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China's global initiatives, aimed at reshaping the world, are coming under scrutiny as concerns of stagnation grow. A recent op-ed by @theChinaDude highlights President Xi's ambitious plans and their implications. The article questions whether a Communist superpower can overcome the contradictions that led to the downfall of the USSR. The New Yorker's piece on China's age of malaise further adds to the narrative. As China enters a new decade under Xi's leadership, the nation's future trajectory is being closely watched.
China’s Age of Malaise | The New Yorker @eosnos https://t.co/pssCtZi7mA
.@eosnos: "China at the end of Xi’s first decade is…a nation slipping from motion to stagnation and, for the first time in a generation, questioning whether a Communist superpower can escape the contradictions that doomed the Soviet Union." https://t.co/WwqkRyvO8d
When techno-nationalist Wang Xiaodong surveys the last 200 years of Chinese political history he finds a common cause "transcends political parties and changes in regimes:" "We need to surpass other countries." https://t.co/DqXOeoAiNn
"To spend time in China at the end of Xi’s first decade is to witness a nation slipping from motion to stagnation and, for the first time in a generation, questioning whether a Communist superpower can escape the contradictions that doomed the [USSR]" https://t.co/7dowkbCfcU https://t.co/HmecBfkvMF
China’s Age of Malaise https://t.co/qMWoIN8G89
Thanks to @theChinaDude for a smart op-ed on Xi's Global Initiatives and how they reflect China's desire to reshape the world https://t.co/ICi31ruRiw