| As the regulatory state grows larger, the entrepreneurial spirit is extinguished As China sinks into the economic morass that usually  afflicts communist projects, so too has its major role in the western  economies, though more so in the Americas than in Europe. This has been  accelerated by the decoupling in which as foreign direct investment in China  fades, no longer is it or will it be the engine of growth it once was.
 What the increasingly socialist Western world ignores is  the degree to which China became more prosperous in direct proportion to the  degree it became less socialist. Thus, its export-led economy generated riches  because the West bought what China made. This is no longer the case and nor is  it likely to be the case in future given the tighter communist control and  shrinking business confidence.  The implications for the West appear to be twofold; a) the  westbound trade from Asia will be larger than the eastbound trade to the  Americas and b) each trade will become smaller than it once was because of  re-shoring, nearshoring and homeshoring of factory production. The Americas are  more naturally self-sufficient industrially, while Europe is not, and more  dependent on imports from the Far East. But dealing with the larger Asia-Europe trade lane, there  is now the threat to safe passage through the Red Sea and the Suez Canal where  Yemeni rockets have been raining down. This has driven up insurance rates and  diverted ships to the much longer and more costly Cape route around South  Africa. Some readers are old enough to remember when the Suez Canal  was closed for eight years during a fit of pique on Egypt's part when it lost  the Six-Day War to Israel in 1967. Western relations with Red China are cooling as Beijing  becomes more traditionally communist, crushing individual liberties that were  growing since the days of Deng Xiaoping.  While the West was ready to cut China some slack as it  edged towards rule of law through commercial arbitration, it was less forgiving  of a society that was becoming increasingly authoritarian and threatening  neighbours. Yet a competence and confidence of the Chinese people has  remained high and this has been the only thing that commends China sourcing of  manufactures. But with the government dragging the people down with new  restrictions, bans and mandates, the admitted strengths of the Chinese were not  enough to slow the decoupling trend. All of which has made Vietnam, Thailand, Philippines,  Indonesia, and more importantly, India and Bangladesh, more attractive as a  source of manufactures. Their competence and confidence would grow over time,  and their governments would allow people to set their own priorities rather  than attempting to build a new socialist man while engaging in a never ending  class war. It is ironic that that these free-enterprising people are  conscripted in a classic communist class war, while at the same time the  Western world faces a class war from a supposedly capitalist regime,  intellectually led by Klaus Schwab and his World Economic Forum.  The WEF's views are enacted in rules and regulations with  the least possible input from elected legislatures. What's more, the West's  permanent civil service, the core of the Deep State, are unduly influenced, if  not actually controlled, by companies they supposedly regulate.   Perhaps unwittingly, these Eastern and Western forces are  working to similar ends. They are at peace today, but may be at war tomorrow.  One suspects such conflicts will be wars like those described in George  Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four", in which their importance lies not  in whether one side wins or loses, but whether they create sustainable  emergencies serious enough to justify  detailed and perpetual social control. Yet the Deep State has encountered difficulties. It had its  Gramsci Plan to parallel the German's World War I Schlieffen Plan, which had  put the German invasion of France on a schedule. Antonio Gramsci's plan to take  over the Western World was not by opposing and overthrowing Western  institutions as Marx advised, but by joining these organisations, and taking  them over, a process called the "long march through the  institutions". For the last 40, 50 years Gramsci Plan worked well. They  took over the universities, themselves serving as the filtration services for  the media and bureaucracy. So by 1980 one could safely say newsrooms were  dominated by the Parliamentary left. Soon it was much the same in the civil  service and the judiciary.  These  developments were occurring against a background of an electorate that was  50:50 split right and left judging by electoral results.  The Deep State, not being a conspiracy but rather an  amorphous collection of like-minded bodies, are vulnerable to siloed group  think, of going a bridge too far. What looked cool to the in-crowd like  attempting to normalise transgender operations or the whole range of queer  behavior, seriously sickened the out-crowd. Because Deep State showed itself for what it was too soon,  masculine revulsion elected Donald Trump. But with the Deep State sabotaging  all it could, there wasn't much the Trump Administration could do in office,  except in foreign affairs where he made yards because the Deep State played no  crucial role in the deals he made. Thus he moved the US Embassy to Jerusalem,  working out a new NAFTA deal, effecting a major tax cut, the signing the  Abraham Accords furthering a Middle East peace, and getting out of the Paris  Climate Accords.  What the siloed left, locked into their own echo chambers,  failed to realise is how unhinged they had become. Measures that under normal  circumstances would be considered unethical, were deemed in the hysterical mood  of the time, to be okay if applied to Trump. But there was resistance from the Canadian truckers convoy,  massive protests of German, Dutch and French farmers who besieged national  capitals and British Brexiteers who were in widespread revolt against the Deep  State. Of all the weapons of which the Deep State was most proud,  was the undisputed control of legacy media. They had achieved that beyond their  wildest dreams. But it was to prove nearly useless, rather like tanks in the  Russo-Ukraine war. They just seem to get blown up by artillery and drone  strikes. Great news sources of the past - CNN and the New York Times  - were now just Democratic Party mouth pieces, and known to be so and regarded  as such.Of the future, one can be  reasonably sure that there will be less production and less international  trade. That is, if nothing comes to change the mood as Trump did, bucking up  consumer confidence, and making the West great again. Which is precisely what  the left does not want.   |