by Patrick Appel
Fear Of A Red Planet explains why it isn't replicable:
Firstly under the nationalists and now under the communists China has
been subject to the greatest and most successful program of
nation-building ever seen. Whilst in India there are reportedly still
whole villages in which nobody has ever heard of the country India’,
since 1912 the Chinese nation has steadily been built up, with ethnic
and regional loyalties largely subsumed into the Chinese identity or
race (????).
Whilst it is generally believed in China that this
identity has existed for thousands of years, it is in fact an invention
of nineteenth century theorists like Liang Qichao
(???), intended to replace an imperial system fairly similar to the one
that existed in the Austro-Hungarian or Russian empires. This has
largely succeeded, and it is only in those areas with ethnic identities
so entirely different to that of the majority as to be incompatible
(such as Tibet and Xinjiang) that it has failed. The high level of
nationalism in China (Australian China-hand Ross Terrill
described it as “the nearest thing China has to a national religion”)
has allowed the Chinese state to survive pressures which would shatter
other countries, as such the Chinese model cannot simply be
transplanted to countries with strong regional identities.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/daily-dish/archive/2009/07/the-chinese-model/198547/
