王沪宁的胜利与恐怖
由 N.S. 里昂 2021 年 10 月 11 日 文章
https://www.palladiummag.com/2021/10/11/the-triumph-and-terror-of-wang-huning/
白宫官方照片/王沪宁在多伦多观察中国国家主席胡锦涛与美国总统奥巴马的谈话
2021年8月的一天,赵薇失踪了。 对于中国最著名的女演员之一来说,从公众视野中消失本身就足以引起轰动。 但赵的消失行为要彻底得多:一夜之间,她就从互联网上被删除了。 她拥有 8600 万粉丝的微博社交媒体页面以及专门针对她的粉丝网站都已下线。 在流媒体网站上搜索她的许多电影和电视节目没有返回任何结果。 赵的名字从她参演或执导的项目的片尾字幕中被删除,取而代之的是一个空白。 网上提及她名字的讨论受到审查。 突然之间,这位 45 岁的名人曾经存在过的痕迹就消失殆尽了。
她并不孤单。 随着中国政府监管机构宣布“加大打击力度”,旨在消除宣扬淫荡生活方式的“低俗网红”,并“解决网络粉丝文化造成的混乱问题”,其他中国艺人也开始消失。 那些模仿韩国男团明星女性化或雌雄同体美学的人——被形象地称为“小鲜肉”或“小鲜肉”——接下来将被淘汰,政府誓言“坚决杜绝娘娘腔男人”出现在电视节目中。 中国易受影响的年轻人的银幕。
赵和她不幸的娱乐业同胞陷入了比他们自己更大的事情中:一波突如其来的新政府政策正在颠覆中国人的生活,官方媒体将其描述为国家的“深刻变革”。 这一转变被官方称为中国国家主席习近平的“共同繁荣”运动,它沿着两条平行线进行:对私营部门经济进行大规模的监管打压,以及自上而下重塑中国文化的更广泛的道德努力。
但为什么会发生这种“深刻转变”呢? 为什么现在呢? 大多数分析都集中在一个人身上:习近平和他个人对政治控制的痴迷。 然而,被忽视的答案是,这确实是一个非常有权势的人数十年思考和规划的顶峰——但那个人不是习近平。
灰色显赫
王沪宁更喜欢阴影而不是聚光灯。 这位戴着眼镜、说话轻声细语的政治理论家患有失眠症和工作狂,他的前朋友和同事形容他性格内向、极其谨慎。 经过中国前领导人江泽民的一再恳求,这位当时才华横溢的年轻学者——他满怀憧憬地表示要走儒家学者的传统道路,远离政治——在20世纪90年代初放弃学术界,加入中国共产党政权。 反而。 当他最终这样做时,王切断了与以前的关系的几乎所有联系,停止出版和公开演讲,并执行了严格的政策,根本不与外国人交谈。 在这层精心营造的不透明面纱的背后,西方很少有人了解王,更不用说认识他本人了,这并不奇怪。
然而王沪宁可以说是当今最有影响力的“公共知识分子”。
作为中共七人政治局常委之一,他是中国最高的意识形态理论家,被誉为习近平每一个标志性政治概念背后的“思想人”,包括“中国梦”、反腐败运动、 “一带一路”倡议、更加自信的外交政策,甚至“习近平思想”。 仔细观察习近平在一次重要旅行或一次重要会议上的任何照片,人们很可能会发现王在背景中,永远远离领导人的身边。
因此,王与中国历史上的著名人物如诸葛亮和韩非(历史学家称后者为“中国的马基雅维利”)相提并论,他们同样在皇位背后担任强大的战略顾问和军师——这一职位在中国文学中被称为“帝士”: “帝师。” 在西方,这样的人物与特朗布莱、塔列朗、梅特涅、基辛格或弗拉基米尔·普京顾问弗拉迪斯拉夫·苏尔科夫的传统中的“灰色显赫”一样容易辨认。
但王的非凡之处在于,他成功地担任了中国前三位最高领导人的宫廷哲学家的角色,包括江泽民标志性的“三个代表”政策和胡锦涛的“三个代表”政策背后的笔。 和谐社会。”
在中共派系政治残酷残酷的世界里,这是前所未有的壮举。 王是被江泽民的“上海帮”招入党的,这是习近平在2012年上台后对这个敌对派系进行了无情清洗的人。 许多知名人士,如前安全部部长周永康和前安全部副部长孙立军,最终入狱。 与此同时,随着习派的巩固控制,胡锦涛的共青团派也被严重边缘化。 但王沪宁依然存在。 这一事实比任何其他事实都更能揭示他无可挑剔的政治狡猾之深。
中国灰色名人在共同繁荣运动中的印记是显而易见的。 虽然现在很难确定王在他的黑匣子里到底相信什么,但他曾经是一位多产的作家,出版了近 20 本书以及大量论文。 这些作品中的思想与当今中国正在发生的事情之间存在着明显的连续性,这说明了北京如何通过王沪宁的眼睛来看待世界。
文化能力
当其他中国青少年度过文化大革命(1966-76)的动荡岁月时,“下放农村”挖沟渠、种地,王沪宁却在家乡上海附近的一所精英外语培训学校学习法语。 他每天都在阅读老师为他保管的违禁外国文学经典。 1955年出生于山东的一个革命家庭,他是一个体弱多病、书生气十足的青年。 这一点,再加上他家人的关系,似乎让他免于苦役。
1978年,随着毛泽东的继任者邓小平开始“改革开放”,中国关闭的大学重新开放,王是第一批参加恢复的全国高考的人之一,与数百万人竞争重返高等教育的机会。 他的考试成绩如此出色,以至于中国顶尖学府之一的上海复旦大学录取了他进入著名的国际政治硕士项目,尽管他从未完成过学士学位。
他在复旦完成的论文,也就是他的第一本书,追溯了西方国家主权概念从古代到今天的发展,包括从吉尔伽美什到苏格拉底、亚里士多德、奥古斯丁、马基雅维利、霍布斯、卢梭、孟德斯鸠、 黑格尔和马克思——并将其与中国的观念进行了对比。 这部著作将成为他未来许多民族国家和国际关系理论的基础。
但王也开始拾起他一生工作的另一条核心线索:文化、传统和价值结构对政治稳定的必要中心地位。
王在 1988 年的一篇文章《中国不断变化的政治文化的结构》中详细阐述了这些观点,这篇文章后来成为他被引用最多的著作之一。 他在文中指出,中共必须紧急考虑社会的“软件”(文化、价值观、态度)与其“硬件”(经济、系统、制度)一样塑造政治命运。 虽然看似一个简单的想法,但这显然是对正统马克思主义唯物主义的大胆突破。
在邓小平迅速向世界开放的过程中审视中国,王认为中国正处于“转型状态”,从“生产经济向消费经济”转变,同时“从精神文化向物质文化发展” ”和“从集体主义文化到个人主义文化”。
同时,他认为“中国特色社会主义”的现代化实际上使中国根本没有任何真正的文化方向。 “中国最新的结构中没有核心价值观,”他警告说。 这只会瓦解社会和政治凝聚力。
他说,这是站不住脚的。 警告说,“文化大革命塑造的政治文化的组成部分已经脱离了这种文化诞生的根源,也脱离了社会需求、社会价值观和社会关系”——因此“ 对马克思主义的接受并不总是积极的”——他认为,“1949年以来,我们对古典和现代结构的核心价值观进行了批判,但对塑造我们自己的核心价值观不够重视。” 因此:“我们必须创造核心价值观”。 他总结说,理想情况下,“我们必须将[中国]传统价值观的灵活性与[西方和马克思主义]的现代精神结合起来。”
但在这一点上,就像改革开放那些令人兴奋的岁月中的许多人一样,他仍然对自由主义能够在中国发挥积极作用抱有希望,并写道,他的建议可以允许“体现现代民主精神的现代结构的组成部分和 人文主义找到他们扎根和成长所需的支持。”
这种情况很快就会改变。
黑暗的愿景
同样在 1988 年,30 岁的王以前所未有的速度成为复旦大学最年轻的正教授,并获得了令人垂涎的奖学金(由美国政治学协会资助),以访问学者的身份在美国度过了六个月。 出于对美国的强烈好奇,王充分利用了这一点,像近代中国的托克维尔一样游历美国,访问了30多个城市和近20所大学。
他的发现深深地困扰了他,永久地改变了他对西方及其思想后果的看法。
王将他的观察记录在一本回忆录中,这本回忆录后来成为他最著名的作品:1991 年出版的《美国对抗美国》一书。 在书中,他惊叹于华盛顿特区街头的无家可归者营地、纽约和旧金山贫困黑人社区失控的毒品犯罪,以及似乎已经融入并接管政府职责的公司。 最终,他得出的结论是,美国面临着由其社会矛盾所产生的“不可阻挡的危机暗流”,这些社会矛盾包括贫富之间、白人与黑人之间、民主与寡头权力之间、平等主义与阶级特权之间、个人权利与集体责任之间、文化传统与社会矛盾之间。 液体现代性的溶剂。
但他说,虽然美国人可以意识到他们面临着“复杂的社会和文化问题”,但他们“倾向于将这些问题视为需要单独解决的科学和技术问题”。 他认为,这对他们毫无帮助,因为他们的问题实际上都是密不可分的,并且具有相同的根本原因:现代美国自由主义核心的激进、虚无主义的个人主义。
“美国社会的真正细胞是个人,”他发现。 之所以如此,是因为(按照亚里士多德的说法)社会最基础的细胞“家庭,已经解体”。 与此同时,在美国体系中,“一切事物都具有双重性,高度商品化的魅力无处不在。 人肉、性、知识、政治、权力、法律都可以成为商品化的对象。” 这种“商品化在很多方面腐蚀了社会并导致了许多严重的社会问题。” 最终,“美国经济体系创造了人类的孤独”作为其最重要的产物,同时还造成了严重的不平等。 结果,“虚无主义成为美国方式,这对文化发展和美国精神是致命的冲击”。
此外,他表示,“美国精神正面临着来自新理念竞争对手的严峻挑战”。 在回顾他访问过的大学时,他赞赏地引用了艾伦·布鲁姆(Allan Bloom)的《美国思想的封闭》(The Closing of the American Mind),他指出启蒙运动自由理性主义与“对西方传统价值观一无所知的年轻一代”之间日益紧张的关系,并积极拒绝其文化遗产。 “如果价值体系崩溃了,”他想知道,“社会体系如何维持?”
他认为,归根结底,当面对吸毒成瘾等关键社会问题时,美国这个原子化的、被消灭的、萎靡不振的社会发现自己面临着“一个无法克服的问题”,因为它不再有任何连贯的概念基础来发起任何抵抗。
年轻的王曾对美国抱有理想主义的态度,1989年初回到中国,并晋升为复旦大学国际政治系主任,成为自由化的主要反对者。
他开始主张中国必须抵制全球自由主义的影响,成为一个文化统一、自信的国家,由一个强大的、集权的党国统治。 他将这些想法发展为后来被称为中国的“新威权主义”运动——尽管王从未使用过这个词,将自己等同于中国的“新保守派”。 这反映了他希望将马克思主义社会主义与中国传统儒家价值观、法家政治思想、西方国家主权和权力的最高主义思想以及民族主义相融合,以合成不受西方自由主义影响的长期稳定和增长的新基础。
“他最关心的是如何管理中国的问题,”一位前复旦学生回忆道。 “他建议,一个强大的、集权的国家对于维持这个社会是必要的。 他每天晚上都在办公室里度过,没有做任何其他事情。”
王的时机再好不过了。 他回国仅几个月后,中国自身新出现的矛盾就以天安门广场学生抗议的形式爆发出来。 在解放军坦克粉碎了中国萌芽的自由民主梦想后,中共领导层开始拼命寻找新的政治模式来确保政权安全。 他们很快把目光投向了王沪宁。
1993年,当王带领大学辩论队在新加坡国际比赛中获胜而赢得全国赞誉时,他引起了天安门事件后成为中共领导人的江泽民的注意。 王以人性本恶的论点击败了台大,预示着“西方现代文明虽然可以带来物质繁荣,但并不一定能带来品格的改善”。 江泽民把他从大学挖了出来,40岁时,他被任命为中共秘密的中央政策研究室的领导职务,使他进入了最高权力梯队。
王沪宁的噩梦
从现在中国互联网上数以百万计的自鸣得意的观点来看,王对美国解体的黑暗愿景无异于预言。 当他们把目光投向美国时,他们不再将自由民主的灯塔视为更美好未来的令人钦佩的象征。 这就是那些创造了著名的“民主女神”的人的印象,她的纸浆火把高举在天安门前。
相反,他们看到的是王的美国:去工业化、农村衰败、过度金融化、资产价格失控以及自我延续的食利精英的出现; 强大的科技垄断企业能够粉碎任何在政府范围之外有效运作的新贵竞争对手; 巨大的经济不平等、长期失业、毒瘾、无家可归和犯罪; 文化混乱、历史虚无主义、家庭破裂和生育率下降; 社会绝望、精神萎靡、社会孤立以及心理健康问题发病率飙升; 面对颓废和几乎不掩饰的自我厌恶,民族团结和目标丧失; 巨大的内部分歧、种族紧张、骚乱、政治暴力,以及一个似乎越来越接近分裂的国家。
随着2020年美国政治的动荡,中国人开始向王的《美国对抗美国》寻求答案。 2021 年 1 月 6 日,当一群暴徒冲进美国国会大厦时,这本书被抢购一空。 绝版书在中国电子商务网站上的售价开始高达 2,500 美元。
但王不太可能享受这种赞誉,因为他最担心的事情已经成为现实:他在美国发现的“不可阻挡的危机暗流”似乎已经成功地跨越了太平洋。 尽管他和习近平在严厉镇压政治自由主义方面取得了成功,但随着中国逐步接受更加新自由主义的资本主义经济模式,王在美国观察到的许多同样的问题在过去十年中仍然出现并肆虐中国。
“中国特色社会主义”已迅速将中国转变为地球上经济最不平等的社会之一。 目前,官方公布的基尼系数约为 0.47,低于美国的 0.41。 最富有的 1% 人口目前拥有全国约 31% 的财富(与美国的 35% 相差不远)。 但大多数中国人仍然相对贫困:约有 6 亿人的月收入仍然不足 1000 元(155 美元)。
与此同时,中国科技巨头已经建立了比美国同行更强大的垄断地位,市场份额往往接近 90%。 企业招聘通常采用令人筋疲力尽的“996”时间表(上午 9 点至晚上 9 点,每周 6 天)。 另一些人则在庞大的现代契约奴役体系(即中国的“零工经济”)中苦苦挣扎,受困于预付债务。 阿里巴巴表示,预计到 2036 年,多达 4 亿中国人将摆脱这种“个体经营”。
中国不断扩大的大学毕业生群体的就业市场竞争如此激烈,以至于“毕业等于失业”成为一个社会模因(这两个词有一个共同的汉字)。 随着年轻人涌入大都市寻找就业机会,农村地区已被耗尽并陷入腐朽,而几个世纪以来的公共大家庭生活在一代人的时间里被颠覆,使得老年人只能依赖国家提供边缘护理。 在城市,年轻人因炙手可热的资产泡沫而被挤出房地产市场。
与此同时,与西方对中国固有的公共文化的陈词滥调的假设相反,中国的原子化感和低社会信任度已经变得如此尖锐,以至于在受伤的个人被奇怪地经常性地伤害之后,导致了社会周期性的痛苦反省。 路人习惯性地怀疑自己被骗了,把他们丢在街上等死。
中国年轻人在无情的消费主义社会中感到孤独,无法出人头地,越来越多地描述自己处于一种虚无主义的绝望状态,这种状态被网络俚语“内卷”所概括,它描述了个人和社会因 一种普遍的感觉,即陷入一场令人筋疲力尽的激烈竞争,每个人都不可避免地会失败。 这种绝望表现在一场被称为“躺平”的运动中,人们试图通过做生活所需的绝对最低限度的工作来逃避这场激烈的竞争,成为现代的苦行僧。
在这种环境下,截至 2020 年,中国的生育率已降至每名妇女生育 1.3 个孩子,低于日本,仅高于全球最低的韩国,使其经济未来陷入危机。 取消家庭规模限制以及政府试图说服家庭多生孩子的做法遭到了中国年轻人的怀疑和嘲笑,认为这与经济和社会现实“完全脱节”。 “他们还不知道大多数年轻人光靠养活自己就已经筋疲力尽了吗?” 社交媒体上的一篇典型病毒帖子问道。 确实,考虑到中国残酷的教育体系,养育一个孩子的成本是巨大的:根据地点的不同,估计费用在 30,000 美元(大约是普通公民年薪的七倍)到 115,000 美元之间。
但即使是那些有能力生孩子的中国年轻人也发现他们享受着一种新的生活方式:令人向往的丁克(“双收入,没有孩子”)生活,在这种生活中,受过良好教育的年轻夫妇(已婚或未婚)花掉所有额外的现金 在他们自己身上。 正如一位接受了输精管结扎术、彻底解放的 27 岁男性曾向《纽约时报》解释的那样:“对于我们这一代来说,孩子不是必需品……现在我们可以没有任何负担地生活。 那么为什么不把我们的精神和经济资源投资到我们自己的生活上呢?”
因此,尽管美国人今天已经放弃了让中国自由化的旧梦,但他们也许应该看得更近一些。 确实,如果你认为自由主义就是民主选举、新闻自由和尊重人权,那么中国从未实现过丝毫自由化。 但许多政治思想家认为,现代自由主义的全面定义远不止于此。 相反,他们将自由主义的基本目的视为将个人从地方、传统、宗教、社团和关系的所有限制性纽带以及自然的所有物质限制中解放出来,以追求现代“的彻底自主”。 消费者。”
从这个角度来看,中国已经彻底自由化,中国社会正在发生的事情开始看起来更像是王的噩梦,自由主义文化被虚无主义的个人主义和商品化所吞噬。
伟大的实验
正是在这种背景下,王沪宁似乎赢得了中国体制内一场关于中华人民共和国现在需要什么才能持续下去的长期辩论。 中国对不受约束的经济和文化自由主义的宽容时代已经结束。
根据他的一位老朋友泄露的说法,习近平发现自己和王一样,“对中国社会全方位的商业化感到厌恶,以及随之而来的暴发户暴富、官员腐败、价值观、尊严和自我价值的丧失”。 尊重,以及毒品和卖淫等‘道德罪恶’。” 王现在似乎已经让习近平相信,他们别无选择,只能采取严厉行动,以阻止西式经济和文化自由资本主义对社会秩序产生的生存威胁——这些威胁与困扰美国的威胁几乎相同。
这种干预采取了共同富裕运动的形式,习近平在一月份宣布“绝对不能让贫富差距扩大”,并警告说“实现共同富裕不仅是一个经济问题, 这也是事关党的执政基础的重大政治问题。”
这就是为什么反垄断调查对中国顶级科技公司造成了数十亿美元的罚款、强制重组和严格的新数据规则限制了中国的互联网和社交媒体公司。 这就是为什么破纪录的首次公开募股被搁置,企业被勒令改善劳动条件,“996”加班要求被定为非法,零工工人的工资也提高了。 这就是为什么政府一夜之间取消了私人补习行业并限制了房产租金的上涨。 这就是为什么政府宣布要对“过高的收入”进行“调整”。
这就是为什么像赵薇这样的名人一直在消失,为什么中国未成年人被禁止每周玩电子游戏这种“精神鸦片”超过三个小时,为什么 LGBT 群体被从互联网上清除,以及为什么堕胎限制已经被禁止。 得到了显着收紧。 正如一篇民族主义文章在全国范围内推广
这就是为什么像赵薇这样的名人一直在消失,为什么中国未成年人被禁止每周玩电子游戏这种“精神鸦片”超过三个小时,为什么 LGBT 群体被从互联网上清除,以及为什么堕胎限制已经被禁止。 得到了显着收紧。 正如一篇在官方媒体上宣传的民族主义文章所解释的那样,如果允许自由派西方的“乳头娱乐策略”成功地导致中国“年轻一代失去坚韧和阳刚之气,那么我们就会崩溃……就像苏联那样。” 习近平“深刻转型”的目的是要确保“文化市场不再是娘娘腔明星的乐园,新闻舆论不再处于崇拜西方文化的境地”。
最终,这场运动代表了王沪宁的胜利和恐怖。 这是他三十年来的文化思想在政策上的体现。
一方面,值得诚实地看待西方目前正在经历的经济、技术、文化和政治动荡的程度,并考虑他是否准确地诊断出了在我们全球化世界中蔓延的共同暗流。 另一方面,考虑到历史上其他潜在的“灵魂工程师”的许多失败,他设计新社会价值观的策略能否成功似乎令人怀疑。
衡量未来几年这一努力的最佳简单指标可能是人口统计数据。 由于尚不完全清楚的原因,世界上许多国家现在面临着同样的挑战:随着它们发展成为发达经济体,生育率已低于更替率。 这种情况在多种政治制度中都发生过,而且几乎没有任何缓和的迹象。 除了移民之外,现在还尝试了多种政策来提高出生率,从增加对儿童保育服务的公共资金到为有孩子的家庭提供“产前”税收抵免。 没有一个能够持续取得成功,这在某些方面引发了痛苦的争论:失去生存和繁衍的意愿是否只是现代性的一个基本因素。 但如果有哪个国家能够成功扭转这一趋势,无论需要付出多大的努力,那很可能就是中国。
不管怎样,我们的世界正在见证一场正在进行的伟大实验:中国和西方面临着非常相似的社会问题,但在王沪宁的帮助下,现在却采取了截然不同的方法来解决这些问题。 随着中国日益挑战美国的全球地缘政治和意识形态领导地位,这一实验的结论很可能会塑造未来一个世纪全球治理的未来。
国家统计局 里昂斯是一位在华盛顿特区生活和工作的分析师和作家。他是《剧变》一书的作者。
PALLADIUM GOVERNANCE FUTURISM
One day in August 2021, Zhao Wei disappeared. For one of China's best-known actresses to physically vanish from public view would have been enough to cause a stir on its own. But Zhao’s disappearing act was far more thorough: overnight, she was erased from the internet. Her Weibo social media page, with its 86 million followers, went offline, as did fan sites dedicated to her. Searches for her many films and television shows returned no results on streaming sites. Zhao’s name was scrubbed from the credits of projects she had appeared in or directed, replaced with a blank space. Online discussions uttering her name were censored. Suddenly, little trace remained that the 45-year-old celebrity had ever existed.
She wasn’t alone. Other Chinese entertainers also began to vanish as Chinese government regulators announced a “heightened crackdown” intended to dispense with “vulgar internet celebrities” promoting lascivious lifestyles and to “resolve the problem of chaos” created by online fandom culture. Those imitating the effeminate or androgynous aesthetics of Korean boyband stars—colorfully referred to as “xiao xian rou,” or “little fresh meat”—were next to go, with the government vowing to “resolutely put an end to sissy men” appearing on the screens of China’s impressionable youth.
Zhao and her unfortunate compatriots in the entertainment industry were caught up in something far larger than themselves: a sudden wave of new government policies that are currently upending Chinese life in what state media has characterized as a “profound transformation” of the country. Officially referred to as Chinese President Xi Jinping’s “Common Prosperity” campaign, this transformation is proceeding along two parallel lines: a vast regulatory crackdown roiling the private sector economy and a broader moralistic effort to reengineer Chinese culture from the top down.
But why is this “profound transformation” happening? And why now? Most analysis has focused on one man: Xi and his seemingly endless personal obsession with political control. The overlooked answer, however, is that this is indeed the culmination of decades of thinking and planning by a very powerful man—but that man is not Xi Jinping.
The Grey Eminence
Wang Huning much prefers the shadows to the limelight. An insomniac and workaholic, former friends and colleagues describe the bespectacled, soft-spoken political theorist as introverted and obsessively discreet. It took former Chinese leader Jiang Zemin’s repeated entreaties to convince the brilliant then-young academic—who spoke wistfully of following the traditional path of a Confucian scholar, aloof from politics—to give up academia in the early 1990s and join the Chinese Communist Party regime instead. When he finally did so, Wang cut off nearly all contact with his former connections, stopped publishing and speaking publicly, and implemented a strict policy of never speaking to foreigners at all. Behind this veil of carefully cultivated opacity, it’s unsurprising that so few people in the West know of Wang, let alone know him personally.
Yet Wang Huning is arguably the single most influential “public intellectual” alive today.
A member of the CCP’s seven-man Politburo Standing Committee, he is China’s top ideological theorist, quietly credited as being the “ideas man” behind each of Xi’s signature political concepts, including the “China Dream,” the anti-corruption campaign, the Belt and Road Initiative, a more assertive foreign policy, and even “Xi Jinping Thought.” Scrutinize any photograph of Xi on an important trip or at a key meeting and one is likely to spot Wang there in the background, never far from the leader’s side.
Wang has thus earned comparisons to famous figures of Chinese history like Zhuge Liang and Han Fei (historians dub the latter “China’s Machiavelli”) who similarly served behind the throne as powerful strategic advisers and consiglieres—a position referred to in Chinese literature as dishi: “Emperor’s Teacher.” Such a figure is just as readily recognizable in the West as an éminence grise (“grey eminence”), in the tradition of Tremblay, Talleyrand, Metternich, Kissinger, or Vladimir Putin adviser Vladislav Surkov.
But what is singularly remarkable about Wang is that he’s managed to serve in this role of court philosopher to not just one, but all three of China’s previous top leaders, including as the pen behind Jiang Zemin’s signature “Three Represents” policy and Hu Jintao’s “Harmonious Society.”
In the brutally cutthroat world of CCP factional politics, this is an unprecedented feat. Wang was recruited into the party by Jiang’s “Shanghai Gang,” a rival faction that Xi worked to ruthlessly purge after coming to power in 2012; many prominent members, like former security chief Zhou Yongkang and former vice security minister Sun Lijun, have ended up in prison. Meanwhile, Hu Jintao’s Communist Youth League Faction has also been heavily marginalized as Xi’s faction has consolidated control. Yet Wang Huning remains. More than any other, it is this fact that reveals the depth of his impeccable political cunning.
And the fingerprints of China’s Grey Eminence on the Common Prosperity campaign are unmistakable. While it’s hard to be certain what Wang really believes today inside his black box, he was once an immensely prolific author, publishing nearly 20 books along with numerous essays. And the obvious continuity between the thought in those works and what’s happening in China today says something fascinating about how Beijing has come to perceive the world through the eyes of Wang Huning.
Cultural Competence
While other Chinese teenagers spent the tumultuous years of the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) “sent down to the countryside” to dig ditches and work on farms, Wang Huning studied French at an elite foreign-language training school near his hometown of Shanghai, spending his days reading banned foreign literary classics secured for him by his teachers. Born in 1955 to a revolutionary family from Shandong, he was a sickly, bookish youth; this, along with his family’s connections, seems to have secured him a pass from hard labor.
When China’s shuttered universities reopened in 1978, following the commencement of “reform and opening” by Mao’s successor Deng Xiaoping, Wang was among the first to take the restored national university entrance exam, competing with millions for a chance to return to higher learning. He passed so spectacularly that Shanghai’s Fudan University, one of China’s top institutions, admitted him into its prestigious international politics master’s program despite having never completed a bachelor’s degree.
The thesis work he completed at Fudan, which would become his first book, traced the development of the Western concept of national sovereignty from antiquity to the present day—including from Gilgamesh through Socrates, Aristotle, Augustine, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Hegel, and Marx—and contrasted it with Chinese conceptions of the idea. The work would become the foundation for many of his future theories of the nation-state and international relations.
But Wang was also beginning to pick up the strands of what would become another core thread of his life’s work: the necessary centrality of culture, tradition, and value structures to political stability.
Wang elaborated on these ideas in a 1988 essay, “The Structure of China’s Changing Political Culture,” which would become one of his most cited works. In it, he argued that the CCP must urgently consider how society’s “software” (culture, values, attitudes) shapes political destiny as much as its “hardware” (economics, systems, institutions). While seemingly a straightforward idea, this was notably a daring break from the materialism of orthodox Marxism.
Examining China in the midst of Deng’s rapid opening to the world, Wang perceived a country “in a state of transformation” from “an economy of production to an economy of consumption,” while evolving “from a spiritually oriented culture to a materially oriented culture,” and “from a collectivist culture to an individualistic culture.”
Meanwhile, he believed that the modernization of “Socialism with Chinese characteristics” was effectively leaving China without any real cultural direction at all. “There are no core values in China’s most recent structure,” he warned. This could serve only to dissolve societal and political cohesion.
That, he said, was untenable. Warning that “the components of the political culture shaped by the Cultural Revolution came to be divorced from the source that gave birth to this culture, as well as from social demands, social values, and social relations”—and thus “the results of the adoption of Marxism were not always positive”—he argued that, “Since 1949, we have criticized the core values of the classical and modern structures, but have not paid enough attention to shaping our own core values.” Therefore: “we must create core values.” Ideally, he concluded, “We must combine the flexibility of [China’s] traditional values with the modern spirit [both Western and Marxist].”
But at this point, like many during those heady years of reform and opening, he remained hopeful that liberalism could play a positive role in China, writing that his recommendations could allow “the components of the modern structure that embody the spirit of modern democracy and humanism [to] find the support they need to take root and grow.”
That would soon change.
A Dark Vision
Also in 1988, Wang—having risen with unprecedented speed to become Fudan’s youngest full professor at age 30—won a coveted scholarship (facilitated by the American Political Science Association) to spend six months in the United States as a visiting scholar. Profoundly curious about America, Wang took full advantage, wandering about the country like a sort of latter-day Chinese Alexis de Tocqueville, visiting more than 30 cities and nearly 20 universities.
What he found deeply disturbed him, permanently shifting his view of the West and the consequences of its ideas.
Wang recorded his observations in a memoir that would become his most famous work: the 1991 book America Against America. In it, he marvels at homeless encampments in the streets of Washington DC, out-of-control drug crime in poor black neighborhoods in New York and San Francisco, and corporations that seemed to have fused themselves to and taken over responsibilities of government. Eventually, he concludes that America faces an “unstoppable undercurrent of crisis” produced by its societal contradictions, including between rich and poor, white and black, democratic and oligarchic power, egalitarianism and class privilege, individual rights and collective responsibilities, cultural traditions and the solvent of liquid modernity.
But while Americans can, he says, perceive that they are faced with “intricate social and cultural problems,” they “tend to think of them as scientific and technological problems” to be solved separately. This gets them nowhere, he argues, because their problems are in fact all inextricably interlinked and have the same root cause: a radical, nihilistic individualism at the heart of modern American liberalism.
“The real cell of society in the United States is the individual,” he finds. This is so because the cell most foundational (per Aristotle) to society, “the family, has disintegrated.” Meanwhile, in the American system, “everything has a dual nature, and the glamour of high commodification abounds. Human flesh, sex, knowledge, politics, power, and law can all become the target of commodification.” This “commodification, in many ways, corrupts society and leads to a number of serious social problems.” In the end, “the American economic system has created human loneliness” as its foremost product, along with spectacular inequality. As a result, “nihilism has become the American way, which is a fatal shock to cultural development and the American spirit.”
Moreover, he says that the “American spirit is facing serious challenges” from new ideational competitors. Reflecting on the universities he visited and quoting approvingly from Allan Bloom’s The Closing of the American Mind, he notes a growing tension between Enlightenment liberal rationalism and a “younger generation [that] is ignorant of traditional Western values” and actively rejects its cultural inheritance. “If the value system collapses,” he wonders, “how can the social system be sustained?”
Ultimately, he argues, when faced with critical social issues like drug addiction, America’s atomized, deracinated, and dispirited society has found itself with “an insurmountable problem” because it no longer has any coherent conceptual grounds from which to mount any resistance.
Once idealistic about America, at the start of 1989 the young Wang returned to China and, promoted to Dean of Fudan’s International Politics Department, became a leading opponent of liberalization.
He began to argue that China had to resist global liberal influence and become a culturally unified and self-confident nation governed by a strong, centralized party-state. He would develop these ideas into what has become known as China’s “Neo-Authoritarian” movement—though Wang never used the term, identifying himself with China’s “Neo-Conservatives.” This reflected his desire to blend Marxist socialism with traditional Chinese Confucian values and Legalist political thought, maximalist Western ideas of state sovereignty and power, and nationalism in order to synthesize a new basis for long-term stability and growth immune to Western liberalism.
“He was most concerned with the question of how to manage China,” one former Fudan student recalls. “He was suggesting that a strong, centralized state is necessary to hold this society together. He spent every night in his office and didn’t do anything else.”
Wang’s timing couldn’t have been more auspicious. Only months after his return, China’s own emerging contradictions exploded into view in the form of student protests in Tiananmen Square. After PLA tanks crushed the dreams of liberal democracy sprouting in China, CCP leadership began searching desperately for a new political model on which to secure the regime. They soon turned to Wang Huning.
When Wang won national acclaim by leading a university debate team to victory in an international competition in Singapore in 1993, he caught the attention of Jiang Zemin, who had become party leader after Tiananmen. Wang, having defeated National Taiwan University by arguing that human nature is inherently evil, foreshadowed that, “While Western modern civilization can bring material prosperity, it doesn’t necessarily lead to improvement in character.” Jiang plucked him from the university and, at the age of 40, he was granted a leadership position in the CCP’s secretive Central Policy Research Office, putting him on an inside track into the highest echelons of power.
Wang Huning’s Nightmare
From the smug point of view of millions who now inhabit the Chinese internet, Wang’s dark vision of American dissolution was nothing less than prophetic. When they look to the U.S., they no longer see a beacon of liberal democracy standing as an admired symbol of a better future. That was the impression of those who created the famous “Goddess of Democracy,” with her paper-mâché torch held aloft before the Gate of Heavenly Peace.
Instead, they see Wang’s America: deindustrialization, rural decay, over-financialization, out of control asset prices, and the emergence of a self-perpetuating rentier elite; powerful tech monopolies able to crush any upstart competitors operating effectively beyond the scope of government; immense economic inequality, chronic unemployment, addiction, homelessness, and crime; cultural chaos, historical nihilism, family breakdown, and plunging fertility rates; societal despair, spiritual malaise, social isolation, and skyrocketing rates of mental health issues; a loss of national unity and purpose in the face of decadence and barely concealed self-loathing; vast internal divisions, racial tensions, riots, political violence, and a country that increasingly seems close to coming apart.
As a tumultuous 2020 roiled American politics, Chinese people began turning to Wang’s America Against America for answers. And when a mob stormed the U.S. Capitol building on January 6, 2021, the book flew off the shelves. Out-of-print copies began selling for as much as $2,500 on Chinese e-commerce sites.
But Wang is unlikely to be savoring the acclaim, because his worst fear has become reality: the “unstoppable undercurrent of crisis” he identified in America seems to have successfully jumped the Pacific. Despite all his and Xi’s success in draconian suppression of political liberalism, many of the same problems Wang observed in America have nonetheless emerged to ravage China over the last decade as the country progressively embraced a more neoliberal capitalist economic model.
“Socialism with Chinese Characteristics” has rapidly transformed China into one of the most economically unequal societies on earth. It now boasts a Gini Coefficient of, officially, around 0.47, worse than the U.S.’s 0.41. The wealthiest 1% of the population now holds around 31% of the country’s wealth (not far behind the 35% in the U.S.). But most people in China remain relatively poor: some 600 million still subsist on a monthly income of less than 1,000 yuan ($155) a month.
Meanwhile, Chinese tech giants have established monopoly positions even more robust than their U.S. counterparts, often with market shares nearing 90%. Corporate employment frequently features an exhausting “996” (9am to 9pm, 6 days a week) schedule. Others labor among struggling legions trapped by up-front debts in the vast system of modern-day indentured servitude that is the Chinese “gig economy.” Up to 400 million Chinese are forecast to enjoy the liberation of such “self-employment” by 2036, according to Alibaba.
The job market for China’s ever-expanding pool of university graduates is so competitive that “graduation equals unemployment” is a societal meme (the two words share a common Chinese character). And as young people have flocked to urban metropoles to search for employment, rural regions have been drained and left to decay, while centuries of communal extended family life have been upended in a generation, leaving the elderly to rely on the state for marginal care. In the cities, young people have been priced out of the property market by a red-hot asset bubble.
Meanwhile, contrary to trite Western assumptions of an inherently communal Chinese culture, the sense of atomization and low social trust in China has become so acute that it’s led to periodic bouts of anguished societal soul-searching after oddly regular instances in which injured individuals have been left to die on the street by passers-by habitually distrustful of being scammed.
Feeling alone and unable to get ahead in a ruthlessly consumerist society, Chinese youth increasingly describe existing in a state of nihilistic despair encapsulated by the online slang term neijuan (“involution”), which describes a “turning inward” by individuals and society due to a prevalent sense of being stuck in a draining rat race where everyone inevitably loses. This despair has manifested itself in a movement known as tangping, or “lying flat,” in which people attempt to escape that rat race by doing the absolute bare minimum amount of work required to live, becoming modern ascetics.
In this environment, China’s fertility rate has collapsed to 1.3 children per woman as of 2020—below Japan and above only South Korea as the lowest in the world—plunging its economic future into crisis. Ending family size limits and government attempts to persuade families to have more children have been met with incredulity and ridicule by Chinese young people as being “totally out of touch” with economic and social reality. “Do they not yet know that most young people are exhausted just supporting themselves?” asked one typically viral post on social media. It’s true that, given China’s cut-throat education system, raising even one child costs a huge sum: estimates range between $30,000 (about seven times the annual salary of the average citizen) and $115,000, depending on location.
But even those Chinese youth who could afford to have kids have found they enjoy a new lifestyle: the coveted DINK (“Double Income, No Kids”) life, in which well-educated young couples (married or not) spend all that extra cash on themselves. As one thoroughly liberated 27-year-old man with a vasectomy once explained to The New York Times: “For our generation, children aren’t a necessity…Now we can live without any burdens. So why not invest our spiritual and economic resources on our own lives?”
So while Americans have today given up the old dream of liberalizing China, they should maybe look a little closer. It’s true that China never remotely liberalized—if you consider liberalism to be all about democratic elections, a free press, and respect for human rights. But many political thinkers would argue there is more to a comprehensive definition of modern liberalism than that. Instead, they would identify liberalism’s essential telos as being the liberation of the individual from all limiting ties of place, tradition, religion, associations, and relationships, along with all the material limits of nature, in pursuit of the radical autonomy of the modern “consumer.”
From this perspective, China has been thoroughly liberalized, and the picture of what’s happening to Chinese society begins to look far more like Wang’s nightmare of a liberal culture consumed by nihilistic individualism and commodification.
The Grand Experiment
It is in this context that Wang Huning appears to have won a long-running debate within the Chinese system about what’s now required for the People’s Republic of China to endure. The era of tolerance for unfettered economic and cultural liberalism in China is over.
According to a leaked account by one of his old friends, Xi has found himself, like Wang, “repulsed by the all-encompassing commercialization of Chinese society, with its attendant nouveaux riches, official corruption, loss of values, dignity, and self-respect, and such ‘moral evils’ as drugs and prostitution.” Wang has now seemingly convinced Xi that they have no choice but to take drastic action to head off existential threats to social order being generated by Western-style economic and cultural liberal-capitalism—threats nearly identical to those that scourge the U.S.
This intervention has taken the form of the Common Prosperity campaign, with Xi declaring in January that “We absolutely must not allow the gap between rich and poor to get wider,” and warning that “achieving common prosperity is not only an economic issue, but also a major political issue related to the party’s governing foundations.”
This is why anti-monopoly investigations have hit China’s top technology firms with billions of dollars in fines and forced restructurings and strict new data rules have curtailed China’s internet and social media companies. It’s why record-breaking IPOs have been put on hold and corporations ordered to improve labor conditions, with “996” overtime requirements made illegal and pay raised for gig workers. It’s why the government killed off the private tutoring sector overnight and capped property rental price increases. It’s why the government has announced “excessively high incomes” are to be “adjusted.”
And it’s why celebrities like Zhao Wei have been disappearing, why Chinese minors have been banned from playing the “spiritual opium” of video games for more than three hours per week, why LGBT groups have been scrubbed from the internet, and why abortion restrictions have been significantly tightened. As one nationalist article promoted across state media explained, if the liberal West’s “tittytainment strategy” is allowed to succeed in causing China’s “young generation lose their toughness and virility then we will fall…just like the Soviet Union did.” The purpose of Xi’s “profound transformation” is to ensure that “the cultural market will no longer be a paradise for sissy stars, and news and public opinion will no longer be in a position of worshipping Western culture.”
In the end, the campaign represents Wang Huning’s triumph and his terror. It’s thirty years of his thought on culture made manifest in policy.
On one hand, it is worth viewing honestly the level of economic, technological, cultural, and political upheaval the West is currently experiencing and considering whether he may have accurately diagnosed a common undercurrent spreading through our globalized world. On the other, the odds that his gambit to engineer new societal values can succeed seems doubtful, considering the many failures of history’s other would-be “engineers of the soul.”
The best simple proxy to measure this effort in coming years is likely to be demographics. For reasons not entirely clear, many countries around the world now face the same challenge: fertility rates that have fallen below the replacement rate as they’ve developed into advanced economies. This has occurred across a diverse array of political systems, and shows little sign of moderating. Besides immigration, a wide range of policies have now been tried in attempts to raise birth rates, from increased public funding of childcare services to “pro-natal” tax credits for families with children. None have been consistently successful, sparking anguished debate in some quarters on whether losing the will to survive and reproduce is simply a fundamental factor of modernity. But if any country can succeed in reversing this trend, no matter the brute-force effort required, it is likely to be China.
Either way, our world is witnessing a grand experiment that’s now underway: China and the West, facing very similar societal problems, have now, thanks to Wang Huning, embarked on radically different approaches to addressing them. And with China increasingly challenging the United States for a position of global geopolitical and ideological leadership, the conclusion of this experiment could very well shape the global future of governance for the century ahead.
N.S. Lyons is an analyst and writer living and working in Washington, D.C. He is the author of The Upheaval.