The Birth Of The "De-Americanized" World

FAH1223

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http://www.opednews.com/articles/Th...onomic_International_Shutdown-131015-855.html

This is it. China has had enough. The (diplomatic) gloves are off. It's time to build a "de-Americanized" world. It's time for a "new international reserve currency" to replace the US dollar.

It's all here, in a Xinhua editorial, straight from the dragon's mouth. And the year is only 2013. Fasten your seat belts -- and that applies especially to the Washington elites. It's gonna be a bumpy ride.

Long gone are the Deng Xiaoping days of "keeping a low profile." The Xinhua editorial summarizes the straw that broke the dragon's back -- the current US shutdown. After the Wall Street-provoked financial crisis, after the war on Iraq, a "befuddled world," and not only China, wants change.

This paragraph couldn't be more graphic: "Instead of honoring its duties as a responsible leading power, a self-serving Washington has abused its superpower status and introduced even more chaos into the world by shifting financial risks overseas, instigating regional tensions amid territorial disputes, and fighting unwarranted wars under the cover of outright lies." The solution, for Beijing, is to "de-Americanize" the current geopolitical equation -- starting with more say in the International Monetary Fund and World Bank for emerging economies and the developing world, leading to a "new international reserve currency that is to be created to replace the dominant US dollar."

Note that Beijing is not advocating completely smashing the Bretton Woods system -- at least for now, but it is for having more deciding power. Sounds reasonable, considering that China holds slightly more weight inside the IMF than Italy. IMF "reform" -- sort of -- has been going on since 2010, but Washington, unsurprisingly, has vetoed anything substantial.

As for the move away from the US dollar, it's also already on, in varying degrees of speed, especially concerning trade amongst the BRICS group of emerging powers (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), which is now overwhelmingly in their respective currencies. The US dollar is slowly but surely being replaced by a basket of currencies.

"De-Americanization" is also already on. Take last week's Chinese trade charm offensive across Southeast Asia, which is incisively leaning towards even more action with their top commercial partner, China. Chinese President Xi Jinping clinched an array of deals with Indonesia, Malaysia and also Australia, only a few weeks after clinching another array of deals with the Central Asian "stans."

Chinese commitment to improve the Iron Silk Road reached fever pitch, with shares of Chinese rail companies going through the roof amid the prospect of a high-speed rail link with and through Thailand actually materializing. In Vietnam, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang sealed an understanding that two country's territorial quarrels in the South China Sea would not interfere with even more business. Take that, "pivoting" to Asia.

All aboard the petroyuan
Everyone knows Beijing holds Himalayas of US Treasury bonds -- courtesy of those massive trade surpluses accumulated over the past three decades plus an official policy of keeping the yuan appreciating very slowly, yet surely.

At the same time, Beijing has been acting. The yuan is also slowly but surely becoming more convertible in international markets. (Just last week, the European Central Bank and the People's Bank of China agreed to set up a US$45-$57 billion currency swap line that will add to the yuan's international strength and improve access to trade finance in the euro area.)

The unofficial date for full yuan convertibility could fall anywhere between 2017 and 2020. The target is clear; move away from piling up US debt, which implies, in the long run, Beijing removing itself from this market -- and thus making it way more costly for the US to borrow. The collective leadership in Beijing has already made up its mind about it, and is acting accordingly.

The move towards a full convertible yuan is as inexorable as the BRICS move towards a basket of currencies progressively replacing the US dollar as a reserve currency. Until, further on down the road, the real cataclysmic event materializes; the advent of the petroyuan -- destined to surpass the petrodollar once the Gulf petro-monarchies see which way the historical winds are blowing. Then we will enter a completely different geopolitical ball game.

We may be a long way away, but what is certain is that Deng Xiaoping's famous set of instructions is being progressively discarded; "Observe calmly; secure our position; cope with affairs calmly; hide our capacities and bide our time; be good at maintaining a low profile; and never claim leadership."

A mix of caution and deception, grounded on China's historical confidence and taking into consideration serious long-term ambition, this was classic Sun Tzu. So far, Beijing was laying low; letting the adversary commit fatal mistakes (and what a collection of multi-trillion-dollar mistakes... ); and accumulating "capital."

The time to capitalize has now arrived. By 2009, after the Wall Street-provoked financial crisis, there were already Chinese rumblings about the "malfunctioning of the Western model" and ultimately the "malfunctioning of Western culture."

Beijing has listened to Dylan (with Mandarin subtitles?) and concluded yes, the times they-are-a-changing. With no foreseeable social, economic and political progress -- the shutdown is just another graphic illustration, if any was needed -- the US slide is as inexorable as China, bit by bit, spreading its wings to master 21st century post-modernity.

Make no mistake; the Washington elites will fight it like the ultimate plague. Still, Antonio Gramsci's intuition must now be upgraded; the old order has died, and the new one is one step closer to being born.

I for one welcome our new Chinese overlords. :russ:
Just kidding , China has a long way to go even for a fully working alternative to the dollar, 2017 is too early but it will be halfway there by then and it would be protecting itself against the collapse of the dollar.
Its the elites in the US that will be pulling the plug on the dollar, when the system they benefit from becomes too bloated to work. They will seek to replace it with even more control over the world economy and financial system, the proposals will sound very nice I am sure and even reasonable. :dead:

Thank God China is there to save the rest of the world, and it is no charity its obviously all self interest.
So lets all pray China's plans go without any hickups, so that we can all benefit by hanging on to its coat tails and survive the greater entrenchment of our current servitude.

I advise all of you if you can to open a Chinese bank account in Yuan/Renminbi. I have done it myself, in Industrial Construction Bank China ( ICBC).
 

Julius Skrrvin

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We may be a long way away, but what is certain is that Deng Xiaoping's famous set of instructions is being progressively discarded; "Observe calmly; secure our position; cope with affairs calmly; hide our capacities and bide our time; be good at maintaining a low profile; and never claim leadership."

real g's move in silence like lasagna :dead:
 

Chris.B

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Not happening. I went to Africa and Middle east and you will be shocked at American influences in those parts
 

FAH1223

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Not happening. I went to Africa and Middle east and you will be shocked at American influences in those parts

There's Chinese billboards in Sudan :wtf:

My dad is in Mogadishu and he's making friends with the Chinese that are THERE. There are Americans of course, we are still influential but we need to quit believing in our own exceptionalism.
 

Chris.B

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There's Chinese billboards in Sudan :wtf:

My dad is in Mogadishu and he's making friends with the Chinese that are THERE. There are Americans of course, we are still influential but we need to quit believing in our own exceptionalism.
unless a country can produce a military to match the USA...we will always be exceptional
 

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unless a country can produce a military to match the USA...we will always be exceptional

We have lost key industries, technologies that are essential for the workings of an advanced industrial country but can no longer be found in the US.
Examples such as large steel castings used in boilers for large power stations, Nuclear stations, and even large warships like aircraft carriers.
80% of the market for these are in the hands of 2 Japanese companies , the rest of the 20% are in the hands of Koreans and 1 German company.
When the US wants to build a nuclear power plant, a large part of it will have to come from Japan because no one in the US knows how to build it anymore.
You may have to look in a nursing home to track down the last engineers that know how to build it from the 70's.
Its even worse when it comes to electronics, most of the worlds ultra pure silicone used in chips is made by just 4 Japanese companies.
A lot of the componensts in advanced weapons from radar, to the F-22 stealth fighters computers, are sourced from Japanese companies because there is no US equivalent, examples are in Gallenuim Arsnide chips.

Due to outsourcing the US has lost technology, skills and entire industries, the very things that China the rising superpower is gaining.

But the most important reason why the US is headed to the future it is going on is the near complete takeover of the political system of the Financiers and corporations,
the US is no longer a democracy, it is currently an oligarchy and is ruled by corporations. (Who would have predicted those cheesy 80's B movies like Robocop, and Escape from LA would turn out to be true )
These same entities care only about profits, they are like parasites that will consume and consume till the host dies and they will die with it.
Apart form the parasitic entities the US is healthy, we have huge natural resources, vast and skilled human resources, and lots of land.

This country SHOULD be the land of milk and honey but it is not. It's a damn shame too.
 

2Quik4UHoes

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There's Chinese billboards in Sudan :wtf:

My dad is in Mogadishu and he's making friends with the Chinese that are THERE. There are Americans of course, we are still influential but we need to quit believing in our own exceptionalism.

Breh my mom just came from Ethiopia, she said them Chinese is speaking fluent Amharic and eatin Injera like they was born and raised. Idiots on this side like to downplay the Chinese but I quite frankly don't want to see them take over the continent. Finding the means might not be simple, but we Diasporans gotta equalize this shyt by helping to bring the blacks of the West into the fold.
 

FAH1223

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Breh my mom just came from Ethiopia, she said them Chinese is speaking fluent Amharic and eatin Injera like they was born and raised. Idiots on this side like to downplay the Chinese but I quite frankly don't want to see them take over the continent. Finding the means might not be simple, but we Diasporans gotta equalize this shyt by helping to bring the blacks of the West into the fold.

they been there for decades though, I remember my dad told me they were there in the 70s building roads and bridges since Somalia was a communist country and Mao was extending friendship all over the place esp in countries that had just gotten out of colonialism

they took Somali names, speak fluent Somali, many becoming Muslim too, they integrate and assimilate
 

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We're at the end of a one nation overload global economy, period. China won't be the successor to anything. The 1% are our overlords and they come in many shapes and varieties, stateless and not confined to one continent.
 

FAH1223

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We're at the end of a one nation overload global economy, period. China won't be the successor to anything. The 1% are our overlords and they come in many shapes and varieties, stateless and not confined to one continent.
multi polar world?
 
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