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[–]ChairmanLmaoSupreme Dear Leader Chairman Lmao Zedong 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

China loves the J's. There are literally books in China with names that hilariously translate to things like 'How to make money like a Jew'. What they've done is taken the 'stereotypes' about J's (money-grubbing, etc.) but bizarrely interpreted them in a positive light. This is probably also why the only well-known non-Chinese CCP members were J's, like Rittenburg and Epstein. That being said, it's hard to see Xi as working towards some sort of long-term plan with them. However, he's almost certainly still a believer in Marxism, or at the very least feigning a more dogmatic approach in order to sideline more 'pragmatic' opponents. The cult of Mao, for example, has made a comeback, despite his comparative repudiation by Deng and the other pre-Xi leaders. Admittedly, more positive things like nationalism, Buddhism and Confucianism have also made comebacks, but when such groups emerge that become powerful enough to threaten the CCP like the Falun Gong or Eastern Lightning (there was also a neo-Maoist party that received similar treatment), they are dealt with in horrific ways.

China is just a few decades behind the West in terms of the pozz. On some issues like feminism they're about the same or perhaps slightly worse, though they're less pozzed on alphabetism and genderfluidity. However, years ago I heard that some in the CCP were beginning to problematize feminism, but I heard nothing more about whether they actually made moves to reverse it. Racial discrimination laws are also building up in China because the CCP wants to force diversity on the masses around as much as the Left-liberal 'elites' in the West are. Most of the Chinese I met, yes, those fresh off the boat in the West, fit the 'smartphone zombie' stereotype to a tee. Very self-absorbed, though also very cliquish and reluctant to work with racial outsiders when required to work with other people. So, atomization is indeed impacting them, but perhaps not in ways that lead to racial egalitarianism, out-group preference, ethnomasochism and similar nonsense, too.

Chinese rightists (who are generally called 'leftists' because of China's warped political spectrum where liberalism is 'right' and nationalism, Confucianism and other more conservative ideologies are 'left') hate the CCP with a passion. They've pretty much trashed all of China's history in the name of 'progress'. They've commodified much of what's left of it, for example, only rebuilding parts of the Great Wall where tourists were likely to visit and leaving the rest to rot. In spite of all this, Xi farcically labelled the CCP the greatest defenders of China's traditions or something similarly outrageous.

My own view is that China will rapidly occupy/install puppet governments in most of Asia after some point arrives in which it is widely recognized that China has become the conclusive world power while America is simply seen by the world as another Brazil and is thus harmless again. The world will make a bit of noise but most states will be indifferent. Many states are already practically their allies/puppets, although their influence sometimes declines when pro-liberal/Western factions retake a few areas like Sri Lanka and the Maldives. There are already majority Chinese cities in Cambodia, for example. If they occupy countries like Russia/Australia/NZ, I suspect they will wipe out their non-Asian inhabitants and replace them outright rather than lord over such 'diverse' populations, but they will have to dominate Asia before they can expand towards Europe and the Americas. The rest of Asia will probably be used to solve the problem of single Chinese men, especially when much of Asia instead has excess women. Whether they can pull this off before the rampant feminism, massive gender imbalance, low birth rates, general 'softness' of the youth, etc. begins taking a serious toll and affects China's national stability, remains anyone's guess. I think Xi wants to ensure that Hong Kong and possibly Taiwan are conquered before his time is up so that he will go down in history as a 'reunifier' of China, and they are indeed where China will make its first moves.

[–]DisastrousDepth14Race comes first[S] 0 insightful - 1 fun0 insightful - 0 fun1 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Interesting I must say.