sábado, 20 de fevereiro de 2010
The Economist asks 'What are they afraid of?' I do not seek to answer but offer a short comment
On reading 'watchingchina' and strongly recommending to anyone seeking broader insight from someone who has experienced daily life in Shanghai I will attempt a brief comment of my own.
A country as wide and populous as China should be approached responsibly to evidence multiple variables not least the social, economic and cultural background.
It simply cannot be easy to rule a country that big on all counts coming from a recent past of utter poverty and despair for the vast majority.
Yet Chinese leadership has succeeded pulling the country together and forwards to a present and future that never looked as promising to hundreds of million.
While it may be simple for some of us in the West to make general pronouncements on formal freedoms and Democracy as we know it, the Chinese have had a different set of social/historical circumstances explaining their set-up besides every other distinguishing factor.
I can imagine undercurrents of many sorts pulling in diverging directions which would inevitably undermine the country's collective goals were it not for the existence of a strong uniting force.
The West should stand up for that which it believes in hoping to see change taking place on the regime's more obscure ways.
It cannot and must not, though, expect Chinese authorities to be pushed around and give in to what the West believes is best for the world, China included.
A country as wide and populous as China should be approached responsibly to evidence multiple variables not least the social, economic and cultural background.
It simply cannot be easy to rule a country that big on all counts coming from a recent past of utter poverty and despair for the vast majority.
Yet Chinese leadership has succeeded pulling the country together and forwards to a present and future that never looked as promising to hundreds of million.
While it may be simple for some of us in the West to make general pronouncements on formal freedoms and Democracy as we know it, the Chinese have had a different set of social/historical circumstances explaining their set-up besides every other distinguishing factor.
I can imagine undercurrents of many sorts pulling in diverging directions which would inevitably undermine the country's collective goals were it not for the existence of a strong uniting force.
The West should stand up for that which it believes in hoping to see change taking place on the regime's more obscure ways.
It cannot and must not, though, expect Chinese authorities to be pushed around and give in to what the West believes is best for the world, China included.
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