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The flaws that China’s chief ideologue found in America

As a young visitor decades ago, Wang Huning saw “an unstoppable undercurrent of crisis”

Illustration of Wang Huning looking into a crystal ball that shows storm clouds over the US
Illustration: KAL

In August 1988 an inquisitive young Chinese political scientist named Wang Huning came to America for a six-month visit. He admired the Gateway Arch in St Louis, Missouri, and analysed the town government of Belmont, Massachusetts, watched a football game at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, and toured a detergent factory in Iowa City, Iowa. He was shocked by the many people begging in the streets and amazed by the softness of the waterbeds in the furniture stores. One question preoccupied him: how had such a young country raced so far ahead of his homeland, with its history of more than 2,000 years? He found a lot to respect in the dynamism of America, but he also identified contradictions that could tear it apart.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “In search of America”

From the February 24th 2024 edition

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