sorry typo, maksudnya bung Djie

---In [email protected], <jonathangoeij@...> wrote :

 
 punya link-nya bung Lin?

---In [email protected], <djiekh@...> wrote :

 Just received. 
 

 The United States "New York Times" shocked the country, causing a sensation in 
the White House!
 

        Thomas Friedman, a famous columnist of the New York Times, wrote an 
article titled *"The Seven Years of China and the United States".* It was 
published in The New York Times and shocked the White House !
   
      He wrote: "When I sat in the seat of a Chinese stadium and enjoyed the 
magical performances of thousands of Chinese dancers, drummers, singers, and 
acrobats on stilts, I could not but recall the past seven years. Different 
experiences in the United States and China: 
 

 China has been busy with various infrastructure projects, and we are busy 
dealing with al-Qaeda (terrorists); they have been building better stadiums, 
subways, airports, roads and parks, and we have been working on the 
construction of better metal detectors, Hummer military vehicles and drones...
  
       Differences have begun to show. You can compare the dirty old LaGuardia 
Airport in New York and the beautifully shaped international airport in 
Shanghai. When you drive to Manhattan, you will find out how dilapidated the 
infrastructure is along the way. Experience Shanghai's maglev train at speeds 
of up to 220 miles per hour. It uses electromagnetic propulsion instead of 
ordinary steel wheels and tracks. You have already arrived in Shanghai. Then 
ask yourself: Who is living in a third world country?
        
       I think: As a modern country, China has accepted the main concepts of 
modern national sovereignty and human rights. However, the various qualities of 
Chinese civilization make it unique. One of the characteristics of China's 
development model is that the scale effect of learning + innovation + huge 
population affects China and the world. Many foreign companies investing in 
China have a slogan. If they can achieve the first in China, they will be able 
to achieve the world's best.
 

 With the rise of China, this trend is beginning to expand into more and more 
areas such as tourism, aviation, film and television, sports, education, new 
energy, modernization models, and high-speed rail.
 

       Some of us are more envious of the lives of small countries and small 
people, in fact, the difficulties of small and small countries. Small countries 
can't afford storms, while big countries face waves and have much more room for 
manoeuvre.
 

        Chile is a comparatively more-developed developing country. However, in 
a major earthquake in 2010, GDP fell a large chunk, and the entire economy 
could not breathe for two years. Even if China encounters such a large-scale 
natural disaster as the Wenchuan earthquake, the entire country’s economy 
remains unaffected.
  
       For most countries, industrial upgrading often means that the industry 
migrates to foreign countries, and China can carry out large-scale industrial 
gradient transfer within itself, which extends the life cycle of Chinese 
manufacturing.
    
     Culture - The collision of Chinese and Western cultures over the past 
thirty years has not caused most Chinese people to lose their cultural 
confidence. 
 

 The Chinese people today embrace Confucius's heat, Lao Tzu's heat, reciting 
hot, calligraphy and painting fever, tea ceremony heat, old house heat, 
cultural relics, Chinese medicine fever, and heat of health, all reflect the 
revival of Chinese traditional culture.
    
      The food culture, health culture, and leisure culture derived from 
Chinese culture are also incomparable to other cultures. Street restaurants in 
any part of China can make 30 to 40 dishes. In the vast majority of American 
restaurants, there are only hamburgers and potato chips. There are three or 
four dishes that are good. European restaurants have more dishes but rarely 
more than seven or eight varieties.
  
       Some of us are always worried that Chinese people lack religious 
feelings. In fact, anyone who is a little familiar with the history of the 
world knows that religious conflicts in human history have led to countless 
wars. The conflict between various Christian denominations and between 
Christianity and Islam has had a history of thousands of years, resulting in 
human tragedies in which countless lives were brutally murdered. Therefore, our 
people do not have to believe in religion.
  
       Economics--China's traditional economics, strictly speaking, is not 
"market economics" but "humanistic economics." 
 

 In the long history of China, if a government fails to develop its economy and 
improve people's livelihood, it cannot handle disasters and disasters. It will 
lose support from the people and lose its "destiny" and will eventually be 
overthrown by the people.
 

        Today's political party in China is a continuation of the historically 
unified Confucian ruling group tradition, rather than a Western party that 
competes on behalf of different interest groups. 
 

 Many people in the West only agree with the legitimacy of the regime resulting 
from multi-party competition. This is a very shallow political concept.
  
       I once met an American scholar who questioned the legitimacy of the 
Chinese regime. I asked him why he did not first question the legitimacy of his 
own country: You took the land of others and passed colonial, immigration, 
extermination of Indians, and formed the United States today. . I asked him to 
explain to me where the legitimacy and legitimacy of such a country lies. In 
the end, he can only tell me that this is history.
 

        Can we doubt the source of the legitimacy of Western regimes by using 
the concept of “selecting and selecting talents” in China?
 

  Xiao (Small) "Junior"  Bush’s rule brought an economic downturn to the United 
States in eight years and brought disaster to Iraq. Bringing financial tsunami 
is an example.
  
       The most important feature of China’s historical legitimacy is the 
“political tradition of selecting the able and capable people and governing the 
country with the support of the people”.
  
       In the political culture of China, the concept of "one game at a time", 
"hardship on one side, support from all sides", and other cultures cannot be 
produced. I once discussed the Chinese model with Indian scholars. They said 
that on the face of it, China is centralized, but every reform in China 
actually has strong local characteristics. They compete and complement each 
other. Therefore, the Chinese system is better than India’s. The system is more 
dynamic.
  
       They have studied the West and have established a powerful modern 
government system. At the same time, they have their own unique political and 
cultural resources. The combination of the two makes it easier for us to 
overcome the populism, short-sightedness, and legalism that plagued Western 
democracy today. And other issues.
  
       At the political level, many people in the West also take it for granted 
that China will accept the political model of confrontation with the West as 
the Chinese middle class grows. However, they also discovered today that the 
Chinese middle class today seems to value China’s political stability more than 
any other class. They understand that the “democratization” of the West has 
brought chaos and turmoil to many countries. 
 

 Understanding their hard-earned wealth accumulation has actually benefited 
from more than 30 years of political stability in China.
 

        Frankly speaking, what China has demonstrated today is definitely not 
an oversimplified or even simple concept of "advanced" and "backwardness," 
"democracy," "autocracy," "high human rights," and "low human rights." 
 

        This is the article written by Thomas Friedman, an American columnist, 
*Seven Years of China and the United States."* 






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