Monday 28th of April 2025

the wisdom of china......

In 2016, US Vice-President J.D. Vance published a best-selling memoir titled Hillbilly Elegy. Curiously, he explained on the Fox News network recently that China’s pivotal influence on American consumption was due to the US borrowing “money from Chinese peasants to buy the things those Chinese peasants manufacture” (YouTube link here). Let’s consider the sort of individuals in question.

 

Richard Cullen

A hillbilly White House and the wisdom of peasants

 

European understanding

The distinguished Italian philosopher, medievalist, novelist and commentator, Umberto Eco, was also a prolific, widely translated, political and social observer. Eco’s greatest virtue, according to the Times Literary Supplement, “might be said to lie in his ability to clarify the exact nature of our present perplexities” adding that he was, “lucid, logical and always firmly on the side of civilisation".

Vance’s calculated resort to denigrating, peasant imagery brings to mind a reflective essay written by Eco in 1977, which examined the furore that surrounded the release of Michelangelo Antonioni’s then new documentary film, Chung Kuo (China). Eco acutely observed how, as that debate intensified, “willing [Italian] ministers, prefects, police superintendents and old school diplomats [were enlisted] for whom it is important for the Chinese to remain yellow, treacherous, inscrutable and pig-tailed".

 

The peasant and the hillbilly

Here are two widely-used, resonating dictionary definitions: a peasant is, a “poor smallholder or agricultural labourer of low social status", while a hillbilly is an “unsophisticated country person".

Vance, in his memoir, which has had positive reviews, endorsed the supportive aspects of his hillbilly pedigree while he was deeply critical of what he saw as its capacity to foster social disintegration. His Fox News, peasant reference was, however, far more binary: negatively aimed, without any upside qualifications.

 

The Washington hillbillies

So, if China’s global success can largely be explained as a case of tricky peasants lending funds to others (especially in the US) to buy their wares, it is surely now reasonable to submit, based on recent events, that Hillbillies appear to have taken over the White House.

Consider some of the latest evidence advanced by mainstream Western media outlets:

  • The Economist, 12 April: “The age of chaos. Trump’s incoherent trade policy will do lasting damage.  …. Such is the short-sightedness of Mr Trump’s reckless agenda. In a mere 10 days the president has ended the old certainties that underpinned the world economy, replacing them with extraordinary levels of volatility and confusion  (see [paywalled] link here).
  • The Telegraph, 11 April: “Trump’s chaos risks exposing the world to a $1 trillion parasite. … To believe that the worst of the Trump tariff shock is now over is to believe in the miraculous. But I wouldn’t be so foolish as to predict that there is inevitably worse to come. With Trump, it is impossible to know“. ( See this link.)
  • MSNBC, 11 April: “Trump’s tariff tantrum showed why he is wrong about global trade. … After Trump imposed a 10% worldwide baseline tariff and a whopping 145% cumulative tariff on imports from China, the stock market sank, other countries retaliated, our trade partners began looking for leadership elsewhere and Trump was forced to back down, while claiming this was the plan all along.” ( Link here.)
  • The Hill, 9 April: “The world is shocked by Trump’s tariff tantrums – it shouldn’t be. … Trump promised to govern by vengeance. …. What we are witnessing is the end result of a presidency where values are fluid and transactional, expertise is irrelevant and our national credibility is an afterthought.” (See this link.)

Selecting a government

Next, it is useful to reflect on how governments are chosen.

The Communist Party of China has ruled the PRC since 1949. China plainly does not have a Western democratic system. But it does have a merit- and performance-based governing tradition, which has its roots in Confucian statecraft thinking.

Competitive exams to recruit scholar-officials to run the Song Dynasty empire date back more than 1000 years. And they were founded on principles established more than 2000 years ago during the Han Dynasty ( link). Moreover, according to New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, by the 4th century BC, China was divided into four ranked (in this order) classes:

The scholar elite;

The landowners and farmers;

The craftsman and artisans; and

The merchants (or businessmen) and tradesmen ( link).

Note how “warriors” do not appear on the list above (as they certainly would on any such list from Ancient Greece or the Roman Empire).

Polish scholars, writing in 2008, explained that:

“The Western tradition glorified war and conquest and warriors constituted their ruling elite, whereas the Confucian tradition that shaped Chinese civilisation detested violence and raised scholar-officials to the rank of the ruling elite” (link).

China’s key leaders at all levels are drawn from the CPC, which has more than 100 million adult members. This is equivalent to about 40% of the adult US population. Rising through the ranks is fraught with political challenges, but the process remains fundamentally shaped by the traditions outlined above and success still greatly depends on education and intense relevant experience.

Washington also has certain filtering traditions, but these are measurably more flexible than those which apply in Beijing. This flexibility can be positive – but it has also left the door open to fast-tracking the appointment of Elon Musk, a massive political donor, to the highest governance level in America (link), along with a number of other questionable appointments, including multiple, fervent war hawks and a primary architect of the tariff tsunami who heavily referenced a confected version of himself in his scholarly writing (link).

 

Consider your verdict

Does all this thoroughly confirm that hillbillies have now occupied the White House? Weigh the evidence and decide for yourself. But the record already shows that adolescent wild-words, voodoo economics ( link), war-mongering bravado and reckless gatekeeping are all especially permissible in Washington today. This has consequences.

 

Self education

It also seems plain that the governing elite in Beijing understands far more about the US than their equivalents in Washington understand about China – and how far it has advanced in so many respects. To confirm that this is so, the White House could do worse than watch some of the widely-viewed, recent youthful presentations from China by Darren Watkins, an American online personality and opinion leader, also known as, “IShowSpeed.”

One clip from a Fox program in Los Angeles confirms that China already has not one but two Donald Trumps (link). These are remarkable, word-perfect, bilingual comedians, if truth be told, each claiming the other is a Donald Trump pretender. Fortunately, neither has any access to any levers of power.

 

https://fridayeveryday.com/category/news/china-news/

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

SEE ALSO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErHkv1G3RVE

resume shipping...

 

This ‘resumption of shipments’ notice is something Washington should reflect on carefully: Global Times editorial
By Global Times

 

 

Recently, a "resumption of shipments" notice from major US retailers has attracted widespread attention. According to a report by Hong Kong's Ming Pao on April 26, several Chinese exporters revealed at the ongoing Canton Fair that major US retailers - including Walmart, Target and Home Depot - have notified them to "resume shipping goods" that had been temporarily halted due to the high tariffs imposed by the US on Chinese imports, with the tariff costs to be "paid by the American buyers." 
Walmart and other companies have not yet confirmed this information. However, earlier reports indicated that the CEOs of these three major US retail giants met with US President Donald Trump at the White House on April 21 local time to discuss the impact of tariff policies on their "import-heavy" businesses. Recently, Walmart China also announced the launch of a "green channel" to support eligible foreign trade enterprises. Both Chinese and US companies are actively working to maintain the normal operation of supply chains, which once again underscores that tariff barriers cannot override the rigid demand underpinning China-US economic and trade relations.

The specific scope and details of the retailers' notice remain unclear. Last month, Walmart reportedly demanded price cuts from its Chinese suppliers under tariff pressure, prompting China's Ministry of Commerce to summon Walmart for talk. The latest twist in this saga is significant, though not surprising. Multinational companies like Walmart owe their success to economic globalization, and reckless tariff policies pose a severe test to their product pricing and supply chain systems.
At the current tariff rate, a US-based company would have to pay at least $145 in tariff fees to Customs and Border Protection to import an item valued at $100 from China. This cost would wipe out any potential profit, forcing companies either to sell at a loss or to raise prices to a level unaffordable for consumers. US politicians may shout slogans about "decoupling," but the daily needs of ordinary Americans won't wait for political rhetoric to materialize.

According to exporters cited by Ming Pao, only some orders are currently resuming, while others have been canceled. Faced with high tariffs, US retailers like Walmart have only two options: cancel orders for Chinese products or pass the tariff costs onto US consumers. Walmart and others have lobbied the White House and persisted in working with Chinese suppliers - willing even to absorb the tariff costs themselves - because they simply cannot find adequate substitutes for goods "made in China" in the short term. High-quality, cost-effective Chinese products are critical to their survival, operations and profit margins. In short, Washington's tariff stick is hitting the US public hard. And this turmoil is only just beginning.

As the world's two largest economies, China and the US have reaped tremendous economic benefits from bilateral trade. The US imports a lot of consumer goods, intermediate goods and capital goods from China, supporting its manufacturing supply chains, expanding consumer choices, lowering living costs, and boosting the real purchasing power of American people, especially low- and middle-income groups. Even if imports are restricted, domestic demand for Chinese-made products in the US will not simply vanish.

According to a report released by the US-China Business Council in April, 2024, China is a key market for US exports of goods and services. In 2022, China was the largest export market for three US states, in the top three for 32 US states, and in the top five for 43 US states. US exports to China also created 931,000 American jobs in 2022. China-US trade relations are shaped by natural endowments and market demand - basic economic realities. The so-called reciprocal tariffs are nothing more than an expensive political performance that reality will eventually correct.

Facts have proven that beggar-thy-neighbor and de-globalization practices are not only harmful but also unsustainable. It is impossible for countries to retreat into self-sufficiency behind closed doors, and the idea of "excluding China" from global industrial chains is nothing but a fantasy. 

Economic globalization is driven by the objective requirements of productivity growth and the inevitable result of technological advancement; it is the only path forward for human society and an irreversible trend of our times. Walmart's "resumption of shipments" notice is something Washington should reflect on carefully. It is hoped that the US side will learn a lesson from this incident, promptly correct its misguided tariff policies, and return to the right path of engaging in dialogue with China based on equality, mutual respect, and reciprocity.

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202504/1333007.shtml

 

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.