曾任牛津大学辩论社 及亚太协会主席 首先我要感谢我的朋友Eric
给予我采访他的殊荣 正如Paris所说,Eric是最成功的
也是中国最早的风险投资家之一
更令人惊叹的是,他还是 最有趣且最受关注的 中国公共知识分子
在他那场爆红的TED演讲之后 我和埃里克进行过类似的讨论 昨天在议会
实际上听众中有一位 是杰弗里·豪勋爵
演讲结束后他走到埃里克面前 说这是他参加过的最发人深省
且意义深远的中国主题演讲之一 你可能不会认同埃里克那些颠覆性的观点
但我希望你能有同样的感受 正如霍华德勋爵昨日所言 那么埃里克,我想首先
请教你这个问题 你在中国度过了青年时期 正值文化大革命的高峰期
而在你那场广为传播的TED演讲中 想必在座大多数观众都已观看过 你说你感到幻灭
因为年轻时在中国所信奉的失败信仰 于是前往美国去了解西方
你通过努力获得了学位 从伯克利和斯坦福毕业 并在罗斯·佩拉的竞选中成为了一名成功的推销员
你甚至参与了罗斯·佩拉的总统竞选
并认真参与了美国的自由民主政治 正如我们从你热爱民主的演讲中所期待的那样
你在西方似乎很有干劲 但你现在却对自由民主的理念 持非常怀疑的态度
甚至对其理念更加质疑 我曾认为自由民主制适合中国
并且与中国国情相容 你的观点是如何发生转变的
你知道吗 我在你这个年纪时觉得无所不知
你明白那种感觉 我确实明白 因为我曾经历过 当我以为无所不知时
当你以为无所不知时 就很容易接受那些看似完美的理论
那些声称能解释整个世界运行规律的理论
你天生就倾向于相信 每个问题都有解决方案
而重大问题必有宏大解法
当然,在我成长过程中 我以为自己无所不知 我从小接受的教育告诉我
这个世界存在确定性
整个世界都在朝着同一方向前进 我们注定要从原始社会
历经奴隶制走向封建制度 通往资本主义并最终抵达共产主义乌托邦
但现实并未如此发展 当然,当我正值青春年华 在美国求学期间
那时我还年轻,又被灌输了另一个故事 那个故事也很精彩
一个美妙的公式:个体作为独立单元 成为所有社会的主权单位
13亿或60亿个体 将通过投票带领我们走向天堂
而且这也是个很美好的故事 但后来我离开了美国
回到了我的祖国 我四处游历,不断学习
我去过非洲,也到过东南亚 在中国发展我的事业
结果发现这个世界 比我想象的要复杂得多
也微妙得多 而且我觉得也更有趣
冷战结束后制定的那套方案
要求每个国家都必须遵循 才能实现繁荣发展的模式
对大多数遵循这套方案的国家来说 实际上并未奏效
你可以去看看非洲和东南亚各国 它们都严格遵循了这套剧本
每一步都按部就班地执行 但最终却未能如愿以偿
如今它们进退维谷,陷入了困境 中国没有那样做
而且在一定程度上确实取得了成效 当然也存在很多问题 但事实仍然是它带来了
正如我所说,这是历史上 在最短时间内 让最多人口
生活方式得到最大改善的成就 另外在您的演讲中您提到
这对在座的观众来说可能非常反直觉 你之前说他们哪里搞错了
结果发现这个政党 并没有在阻碍 或被动应对中国的现代化进程,而是在引领它
自我纠错,这个很多人认为是民主制度才有的能力 一直是该党执政的标志性特征
而你实际上一直在主张 中国的政治制度至少和西方自由民主制度一样
具有自我纠错能力,甚至可能更强 但政党是如何自我修正其政策的呢
在缺乏制度化的自由民主、 新闻自由、司法监督和普选的情况下
中国模式通过何种机制 能让执政党意识到其政策失误?
我先回答您问题的后半部分 也就是过去几十年来 政治学界的普遍假设——
民主制度具有自我修正能力 民主政体被认为特别擅长
及时调整政策方向 并改革自身以适应时代发展
事实证明如果你学的是政治学 在座有多少是政治学专业的 我不知道你们是不是政治学学生
至少目前的证据表明 选举民主制度具有极强的刚性
它们无法改变方向 涉及太多利益集团
你们知道我的朋友弗朗西斯·福山 这位政治学家称之为美国体制的否决政治
人人都能否决一切 结果一事无成 事实上,另一位伟大的美国评论家法里斯·阿卡里亚
最近撰文指出 美国政治体系应该自我改革
转变为议会制 因为美国的现状是 议会制可能运作得更好
但这显然不可能实现 改革不会发生
所以即使在民主治理模式内部
变革也几乎是不可能的 从议会制转变为总统制
或者反过来。更不用说更广泛范围的改革了
我认为政治改革是迫切需要的 在美国和欧洲。但为什么没有发生呢?
因为这些制度极其僵化 而中国的制度到目前为止
虽然不会永远如此 但一党制恰好非常灵活 我举这个具体的例子
在十八大召开前的十年里 去年我们有九位成员 在政治局常委会中
这是国家的最高决策机构 结果发现权力过于分散
决策过程拖沓冗长 效率不尽如人意 于是在
第十八次党代会上 他们将其缩减至七人
想象一下美国参议院 从100人减少到88人 无论情况多么紧急
这种事情都不会发生 所以中国的体制非常灵活 我现在要提出一个观点
认为它灵活是因为中国共产党
恰好是当今世界上最具精英治理特色 且最具向上流动性的政治组织之一
如果你进行深入分析 党的领导人都是从基层成长起来的
我知道关于太子党的讨论很多 您最近在忙些什么呢? 但若你仔细审视
纵观数据,我研究了中央委员会的工作 党的十八大之前
我还没开始研究当前的这一个 但我认为这通常是成立的
在由25人组成的上一届政治局中 其中仅有五人出身于所谓的“太子党”背景
任何背景的特权,无论是财富还是权力 另外20人,包括总统和总理
都出身于极其普通的家庭 而在中央委员会,如今的中央委员会中
来自任何特权背景的人 所占比例甚至更小
比如与美国参议院相比 有多少人是参议员之子 出身富裕家庭
我想说,如果我们做个调查 如果你做个研究对比一下
中国中央委员会级别的统治精英 或者你选择的任何层级
进行全面比较 与从美国到欧洲的发达国家对比
与从菲律宾到韩国的发展中国家对比 整个韩国
那里曾由官二代掌权 从政客到旅游公司CEO再到大学校长
他们都是大学校长的子女 如果你进行这样的比较
我认为这个政党
来自基层群众的比例 在党的上层精英阶层中 可能是最大的比例
正是这种能力 如果你去任何中国大学 我当时正在复旦大学攻读博士学位
党在最基层进行招募 最优秀最聪明的学生
那些来自农村的学生会加入党组织 他们缓慢地向上移动
逐步进行 选拔过程非常注重择优录取,且极为严格
即便对于新任总书记习近平来说 他是位小王子,恰好就是小王子本人 但你知道这真是太神奇了
该党已执政64年 他是第一个
他是首位国家元首 党的领导人 谁出身于政治领导背景
没有其他人有这样的经历,但即使对他来说 这条职业道路也花了30年时间
他是一步步晋升上来的 从村长、县长 市长、副市长、省长
当他最终登上顶峰时 他已经管理过1.5亿人口 以及数万亿美元的GDP总量
这份履历令人惊叹 你不可能登上顶峰 除非你经历过政党体系的
那种残酷磨砺 所以我认为关键在于能够
从基层招募人才,不论背景如何 并给予他们向上流动的机会
这是政党适应能力的关键 因为上层精英阶层
统治精英们与 他们统治的人民是同一代人
而且来自草根阶层 所以他们了解国家的实际情况 所以你认为精英阶层的崛起是个虚构的说法
我认为数据显示并非如此 简单来说,我认为数据
将继续证明这一点 甚至会更加明显 如果你分析下一届领导班子 部级干部和市级干部中
精英阶层的比例正在下降。即便现在也很低
但这一比例将持续下降 如果你看看未来的领导阵容 在未来20年内
几乎没有什么太子党成员 实际上在数千人中我只看到两位
有希望跻身最高层 你在今天的演讲中提到
党的执政业绩 赋予了党的合法性 我看了你的TED演讲
你确实引用了皮尤研究中心 和《金融时报》的调查 来展示中国共产党
在民众中极高的支持率 那么如果该党真如你所说如此受欢迎
为何还需要 对媒体和互联网进行监管 限制言论自由
以及抗议权并逮捕异见人士 我的意思是如果他们如此自信 他们可以直接举行选举
问得好 你昨天可没问这个问题
你就是这么套我话的 所以我认为这与
受欢迎程度或信心关系不大 我认为这关系到
言论自由的理念,真正的言论自由
我想提出 辩论空间的大小
在公共辩论和公开演讲中 应当根据特定时期的社会状况
进行适当的调整 我认为历史将会证明
中国当前的言论空间程度 是否有利于其长期发展 但简单地认为言论自由
我认为是把现代西方政治理念 所谓的言论自由
过于简单化了 我认为这是一种谬论。绝对言论自由并不存在
没有任何社会拥有绝对的言论自由 每个社会都会根据自身条件对言论进行规范
这种观点基于言论自由的意识形态 它建立在某种假设之上,认为自由言论
在某种程度上不是行为,因此是无害的 所以应该给予绝对的自由
但这显然违背了 人类数千年的经验。言论就是行为
言论确实能够造成伤害 自古以来就对人类社会造成了伤害
在欧洲,我们无需追溯太久 只需回到1933年就能想起一个案例
当时一个人的强有力言论 在特定的条件下被放大
结合当时的时间与地点 最终对数百万民众造成了巨大的伤害与破坏
在当今的欧洲,他们仍在应对同样的困境
在希腊,言论与流血和死亡相关
在法国,言论则意味着要遮住你的脸 这会损害社会凝聚力吗
在德国,由于其特殊国情和特定历史
某些书籍的出版是被禁止的 让我们回到中国。当代中国正在经历
速度和规模在人类历史上 都前所未有的社会转型
在这样的条件下,社会稳定的脆弱性 很容易被放大的言论所破坏
因此我认为负责任的治理 应该考虑到这一点
而当前自由的范围是否恰当 我认为历史会做出评判
我认为你很好地阐述了 该党过去的历史记录 我们不能否认
该党为中国带来的经济奇迹 其速度和规模 然而我认为在座的各位
不仅对过去感兴趣 也对未来充满关切 我指的是大多数东亚国家
在过去半个世纪里 达到了第一世界地位 让我猜猜,韩国和台湾
是的,我指的是在威权体制下实现的 但一旦他们的收入提高了,就转向了民主
你认为这种情况 未来会在中国发生吗
这个问题的前提是有问题的 这个问题假设收入与民主有某种关联
出于对特定政治体制的向往 事实当然并非如此 因为在冷战结束后
许多极度贫困的国家都采用了民主制度
但这并未给它们带来任何改变 不过确实,韩国和台湾等地区
少数地方的收入有所增长 我认为它们是在特殊情况下才追求民主的
韩国当时是个半主权国家 而台湾则处于保护伞之下 在冷战时期,他们做出了那个选择
我认为他们别无选择 但这需要更深入复杂的讨论 但我的观点是,收入水平与渴望
某种特定政治体制之间 并不存在必然联系
还有许许多多极其贫困的国家 虽然一贫如洗却依然向往民主
那么你认为这样的制度 能够维持多久呢? 我认为这取决于很多变量
他们能否继续表现良好 我认为他们会继续表现良好 可能在我这一代人的时间内
其次,民主制度是否会继续失败
我的意思是大多数国家都在看案例 我是说大多数非西方国家
那些采用选举民主制度的国家 这样做并非出于信念 不像西方国家那样,我认为
民主制度是宗教与文化传统的产物 但对非西方国家而言 他们采纳民主是因为认为这制度能奏效
他们参考了先例,研究了那些案例 而如今这些案例已经反转 民主在大多数地方都行不通
事实上,它正在造成巨大危害。那么这种情况会持续吗? 如果这种趋势持续下去 那么中国采用民主制度的可能性就会降低
谁会这么愚蠢呢? 去复制一个行不通的东西
那么你认为中国的政治体制 是西方自由民主制度的替代方案吗
对中国来说它是一个替代方案 我的意思是我不认为 我确实想强调一点
当前的中国政治体制 在现有条件下是适合中国的
但它不可输出 因为我认为政治体制要因地制宜
当这些制度有效时,是因为它们适合 特定的文化环境和时代背景 而且这些制度在不同文化和时代中都是独特的
目前看来,中国的制度似乎 是最优的选择 但我想说的是,我认为
唯一可以输出的 是存在其他选择可能性的理念
每个国家如果想要 成功并繁荣发展 应该寻找一条
适合自身国情的道路 而不是盲目照搬他人模式,这种经验是可输出的
但模式本身不可复制 我再问几个关于国际关系的问题
您在韩国的演讲中 曾预言新世界乱局即将到来
并巧妙地运用了 战国时代来比喻我们这个时代
您当时这样说道 世界并未在一个统一的体系下团结一致
其根本叙事已经消亡 其担保人再也无力承担
最重要的崛起大国 对建立新体系并不感兴趣
或许战国时代是我们这个时代的恰当比喻 中国人似乎正在展望未来
并开始构建新的框架 习近平主席在加州峰会上向奥巴马总统提出的
新型大国关系构想 为何您认为新的世界失序和战国时代即将来临
为何您认为新的世界失序和战国时代即将来临
自二战结束以来 国际关系一直由
我所谓的叙事二分法主导
叙事二分法是一种单一断层线故事
它声称的当然是历史决定论
所以二战之后 叙事二分法认为整个世界被
一条单一断层线所分割 苏联共产主义对抗自由民主与资本主义,双方都
全副武装 将各自的理念从一个大陆传播到另一个大陆
给无数民众带来了难以言表的苦难 最终,苏联
解体,从而开启了美国世纪 这就是叙事二元对立的第一个阶段
第二阶段发生在冷战之后 当时人们普遍认为世界
正在朝着另一种乌托邦迈进 自由民主的乌托邦 存在一条单一的分界线
这条分界线存在于 那些采纳了民主资本主义体系的人
与那些没有采纳的人之间 他们要么拒绝接受,要么尚未接受 这是两者之间的斗争
我认为我们正处于 这个阶段的尾声
叙事上的二元对立 单一断层线的叙事已不再反映
我们世界的现实。确实如此 最好的例子就是当今的中东地区
人类冲突、国家间的冲突、 政权与团体间的冲突现在由多重断层线驱动
西方联盟领导了一个长达十年的项目 试图重塑中东
事实证明,现在的世界远比 二元对立的叙事复杂得多。种族、宗教、文化断层线
以及民族主义断层线被证明更具决定性影响 而非民主与专制之间的单一断层线
我们在叙利亚再次见证了这一点 在东南亚和东亚也是如此
我的意思是民主与专制之间的断层线 并不会定义
中国、朝鲜和日本之间的冲突 当然不会
民族主义的断层线被证明是 更加持久且影响深远 因此当前的全球架构
这个由精英阶层资助、运营和维护的体系 由美国领导的西方联盟 正是基于这种叙事上的二元对立
那种单一断层线的故事 而这种故事已不再反映现实
因此,全球架构的掌舵者美国
如今付出的代价已远超收益 所以我认为这只是时间问题
在美国开始 美国人民开始要求收回他们的国家之前 而他们已经开始这样做了
英国人民正在要求收回他们的国家 我认为叙利亚问题很可能是一个
具有分水岭意义的事件 所以我要说的是
我们正在进入我称之为战国时代的阶段 这意味着没有预设的架构
可以让你直接套用并执行政策 不同的国家和不同的参与者,不同的行为体
都在按照自身利益行事 无论是民族主义、经济还是政治意识形态的考量
无论是种族还是宗教,无论何种形式 因此我们正处在未知的水域 我们将经历这个时期的数十年
然后看看会有什么结果 在您的演讲中您还提到 中国不是一个革命性大国
也不是一个扩张性大国 作为韩国人,我们深知这一点
在核心 中国传统中存在着所谓的中华信仰
这指的是中国人认为中国 是宇宙的中心 如果你回顾历史
韩国、日本等邻国 曾被归类为蛮夷之国
必须向中国朝贡 并遵从中国的文化传统 我认为这与您认为中国
并非扩张性大国的观点相冲突 您对此有何看法 我认为我们应该区分不同的理论
以及像中国这样的客观事实陈述 宇宙的中心是我开玩笑的
我想在此明确区分一下
中心性视角之间
中国的世界观 它已经存在了几个世纪,几千年了 以及普遍性的展望
这是两种截然不同的观点 中心性意味着我处于世界的中心
把蛮族挡在外面,但不去入侵他们 还是你要把我赶出去?没错,就是这样
留着,但如果他们进贡的话,我们也许会接纳 但最多,最多也就这样。所以如果你比较一下
如果你回顾过去两三千年的历史 有整整几个世纪,中国曾经占据
我不知道,大概占世界 GDP的三分之一左右 也许是一半,我记不清具体数字了 好吧,查查弗格森的书
图表显示 在这些时期
中国对其他国家的所作所为 并与其他帝国比较
无论是罗马、英国还是其他帝国 当它们的全球权力份额只有
中国份额的一半时 它们对其他国家的所作所为 所以我认为这是个程度问题
好的,这是我的最后一个问题 你建议美国及其他世界大国 采取不干预政策
你说要给中国时间 给予它空间和独立性 让它继续走自己的路,和平共处
也许这样会产生对各方都更有利的结果 你在讲座中还指出
美国再也负担不起 在全世界推广民主、自由和自由主义
再也无力拯救那些国家 我知道你预测到人道主义危机
所谓的"新世界失序" 但这真的是我们想要的结果吗? 我的意思是,我们真的愿意
生活在这样一个世界里 在那里我们再也无法依靠国际组织 以及美国和其他西方主要强国
来解决我们的人道主义危机 嗯,我既是商人,也是政治学家
所以我对规范性陈述不感兴趣
我感兴趣的是分析性陈述 我们分析将会发生什么 而不是应该发生什么
我的意思是关于应该发生什么的问题 实在太复杂了 它受到我们成长方式的影响
宗教、你去哪个教堂 这些都需要数周时间
今天的分析和我感兴趣的分析 是关于将会发生什么 而我认为将会发生的是
无关好坏 实际上我觉得这样更有意思 我不会用'好'这个词,而是更有趣
让建筑自然生成才更有意思 无需预先设计,没有既定结论
既定结论需要强制执行 需要强制推行 人们不得不被迫接受它
但如果没有预设结果 我认为这样的世界才更有趣 但这可能会造成更多痛苦
但谁能断言 当前这种强制趋同的过程 就没有造成痛苦呢 that the party's performance track record gives the party its legitimacy And I mean I saw your TED talk You actually referred to the Pew Research and Financial Times survey to show like the incredibly high approval rate of the Communist Party by their citizens Then if the party is incredibly popular as you say why does the party feel the need to regulate the media and the internet Restrict freedom of speech and right to protest and arrest dissidents I mean if they're so confident they can just hold elections Hello my name is Xinyin Li and I'm a former president of the Oxford Union and Asia Pacific Society I would like to first thank my friend Eric for giving me the honour of interviewing him As Paris said Eric is the most successful and one of the very first venture capitalists from China And what's even more amazing is that he's also the most interesting and the most talked about A public intellectual from China after his viral TED talk I had a similar discussion with Eric at the Parliament yesterday And actually one of the audience members in the talk was Lord Geoffrey Howe And he came up to Eric after the talk and said it was one of the most thought provoking and profound talks in China he's ever been to You probably would not agree with Eric's subversive views But I hope that you can feel the same way as Lord Howard did yesterday So Eric I would like to first begin by asking you this You spent your youth in China at the height of the cultural revolution And in your viral TED talk which most of the audience members probably have watched already You say you were disillusioned by the failed religion of your youth in China and went to America to learn about the West You worked your way to get degrees from Berkeley and Stanford and became a successful salesman in Rose Perra's campaign You even got involved in Rose Perra's presidential campaign And seriously participated in American liberal democracy as we would all expect from your democracy loving speech You seem to have drive in the West but you now are very skeptical of the idea of liberal democracy And even more skeptical of the idea that liberal democracy is desirable for China and is compatible with China How did this shift in your view take place You know when I was your age I knew everything You know how it feels I do because I was there And when I knew everything and when you knew everything you are predisposed to buying into neat formulas that explain all of the world And you're predisposed into believing that there's a solution to every problem and there's a grand solution to the grand problem And of course I knew everything when I was growing up and I grew up with the narrative that there was a certainty in this world and the whole world was moving in the same direction and it's for certain that we would go from primitive societies through slavery to feudalism to capitalism and ultimately end up in the communist utopia It didn't quite work out that way And of course when I was coming of age and I was a student in America I was still young and I was fed another story And that was neat too A beautiful formula where the individual emerge as a sovereign unit of all societies and 1 3 billion or 6 billion individuals will vote ourselves to paradise And it was a beautiful story too But then of course I left America I returned to my native country and I traveled everywhere and I studied I went to Africa I went to Southeast Asia I grew my business in China And the world turned out to be more complex than that And more nuanced than that And more interesting I think The formula that was devised after the Cold War where every country must follow to achieve prosperity didn't really work out for most of those countries that prescribed them and followed them You can go to all those countries in Africa and Southeast Asia They followed the playbook They did everything by the book But it didn't work out for them And they can't go back They're in trouble China didn't do that And it did work out to some extent There were many problems of course But the fact is still that it led to like I said the greatest most significant improvement in the way of life for the largest number of people in the shortest time in history Also during your speech you said one might be very counterintuitive to audience members here You said what did they get wrong It turned out that the party has not been holding back or reacting to China's modernization but leading it Self correction the ability many attribute to democracies has been a hallmark of the party's governance And you've been actually arguing that the Chinese political system is at least self correcting as Western liberal democracy if not more But how does the party self correct their policies I mean in the absence of institutional liberal democracy free press judicial oversight popular vote what is the mechanism through which the Chinese model informs the party of being wrong about their policies You know let me first address the second half of your question which is you know the overriding assumption in the last few decades by political scientists is that democracy is self correct Democracies are uniquely capable of changing courses and reforming themselves to adapt to the times It turns out the facts are if you're political science how many are poli sci students here I don't know if you're political science students It turns out at least so far the evidence indicates that electoral democracies are extraordinarily rigid They can't change course So many interests are involved You know Frank Fukuyama my friend the political scientist is called American system vitocracy Everybody can veto everything They can't do anything In fact Faris Akaria another great American commentator has recently written that you know the American political system should change itself into a parliamentary one Because the circumstances in America are such that a parliamentary system could work better But of course it's simply not possible It will not be done So even within democratic models of governance it is nearly impossible to change from a parliamentary one to a presidential one or vice versa Let alone any wider range of changes And I think political reforms are badly needed in America and Europe But why is it not happening Because these systems are extraordinarily rigid The Chinese system so far it's not going to be forever The one party system happens to be very agile I use this one particular example For the ten years before the 18 th Party Congress last year we had nine members at the standing committee of the Politburo which is the highest ruling body in the country And it turned out that the power was too diffused decision making process was dragging and didn't work quite well So what did they do at the 18 th Party Congress They took it down to seven Imagine taking the U S Senate from 100 people to 88 It won't happen regardless of how urgently needed it may be So the Chinese system is very very agile And now the reason why I would advance the case that it is agile because the Chinese Communist Party happens to be one of the most meritocratic and upwardly mobile political organizations in the world today If you conduct a good analysis the leadership of the party emerges from the grassroots I know there's a lot of talk about princelings and what have you but if you really take a look at the numbers I studied the Central Committee before the 18 th Party Congress I haven't gotten around to study the current one but I think it generally holds true In the last Poly Bureau of 25 people only five of them came from so called princeling background any background of privilege whether it's wealth or power The other 20 including the President and the Prime Minister came from entirely ordinary backgrounds In the Central Committee in today's Central Committee the percentage of people who come from a background of any privilege is even smaller Compare that to the U S Senate for instance How many are sons of senators and sons come from wealth Compare that I would say if we conduct a survey if you conduct a study and compare the Chinese ruling elites at the Central Committee level or whatever level you want to choose and compare that across the board against developed countries from America to Europe against developing countries from the Philippines to South Korea the entire country of South Korea where just there was run by princelings from politicians to travel CEOs to university presidents who are all sons of university presidents So if you make that comparison I would suggest that the party the percentage of people who come from the grassroots in the upper echelon of the party is probably the largest period And it is this ability if you go to any Chinese university I was studying for my PhD at Fudan The party recruits at the very grassroots level the best and the brightest students who come from the countryside they join the party and they move their way up slowly step by step And the selection process is very meritocratic and very tough even for Xi Jinping the new general secretary He's a princeling happens to be princeling But you know it's amazing The party has been in power for 64 years He is the first he is the first head of state head of the party who comes from a background of political leadership No one else has So but even for him the career path took 30 years He worked his way up from village chief county chief mayor vice mayor mayor of provincial By the time he made it to the top he had managed 150 million people and a couple of trillion dollars in combined GDP The track record is amazing And you don't make it to the top unless you go through that grinding machine of the party system So I think the ability to recruit people from the grassroots regardless of the background and allow them the upward mobility to move up is the key to the party's ability to adapt because the upper echelon the ruling elites are the same generation of the people they're ruling and come from the grassroots so they know the conditions of the country So you think the rise of princelings is a fiction Well I think the numbers indicate that It's simply I think the numbers will continue to indicate that even to a greater extent if you analyze the next line up the ministerial level cadres and the mayoral level cadres the percentage of princelings is dropping Even now it's small But it will continue to drop if you look at the future line up for the next 20 years There are hardly any princelings I see two actually out of thousands that have any hope of making it to the top I mean you mentioned in the speech today that the party's performance track record gives the party its legitimacy And I mean I saw your TED talk You actually referred to the Pew Research and Financial Times survey to show like the incredibly high approval rate of the Communist Party by their citizens Then if the party is incredibly popular as you say why does the party feel the need to regulate the media and the internet Restrict freedom of speech and right to protest and arrest dissidents I mean if they're so confident they can just hold elections Good question You didn't ask that yesterday This is how you get me So I think it doesn't have a lot to do with popularity or confidence I mean I think it has to do with the idea of free speech really freedom of speech And I would like to suggest that the degree of space for debate for public debate for public speech should be calibrated by the conditions of a society at particular times And I think history will tell whether China's current degree in space or conducive for its long term success But to simply say that freedom of speech is I think oversimplifying You know the modern Western political ideology of so called freedom of speech I think is a fallacy It doesn't exist It's no society has absolute freedom of speech Every society based on its conditions regulates speech It's based on the ideology of freedom of speech is based on the idea that somehow free somehow speech is not act Therefore it's harmless Therefore it should be allowed absolute freedom But of course it's contrary to human experience over thousands of years Speech is act and speech has been capable of doing harm and have done harm to human societies since time immemorial In Europe one does not have to trace back further than 1933 to remember a case where powerful speech by one man amplified under the right conditions of the time and the place end up doing great harm and destruction to millions In today's Europe they're still grappling with the same situation In Greece blood and death was involved with speech In France is a speech to cover your face Does that hurt social cohesion In Germany because of its particular conditions particular history publishing certain books is banned So let's come back to China Contemporary China is experiencing social transformations of which the speed and scale are unprecedented in human history Under such conditions the fragility of social stability can be easily disrupted by amplified speech So I think responsible governance should take that into consideration And whether the current range of freedom is proper I think history will judge I think you give a good account of the past track record of the party and we cannot deny the pace and scale of the economic miracle that the party has brought to China However I think all of us here are not only interested in the past but also in the future I mean most of the East Asian countries that achieved first world status in the last half century Let me guess South Korea and Taiwan Yeah I mean achieved under authoritarian regimes but once their income got higher they turned democratic Do you think that's going to happen for China in the future The presumption of that question is problematic The question presumes somehow that income has something to do with the desire for a particular political system It's of course not the case Because after the Cold War many many more very very starving poor countries adopted democracies Didn't do anything for them But so yes South Korea and places like Taiwan and a few places income has risen and they wanted democracy I would argue under unique circumstances you know South Korea was a semi sovereign country And Taiwan they were under the umbrella of the Cold War and they made that choice They had to I think But that's a longer and more complicated discussion But my point is there is no link between income and the desire for a particular political system There are many many more very very poor countries Didn't make a dime and wanted democracy I mean then how long do you think the system is going to last I mean Well I think it depends on many many variables Can they continue to perform I think they will continue to perform for some time probably within my generation And second will democracy continue to fail I mean most countries look at cases I mean most countries most of the non Western countries who adopted electoral democratic regimes did so not because of faith as the West has I would argue democracy is an outgrowth of religious and cultural traditions But for non Western countries they adopted them because they thought it would work And they looked at the precedence looked at those cases And now the cases have reversed Democracies are not working in most places In fact it's doing great harm So will it continue If that trend continues then the probability of China adopting democracy will be less Who would be that stupid to copy something that doesn't work I mean then do you think the Chinese political system is an alternative to Western liberal democracy Well it's an alternative for China I mean I don't think I do want to make the point that the Chinese political system at the moment is suitable for China under the current conditions And it is not exportable Because I mean I think political systems work When they work they work because they are suitable for the cultural conditions and the times And they are unique across different cultures and different times And the Chinese system seems to be optimal at the moment But I would say that I think the only thing that's exportable is the idea that there are alternatives And each country if you want to succeed and want to prosper should look for a path that's suitable for your own circumstances And not blindly copy others And that is exportable But not the model itself I'll just ask a couple more questions about international relations During your talk in South Korea you predicted the coming of new world disorder And you cleverly used the phrase warring states as a metaphor for our time And you said the following the world is not coming together under a unified system Its underlying narrative is dead Its underwriter is no longer able to pay for it The most significant rising power is not interested in making a new one Perhaps warring states is a proper metaphor of our time The Chinese seem to be looking ahead and beginning to formulate a new framework What presidents see proposed to President Obama during their California summit as great power relations Why do you see the coming of new world disorder and an era of warring states Since the end of World War II international relations have been dominated by what I call a narrative dichotomy A narrative dichotomy is a single fault line story What it says is and of course of historical determinism So after World War II the narrative dichotomy is that the whole world is divided into by a single fault line Soviet communism against liberal democracy and capitalism And they both armed themselves to the teeth and took their ideas from continent to continent caused untold sufferings by many people And in the end the Soviet Union collapsed hence the American century So that's the first phase of the narrative dichotomy The second phase is after the Cold War Then it was assumed that the world is moving towards a different utopia the utopia of liberal democracy And there's a single fault line The single fault lines are between those who are democratic capitalism and have adopted that system and those who are not refused to or are not yet And it's a struggle between these two And I would argue that we are at the end of that phase The narrative dichotomy the single fault line narrative no longer reflects the realities of our world It just does not The best example would be say Middle East today Human conflicts conflicts among nations states and groups are now driven by multiple fault lines The Western alliance led a decade long project to remake the Middle East It turned out the world is much more complex now than a narrative dichotomy The ethnic religious cultural fault lines nationalist fault lines proved to be much more consequential than the single fault line between democracies and dictatorship And we're witnessing that again in Syria And in Southeast Asia in East Asia the same thing I mean is the fault line between democracy and dictatorship is going to define the conflicts among China Korea and Japan Of course not Nationalist fault lines proved to be much more persistent and consequential So the current global architecture which is underwritten and paid for and run by the United States led Western alliance is based on that narrative dichotomy of that single fault line story And that story no longer reflects realities Therefore it's costing the captain of the global architecture America much more now than the benefits So I think it's a matter of time before America begins to the American people begin to ask for their country back And they already are beginning to do so The British people are asking for their country back I think Syria is probably a watershed event in that perspective And so what I'm saying is we are entering a phase I call warring states Meaning there is no pre designed architecture that you could plug in and run your policies Different states and different participants different actors are behaving in their own interests whether it's nationalist economic or political ideological or ethnic or religious whatever it may be And so we're in uncharted waters And we'll go through decades of that period and we'll see what emerges And also during your speech there you said China is not a revolutionary power and it is not an expansionary power And as a South Korean we know that at the core of Chinese tradition there is so called a belief Zhonghua which refers to Chinese belief that China is the center of the universe I mean if you see the past history South Korea Japan and other neighboring nations were categorized as barbarian nations and had to pay tribute to China and conform to Chinese culture tradition I mean I think this conflicts with your view of China as a non expansionary power I mean what is your take on this Well I think we ought to distinguish between theories and a factual statement like China is the center of the universe I'm kidding I want to make a real distinction here between an outlook of centrality which is the Chinese outlook It's been around for centuries and thousands of years and an outlook of universality These are two very very different outlooks Centrality meaning I'm at the center of the world Keep barbarians out but not invading them Or you're kicking me out Yeah That's right Keep But maybe if they pay tribute we'll take them But at most At most So if you compare If you look at the last two three thousand years there have been centuries centuries when China was I don't know a third of the world's GDP or something Maybe half I don't remember the numbers Okay Check Ferguson's book It tells you It has a chart And what During those periods what China did to other countries and compare with other empires whether Rome or Britain or other empires when their share of the global power was half of what China's share was and what they did to other countries And so I think it's a matter of degree Yeah This is my last question You suggest a non interventionist policy to the United States and other major powers of the world And you say give China time allow it the space and independence to continue on its own path live and let live Perhaps that would produce an outcome more suitable to all And you also pointed out during your lecture that America can no longer afford to spread democracy freedom and liberalism around the world and can no longer afford to save countries in humanitarian crisis I know that you predict the so called new world disorder but is that a desirable outcome I mean do we actually want to live in a world where we can no longer rely on the international organizations and America and other major Western powers to sort our humanitarian crisis Well I'm a businessman and I'm a political scientist So I'm not interested in normative statements I'm interested in analytical statements where we analyze what will happen not what should happen I mean the question of what should happen is so complex It's influenced by how we grew up the religions what church you went to It'll take weeks The analysis today and the analysis I'm interested in is what will happen And I think what will happen is not whether it's good or bad I mean I actually think it's more interesting I wouldn't use the word good It's more interesting It's more interesting to let an architecture emerge without pre design without a foregone conclusion The foregone conclusion has to be enforced has to be coerced People have to coerced to accept it but without a foregone outcome And I think that's the more interesting world but it could cause more suffering But who is to say that the current process of forced convergence is not causing suffering Yeah Thanks
大家好欢迎来到烽火的频道 本期视频分享的是2013年11月13日
在牛津辩论社 李世默与韩国人李心印的一场对话
这场对话对中国的政治制度 言论自由 国际关系
以及 世界秩序的未来展开深入的讨论 这位韩国小伙
认为既然中国共产党如此的受欢迎 为何还需要监管媒体、互联网
并限制言论自由 李世默在这里回答的已经非常的好了
但是烽火还想发表一下自己的观点 世界上没有哪个国家是没有限制的
言论自由 即使 在最为开放的美国也不敢说
完完全全的言论自由 其次言论自由它不是言论放纵
什么叫言论放纵 就是捏造事实 鼓吹虚假的言论
抹黑造谣 因为这些言论很可能 会伤害到其他的人或其他组织
甚至国家和民族感情 现阶段外媒对中国的捕风捉影
抹黑造谣的言论还少吗 所以 言论自由和共产党受不受欢迎
是完全的两回事 韩国小伙 明显是在给李世默挖坑
其次这位韩国精英 认为中国在历史上有很多的附属国家
比如说韩国、日本等 都是每年的纳贡
由此推断中国是具有扩张性的 这简直就是谬论和以偏概全
中国在历史鼎盛时期也并没有说去 吞并日本和韩国吧
顶多就是纳贡 如果由历史来推断 一个国家是否具有扩张性
那么美国和西方世界的殖民历史 掠夺历史,又怎么说呢
希望这位韩国小伙 停止双标 停止意识形态上的偏见
本期视频 就分享到这里 我们呀下次再见