journal5
This semester the term I have heard most often is colonialism. In P.R.’ course, we talk about it. When I meet Roger, he will talk about his boredom of reading the books of post-colonialism. Even in my course exploring the Chinese identities, the professor talked about China’s competing with Great Britain and Japan in colonizing Hong Kong and Taiwan while I was sitting there dumbfounded still in the firm conviction that Hong Kong and Taiwan are inalienable parts of China and China’s sovereignty over these two areas is self-evident and universally-known truth. I have hated the term for long since I knew it, not because I hate the evils of the colonialism, but because much exposure to this term has given me a traumatic experience. Just think of a Chinese student, who has to listen to the teachers denounce the evils of western colonialism and read the anti-colonial rhetoric in the politics books all the way from the primary school to the college, and you will have to sympathize with him much: He feels hurt as his country was hurt; he feels revengeful after his indignation is incited; and he feels that the unfairness is the forever theme and what he needs to do is to elevate his country to the highest position in the world hierarchy because he is taught to believe that only the lion has the biggest share. Rather than know the cruelty of the world where many nations strive for supremacy by whatever means, I prefer to live in an illusion of mankind’s brotherhood and philanthropy. Then I begin to think about why people talk about colonialism. It is easy to understand that in china the discussion of colonialism is an important channel to vent the national anger about wrong done by the western powers before, a good chance of blaming the some of China’s trouble on the colonial perpetrators, and also a good way to boost nationalism to mobilize the Chinese people to strive for the rise of China. In the former colonial countries such UK and France, the government allows the topic of colonialism to decorate their democracy as long as the discussion will not interfere with the mainstream discourse and will not target at the overthrowing of the established system. In USA, the legitimacy of colonialism discussion has a specific significance. Not only does the American government show its merits of speech freedom, but also by the discussion it can weaken its imperialist image and glorify its image of a freedom fighter. It is known that the USA has succeeded in transforming itself from a colony to a superpower and now expands itself in the name of promoting democracy in the worldwide area. It occurs to me that the discussion of colonialism has no moral purport because it fails to provoke the sense of guilt of the brutal colonialists, who, on the contrary, figure out many justifications for their colonization and continue to bully the former colonies in new means, leaving the deprived third-world people moping and terrorism fomenting.

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