They don’t need another grass roots revolution, which is why they came down so hard on Falun Gong cult. The leadership is also sensitive to how the rest of the world sees China. Our markets and resources are important to them and it wants to showcase the New China at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai, WTO, etc.
China is rapidly becoming a world superpower. They’re doing it peacefully by building relationships: forging, trusting, win-win, long-term, mutual benefit relationships with other nations.
The richness of their history, traditions, and values is a wonderful strengthening asset for them and helps them handle the amazing growth they’re experiencing. They enjoy a quiet confidence that a people who have been around a long time and experienced everything ― ups, downs, power, occupation by foreign powers, revolution. The pressures of sudden, dramatic change are also affecting every part of their culture: generational, governmental, family, business, educational, etc.
When your culture, your history and background are 5,000 years old you have a completely different perception of yourself, your family, your country, of time, of the rest of the world, than if you lived in a country that is 230 years old.
When I arrived in Shanghai, it seemed as if the whole city was under construction. It already had a massive freeway system that matched or surpassed the one in Los Angeles, and a skyline of space age, futuristic, skyscrapers like something from a Star Wars movie. These were preparing for Oct. 1, 1999, the New China’s 50th anniversary.
In my view, there was no way they would all be completed by Oct. 1.
But they were!
There are many reasons for China’s stupendous economic growth. Certainly one of them is that they are a benevolent dictatorship.
When the government decides it wants to do something, it forges ahead, without the complexities of democracy. It doesn’t have to worry about:
≺ the loyal opposition
≺ special interest groups
≺ lobbyists
≺ activists
≺ advocates
≺ protesters
≺ financial contributors
≺ unions
≺ layers of paper and policy.
They just do it!
The Three Gorges Dam Project
The dam, seventeen years in the making, is one of the technological marvels of the world. Two thousand years ago, the Chinese built The Great Wall. The Three Gorges Dam is the modern equivalent of that achievement.
≺ It’s the world’s largest water conservation and flood-control project
≺ It’s the world’s largest hydro-power plant
≺ It allows ocean-going ships to penetrate the heartland of China, opening up its vast resources and markets. Imagine ocean-going ships being able to sail into Chicago or Atlanta.
≺ 2.5 million people are being resettled
≺ 1,599 industrial enterprises, including power, telecommunications, harbors, plants, roads are being relocated
≺ 250,000 workers have been employed on the project
The 2.5 million people being resettled, who were not living in the finest digs, will get a cash settlement, plus two options.
New cities are being built above the new water line and new, free homes will be given to those who stay. Those who don’t want to stay can resettle in the larger cities such as Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou. The government will supply cash, transportation and new homes there. Older people are choosing to stay in the new cities and towns while younger people are opting for a new beginning in the larger cities.
Next week: Lesson Three of: Eight Lessons I Learned From the Communists
CONFUCIUS SAYS…..
China: godless, but not heathen!
Ernie Tadla, www.odysseychina.net




































September 30th, 2007 at 4:32 pm
Excellently argued! I am also sick of people talking about China as if they know anything about it. So many people just cry “violation of human rights” without a whittle of understanding of what is really going on and how difficult it is to mobilize a 1.3 billion population.
September 30th, 2007 at 5:41 pm
A very well articulated presentation of China’s current political and economic path indeed!