CaptainJackSparrow
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From WikiChina
While secrets from WikiLeaks were splashed all over the American newspapers, I couldnt help but wonder: What if China had a WikiLeaker and we could see what its embassy in Washington was reporting about America? I suspect the cable would read like this:
Washington Embassy, Peoples Republic of China, to Ministry of Foreign Affairs Beijing, TOP SECRET/Subject: America today.
Things are going well here for China. America remains a deeply politically polarized country, which is certainly helpful for our goal of overtaking the U.S. as the worlds most powerful economy and nation. But were particularly optimistic because the Americans are polarized over all the wrong things.
There is a willful self-destructiveness in the air here as if America has all the time and money in the world for petty politics. They fight over things like we are not making this up how and where an airport security officer can touch them. They are fighting we are happy to report over the latest nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia. It seems as if the Republicans are so interested in weakening President Obama that they are going to scuttle a treaty that would have fostered closer U.S.-Russian cooperation on issues like Iran. And since anything that brings Russia and America closer could end up isolating us, we are grateful to Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona for putting our interests ahead of Americas and blocking Senate ratification of the treaty. The ambassador has invited Senator Kyl and his wife for dinner at Mr. Kaos Chinese restaurant to praise him for his steadfastness in protecting Americas (read: our) interests.
Americans just had what they call an election. Best we could tell it involved one congressman trying to raise more money than the other (all from businesses they are supposed to be regulating) so he could tell bigger lies on TV more often about the other guy before the other guy could do it to him. This leaves us relieved. It means America will do nothing serious to fix its structural problems: a ballooning deficit, declining educational performance, crumbling infrastructure and diminished immigration of new talent.
The ambassador recently took what the Americans call a fast train the Acela from Washington to New York City. Our bullet train from Beijing to Tianjin would have made the trip in 90 minutes. His took three hours and it was on time! Along the way the ambassador used his cellphone to call his embassy office, and in one hour he experienced 12 dropped calls again, we are not making this up. We have a joke in the embassy: When someone calls you from China today it sounds like they are next door. And when someone calls you from next door in America, it sounds like they are calling from China! Those of us who worked in Chinas embassy in Zambia often note that Africas cellphone service was better than Americas.
But the Americans are oblivious. They travel abroad so rarely that they dont see how far they are falling behind. Which is why we at the embassy find it funny that Americans are now fighting over how exceptional they are. Once again, we are not making this up. On the front page of The Washington Post on Monday there was an article noting that Republicans Sarah Palin and Mike Huckabee are denouncing Obama for denying American exceptionalism. The Americans have replaced working to be exceptional with talking about how exceptional they still are. They dont seem to understand that you cant declare yourself exceptional, only others can bestow that adjective upon you.
In foreign policy, we see no chance of Obama extricating U.S. forces from Afghanistan. He knows the Republicans will call him a wimp if he does, so America will keep hemorrhaging $190 million a day there. Therefore, America will lack the military means to challenge us anywhere else, particularly on North Korea, where our lunatic friends continue to yank Americas chain every six months so that the Americans have to come and beg us to calm things down. By the time the Americans do get out of Afghanistan, the Afghans will surely hate them so much that Chinas mining companies already operating there should be able to buy up the rest of Afghanistans rare minerals.
Most of the Republicans just elected to Congress do not believe what their scientists tell them about man-made climate change. Americas politicians are mostly lawyers not engineers or scientists like ours so theyll just say crazy things about science and nobody calls them on it. Its good. It means they will not support any bill to spur clean energy innovation, which is central to our next five-year plan. And this ensures that our efforts to dominate the wind, solar, nuclear and electric car industries will not be challenged by America.
Finally, record numbers of U.S. high school students are now studying Chinese, which should guarantee us a steady supply of cheap labor that speaks our language here, as we use our $2.3 trillion in reserves to quietly buy up U.S. factories. In sum, things are going well for China in America.
Thank goodness the Americans cant read our diplomatic cables.
Embassy Washington.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/01/opinion/01friedman.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print