The New Rules: Using China to Scare Ourselves Straight

By Thomas P.M. Barnett, on , Column

Judging from the accounts of virtually every pundit, the Chinese emerged as the foreign threat of choice in the just-concluded U.S. elections, with the breakthrough "Chinese Professor" ad being compared by the always-calm James Fallows to such incendiary hall-of-famers as "Daisy Girl" (1964) and "Willie Horton" (1988). I'm with Fallows: The exceedingly clever ad represents a crystallizing moment in our increasingly contentious relationship with China, elevating the Chinese far beyond Iran's mullahs and Osama Bin Laden as the pre-eminent fear-driven threat dynamic motivating calls to get our house in order.

The ad portrays a high-tech college lecture hall in Beijing, circa 2030, where a wise instructor explains to a rapt audience of China's best and brightest how the American empire, like that of the Romans and British before it, collapsed under the weight of its own debt. The gotcha moment? Under Chairman Mao's benevolent gaze, the prof notes smugly, "Of course, we owned most of their debt. So now they work for us." The class erupts in derisive snickers. ...

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