SUPER-CHAOS IN THE WORLD’S LARGEST DESERT
In his memoirs, Henry Kissinger relates a conversation he had with the 20th century's most murderous monster, Mao Tse-Tung. The topic was the extent to which a country can experience chaos, social breakdown and upheaval.
The bigger the country, the greater its capacity for chaos, said Mao. A small country can become chaotic on a limited basis, but only a giant such as China has the capacity for what Mao called "super-chaos."
It was this capacity for such "super-chaos" that required, according to Mao, a ruthless and unchallenged Communist dictatorship to keep it in check. It was a clever term for the same tired rationale used by all tyrants to justify their oppression.
Yet anyone familiar with the long history of China is well aware of its periodic episodes of anarchic collapse, and the deep-set fear most Chinese have of them. But no matter how much the Chinese try to prevent them, they come anyway and it sure looks like one is headed their way now.
What's coming is a tsunami of pollution washing over China that is about to leave in its wake what World Bank analysts say will be "the world's biggest desert."
Imagine what would happen if you dumped several hundred million people in the Sahara, currently the world's biggest desert. That's China's future, folks. Only worse.