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by Bakary
1988 days ago
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Public opinion is swayed elsewhere as well and in plain sight. Most people have barely any knowledge of their own history and usually don't care to find out. Americans have all the information at their fingertips and yet we can all see how that is working out in terms of discourse. My point isn't to defend the CCP apparatus or to engage in whataboutism, but simply to point out that China isn't a blob of unthinking people as they are often portrayed to be. Nor are they basically primed to instantly adopt Western values should some Westerner bravely bust through the censorship wall and "educate" them. That's where the orientalism springs from: an inability to conceive of other cultures as anything other than relative actors to one's own.[0] In my view, it is a widespread and serious flaw in thinking that only helps to weaken the West when dealing with China. [0] For an amusing illustrative example see https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/05/29/how-weste... |
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- the Chinese culture will never be the same as the US, and
- Chinese opinion is not a single blob,
but I think “oriental” countries like Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan show that they could be persuaded (let’s not use “educated” here) to be:
- less aggressive to neighbors, and
- not trying to dominate, to overthrow world order by exporting authoritarianism and censorship.
And regarding swaying opinions, I agree that it happens elsewhere as well (just as Trump was swaying opinions with Twitter and Facebook before he was banned), but I would take a public discourse anytime.