A
Grander Sight
I want everyone to know where I stand.
Frans Vandenbosch 方腾波
14.04.2024
![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240511170106-5bbe56135b739c01e385caffdc8f92e1/v1/63f7ab902a46c90ea59f1b4866174974.jpeg)
The sun beyond the mountains glows The Yellow River seaward flows.
You will enjoy a grander sight By climbing to a greater height.
欲穷千里目
更上一层楼
This famous poem was written by 王之涣, Wáng Zhīhuàn (688 -742) almost 13 centuries ago. He was referring to the effort required to gather wisdom and knowledge.
In this essay I will try to guide you to the Grander Sight
Where I stand, issue by issue
Inspired by Caitlin Johnstone, I want to present my readers with my political and social viewpoints. You, my esteemed readers, deserve to know where I stand. I will try to be as transparent as possible about my ideology, politics, religion, social issues and more.
Reading through my essay, you will notice that all my viewpoints are heavily influenced by my years long life in China. China and my close connection with many Chinese people of all capacities have opened my blinders. Also my intense travels all over this globe (I have been to > 50 countries) have widened my viewpoints on many issues.
I do not believe that every coin has two sides. There are coins with only one side. I do not believe that the truth is somewhere between black and white. There are stories which are black, so dark black that we refuse to read or believe it.
I'm a political rebel, always been. It is a tradition in our 1200-year-old family.
Ideology
The political adage: "Whoever is young and not on the left has no heart, he who is old and not on the right has no mind" does not apply to me.
I’ve never been a socialist. But lately a lot of people have been calling me a communist. I don’t mind, they have no clue what modern Chinese Communism is. Really I just support shoving things as far to the Chinese
way as possible until we’ve created a healthy and harmonious world and moved from competition-based systems to systems in which we collaborate with each other and with our ecosystem for the good of everyone.
That’s my ideological preference, but I’m not arrogant enough to believe I personally know what’s best for everyone, so more than anything what I want is a world where we’re not being manipulated and deceived about what’s going on so that we can figure out the best course for humanity as a collective. That’s why first and foremost ahead of my own ideological preferences I support government transparency, democratized information, free speech, personal freedom and the end of western massscale manipulation and propaganda. Once everything’s out in the light and our perception is no longer being obfuscated and distorted by the powerful I personally believe we’ll find our way toward something resembling modern socialism as practiced in China. But I hold that belief with an open palm.
Politics
Western politics is a Kabuki show. It is a theatre play, nowhere serving the people. Top actors as Biden, Von der Leyen and Zelenskyy should be given a Golden Palm or an Oscar.
I have lost confidence in western style elections. I believe the closer you get to the nexus of power the more worthless electoral politics becomes, because more and more effort goes into manipulating the electoral process to protect the interests of status quo power. Elections in most western countries are completely useless and fake, and even the elections for provincial and municipal officials are aggressively manipulated. Our "representatives" no longer represent the people.
The power of our politicians is based on the regular media, not on the voting system. I don’t personally think we’re likely to see big meaningful changes in the west until the people force change to happen by direct action, and that’s not going to occur as long as everyone’s being successfully manipulated into accepting the status quo by mass-scale propaganda. That’s why I write about propaganda so much—I see it as the ultimate obstacle to the revolutionary changes we desperately need.
War and militarism
I see the American empire-like power structure centralized around the United States as the greatest source of conflict and dysfunction in the world today. All the largest international conflicts of our day ultimately boil down to the US empire trying to secure planetary domination and weaker nations resisting it in some way. Europe, Japan South Korea and many others are vassals of the USA. Its campaign to secure planetary hegemony is placing our world at greater risk of nuclear war as it sees the empire engaging in increasingly confrontational standoffs with Russia and China. I therefore see ending the US empire and neutering its global war machine as a matter of existential importance for humanity. Only after the collapse of the American hegemony, there will be freedom and peace at this globe.
Environment
I believe a nuclear war is the greatest existential threat to our species. I do not believe in human caused global warming. I feel that it is suspicious that that debate consumes so much oxygen when there’s so much other evidence. And so much other urgent issues to care about.
Obviously, there are rich and powerful people who’ll be looking to ride their various agendas on top of humanity’s shift from fossil fuels to other energy systems.
Spirituality and religion
I was raised Roman Catholic but gradually left the Roman Catholic church. I’m critical of all religion and believes.
In China, I went to official SARA/government -registered Catholic church. Especially in China, I despise the "Roman" catholic, aka ex-underground house churches, reporting to Rome. The official Chinese Roman Catholic church is, in my opinion, much more sincere and closer to the original teachings than the current Roman Catholic Church of Pope Francis. I am strongly convinced that the replacement of Pope Benedict XVI by Pope Francis in 2013 was a regime change, organised by the CIA.
During the last two decades, I noticed that I am fast moving towards Confucianism. The way I'm approaching people, both in China as in the West has more Confucianist characteristics than Catholic. I fully respect but I'm not a big fan of Taoists; they're too inactive. And neither I'm a fan of
Buddhists; they're too moderate in their emotions.
Civil rights
I think protecting the rights of the individual protects the health of the collective. It’s always going to be the outspoken fringesters who first notice something’s wrong about where we’re at or where we’re headed, so you need to make sure there’s space for them to speak and be heard. Because in the West, nobody can be trusted to determine what speech is valid and true, it needs to be legal to the furthest extent the collective can tolerate without harm.
The freer people are to think, speak, act and live however they want undisturbed, the healthier our society is; this means freeing them from having their minds manipulated by the powerful as noted above.
The collective is also within its rights to stop an individual from harming them. If someone’s using wealth and power as a weapon to exploit and abuse people for instance, then their wealth and power can rightfully be taken away in the same way a mass shooter’s weapon can be taken away to protect the collective.
Social justice issues
I oppose wokeism, political correctness, racism, sexism and discrimination against disempowered groups of all sorts. These are real problems that do need to be solved as humanity winds its way into the future; we can’t just ignore them. But I do get frustrated at times with the way these issues consume all the political oxygen in the room without leaving any space for far more urgent matters like the looming threat of nuclear war, and I do think it’s a bit ridiculous that in our current political environment being a racist is regarded as far more outrageous and offensive than being a warmonger. But I understand that’s just the nature of the western mainstream political framework people are being presented with, where we’re encouraged to argue as hotly as possible over culture war issues that don’t threaten the powerful at all, so we don’t start turning that heat onto issues like war, ecocide and oligarchy.