Nov 18, 2024
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America at a Crossroads in the Face of Growing CCP Threat

America at a Crossroads in the Face of Growing CCP Threat | The Epoch Times

America at a Crossroads in the Face of Growing CCP Threat

A man looks at his phone near a giant image of the Chinese national flag on the side of a building in Beijing, during the ongoing 19th Communist Party Congress on Oct. 23, 2017. Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images

Frank Tian Xie

11/18/2024

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America today is at a crossroads—something realized by people on both sides of the political spectrum.

The most important issues for American voters in 2024 are inflation and prices (25 percent), immigration (11 percent), health care (10 percent), and jobs and the economy (10 percent), according to a survey by Statista. In short, voters are most concerned about the economy!

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As researchers in business and economics, however, my colleagues and I often seek factors outside of the economy to find the true, underlying causes that either stimulate or stifle growth.

We often go so far as to identify the philosophical, ideological, and international factors that contribute to the economic well-being of a nation—because the way we think, what we believe, and how we behave, as well as how we interact with other countries, do indeed affect our economy, our way of life, and our cost of living.

What I observe is an increased concern among Americans about both the external threat from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), as well as an internal threat in the form of communist subversion threatening our way of life.

his concern is especially notable among minority groups, namely, the Cuban, the Chinese, and the Vietnamese American communities. The reason for that is simple. Many from these communities came to America in their youth or adulthood after fleeing or leaving socialist and communist societies.

Based on their lived experience, they do not want to live under such a society again. Yet for many Americans, who don’t have this first-hand experience, their perception of socialism and communism is mostly shaped by textbooks and media.

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This year marks the 75th anniversary of the communist takeover of China. When asked about how the Chinese communist regime has been able to last this long when the Soviet Union is long gone, Columbia University professor Andrew Nathan attributed this to China’s “economic growth” leading to the rise in the standard of living, especially over the past two to three decades.

But how was that actually achieved? It was because the United States opened its market, provided the technology, and lent the management skills that helped to save China from the economic collapse in the aftermath of the Great Cultural Revolution. In 2001, the United States allowed China to join the World Trade Organization (WTO). Not only did the United States fail to take advantage of the demise of the Soviet Union and the Eastern European Communist Bloc, but it also failed to continue its victorious feast to eradicate communism completely around the world.

On the contrary, the United States and the West have provided political support, economic support, markets for trade, and even military technology and cooperation to allow the Chinese communist regime to survive and take the opportunity to develop and grow. In the end, it backfired on the United States and the West, and now it has become a major problem for the U.S.

To the dismay of many in America, we helped CCP, but we created a monster, which has now become stronger and more aggressive and ever more hostile to the West.

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Meanwhile we are allowing the CCP to subvert America by letting this Communism ideology to creep into America in a bid to destroy us.

Dr. John J. Mearsheimer is a chair professor in international relations at University of Chicago, well know for his “offensive realism” theory. He describes the interaction between great powers as being driven primarily by the rational desire to achieve “regional hegemony” in a leaderless international system. According to his theory, Mearsheimer believes that China’s growing power is likely to bring it into conflict with the United States.

In his book “The Great Delusion – Liberal Dreams and International Realities,” Mearsheimer believes that America’s “liberal hegemony” has now failed.

Liberal hegemony means that the United States, as a country that pursues liberalism, seeks to promote this social concept based on Western democracy and freedom to other countries and regions through the United States’ regional and global hegemony.

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Because of the failure of U.S. liberal hegemony, coupled with the rise of nationalism in various countries, as well as the role of the United States in the conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria, and U.S. foreign policy in Ukraine and the Middle East, coupled with the expansion of NATO, and the rise of Russia and China, it has caused our world to transform from unipolar to multipolar.

In a time like this, with a multipolar world, it is even more important for America to have clear leadership in world power diplomacy.

The rise of China and the resurgence of Russian power mean that liberal hegemony is gradually disappearing, and the United States now faces two potential rivals that may be equally competitive.

One of the reasons why I agree with Professor Mearsheimer’s assessment, is that in the disputes between the United States, China, and Russia, the United States should work with Russia, which has already denounced Communism, rather than exclude Russia and push it towards the Chinese, to jointly deal with the greatest enemy of humanity: the Chinese Communist regime.

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Tariffs imposed on China under the Trump administration and carried on by the Biden administration are tough measures against China—whoever wins this election should continue and finish this strategic economic showdown with China.

In Mearsheimer’s view, liberalism is being defeated by nationalism. But according to my analysis, liberalism is in fact being defeated by international communism—including external Chinese communism and internal far-left socialist elements in this country.

The United States is attacked from all sides both at home and abroad.

In addition to what Mearsheimer believed to be the factors of competition between nationalism, realism, and liberalism, it was Chinese communism that made it happen.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

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Frank Tian Xie, Ph.D., is a John M. Olin Palmetto professor in business at the University of South Carolina Aiken, and a visiting scholar of the National Taiwan University.

謝田的世界 Frank Tian Xie, Ph.D.
乾淨世界中,謝田的世界。 六十年代之初,生于黄海之滨,长于东北边陲。 七十年代初叶,得尝农家苦乐,略知国难家累。 八十年代发韧,求学古都燕园,茫中求脱左昧。 八十年代中叶,负笈留学美国,科学救国难遂。 八十年代末节,惊闻六四血案,民主救国心碎。 九十年代初始,业界拼搏八年,家齐自疏修为。 九十年代中叶,携妇将雏求索,世事耕耘繁累。 九十年代末劫,欣闻佛法正道,感念主佛慈悲。 零零年代以降,勤修正法律己,教书育人不悔。 Frank Tian Xie, BS, MBA, Ph.D. Dr. Frank Tian Xie is John M. Olin Palmetto Chair Professor in Business and Professor of Marketing at the University of South Carolina Aiken & Senior Fellow at think tank Consilium Institute. As a recipient of the Taiwan Fellowship, he was a Visiting Scholar at Public Economic Policy Research Center at National Taiwan University. Prior to his appointment at USC Aiken, Dr. Xie was on the faculty of business at Drexel University in Philly, PA. Professor Xie obtained his Ph.D. in Marketing and MBA in Finance from Robinson College of Business at Georgia State University in Atlanta, and BS in geoscience from Peking University in Beijing, China. A native of China and an expert on Chinese business, society, & economy, Dr. Xie is a columnist on business for New Epoch Weekly, a global Chinese language magazine. His research interest includes Chinese business and economy, marketing strategy, business-to-business marketing, international marketing, and research methodology. His research appears in academic journals such as the Journal of Business Market Management, Journal of Business Research, Industrial Marketing Management, Journal of Business and Industrial Marketing, Journal of Interactive Advertising, Journal of Retailing & Consumer Services, Journal of Education for Business, Journal of Business and Economic Policy, Journal of Southeast Case Research Association, and Journal of Marketing Channels. Dr. Xie has been a speaker in numerous seminars and panels in countries in America, Asia, and Europe; and appeared in global media outlets from VOA, RFA, Radio Australia, New York Times, CNN, NBC, CBS, Tokyo Shimbun, to Epochtimes, NTDTV, and SOH Radio International. He has been writing a column on business and economics since 2002.