Chung Kuo

Guest Post by Doug Casey

This article is entitled Chung Kuo, which means Middle Kingdom.

The Chinese have long seen themselves as superior to every other race (like almost every race does) and the center of the world. It’s because they were so confident of this that they never ventured out as Europeans did, with a brief exception in the 15th century when a gigantic Chinese fleet, composed of ships vastly superior to those of Europe, ventured as far as Africa. Since dropping the ball on world conquest back then, or at least exporting their culture wholesale, they’ve been in stasis, and on the receiving end of what Europe had to dish out.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)

The Chinese resent the “gweilo,” or “laowai” (loosely translated in Cantonese and Mandarin respectively as “foreign devil”) for appropriating places like Hong Kong, Macau, Shanghai, and numerous other enclaves. They resent episodes like the Opium Wars, which resolved whether they were to be used as a market for narcotics. They never learned to appreciate lots of foreign soldiers running around their countryside, even though Westerners felt it was a birthright.

Rent 55 Days at Peking for the conventional European view of imperialism during the Boxer Rebellion. Better yet, buy or rent The Sand Pebbles, in my opinion one of the best movies out there—and the book is even more entertaining and educational.

The Chinese absolutely resent the U.S. government parading its aircraft carriers off the China coast as if it owned the place. The U.S. government is not showing strength, it’s displaying arrogance and stupidity by antagonizing a sleeping dragon. And the thought of American politicians—which is to say an assortment of insular lawyers, eggheaded wannabe social engineers, and refugees from Arkansas trailer parks—negotiating with people who’ve been through what the Chinese have, is just scary.

The U.S. government may feel like it can call the shots now because it has a dozen aircraft carriers and a couple thousand fighter planes. But it’s making a serious enemy while it’s going to bankrupt America in a counterproductive projection of force to the other side of the planet. And that’s not all. Because the day will go to the people with the most wealth, not the ones that have the most expensive military hardware.

The Future in China

I can give you a dozen credible scenarios describing what might happen in China over the next couple of decades. But the trend that seems certain to continue is the rapid rate of wealth increase there. I don’t credit official figures with any great accuracy, but if we take them as being approximately right, then the U.S. economy is growing at 2%, and China’s at about 7%—but with a base of about four times the population. What this means is that the largest economy on the planet will soon no longer be America’s—but China’s.

It’s already been something of a psychological smack upside the back of the head for Americans to realize that they’re far less powerful than they were in the ’50s and early ’60s, when America was wealthier than the rest of the whole world put together. What will it mean when it’s only a fraction as wealthy as China alone?

Of course, the average American will still be living far more comfortably than the average Chinese; he’ll still have a bigger house, more gadgets, cars, and consumer goods. But he may actually have considerably less investment capital and savings. And there will be vastly more wealthy Chinese, and they’ll have vastly more wealth than wealthy Americans.

There are a number of reasons for this. One is that Chinese culture is ingrained with the Confucian work ethic, which is quite similar to the Protestant work ethic that helped the West get where it now is. The difference is that the West has become a group of flaccid welfare states, morally weakened by its own prosperity, pretty much as Joseph Schumpeter predicted. While I’m philosophically averse to believing that success must necessarily lead to dissipation, that certainly seems to be the historical record. And it also seems pretty clear that a society, a government, a corporation, or an organization of any type is pretty much like a human body in at least one way: As it gets older, it gets weaker and more corrupt, approaching its inevitable death.

Another element of Chinese ascendance is just the sheer number of people that share a common culture and language. Upwardly mobile Chinese all learn English, the world’s language, as well as Mandarin. So they can access everything from the West, but very few people in the West will ever learn Chinese, making it hard to reverse the flow.

Further, just as every other people from a given culture tend to prefer associating and doing business with themselves—Jews, blacks, Arabs, Irish, Italians, you-name-it—the same is true of the Chinese. But they’re an order of magnitude larger than most any other cultural grouping. From a financial point of view, it’s just arithmetic.

Take an American and a Chinese, each with a dollar. Say both are equally smart and hardworking, and each is able to double his dollar every year—2, 4, 8, 16… The only difference is that the American pays 35% in taxes and the Chinese pays nothing. Actually the American is paying close to 50% and the Chinese is paying something, but the difference is about the same. With only that differential, by the time the American has one million dollars, how much does the Chinese have? The answer is that by the time the American has a million dollars in 28 years, the Chinese has 268 million.

Actually the situation is even grimmer. The Chinese will probably work harder. He’s in an environment where, if only because of minimal regulation, he’ll make his capital grow faster. If Herrnstein and Murray are right in their book The Bell Curve, the Chinese guy is smarter (105 v. 100 average IQ for Europeans). And then, when the American dies, the government will take half of his piddling million dollars for estate taxes, so his kids start with no meaningful financial capital. And probably minimal intellectual capital, if the obvious dumbing down of American schools has anything to do with it. Meanwhile, the scions of the Chinese will have an untaxed $268 million, and probably a much better education and stronger work ethic to help them deploy it.

The situation was best summed up by my friend The Great Winfield, the famous commodity speculator, who, when I asked him how he was going to deal with the eventuality, commented “After I kick the bucket, I’m going to come back as a young, good-looking girl. That way, maybe I’ll get a rich Chinese boyfriend, and at least I’ll eat regularly.”

And I’m not overdoing the tax angle, either. The average American has been so brainwashed that he thinks he has a moral obligation to give the government whatever it asks for; he thinks he’s being dishonest and cheating if he puts his own and his family’s welfare above the demands of the State. At the same time, he thinks the State has a moral obligation to provide for his health, education, welfare, and retirement.

The average Chinese, however, recognizes the government as his adversary and feels no moral obligation at all towards it, only to his family. He knows the guy calling himself “the government” is just a successful warlord, and a successful warlord is just a major league criminal. He considers it his duty to deny resources to the State because he knows he can’t feed the beast and his family with the same grain of rice. And he has no concept of the State taking care of him; that’s something his family does.

Where will it all end up? In the short run, more of the world will surely resemble British Columbia, with its majority Oriental population. In the long run, the world portrayed in David Wingrove’s Chung Kuo novels, in which the Chinese dominate the world as thoroughly in the 22nd century as the Europeans did in the 19th, isn’t at all out of the question.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
19 Comments
Abelard Lindsey
Abelard Lindsey
February 24, 2018 12:36 pm

I have not lived in China, but I have lived in Taiwan, and have done business with Chinese people from China, Taiwan, and the Overseas Chinese (Singapore, Malaysia). The Chinese are smart. I think, as a race, they are smarter than anyone else (including the Jews – I think Jewish intelligence is overhyped and is mostly verbal – visual spacial IQ is the basis of innovation and, hense, wealth creation). They also possess a strong work ethic. In some ways it is superior to that of the Japanese and Koreans. The difference is that the Chinese work for themselves, family, and friends. They do not work for “the corporation” the way Japanese and Koreas do. Hence, the Chinese are far, far, more entrepreneurial than the Japanese or Koreans. There are exceptions I know personally (I lived in Japan for 9 years), but generally the Japanese do not have an entrepreneurial bone in their bodies. The Chinese have a rather chaotic and unorganized business and social culture compared to the Japanese and Koreans.

There is one down side to the Chinese. That is their culture of corruption. In my opinion, this is the number hurtle the Chinese as a people culture need to overcome before they can become the most successful and dominant culture on the planet.

I read the Chung Kuo novels a long time ago, before I had much experience with the Chinese. The author, who is English, does get certain aspects of their culture right. However, the flaw is his novels features the Chinese as socially organized as the Japanese. Anyone who has experience living in China and doing business with them can tell you that they are not like that at all.

BTW, its not Chung Kuo. Its Zhong Guo.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Abelard Lindsey
February 24, 2018 1:22 pm

The Chinese are incapable of anything other that copycatting other more intelligent races.

starfcker
starfcker
  Anonymous
February 24, 2018 3:48 pm

Who downvoted that?

wdg
wdg
  Abelard Lindsey
February 25, 2018 10:03 am

I spent fair amount of time in China lecturing at universities, undertaking joint projects and supervising graduate students/visiting scientists. During this time, I traveled from Inner Mongolia to Shanghai through cities and rural communities, and on to Hong Kong. I remember lecturing at Beijing University just before the Tiananmen Square massacre and was impressed by the thirst for democracy among the students much to the shock of their professors. I thought at the time that this may not end well and cautioned them to go slowly until the institutions of democracy were in place. Well, they were not interested in delays and wanted democracy now. I also lectured in Japan and have collaborated with Japanese scientists, some of whom have become friends. As noted by Abelard Lindsey, Japan has a very ordered culture with safe and clean communities whereas the Chinese culture is disordered and the communities were not very clean and quite chaotic as you see today in most Chinatowns in North America. I would agree that Chinese society is more corrupt which I saw by the amount of cheating by Chinese students and even plagiarism on the part of graduate students.

As for future of China, I disagree with Doug Casey. Yes they have the numbers and a slightly higher IQ of 105, but they are not in general an innovative people. Charles Murray in his seminal book “Human Accomplishment: The Pursuit of Excellence in the Arts and Sciences, 800 B.C. to 1950” would argue that the absence of major achievement by the Chinese, at least compared to Europeans, over the past 3000 years may be due to culture. It is true that China (and Japan) has a hierarchical culture that stifles innovation but my sense is that it is more going on than just culture. And keep in mind that the measurement of IQ is a rather crude measure of intelligence that does not take innovation and creativity into account, at least not fully. As an example, IQ has been normalized such that men and women have the same IQ but there are almost no women listed at major contributors in the sciences and arts in Human Accomplishment by Charles Murray. I would argue that the Chinese people are not very innovative, nor are the Japanese or Koreans, and this is probably genetically controlled. The advanced economies they have built are based largely on scientific and technical innovations originating in the West. European man (and it is male) is the innovator whereas Asian man is the replicator and copier of western innovations. China, Japan and Korea were built on western know-how and are not the future. Doug Casey is correct in that the West is in social and economic decline where creativity, innovation and growth has been throttled by the welfare state and all the destructive pathologies related to it including a diminished work ethic, lower morality, more corruption, family and marriage breakdown, drug use, etc. A major factor in the decline of the West, avoided by Doug Casey, is the mass immigration of low-IQ people from the third-world who represent a very large negative liability by consuming wealth and damaging our communities and civilization. As for the future, the western man will either take back control of their nations, close the doors to third-world immigration, gut the welfare state and restore our civilization…or go down the tube as another failed experiment. I am not ready to right off European man, at least not yet, but either way the future is not China or Japan.

James M Dakin
James M Dakin
February 24, 2018 1:08 pm

Am I missing something here, or does it follow that corruption is natural? If you are only loyal to your family, why wouldn’t you screw everyone else? So it isn’t a cultural failing, just human nature.

Penforce
Penforce
February 24, 2018 1:13 pm

Careful Doug, smacking someone upside the back of the head sounds complicated.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
February 24, 2018 1:46 pm

Japanese > Chinese.

PS, The Sand Pebbles movie on youtube.

Mark
Mark
  Zarathustra
February 24, 2018 10:36 pm

I love that movie and its ending…real life…real combat

mark branham
mark branham
February 24, 2018 2:18 pm

Jim Rodgers moved his family(wife,two daughters) to Singapore to make sure his daughters learned Mandarin. China’s one child policy made women scarce; he knows where the future is.

Mark
Mark
  mark branham
February 24, 2018 10:35 pm

MB,

I’m not an international player so I’m significantly restricted compared to Rodgers in many ways…but I’ll stand and fight for my wife and daughter/son-in-law and grandson in our country and we will impact the American culture.

I have followed Rodgers on You Tube over the years, he may be pragmatically right hedging his children’s bets…and merging them and their future into China. I may just be a corny working class (who clawed his way up) throwback…but we will stand here and slug it out…with the hordes.

Just my reaction every time I see/hear/read the China card being touted…

allan smith
allan smith
February 24, 2018 3:04 pm

The oriental population of British Columbia is about 1 million out of a total population of 4.6 million. They are not a majority as Doug Casey often claims.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
February 24, 2018 5:58 pm

I’ve had a few dealings with Chinese over the years. Some are bright, some not. Some of their schools still teach rote memorization as a practice; some manage to break free of this, and become independent, creative thinkers. Not sure how many.
One example was a grad student when I was taking my Master’s. I’ve written comments before on how he just didn’t get it. We had research review meetings every Wednesday, and my department chair would roast him over the coals. “What have you even done here? I see a shotgun-scatter of data, that you have drawn a line through with slope and intercept labeled. But there’s no correlation! Even if the line matched the data, you have not given any kind of theory or proposal that I can find. Does it even mean anything, this graph? How does comparing viscosity against temperature tell you anything? Aren’t you just trying to re-frame the Ideal Gas Law with bad data that does nothing of the sort? When will you quit wasting my time with irrelevant diagrams!” And this guy already had a doctorate, from some university somewhere.
Some have it, some do not; some never get a chance to show what they have. Life in China is not so different, unless you have time, resources and money. At least they still understand that.

yahsure
yahsure
February 24, 2018 9:52 pm

My Chinese experience is with all the junk they sell here. Most of the products sold here are crude and fall apart after a short while. Everything I have bought from Japan is a masterpiece. (cars and motorcycles) Actually having the effect of making American goods better to match the quality of Japanese products. Korean stuff is very good also. The company I work for uses mostly Chinese parts.They are just horrible.it is embarrassing that they sell stuff that looks so bad. China comes across as some kind of third world place from what I have seen and experienced. I prefer my father’s world where everything was made in the USA.

Gloriously Deplorable Paul
Gloriously Deplorable Paul
February 25, 2018 12:44 am

I work on yard cranes in a container terminal in San Pedro. Most (14/22) of our cranes are Chinese built. They are clearly inferior to the Japanese built cranes we have and by a wide margin. I know a consultant who is hired by terminals to travel to Shanghai Port Machinery Company’s manufacturing site to oversee construction to ensure that they build the cranes to spec. ZPMC is known to sell one thing and deliver something less. They get away with whatever they’re allowed.

Martel's Hammer
Martel's Hammer
February 25, 2018 1:21 am

Isn’t the fatal flaw in this argument about Chinese world domination self evident? Europeans and Americans came to dominate the world on the backs of two simple principles: Personal Property Rights and Limited Government. From those two principles all else follows. Sure we are slackers now but a revolution is coming to fix our own countries. China, India with much larger populations lack these two key cultural concepts and thus while smart and sophisticated are unable to generate the type of dynamic risk taking economy that supports world domination. Certainly the rise of China has been aided by those evil “globalists” but Trump is gutting them in much quicker than I could possibly imagine. Russia despite so many brilliant minds also can’t seem to get away from the Imperial central government and collectivism. So no China is going to flame out and demographically get old before they get rich. But a cornered rat is a dangerous rat whether it is the Globalists in DC, China or an actual rat……so it could get sporty.

Thunderdolt
Thunderdolt
February 25, 2018 4:39 am

@yahsure.
Give the chinese time and soon the quality will be fine.
There was a time, not so long ago, when japanese goods fell under the term Jap Crap.
I personally remember a japanese product that was made from a recycled tin can turned inside out with the original product name still visible on the inside. And it broke in no time.
In the same vain buying a korean car pre 2000 meant cheap and nasty, but now a different story – cheap and quality.

subwo
subwo
  Thunderdolt
February 25, 2018 3:05 pm

Just bought some Hankook Korean tires. They emit a nasty smell so strong I thought I had dead animals in my garage. Smells just like the made in China rubber in Harbor Freight.

Abelard Lindsey
Abelard Lindsey
  Thunderdolt
February 26, 2018 11:51 am

Yes. The impediment to product quality improvement in China is their culture of corruption.

Abelard Lindsey
Abelard Lindsey
February 26, 2018 11:50 am

I will say a few more things about the Chinese. For one thing, they are not as smart or as homogeneous as you might think. Walk the streets and ride the subways of Shanghai and Beijing and you will notice that there is quite a bit of ethnic diversity within the so-called “Han” Chinese race. You will also notice a lot of drungers as well. The stereotypically nerdy intelligent Chinese is not nearly as prevalent in Shanghai and Beijing as, say, Taipei. To me, ethnically China is the Asian equivalent to the U.S. in that it is a mix of all kinds of “East Asian” people the same way that the U.S. is a mix of all white people.

As such, I do not think their mean IQ is 105. I think its more comparable to ours, around 100.

The idea that the Chinese are incapable of innovation is utter rubbish. They are more than capable of innovation when they decide to do so. Their innovation and creativity is not limited to advanced technology either. it was a guy from Mainland China who designed the 2005 and beyond Ford Mustang.