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钟建英's avatar

Hi, I went through a similar journey, admiring the West, and now feeling disillusioned. In truth, there was plenty to admire, and I like to think that the West today is not the same as what it once was. Perhaps it’s easy to be principled and magnanimous when the West collectively dominated the world’s economy. But not so easy when one feels threatened by the economic (and military) success of regimes that are supposed to fail.

Yet again, did the West ever deserve admiration? It’s only recently that I discovered how the CIA has overthrown (or helped to overthrow) democratically elected governments in Iran, Congo, Chile, Afghanistan, etc, … instigated the violence against the Chinese community in Indonesia for their alleged communist sympathies, …. Who knows what other atrocities have gone unreported? And know, the ongoing genocide in Gaza (which the US supports by continuing to provide arms) has laid bare the full hypocrisy of the West.

The hope I have for a better, more just world is the continued growth of the Global South, and the diminishing centrality of the West, economically and culturally. I also hope that more and more Chinese, Asians, Africans, Latin Americans wake up and see Western hegemony for what it is. Western soft power” remains formidable, and humans have an unfortunate tendency to admire the rich and powerful (which Adam Smith observed in his Theory of Moral Sentiments).

Also, too many people still conflate “democracy” either a particular set of Western liberal institutions, simply dismissing the possibility that other ways of doing democracy is possible. I agree with your observation about dualism, dividing the world into “democratic” vs “authoritarian”, and treating allies as “democratic” no matter how undemocratic they really are. (Is Israel really a democracy? Is Ukraine really democratic? Is the US really democratic when the wealthy have so much influence on preselecting candidates?)

I feel this is an important topic, and you should keep writing about it. It is something I am exploring in my own Substack publication “The possibility of democratic choice” (it’s a personal journal).

clare chai's avatar

This brings to mind a section of Ken Liu’s short story The Perfect Match and I quote it here:

‘“I grew up in China,” Jenny said, wiping a strand of hair behind her ear. “Back then, the government watched everything you did on the Network and made no secret of it. You had to learn how to keep the insanity at bay, to read between the lines, to speak without being overheard.”

“I guess we were lucky, over here.”

“No….You grew up believing you were free, which made it even harder for you to see when you weren’t. You were like frogs in the pot being slowly boiled.”’

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