We're hopscotching here, Blansky. You raised another question while I was answering the one about steel. Some of the deliberate hope about interdependent trade, despite the trade deficit, is that it brings about a very high degree of not only technological but personal traffic between the two countries. In the case of China, this has certainly completely changed how younger generations perceive the West. It still might be a one-party country, but it isn't Stalinist anymore. Mao is out, free enterprise and a relatively open intellectual environment is in. Nixon was correct on this one. And this is also what is moulding the current policy with Iran, whose urban majority and younger generation are quite pro-Western, even if the regime is not. Nobody has a crystal ball, and I think I'm more a realist than a pessimist when I believe some kind of catastropic world war is inevitable at some point. There are just too many titanic environmental, demographic, and ideological stresses going on. Something has to eventually crack. But in the meantime, even if China has a very aggressive espionage program in high
gear trying to steal both our military and industrial/tech secrets, they are also as a people and even govt quite friendly to the US in many
ways. And like I've already noted, many of their intellectual cream of the crop are being educated here, esp by the UC system. Most of these people are quite progressive and very open to Western ideas in general.