...
...
If you look through the history books, over the last 1,000 or even 20,000 years. You see that all sorts of populations/countries/regions/industries/religions/etc etc, come and go.
I would imagine, that many of them, which were big in the past, haven't even made it to the history books.
Because they were too small or the evidence/information about their existence, has long since disappeared.
So, it is not clear, if this China situation is just a blip, and the "Roman Empire", will once again triumph again, with Donaldini Trumpatteta, the smart, sane and amazingly honest, US, "Roman Empire", leader/tweeter.
Or, as some suspect, it is the beginning of the "Fall, of the Roman Empire". History repeating itself.
If there is a big power shift, will it just be the US, or will the rest of the West, such as Europe, decline as well ?
The UK, is hopefully small enough, to somewhat quickly adapt to changing world-wide situations. So, hopefully it can cope with whatever way round, the world ends up.
It takes time to rebuild industries, but in time I hope the UK, gets there, as needed.
I very much doubt China's lead will just be a blip in history. Many historians have suggested that China lead the world in living standards perhaps 900 years out of the last 1000. The "American Historical Association" calls China "The Oldest Living Civilization"
[1], so China is no shooting star.
Roman Empire army at its largest had 28 legions - 3,000 to 5,000 a legion, so max about 150,000 men total. Qin Dynasty (214BC) Southward expansion alone had 500,000 troops in one theater.
Skipping and skipping all the way to the Ming Dynasty when China explored
international trade in the 1400's with
Zheng He's seven "treasure hunt" trips....
Quoted from
Business Insider: "Few people in the West realise how economically and technologically advanced China was by the 1400s. The Treasure Fleet was vast — some vessels were up to 120 metres long. (Christopher Columbus's Santa Maria was only 19 metres.) A Chinese ship might have several decks inside it, up to nine masts, twelve sails, and contain luxurious staterooms and balconies, with a crew of up to 1,500, according to one description. On one journey, 317 of these ships set sail at once."
[2]An English author is convinced that China possibly discovered American in 1421. In the book, he suggested that Zheng He's fleet that reached Africa was over twice the size of the combined fleets of all European nations' navies at the time.
[3]Fast forward or back, you found events like China's discovery of magnetic compass, gun powder... They were using crossbows more than 1,000 years before crossbows show up in Europe.
No, China is no shooting star. China is a very strong competitor for any nation today. UK, USA, Russia, whoever, better treat this competitor with some respect to its economic power. Under estimating it will surely not be a good thing to do...
Fortunate for the USA perhaps - Judging from statements he made and the way he conducted himself, I think Trump understand the Chinese and the Chinese culture well. His first trip to China shown a lot of mutual respect between him and the Chinese. So I am optimistic that he will do a good job here with USA/China relationship. We'll see. Time will tell if reality is what I discerned.
[1] See
AHA's article on "
China, The Oldest Living Civilization" here:
https://www.historians.org/about-aha-and-membership/aha-history-and-archives/gi-roundtable-series/pamphlets/em-42-our-chinese-ally-(1944)/the-oldest-living-civilization[2] "
500 years ago, China destroyed its world-dominating navy because its political elite was afraid of free trade",
Business Insider magazine
https://www.businessinsider.com/china-zhenge-he-treasure-fleet-elite-free-trade-2017-2[3] "
1421: The Year China Discovered America" Author
Gavin Menzies - Amazon profile: GAVIN MENZIES was born in 1937 and lived in China for two years before World War II. He joined the Royal Navy in 1953 and served in submarines from 1959 to 1970. In the course of researching 1421, he visited 120 countries, over 900 museums and libraries, and every major sea port of the late Middle Ages. He is married with two daughters and lives in North London.