I get the attractiveness of the single-villain ideology. You never have to think of who the villain is, you never have to worry about nuances, you just bask in the warm glow of your righteousness and eternal powerlessness. It's probably almost unavoidable in Latin America, where the idea that there's any enemy but the US is hard to grasp.
Perhaps you misunderstand latin america. at least here, the dominant view of the US is rather positive, and we even have photocopied from the US, cato-institute style 'libertarians' becoming more an more a normal part of the political spectrum. gringos go home is an old-fashioned, pretty rare position to hold here. I rarely run across other anti-imperialists outside social sciences faculties and groups of far-from-the-overton-window leftos.
Are you serious? Every human being in the US has exactly the same policies as Ronald Reagan? You're from Chile, so you're a Pinochetista?
you know, the sad thing is chile seems to be undergoing such a strong move towards the right lately that in future this might not be a bad guess. but no, I don't mean because you're a gringo! I know you're waay left of center, and not just in the context of the united states either. my guess (or, I suppose, modal absence of a guess?) is that it seems to me that your general attitude towards china and russia is so negative, when compared to the US. multipolarity, at least in the real world, inherently means the US loses power and any or all of china, russia, iran, gain power. and like, that makes sense for me to want, who thinks that of course china, iran and russia are extremely evil, but also that the US is not very meaningfully less evil (it's nicer towards its own population, granted, but i am distinctly not a member of that group and neither is most of humanity, so that only goes so far)... and you know, at least China seems to have more of a policy of "do whatever, underling, just pay tribute" rather than the familiar "you're going to do exactly what i tell you or i'm going to coup you into 20 years of fascist dictatorship". The CPC seems uninclined to fund religious fundamentalism abroad, whereas whenever I look into some fundie movement, it seems like half the time I end up finding the CIA or DoD or that cult that invites every influential politician to their weekly breakfast to plot how to make the entire world born again christians or something. what I mean is if one does believe that the US is substantially less evil than its current geopolitical rivals then I wouldn't guess one would be for multipolarity, is all.
I doubt it's that benign— if nothing else, you have to agree to fuck Taiwan. And why is Chinese super-influence over the local economy good when American or (going way back) British is bad? But yes, choices are good— it's not a coincidence that the neoliberal package got foisted on countries precisely when the Soviet empire was collapsing.
I agree, though there's a lot of rope between those two ends. But i'm going to be predictably latin american, here:
chinese super-influence seems preferable to me than anglo superinfluence because of what i point out above: the chinese don't seem to be interested in making the world china in the way the americans seem to be in making the world america (insert that rammstein song here). Like yeah, emotionally I confess to holding the feeling of "ain't no chinese pinocheted my ass", and that's not nothing, but more broadly the US hegemony is the reason why neoliberal politics has been
the politics since the fall of the soviet union, and the human cost of that seems to me to be just mind-bogglingly vast, even compared to a path of normal capitalism, not even new deal capitalism. let's not even tally how global US hegemony basically means no socialist experiment will ever be viable without such immense costs not even I would want it: see Songun and Juche, like yikes, give even
me US dominance over that.
Choice is good, as you say: I prefer multipolarity over any global superhegemony because it means that hegemons need to, as you say, compete over customers. And there's also, you know, China's not going to win the contest by knockout anytime soon: at most it's going to spend the century or so as a near-peer competitor who gets whatever is too far for the US hand to properly grasp, but is still, when all is said and done, inferior. the problem of a chinese superhegemony might be one we have to face in future, but american superhegemony is both more immediate and more certain.
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@Raphael: I doubt the russian security system can compete with that of western europe, but they do have more vacation days, tho