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Yesterday’s Country: Not to Worry, They Can’t Innovate
Fred on Everything ^ | 17APRIL 2019 | Fred Reed

Posted on 04/27/2019 4:21:55 AM PDT by vannrox

For many years the United States has regarded itself as, and been, the world’s technological leader. One can easily make a long and impressive list of seminal discoveries and inventions coming from America, from the moon landings to the internet. It was an astonishing performance. The US maintains a lead, though usually a shrinking one, in many fields. But:

China has risen explosively, from being clearly a “Third World” country forty years ago to become a very serious and rapidly advancing competitor to America. Anyone who has seen today’s China (I recently spent  two weeks there, traveling muchly) will have been  astonished by the ubiquitous construction, the quality of planning, the roads and airports and high-speed rail, the sense of confidence and modernity. Compare this with America’s rotting and dangerous cities, swarms of homeless people, deteriorating education, antique rail, deindustrialized midlands, loony government, and ahe military sucking blood from the economy like some vast leech, and America will seem yesterday’s country. The phrase “national suicide” comes to mind.

A common response to these observations from thunder-thump patriots is the assertion that the Chinese can’t invent anything, just copy and steal. What one actually sees is a combination of rapid and successful adoption of foreign technology (see Shanghai maglev below) and, increasingly, cutting edge science and technology.  More attention might be in order. A few examples: A few examples from many thatmight be adduced:

“China  Confirms Scientist Genetically Engineered Babies”

Supposedly the intent was to make the twins resistant to AIDS. It was done using CRISPR-Cas 9, a gene-editing technique invented in the West by Jennifer Dooudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier but quickly mastered by China. It seemed odd that AIDS resistance would be the goal since the disease is easily avoided. Maybe, I thought, for some technical reason the insertion was particularly easy. But then:

“China’s Genetically Edited Twins May Have Enhanced Brains ‘By Accident’”

“By accident” indeed. Since the researchers  admitted being aware of the neurologic effects of CCR5, the gene in question, the experiment sure looked like a shot at increasing intelligence. But maybe not. Then:

“Chinese researchers insert human brain gene into monkeys, making them smarter”

Whether the insertion in fact had the effect described, I do not know, and the story maybe or may not be sensationalized. Of interest are, first, that it was an attempt to engineer intelligence, second, that it involved inserting a human gene in a (presumably) lower primate, and third, that the Chinese did it.

“China, Huawei to Launch 5G network in Shanghai Station”

Though 5G is usually presented as an improvement to smartphones, it is far more, and the Chinese seem poised to jump on it hard. See below.

“World’s First 5G powered Remote Brain Surgery Performed in China”

It is interesting that China and South Korea are clear leaders in 5G. The US, unable to compete seeks to prohibit its European vassals from dealing with HuaWei by threatening sanctions. Germany has refused to obey. .

Huawei’s 5G Dominance In The Post-American World – Forbes

Whether Forbes’ overstates the facts can perhaps be argued. That China has come from nowhere to be ahead in a crucial technology ought to be a wake-up call. That America has to rely on sanctions instead of better technology accentuates the point.

“More Than 510,000 Overseas Students Return to China”

This year. A couple of decades ago, Chinese students in the US often refused to return to a backward and repressive country. It now appears that Asia is where the action is and they want to be part of it.

“Chinese Bullet Trains Depend on Mega Bridges”

These things are everywhere. Click the link.Inmost countries roads and rails follow the contour of the land. China likes pillars.

Digging subways is expensive and disruptive, cutting highways through cities isdestructive of homes and business, so China goes with sky-trains. Building these takes about half the land as roadways. The bridges are built offsite and then erected with a special crane.

“China Develops Infrared Light to Alter Genes of Cancer Cells”

A team led by Professor Song Yujun from the Nanjing University’s College of Engineering and Applied Sciences designed an infrared light-responsive nano-carrier to be used for the CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing tool, which will have great potential in cancer therapeutics. The strong penetrability of infrared light enables scientists to precisely control the gene editing tool in deep human tissue”

I am clueless as to the function of IR in this but, as with so very many stories coming out of China, it does not suggest copycatting. increasingly, the Chinese seem to following from in front.

“China Breaks Quantum Entanglement Record at Eighteen Qbits”

In a new record, Pan Jianwei and colleagues at the University of Science and Technology of China, eastern China’s Anhui Province, demonstrated a stable 18-qubit state. The previous record of 10 qubits was set by the same team. The breakthrough was made possible by simultaneously manipulating the freedom-paths, polarization, and orbital angular momentum of six photons.

“The speed of quantum computing grows exponentially as the number of qubits in an entangled state increases … the achievement of an 18-qubit entanglement this time has set the world record for largest entanglement state in all physical systems,” Wan

(Noah’s ark measured  300  Qbits, but the (barely) antediluvian technology has bee lost.)

Shkanghai Maglev Train

Open Date: Dec. 31st, 2002
Total Length: 30 kilometers (19 miles)
Highest Speed: 430km/h (267 mi/h)
Duration per Single Journey: 8 minutes
Frequency: 15-20 minutes
Route: Longyang Rd. – Pudong International Airport (PVG

Trains relying on magnetic levitation float on a field of magnetic repulsion, having no contact with rails. This reduces friction and ends wear on wheels and rails. China did not invent the technology but uses it well. Before this train, the trip from downtown to the airport took forty minutes to an hours. Now, eight minutes. The technology is German, the idea a century old, but the Chinese decided that they wanted it, and got it. The ability to make a decision and act on it without years of political wrangling and lawsuits gives China a major advantage over other countries.

The video is long, at 43 minutes, a bit ray-rah, and wanders briefly off into the history of elevated rail in Chicago but gives a good picture of the train, the technology at a non-specialist level, and the China in which it runs.

Rand: Chilling World War III Wargames show US Forces Crushed by Russia and China

“RAND Senior Defense Analyst David Ochmanek discussed the simulations at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) in Washington D.C. last week. “In our games, where we fight China or Russia … blue gets its a** handed to it, not to put too fine a point on it,” he said, during a panel discussion. Blue denotes U.S. forces in the simulations.”

The reasons for this are several and belong in another column. The military’s utterly predictable response is “Send m ore money” instead of “Maybe we should mind our own business and spend on our economy.” The point here is that the world is changing in may ways and Washington seems not to have noticed.

Conclusion

The list could be extended at length,tocover numbers of patents awarded, scientific papers published, quantum communications, investment in education and technological research and development, supercomputers and chip design and many other things. Beijing is clearly bent on Making China Great Again–as why should it not? Meanwhile America focuses more on transgender bathrooms and whether Bruce Jenner is a girl than on its endless and draining wars. China sends its brightest to the world’s best technical school while America makes its universities into playpens for the mildly retarded. The country crumbles but spends drunkenly of defective fighter planes it doesn’t need in the first place.

This won’t work a whole lot longer.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: china; military; technology; trump
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1 posted on 04/27/2019 4:21:55 AM PDT by vannrox
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To: vannrox

everyone THANK the clintons who gave china
every sincle us patent application for $$$$$.

like the uranium 1 scheme, they walk free.


2 posted on 04/27/2019 4:26:10 AM PDT by Diogenesis ( WWG1WGA)
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To: vannrox

When are you moving to that workers paradise Fred?


3 posted on 04/27/2019 4:31:40 AM PDT by Russ (I)
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To: vannrox
About time somebody woke up! Well worth noticing Chinese naval bases around the Indian Ocean (effectively controlling access to the Persian Gulf and oil in time of war), Bases around the South Pacific to perform the same function to prevent access to resupply and defense of allies (South Korea, Japan, the Philippines, etc.), and the "Roads and Belts Initiative" Where China - armed with all the money we're sending them - are constructing ports, railways and roads connecting them and their ability to move men and supplies all over the world.

The latest is in Italy.

S'pose the rest of us will finally wake up and develop coherent defenses/responses?

4 posted on 04/27/2019 4:34:01 AM PDT by Chainmail (A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
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To: vannrox
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5 posted on 04/27/2019 4:34:57 AM PDT by yuleeyahoo (The nation which can prefer disgrace to danger is prepared for a master and deserves one. Hamilton)
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To: vannrox

Yeah, maybe.

I remember back in the 1980s when we thought the USSR was going to eat our lunch (militarily and politically). Then they collapsed. Ditto Japan in the early 1990s.

I’ve been to China. Yes, lots of new construction. However, except for a few high profile projects, most of it shoddy.

The Russians, Chinese and Indians have people who are very, very smart. But the problem is that their countries are fundamentally corrupt.

On the other hand, we in the US often shoot ourselves in the foot. I don’t blame people for thinking we are “mildly retarded”. Yet, it seems to work. The Germans are also very smart, but they seem intent on national suicide even more than we are.


6 posted on 04/27/2019 4:39:51 AM PDT by rbg81 (Truth is stranger than fiction)
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To: Russ

Fred is an interesting character. He’s not a cheerleader, but an observer and contrarian. His points are worth considering in a broader sense. China has done much, they are not the feeble minded unable to innovate which is the feeling of many.

Fred’s point is that WE the USA aren’t innovating enough. We have allowed the leftists to destroy our educational rigor and it is WE the USA who are not innovating like we used to do. We are being prevented from leading the world by the democRATS and we are gifting our innovations to those who will use them to destroy us.


7 posted on 04/27/2019 4:52:26 AM PDT by Ouderkirk (Life is about ass, you're either covering, hauling, laughing, kicking, kissing, or behaving like one)
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To: Ouderkirk; Russ

Why waste your time. “Russ” clearly couldn’t have read the entire article and gave it thought. Lots of FReepers attack the posters and writers without having giving any discernment to what what was posted.


8 posted on 04/27/2019 4:59:05 AM PDT by raybbr (The left is a poison on society. There is no antidote. Running its course will be painful. You)
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To: vannrox

He is right about one thing, our system won’t work a whole
lot longer. That is not an accident, that is the goal of the left and has been since the 1920’s.


9 posted on 04/27/2019 4:59:20 AM PDT by Brooklyn Attitude (The first step in ending the war on white people is to recognize it exists.)
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To: Ouderkirk
Fred’s point is that WE the USA aren’t innovating enough. We have allowed the leftists to destroy our educational rigor and it is WE the USA who are not innovating like we used to do. We are being prevented from leading the world by the democRATS and we are gifting our innovations to those who will use them to destroy us.



That is putting it mildly. The USA has about two years to get our act together. Otherwise, it will be impossible to catch up. IMPOSSIBLE.
10 posted on 04/27/2019 5:06:02 AM PDT by vannrox (The Preamble to the Bill of Rights - without it, our Bill of Rights is meaningless!)
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To: vannrox

Many here would rather hide their heads in the sand and pretend that China of today is the China of say 1965. s

The change in China since say 1990 immeasurable. The primary benefactor and force to be reckoned with is the youth.

They have stuff and they like stuff. They are Chicaps....... business types they make deals and the deals end up making stuff.

Europe rather than America should be worried.

East of Suez is the future. Europe is in serious decline

The China youth have american stuff and like it

I observe and present a finding


11 posted on 04/27/2019 5:20:30 AM PDT by bert ( (KE. NP. N.C. +12) Honduras must be invaded to protect America from invasion)
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To: vannrox
If China were to become a purely capitalist country, it would indeed become a creative/inventive powerhouse...and not one to be feared at all.

But Communist China's place in the economic world at the moment is the result of stealing, copying, and reverse engineering inventions produced by free men in the free world.

One of the major reasons the U.S. has been an innovation leader is not just because of its free market capitalism but also because, unlike Europe, it isn't a relic of the original European caste system wherein people were (and still are to some degree) expected to know their place.

Speaking of Europe, the funny thing about the EU is that it represents a return to the old European caste system (wherein the proletariat have NO power or influence over the leadership). If the EU gains power in Europe, Europe will dry up like a prune.

12 posted on 04/27/2019 5:26:00 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: yuleeyahoo

Happens in the US, too

13 posted on 04/27/2019 5:29:12 AM PDT by sockmonkey (I am an America First, not Israel First FReeper.)
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To: vannrox

I am in the process of designing and building a DIY electric bicycle, an E-Bike. (When it comes to fun on two wheels, I’m an addict.) Hands down, the best hardware available in the world is coming from China.

The US hardware is so far behind the curve it is stupid. Drive systems, batteries, controllers (even the bicycle itself) are so far ahead of the US equivalent its scary.

And the cost of the hardware? Pennies on the dollar. We in the US are in trouble . . .


14 posted on 04/27/2019 5:38:49 AM PDT by BraveMan
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To: vannrox
(Noah’s ark measured 300 Qbits, but the (barely) antediluvian technology has bee lost.)

What?

15 posted on 04/27/2019 5:49:24 AM PDT by Pietro
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To: vannrox

The electronic exports are defective junk.


16 posted on 04/27/2019 6:33:53 AM PDT by Silentgypsy (Call an addiction hotline and say you're hooked on phonics.)
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To: vannrox
Thanks Free Traitors™.

A must read: Trade, the Left, and Trump

17 posted on 04/27/2019 6:40:00 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: rbg81

“But the problem is that their countries are fundamentally corrupt.”

Glad we don’t have that problem


18 posted on 04/27/2019 8:04:06 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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To: vannrox

Fred is dead on. The US is an architectural slum
with a citizenry to match. And we haven’t bottomed
out yet.


19 posted on 04/27/2019 8:21:29 AM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: vannrox

“and ahe military sucking blood from the economy like some vast leech...”

Yeah, shove it where the sun don’t shine. The military is what stands between us and them.

I don’t underestimate the Chinese, but I also don’t ignore the “ghost cities”

http://www.the-ifj.com/2019/02/06/what-has-become-of-chinas-ghost-cities/

I also recognize, as others do, that their transition from Communism to Fascism has powered their economy to date. Their inevitable collapse due to Central Planning is the biggest threat we, and the world, face.

The world’s #2 economy will cause economic havoc when the wheels fall off, and Xi’s attempts to stay in control will be bloody.

The “one child” policy has given China many single, military aged men as well as many new wealthy. Neither will be happy with decreasing GDP and standards of living.


20 posted on 04/27/2019 8:38:46 AM PDT by jdsteel (Americans are Dreamers too!!!)
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