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Jeffrey Wasserstrom: China, Xi Jinping, Trade War, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Mao | Lex Fridman Podcast #466

3h 3m 52s27,899 ord3,922 segmentsEnglish

FULLSTÄNDIGT TRANSKRIPT

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- The following is a conversation

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with Jeffrey Wasserstrom, a historian of modern China.

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This is the "Lex Fridman Podcast."

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To support it, please check out our sponsors

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in the description.

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And now, dear friends, here's Jeffrey Wasserstrom.

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You've compared Xi Jinping and Mao Zedong in the past.

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What are the parallels between the two leaders

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and where do they differ?

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Xi Jinping, of course, is the current leader of China

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for the past 12 years,

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and Mao Zedong was the Communist leader of China

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from 1949 to 1976.

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So what are the commonalities, what are the differences?

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- So the biggest commonality of them

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is that they're both the subject of personality cults,

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and that Mao is the center

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of a very intensely felt one from 1949 to 1976.

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And when he died, you know,

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there was tremendous outpouring of grief,

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even among people who had objectively suffered enormously

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because of his policies.

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Xi Jinping is the first leader in China since him,

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who has had a sustained personality cult of the kind,

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where if you walk into a bookstore in China,

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the first thing you see are books by him,

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collections of his speeches.

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And when Mao was alive,

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you might've thought that's sort of what happened

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with Communist Party leaders in China.

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But after Mao's death,

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there was such an effort to not have

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that kind of personality cult,

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that there was a tendency to not publish

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the speeches of a leader

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until they were done being in power.

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I was first in China in 1986,

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and you could go for days

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without being intensely aware

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of who was in charge of the party, you would know,

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but his face wasn't everywhere,

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the newspaper wasn't dominated with stories about him,

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and quotations from his words and things like that.

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So with Xi Jinping, you've had a throwback to that period

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in Communist Party rule,

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which seemed as though it might be a part of the past.

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So that's a key commonality,

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and a key difference is that Mao really reveled in chaos,

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in turning things upside down in a sense that,

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you know, he talked about class struggle,

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which came out of Marxism,

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but he also really, his favorite work

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of Chinese popular fiction was the Monkey King

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about this legendary figure

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who is this Monkey King

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who could turn the heavens upside down.

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So he reveled in disorder

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and thought disorder was a way to improve things.

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Xi Jinping is very orderly, is very concerned

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with kind of stability and predictability.

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So you can see them as very, very different that way.

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And Mao also liked to stir things up

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like that people on the streets clamoring.

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So Xi Jinping, even though he has a personality cult,

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it's not manifesting itself.

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He doesn't like the idea

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of people on the streets

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in anything that can't be controlled.

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So you can, you know, there are a lot of ways

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that they're similar, a lot of ways they're different.

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They're also different,

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and this fits with this orderliness,

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that Xi Jinping talks positively about Confucius

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and Confucian traditions in China.

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And Confucian traditions are based

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on kind of stable hierarchies, for the most part,

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and sort of clear categories of superior and inferior,

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whereas Mao like things to be turned upside down.

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He thought of Confucianism as a futile way of thought

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that it hold held China back.

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So you can come up with things that they're similar

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and you can come up with things

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where they're really opposites.

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But they both clearly did wanna see China under rule

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by the Communist Party.

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And that's been a continuity

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and that connects them to the leaders

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in between them two as well.

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- So there's some degree, as you said,

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that Xi Jinping has pauses the ideas of communism

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and the ideas of Confucianism.

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So let's go all the way back.

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You wrote that in order to understand the China of today,

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we have to study its past.

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So the China of today celebrates ideas of Confucius,

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a Chinese philosopher who lived 2,500 years ago.

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Can you tell me about the ideas of Confucius?

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- First of all, we don't know that much

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about the historic Confucius.

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He's around the same time as,

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you know, figures like Socrates,

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and like with Socrates,

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we get a lot of what we know about him

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or think we know about him from what his followers said,

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and things that were attributed to him

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and dialogues that were written afterwards.

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So, you know, you can have a lot of fun

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with these sort of axial age thinkers

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and what they had in common.

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Another thing that connects these axial age thinkers

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is they were trying to kind of make a case

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for why they should be able to educate the next generation,

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the elite, and sort of had a way of promising

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that they had philosophical ideas

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that helped decide how you should run a polity.

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Confucius lived in a time

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when there were these warring kingdoms

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in a territory that later became China.

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But what he said was that there had been this period

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of great order in the past,

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that the lines between inferior and superior were clear,

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and there was a kind of synergy

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between superior and inferior

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that kept everything ticking along really nicely.

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He thought that hierarchical relationships

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were a good thing, and that the trick was

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that both sides in a hierarchical relationship

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owed something to the other.

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So the father and son relationship was a key one.

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The father deserved respect from the son,

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but owed the son care and benevolence.

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And things would be fine

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as long as both sides in a relationship held up their end.

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And he had a whole series of these relationships.

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The husband to the wife was again an unequal one,

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of the husband being superior to the wife,

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but him owing the wife care and her owing him deference.

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And he had the same notion that then the emperor

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to the ministers were...

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These were all parallels,

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and there were no egalitarian relationships in Confucianism.

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Even something that in the West,

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we often think of as a kind of

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quintessentially egalitarian relationship between brothers,

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in the Chinese tradition of Confucianism,

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there was only older brother and younger brother.

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Brotherhood was not an egalitarian relationship.

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It was one where the older brother

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took care of the younger brother

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and the younger brother showed respect

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for the older brother.

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- So stable hierarchy

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was at the core of everything in society,

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it permeated everything including politics?

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- Yeah, and there was even a sense

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that it connected the natural world

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to the supernatural world.

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So the emperor was, to heaven,

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this kind of non personified deity

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like the emperor was to the ministers.

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So all of this had these relationships.

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So the emperor was the son of heaven.

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And you know, for Confucius, he said,

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so we should study the text,

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we should study how the sages of old behaved

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that society was becoming corrupted

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and was going away from that sort of purity

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of the sages when the relationships were all in order.

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So Confucianism was a kind of conservative

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or even backward-looking thing.

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It wasn't arguing for progress,

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it was arguing for reclaiming a pure golden age in the past.

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So it was also a kind of conserv.

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So in all kinds of ways, you know,

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it's irreconcilable to many things

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about Marxism and communism,

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which is all about struggle

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and all about actually a progressive view of history

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moving from one stage to the next.

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- So that's the interesting thing

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about Xi Jinping and the China today

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is there is that tension of Confucianism and communism

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where communism Marxism is supposed to,

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you know, let go of history,

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and Confucianism, there's a real veneration of history

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that's happening in China of today.

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So they're able to wear both hats and balance it.

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- Yeah, you could say that in many points

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in the 20th century, there was a kind of struggle

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between different competing political groups

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over which part of the Chinese past to connect with.

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Was it to the Confucian tradition

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or to the kind of rebellious Monkey King tradition,

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which was what Mao connected to.

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Xi Jinping, and before him, to some extent,

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you know, hu Jintao, we saw this a little bit, the Olympics,

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it was more this kind of mix it all together view.

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Anything that suggested greatness in the past

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could be something that could be fused together.

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So Xi Jinping says that, you know,

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