Hafizzz
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2010
- Messages
- 5,041
- Reaction score
- 0
No, having alot of money does not = powerful
China has the 2nd biggest economy, but isn't the 2nd most powerful,
LOL. You can get Power with money !!!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
No, having alot of money does not = powerful
China has the 2nd biggest economy, but isn't the 2nd most powerful,
New Recruit
In many ways, China is the world's second most powerful country. And if you factor in the advantages that a rising power has against one which has already seen its best days, perhaps China is the most important country.
However, what one has got to respect and admire is the innate Chinese sense of humility. There is no chest thumping going on, either at the governmental level, or even by our Chinese friends participating on this forum. They keep pointing to areas where they are behind the west, and never focus excessively on their amazing accomplishments.
I find the Chinese national character - with this wonderful expression of humility - to be in sharp contrast to many of the more arrogant powers we have seen in the recent past. Kudos to China for being possibly the greatest nation on earth, and being humble at the same time.
In many ways, China is the world's second most powerful country. And if you factor in the advantages that a rising power has against one which has already seen its best days, perhaps China is the most important country.
However, what one has got to respect and admire is the innate Chinese sense of humility. There is no chest thumping going on, either at the governmental level, or even by our Chinese friends participating on this forum. They keep pointing to areas where they are behind the west, and never focus excessively on their amazing accomplishments.
I find the Chinese national character - with this wonderful expression of humility - to be in sharp contrast to many of the more arrogant powers we have seen in the recent past. Kudos to China for being possibly the greatest nation on earth, and being humble at the same time.
Currently, the US is dictating what they want because, as of yet, emerging powers are far too weak. I don't mind if the US will remain the "most powerful" country in 2050 - as long as other nations can act more independently and there is a genuine balance of power. No nation should have the ability to completely disregard and violate all International agreements and rules (which is what the US has been doing for decades) while forcing other countries to abide by those same rules. Also, those rules are usually serving western interests.Even if one is the most powerful one cannot just go around dictating what one wants.
And let's not forget that other (smaller) rising powers will also help change the current world order. Brazil, Russia, Turkey, Indonesia and so on. It's not only about China and India.I find it hard to believe US will still remain the most powerful nation in 2050. I feel that this article is a clever move by China, intended to ease USA over the rise of China and it's intentions. At this pace, by 2050 China will surely be the most powerful economy and India would be at #2. According to IMF projections US economy will be significantly lower in comparison, although much bigger than today. That means India and China would have much bigger defense budgets than US making them extremely powerful forces.
Sure you can't pick up random countries and compare, but in the case of East Asian countries with similar cultural background and similar development model, such comparisons can be meaningful. Besides GDP, we can also look at
Olympics
Japan 1964
S.Korea 1980
China 2008
World Expo
Japan 1970
S.Korea 1993
China 2010
Beginning of High-Speed Rail construction
Japan 1960s
S.Korea 1990s
China 2000s
Beginning of pop culture influence
Japan 1970s-1980s
Hong Kong 1980s-1990s (golden age of HK cinema)
S.Korea 1990s-2000s (Korean wave)
and many more. All fall in roughly same timeline.
In fact comparisons with Japan, S.Korea and Taiwan in similar stage of development feature prominently in popular and academic discussions in China. I remember when Beijing and Shanghai won the rights to 2008 Olympics and 2010 World Expo respectively, there were some excitement in Chinese press about it only taking China 2 years to go from Olympics to Expo while took Japan 6 years.
And let's not forget that other (smaller) rising powers will also help change the current world order. Brazil, Russia, Turkey, Indonesia and so on. It's not only about China and India.
Cao Cao was far more clever. He 'welcomed' the young emperor and pledged to serve for him.
In pure 1 on 1 combat, it seems highly doubtful that any other nation has a chance of besting China.