• China lacks will and way to lead the world

    From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 11 18:46:46 2024
    "Many influential individuals and policymakers in Washington agree as a
    matter of fact that the one of the China Dream’s goals is to displace
    the US-led international order and thus Washington’s global leadership
    and power.

    As exemplified by the lack of concern for foreign affairs in Xi’s recent remarks, they’re wrong. Beijing is unwilling and—more importantly—unable to replace America on the global stage. US policy must adapt to this
    reality to put American interests first.

    Xi’s 2017 speech to the 19th National Party Congress is often cited as evidence of Beijing’s intent to overturn America’s role in the world. In that speech, Xi envisions China as “a global leader” having “mov[ed] closer to the center stage.”

    If Washington is to take Xi at his word, as some are wont to suggest,
    then China merely seeks a greater say in the global order commensurate
    with its rise in power – not world domination.
    ..
    Washington would be prudent to understand Beijing does not seek to and
    cannot supplant America’s global superpower role. Instead of wasting resources on preventing something China doesn’t want, policymakers
    should put tangible American interests first.

    This means maintaining dominance of the Western Hemisphere, bolstering
    economic security, deterring threats to the homeland and adhering to Constitutional principles. Only then can US global power and security be maximized."

    https://asiatimes.com/2024/10/china-lacks-will-and-way-to-lead-the-world/

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  • From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Sat Oct 12 13:27:56 2024
    Questions:

    What is the relation between will and way? Is will necessary and
    waysufficent by itself? Either one is necessary but insufficient? Will
    and way are always interacting. Positively related, negatively related,
    or not related?

    What does will mean in this context? Reflecting the collective will of
    the Chinese people or the just will the Chinese leaders disregarding the people's thinking?

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  • From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 13 19:03:24 2024
    My take.

    Whether China or any nation can or will lead the world is not a matter
    of any leader or politicians' willing. Rather it reflects the strength
    of a nation, mainly its manufacturing output as a percentage of global
    output.

    A country is what it can collectively make, for itself and for the
    world.

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  • From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Sat Oct 19 17:44:42 2024
    May the question is less related to China's will and way but whether the
    US and its hardcore allies could bulk up manufacturing. Today's US is
    nowhere near yesterday's US in this aspect.

    "China today has a nearly one-third share of global manufacturing
    output—not as much as the United States at the height of its postwar
    power, but a massive amount nonetheless. It was America’s manufacturing dominance that enabled the spread of our commerce and power across the
    globe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. China’s vast industrial
    base gives it the same opportunity.

    China has nearly half of global shipbuilding capacity. It is using this capacity to build drone aircraft carriers, large LNG tankers, and roll-on/roll-off ships for auto exports. China has 232 times more
    shipbuilding capacity than the United States, whose industry has
    consolidated to the point where we have to choose between building
    submarines for our allies or for ourselves. We don’t have the luxury of
    ice cream ships anymore.

    It’s not just ships. Two companies in Shenzhen make virtually all of the world’s commercial drones, while the United States barely has a
    commercial drone industry. China surpassed the United States in share of
    global semiconductor production within the last few years, and appears
    poised to clean up in so-called legacy chips that power commercial
    electronics, weapons, and much more. China is also the world’s largest producer and exporter of automobiles, gas-powered and electric. The
    United States still has an impressive auto industry, but the number of
    vehicles assembled here hasn’t changed much since the turn of the
    century. U.S. automakers now face an existential threat as Chinese
    competitors like BYD build transplant factories in Latin America,
    Southeast Asia, and Europe.

    These aren’t random examples. All three technologies—drones, chips, and cars—were invented in the United States (in the case of cars, their mass production was invented here). General Atomics, Intel, and Ford Motor
    Company were pioneers. In the span of a lifetime, the United States went
    from dominating production of all three to facing the fight of our life
    in these industries. Why?

    America’s crisis of production is ultimately a crisis of productivity.
    Total factor productivity has stagnated during the past half century,
    diverging from trend in the 1970s. Manufacturing productivity did better
    for longer thanks to a booming electronics sector, but since the Great Recession, it too has stagnated. This stagnation means American
    factories are missing out on an era of tremendous automation and growth.
    The “alien dreadnoughts” are being built. But they are being built on
    the other side of the world."

    https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2024/08/rebooting-the-american-industrial-base-software-and-the-future-of-manufacturing/

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