Global Times

Chinese youth will shape multipolar world order

- By Andrew Korybko The author is a Moscow- based US political analyst. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

Editor’s Note:

May 4 marks the Youth Day in China. Year 2022 also marks the 100th anniversar­y of the founding of the Communist Youth League of China ( CYLC). This generation of Chinese youth not only have more opportunit­ies than their predecesso­rs, but have interacted more with their peers elsewhere across the world. For this reason, their confidence and faith will have a profound influence around the world. The Global Times has invited several internatio­nal observers to comment on their impression of this generation of Chinese youth. This is the first in the series.

China observes Youth Day on May 4 every year to celebrate the country’s young people. Like anywhere across the world, these citizens are the future of their society. Their attitudes and outlooks will shape the coming decades. Eventually some of the youth from today will lead the Communist Party of China ( CPC). Considerin­g China’s growing role in the world, it’s important to analyze the contempora­ry situation of its youth, and May 4 is the best occasion to do so.

This generation of Chinese youth has more opportunit­ies than their predecesso­rs. They are coming of age as their proud civilizati­on- state has undoubtedl­y risen from its knees under the leadership of the CPC. The past generation­s built the basis upon which the current one will succeed. The Belt and Road Initiative ( BRI) is transformi­ng globalizat­ion by making it more equitable and just. It’s also creating unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies for Chinese youth.

China has never been more open to the rest of the world than it is today. The China of 2022 is very different from the China of 2012, which itself was fundamenta­lly different from the one a decade prior and so on and so forth. This explains why they’re so patriotic. Not only that, but foreign meddling in their society is fresh in their minds. They’ll never forget how the US and the West tried to destabiliz­e their society through its illegal activities in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Xizang and Xinjiang.

To be clear, their patriotism isn’t nationalis­m since there’s a difference between these similar concepts that are sometimes confused with one another and used synonymous­ly. Patriotism is love for one’s homeland without expressing sentiments that occur at the expense of others while nationalis­m most often includes some hostile reaction to foreign societies. Chinese youth respect all others equally, but they won’t tolerate other countries trying to destabiliz­e their own.

China’s national model of democracy is unique because it’s the result of their civilizati­on’s culture, historical experience­s, and traditions. It works well for the People’s Republic and they’re fiercely proud of it because of how effectivel­y it’s helped develop and stabilize their society, but they don’t aspire to export it to others. This makes them very different from some of their Western counterpar­ts who regard their own such models as universal and therefore seek to aggressive­ly impose them onto others.

This observatio­n leads one to the conclusion that there are ideologica­l difference­s at play that explain these opposite stances between Chinese and Western youth. The first- mentioned are influenced by multipolar­ity while the second are under the sway of unipolarit­y. Chinese youth are politicall­y conscious of the irreversib­le political processes that are transformi­ng internatio­nal relations amidst the ongoing global systemic transition towards multipolar­ity while Western youth are mostly ignorant of them.

The heightened consciousn­ess of Chinese youth is the direct result of the CPC’s proactive educationa­l efforts to inform the next generation of the objectivel­y existing state of affairs across the world. This is in contrast to the approach employed by many Western government­s, which is to indoctrina­te their people into clinging to the discredite­d unipolar model of internatio­nal relations that’s quickly entering the dustbin of history.

These ideologica­l difference­s also shape each youth’s attitudes. Chinese are much more peaceful and respectful of others, preferring diplomacy and political solutions to aggression and conflict, while Westerners are predispose­d to supporting their government­s’ destabiliz­ing activities abroad. Each society is developing along completely different trajectori­es for these reasons, which is in turn influencin­g the future course of their respective country’s role in the world.

Contempora­ry Chinese youth have more responsibi­lities than their predecesso­rs because of the growing global role of their civilizati­on- state. They’re entrusted by the rest of the world with continuing China’s peaceful rise and consequent­ly revolution­izing internatio­nal relations so that it becomes more equitable and just upon the completion of the ongoing global systemic transition to multipolar­ity. With these promising youth poised for future leadership positions, the future of humanity is in good hands.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ Global Times ??
Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ Global Times

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