Why don’t you talk?
What are you doing?
You’re not in time.
What would I sing?
If this would happen tomorrow
Would I still sing this song?
And what would it say?
I was right on time
But I’m not good at that
You’re still singing this song
A little ahead of everyone else
You still know what I’m singing
But I don’t think people are
As well off as you
No, there aren’t.
What would I do?
If this would happen tomorrow
Would I still sing this song?
And what would it say?
I was right on time
But I’m not good at that
You’re still singing the same song
I want to scream
If I have to do it again
And what would it say?
I was right on time
But I’m not good at that
You’re still singing the same song
I want to scream
I want to scream
I want to scream
I want to scream
I want to scream
I want to scream
You’re still singing the same song
The following article is from the February 2010 issue of the American Prospect magazine. To be notified when more are published, sign up to receive the magazine here.
With the rise of China’s middle class, a nation with a vast working class struggling with rising costs at the hands of a shrinking middle class, and the growing income gap between rich and poor, Americans are finding it hard to think like Chinese people—and that’s a good thing.
The Chinese, who already seem willing to sacrifice material luxury to create a better life for themselves, may soon be giving up the illusion of luxury too. Over the past five years, Beijing has cracked down on luxury goods, creating an air of repression in which all luxury has now become a crime. “Now people are more worried about social security for one’s children because of their own family’s financial stress,” an official with the Ministry of Public Security told reporters recently.
Yet the crackdown on luxury is also driving an increase in wealth. According to a study by the Hong Kong–based consultancy Global Financial Integrity (which analyzed the purchasing power of Chinese yuan at the beginning of 2010), Chinese millionaires now have an average wealth of $12 million—three times
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