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Feeling the Decline of US Power and the Growing Influence of China - Perspective of an Overseas PhD

Fake meeting.
According to RSS, everyone is talking about SP2012 in any international meeting.

Indeed. The world is amazed at their speed and level of human development. So, at the start of any international meetings, people hail their leadership.

Bitter reality aside, these folks have a weird understanding of any concepts, entirely divorced from reality and living in abstract reality that none of us can have a real sense of.

Hence the attempt to defame a PhD student's intellectual courage, independence and honesty to voice his opinion in an international forum.

Feed these people any imported concepts, and they will buy it, just as they bought into the false concept of free media (thus, Pravda insinuation) as if free media is realistically possible. These people's understanding of freedom as abstract as their 2012 superpower status.

We can hardly understand it. They live right next door but so many light years behind in critical and historical thinking skills.
 
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Do refugees in German speak gooood German?


Fake meeting.
According to RSS, everyone is talking about SP2012 in any international meeting.
I’m not a perfect german speaker. I got problem with articles der die das, with words containing b or p, but when I speak on the phone, most people don’t know they speak to non-german native speaker. In contrast Chinese speakers emphasize too much their chinese ancent when speaking german so even some people know which province of China the Chinese come from.

That is not only the reason why german companies favor Vietnam over Chinese applicants. The other reason is we don’t have Middle Kingdom complex.

You can ask the german guy. He will confirm. Pls also ask him why in major companies as Siemens, Bosch or financial institutions as Deutsche Börse, Commerzbank you see lots of Viets having high paid jobs, while Chinese more in low paid with time limited contracts. Many Chinese are frustrated some return to glorious communist paradise China.
 
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I’m not a perfect german speaker. I got problem with articles der die das, with words containing b or p, but when I speak on the phone, most people don’t know they speak to non-german native speaker. In contrast Chinese speakers emphasize too much their chinese ancent when speaking german so even some people know which province of China the Chinese come from.

That is not only the reason why german companies favor Vietnam over Chinese applicants. The other reason is we don’t have Middle Kingdom complex.

You can ask the german guy. He will confirm. Pls also ask him why in major companies as Siemens, Bosch or financial institutions as Deutsche Börse, Commerzbank you see lots of Viets having high paid jobs, while Chinese more in low paid with time limited contracts. Many Chinese are frustrated some return to glorious communist paradise China.

Cool story, dude! I’m rather unaware of Siemens or Commerzbank operating nail salons or pho shops in Germany. In fact, there is more chance to see a Chinese National in higher management not because of their flawless German language skills, but because China is a bloody major market. Anyone with a sane mind at Siemens or Volkswagen would never let a Vietnamese come near their Chinese clients.

Coming to heavy accents, unless that person was born here, Chinese as well as Vietnamese have a heavy accent, sometimes even an unpleasant accents.

Now contrast to this rare article about the biggest democracy in the world. First, few people are interested to comment at all and the comments are practically negative towards India. They range from mocking, ridiculing, attacking and of course comparing with China at the expense of India.

India: Modi’s second big crash

Indien: Modis zweiter großer Crash
https://heise.de/-3875209
https://heise.de/-3875209
 
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I’m not a perfect german speaker. I got problem with articles der die das, with words containing b or p, but when I speak on the phone, most people don’t know they speak to non-german native speaker. In contrast Chinese speakers emphasize too much their chinese ancent when speaking german so even some people know which province of China the Chinese come from.

That is not only the reason why german companies favor Vietnam over Chinese applicants. The other reason is we don’t have Middle Kingdom complex.

You can ask the german guy. He will confirm. Pls also ask him why in major companies as Siemens, Bosch or financial institutions as Deutsche Börse, Commerzbank you see lots of Viets having high paid jobs, while Chinese more in low paid with time limited contracts. Many Chinese are frustrated some return to glorious communist paradise China.
Dunno why refugees r proud to speak foreign languages? I feel sorry for their home country.

Cool story, dude! I’m rather unaware of Siemens or Commerzbank operating nail salons or pho shops in Germany. In fact, there is more chance to see a Chinese National in higher management not because of their flawless German language skills, but because China is a bloody major market. Anyone with a sane mind at Siemens or Volkswagen would never let a Vietnamese come near their Chinese clients.

Coming to heavy accents, unless that person was born here, Chinese as well as Vietnamese have a heavy accent, sometimes even an unpleasant accents.

Now contrast to this rare article about the biggest democracy in the world. First, few people are interested to comment at all and the comments are practically negative towards India. They range from mocking, ridiculing, attacking and of course comparing with China at the expense of India.

India: Modi’s second big crash

Indien: Modis zweiter großer Crash
https://heise.de/-3875209
https://heise.de/-3875209
I guess they hire those southeast Asian refugees in Deutsche Bank because they like those salons DB has invested?
 
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Cool story, dude! I’m rather unaware of Siemens or Commerzbank operating nail salons or pho shops in Germany. In fact, there is more chance to see a Chinese National in higher management not because of their flawless German language skills, but because China is a bloody major market. Anyone with a sane mind at Siemens or Volkswagen would never let a Vietnamese come near their Chinese clients.

Coming to heavy accents, unless that person was born here, Chinese as well as Vietnamese have a heavy accent, sometimes even an unpleasant accents.

Now contrast to this rare article about the biggest democracy in the world. First, few people are interested to comment at all and the comments are practically negative towards India. They range from mocking, ridiculing, attacking and of course comparing with China at the expense of India.

India: Modi’s second big crash

Indien: Modis zweiter großer Crash
https://heise.de/-3875209
https://heise.de/-3875209
You again with pho and nails. Where can I see Chinese in high level management? Pls give me some names.
 
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you have humour. I asked you for figures of chinese nationals in german companies and you posted fortune 500?


Err, it was you who made the first claim that there are numerous Vietnamese who occupy high positions in German companies. Who are they?

BTW, if there are any (which I doubt) what passport do they have?
 
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Err, it was you who made the first claim that there are numerous Vietnamese who occupy high positions in German companies. Who are they?
BTW, if there are any (which I doubt) what passport do they have?
English is obviously not your native language. I said high paid not high position. Most Vietnamese occupy jobs in technical, engineering or financial because we are good in maths. As professionals not managers. Pls go and look around you, we can more than make pho and nails. Yes they mostly have german passports. Those who work in nails and resto businesses are new immigrants.

Vietnamese in Deutschland

img-7161-1467000384_660x0.jpg
 
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English is obviously not your native language. I said high paid not high position. Most Vietnamese occupy jobs in technical, engineering or financial because we are good in maths. As professionals not managers. Pls go and look around you, we can more than make pho and nails. Yes they mostly have german passports. Those who work in nails and resto businesses are new immigrants.

Vietnamese in Deutschland

img-7161-1467000384_660x0.jpg

So, in other words, you have nothing to show but a claim without any backing of stats. :lol:

I go around quite a lot. One of my best friend is IT head of Commerzbank in Frankfurt, I will ask him about his "Vietnamese colleagues". Many of my friends are owners of a mittelstand company, either in high tech or international retail and service sector. No Vietnamese there but lots of Chinese in research or management dept.
 
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So, in other words, you have nothing to show but a claim without any backing of stats. :lol:

I go around quite a lot. One of my best friend is IT head of Commerzbank in Frankfurt, I will ask him about his "Vietnamese colleagues". Many of my friends are owners of a mittelstand company, either in high tech or international retail and service sector. No Vietnamese there but lots of Chinese in research or management dept.
you have misunderstood his words.
He meant management in Deutsche Pho.
 
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So, in other words, you have nothing to show but a claim without any backing of stats. :lol:

I go around quite a lot. One of my best friend is IT head of Commerzbank in Frankfurt, I will ask him about his "Vietnamese colleagues". Many of my friends are owners of a mittelstand company, either in high tech or international retail and service sector. No Vietnamese there but lots of Chinese in research or management dept.
You are a troller. Previously you say “die gelbe Gefahr” one of the worst racist remark as pro China comment, now you claim Commerzbank Frankfurt having a IT head as friend with lots of Chinese working there.

How is it possible? You are known as left wing elitist hating everything associated with capitalism but having a friend in a bank known as major pillar of german capitalism?
 
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You are a troller. Previously you say “die gelbe Gefahr” one of the worst racist remark as pro China comment, now you claim Commerzbank Frankfurt having a IT head as friend with lots of Chinese working there.

How is it possible? You are known as left wing elitist hating everything associated with capitalism but having a friend in a bank known as major pillar of german capitalism?

What an idiot you are. First of all, if your command of German was a bit better then you would have understood the "gelbe Gefahr" was sarcastic in intention as that person was criticising comments that were racist in natur to the Chinese. Secondly, I do have a friend who is head of IT for Commerzbank in Frankfurt, but I never said that there are loads of Chinese working there. You need to polish your English.

What I said was that I have friends who are owners of a mittelstand company who have many Chinese working for them, such as Germany's biggest duty free company that has shops in all major airports. Already, many major airports in Europe have trilingual signages in the airport with local language, English, and Chinese only. So, go figure why Chinese employees are important.
 
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Letter to Editor: Feeling the Decline of American Soft Power and the Growing Influence of China at an International Conference -- The Perspective of an Overseas Chinese PhD Student

By Zheng Liping, Free University of Berlin, Germany (People's Daily Online) October 30, 2017


FOREIGN201710301650000206053741080.jpg



While the Western Media paid unprecedented attention to China’s 19th Communist Party Congress, as a Chinese PhD student based in Berlin, I deeply felt the growing influence of China at an academic conference held at the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences on October 20-21, 2017.

It was the tenth-anniversary conference of the Graduate School of North American Studies, affiliated with the John F. Kennedy Institute of North American Studies at the Free University of Berlin. The elaborately organized event invited dozens of top scholars and diplomats from the U.S., Great Britain, Canada, Germany, and so on to give remarks or present research talks primarily pertinent to American Studies and a variety of salient problems America is faced with at present. The meeting’s theme was “The Fault Lines of Democracy.” Surprisingly, some scholars’ talks and discussions touched upon China frequently. As one of the only two Chinese doctoral students present at the conference, I actively took advantage of the occasion to offer my Chinese perspective to the international audience. Two interrelated issues relevant to China are worth sharing here: exceptionalism and national narrative in globalization.

The Dimming Halo of the American Dream and American Exceptionalism

Most scholars pointed out that liberal democracy in the era of Donald Trump was in jeopardy and underlined that America was not as exceptional as it used to be. From their viewpoints, under the leadership of Trump, many things are ruining American Exceptionalism, a nationalistic concept that inspires the idea of the American Dream and generates American soft power. At the core of American Exceptionalism are American values, such as democracy, freedom, and equality. Many American presidents are famous for their steadfast endorsement of the uniqueness and superiority of the American creed. For example, Abraham Lincoln called America “the last, best hope of the earth,” and Ronald Reagan proudly claimed America to be “a shining city upon a hill.” Over the course of American history, these ideas have shaped the American Dream, which means that one can obtain happiness and success through their own hard work on the land of infinite possibilities and opportunities. Therefore, most American people identify the greatness of the American nation with “a beacon to the world.” Undoubtedly, millions of immigrants from all over the world were enchanted by such soft power, symbolized in American Exceptionalism and the American Dream.

However, much evidence has shown that the attraction of American soft power seems to be weakening. One the one hand, a number of domestic and foreign policies made by the Trump Administration are increasingly marring the American image that is conventionally labeled as democratic values and its ambition as a global superpower leading also with its cultural ideology. To the astonishment of Paul Gilroy from King’s College London, who gave a talk on “Anti-racism in the Era of the Alt-right,” Trump becomes the only American president ever in history who discredited American Exceptionalism. Since his presidency in January this year, Trump has been undermining the political and cultural legacy of his predecessor Barack Obama, who is iconized as the living example of the American Dream. As U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders criticized on his visit to Free University of Berlin in July 2017, “I am very concerned about Donald Trump’s disrespect for democracy, for tolerance, and traditional American values….I am outraged at President Trump’s efforts to divide the American people up on the basis of race, religion, or national origin.” Additionally, according to the Pew Research Center’s recent Global Attitudes Survey, America’s overall image has suffered a dramatic decline among world publics of 37 nations polled, primarily due to Trump’s provocative policy and unconventional leadership.

On the other hand, the Chinese Dream, as well as the emergence of Chinese Exceptionalism, is likely to outshine the American Dream, thus attracting many international concerns in the media and academia. Clearly, Western scholars at the conference generally agreed to the fact that China was increasingly becoming powerful and assertive on the world stage and that its international clout was spreading. Nevertheless, they are very wary of this tendency of the so-called power diffusion from the West to the East, because their stereotypical idea tends to identify China with communism, which they think starkly conflicts with the superiority of democracy. As we know, after the victory of the Cold War, political scientist Francis Fukuyama’s argument of “the end of the history”—namely “the end point of mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government,” has had a great influence upon Western people’s self-perception of the superiority of their democratic values. It is palpable that the pervasive aversion to the ideology of communism engrained in the minds of Western people not only aggravates their anxiety and fear of the Chinese nation’s great rejuvenation, but also invokes their profound reflections on the crisis of democracy in the U.S. and Europe at large. For instance, Christian Lammert—professor of political science from the Kennedy Institute of North American Studies has recently published a timely book titled Die Krise der Demokratie und Wie Wir Sie Überwinden Können (The Crisis of Democracy and How We Can Overcome It, 2017).

China’s narrative in globalization: more than prosperity

Several scholars put forward that the economic downturn of the U.S. formed a sharp contrast with China’s remarkable ascent to power in recent decades, but the U.S. should not simply attribute a range of its political and economic problems to globalization. It is highly controversial that Trump retreated from international institutions and turned to a new era of isolationism and protectionism, given that China is continuously opening its doors to the world and integrating into the international community. By providing substantial data, political scientist Marianne Braig from the Latin American Institute at Free University of Berlin illustrated that in the market of Mexico, Chinese products had succeeded in replacing the role of the U.S., which dominated the foreign trade of Mexico in the last century. Strikingly, Julika Griem, a cultural scholar from Goethe University Frankfurt, argued that strategic narratives for nation states, as well as languages, culture, and communication, did matter in globalization. Obviously, Trump’s counternarrative of globalization does not make sense.

Their discussion made mention of China repeatedly. I naturally felt an urge to speak for China on this precious occasion. My response on the spot was as follows:

You have talked a lot about China. I am from China and would like to take this opportunity to introduce more to all of you. Owing to globalization, China has created amazing economic achievements. As a great beneficiary of globalization, China has not only promoted the development of globalization, but also will keep moving forward to make more contributions to international cooperation and global prosperity. The One Belt One Road initiative, which last audience has just mentioned in his question, is the best evidence for China’s effort to boost globalization. Besides, China has much more public goods to offer to the world people. China is a civilization-state with 5000 years of history and brilliant culture. The Chinese narrative representing China’s unique national and cultural identity is embodied in China’s foreign policy and diplomacy, which are committed to the noble cause for the world’s peace, development, harmony, stability, security, and all the like. China hopes to impress world people not only with its material growth but also cultural values, which abound in Chinese traditional and modern culture. Economically and culturally, the rising China is ready to share its wisdom and experience with the world for the common good.

Joseph Nye, who is widely reputed as the father of soft power, states an important point in many of his books concerning power: “The future of power is a matter of whose story wins.” When it comes to the Chinese Dream, Chinese Exceptionalism, and the Chinese narrative, in my mind they are to a certain extent three interrelated concepts, which constitute one core concept—the soft power of China. To realize the Chinese Dream, the discourse of Chinese Exceptionalism plays a role in presenting a persuasive story-telling of China. When the Chinese Dream comes true, the world will see a more prosperous and harmonious China with both hard and soft power.

http://en.people.cn/n3/2017/1030/c90000-9286609.html

The Western world is caught between a rock and a hard place. They are dealing with one of the worst crisis moments in their history. I see it, hear it and feel it every single day.

Donald Trump has probably changed the landscape for good. There is still a very long way to go before his presidency ends, but the despair, frustration and pessimism is extremely high. We can only imagine how bad things will be in the coming years.

China was making a case for leading the world a long time ago. It all started after 9/11 when Murica decided to wage unilateral wars. The stage was set long ago. Now with Trump leading the “free world” China can make the move and assure its legacy.
 
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What an idiot you are. First of all, if your command of German was a bit better then you would have understood the "gelbe Gefahr" was sarcastic in intention as that person was criticising comments that were racist in natur to the Chinese. Secondly, I do have a friend who is head of IT for Commerzbank in Frankfurt, but I never said that there are loads of Chinese working there. You need to polish your English.

What I said was that I have friends who are owners of a mittelstand company who have many Chinese working for them, such as Germany's biggest duty free company that has shops in all major airports. Already, many major airports in Europe have trilingual signages in the airport with local language, English, and Chinese only. So, go figure why Chinese employees are important.
It's purely racist major airports in the west do not have viet signs....
Racist and disgusting....
We should boycott by dragging all viet refugees outside this racist country!

Helsinki
001pqWZ0gy6UlH47H3P81&690.jpeg


frankfurt airport website....
English, German, Chinese, purely racist to non-EN/DE/CN speakers
https://www.frankfurt-airport.com/zh/reisen/rund-um-den-flug.html
 
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