There Are No Commies in China
by
Fred Reed

Shanghai
Guadalajara
Just finished the last bag-drag back from China, jet-lagged, brain
fried on caffeine, edgy groggy. Maybe Ill kill something.
Or hibernate. What province am I in? Why do these Mexicans have
round eyes? Its not natural. Some thoughts, barely:
I couldnt find the commies. Conservatives, who apparently
preserve their minds in amber at birth, ramble on about Communist
China. I guess their brains have parking brakes. Things are much
less confusing if you have only one idea and stick with it. Anyway,
if China is a communist country, Im Julius Didianus. Who ever
heard of a communist economy growing at nine percent? Or at all?
I grant you, the rascals used to be commies, but theyve degenerated,
and lost their touch. I could do it better. When I landed at Beijing,
I got through passport control in about thirty seconds. They didnt
even glance at my baggage. Grabbed a cab to my hotel. The driver
tried to overcharge me. It looked like capitalism to me.
I remember going into the Soviet Union on some junket or other.
Now, the Russkies could do some communism: Paranoia, thuggishness,
ugly boring buildings, clothes that looked air-dropped and people
walking hunched over as against a cold wind when there wasnt
any wind. Nothing in the stores, and not many stores. Nothing worked.
Nobody cared about anything. It was like Mexico but without the
technology and consumer goods. Or the sense of urgency.
I went into St. Petersburg from Helsinki on a train, like Lenin
though with less effect, because Aeroflop had lost our reservations
in its central abacus. The border Nazis rolled down window shades
in case we might have stashed propaganda in them. It was like going
into a prison. It was going into a prison. Thats how communism
is supposed to work.
But China. If the government had the slightest interest in us,
I didnt notice it. For two weeks we rushed aboutBeijing,
Xian, Chungking, Shanghai, Guilin, and such like, and spat ourselves
out into Hong Kong like a cud. I dont astound easily, but
this time I astounded. Sure, I knew about the vast rivers of vacuum
cleaners and calculators spewing out of China into Wal-Mart. But
knowing it was like knowing that the Grand Canyon is a large hole.
It doesn't convey the reality.
The joint is hopping. China has 1.3 billion people, and 1.5 billion
construction cranes. I counted them. Pretty girls wander around
in snug jeans and camisetas ombligueras so you wont wonder
whether they have navels. Stores are full of things that stores
are usually full of. Some of the malls could have been in Japan.
China has lots of ordinary five-star hotels just like any anywhere,
well-run, unpleasantly air-conditioned, and with free toothbrushes.
The country is alive and shows indications of going somewhere. The
shopkeepers spot a Western mark and holler. One of them successfully
sold me a bottle of local booze with a cobra pickled in it.
Oh Mexico, thou of the mere little worm in thy tequila
.
I suppose I was unconsciously expecting something third-worldly,
maybe like Guadalajaratolerably prosperous, sidewalks crumbling,
most things working most of the time, low buildings not excessively
well maintained, nothing happening and nothing indicating that anything
ever would. No. Chungking is what New York would be if New York
were a big city. Were talking forty-storey high rises that
somehow dont look as dull as ours, massive highways and bridges.
Every time we landed the airport turned out to have been completed
four years ago, one year ago, what have you. Those cities arent
Guadalajara. Theyre Chicago.
The clunky Russian aircraft are gone. Now you see new stuff from
Boeing and Airbus.
OK, thats the up side. The downside is lots, and smart people
see real instability that could lead to an explosion. The Chinese
explode well, as the Cultural Revolution of 196676 demonstrated.
One problem is that said Revolution also left a generation of jobless
ex-radicals who cant read, a bit like New Orleans. You can
criticize Mousy Dung all you want, but you have to give him credit
for being an unconscionable ass with no concern for his people.
Anyway, those kids, no longer kids, could be trouble.
Then the policy of one child per family, combined with a preference
for boy children, has left huge numbers of excess males who arent
going to find wives. They too might become disagreeable. I would.
Add that the new wealth isnt reaching a whole lot of people.
Corruption is rife. Poverty remains horrendous in many parts. Finally,
China is said to have eighty million evangelical Christians, which
means that it will likely attack Iraq, as well as a lot of Moslems.
Years ago I lived in Taiwan for a bit, studying Chinese, both the
language and the young ladies, and living on fried squid bought
in stalls under a bridge. At the time the island was doing a Five
Year Plan. Back then every country with a patch of jungle, two colonels
and a torture chamber had a Five Year Plan, efficiently doing nothing.
I noticed that Taiwan was actually following its Plan: The reactors
at Jin Shan were almost complete, the port at Gau Syung functioned,
the steel mill made steel.
I thought: Hmmm. These folk can obviously play big-city hardball
finance and such, since thats what they are doing in Hong
Kong, which is just Manhattan with slanted eyes. They can run a
high-tech economy, since Taiwan is doing it. That leaves Mau, keeping
China mired in darkness, as Americas first line of defense.
Mau croaked. You really cant rely on communists. China now
appears to be doing what Taiwan did. My take is that the Communist
Party figured out that Marxism was great except that it didnt
work, and anyway it could bore a tax accountant into the shrieking
gollywoggles, so they decided to keep the name while doing whatever
worked. This is a novel concept for the West, which tends to eschew
reason for organized imbecility, as for example liberalism and conservatism.
Anyway, Katie bar the door. Better, open the bar.
Now, Beijing isnt the headwaters of compassion. I avoided
staging any protests in Tien An Men Square, as the government is
unprincipled and would not hesitate to use Waco-style methods to
crush me. Russia, though, China isnt. Remember that when the
Soviet Union was a superpower, though usually with a Guatemalan
level of technology, it couldnt make a decent personal computer.
Taiwan was spitting them out like aspirin tablets. Well, same people.
And no Mau to paralyze them.
Im
going to go to sleep, or maybe jump off a roof. I hate airplanes.

Guilin. Nicely
moody, but residual.
September
14, 2005
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well.
Copyright
© 2005 Fred Reed
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