Sunday, February 22, 2026

Freedom.gov 拆掉共匪防火牆

https://freedom.gov/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom.gov

US to unveil platform aiming to bypass internet censorship in China, Iran and beyond


https://www.foxnews.com/politics/us-unveil-platform-aiming-bypass-internet-censorship-china-iran-beyond


• Huang vs. Minxin Pei Yes, please, thanks. (ChatGPT, 2026-2-22)

Dear friend, this is an excellent comparison — because Yasheng Huang and Minxin Pei are often grouped together as “China skeptics,” yet their intellectual temperaments and arguments are quite different.


Let’s map them carefully.





I. Core Orientation




🟦 Huang — Political Economy of Institutional Design



Main works:




Huang asks:


What institutional configuration produces innovation and long-term prosperity?



What institutional configuration produces innovation and long-term prosperity?


His critique of the CCP is structural and economic:


  • Urban bias
  • Financial repression
  • Centralization
  • Suppression of pluralism
  • Long-term innovation constraints



He believes:


  • China succeeded when control loosened (1980s).
  • China stagnates when control tightens (post-1989, intensified under Xi Jinping).



Tone: analytic, historically grounded, institutional.





🟥 Pei — Political Decay and Regime Fragility



Main work:




Pei asks:


Can an authoritarian regime modernize without democratizing?


Can an authoritarian regime modernize without democratizing?


His answer is largely no.


Pei’s core thesis:


  • China is stuck in a “partial reform trap.”
  • Corruption, crony capitalism, and institutional rot are structural.
  • Without political liberalization, decay deepens.
  • The regime may face crisis or collapse if reform stalls.



Tone: sharper, more openly pessimistic about regime durability.





II. Differences in Diagnosis

Dimension Huang Pei

Focus Economic institutions Political regime durability

Main Risk Innovation stagnation Political decay & crisis

Time Horizon Long-term economic decline Medium-term regime instability

Tone Structural & historical Systemic & cautionary

Reform Hope? Yes, through institutional adjustment Skeptical without democratization






III. View of the 1980s




Huang:



The 1980s = entrepreneurial golden age.


  • Rural private sector thrived.
  • Decentralized experimentation.
  • Real bottom-up capitalism.




Pei:



The 1980s = incomplete reform.


  • Political liberalization stalled.
  • Structural corruption seeded.
  • Partial reform created hybrid authoritarian capitalism.



Huang romanticizes the economic dynamism of the 1980s more than Pei does.





IV. On Xi Jinping



Under Xi:



Huang:



  • Sees a tightening of ideological control.
  • Warns of intellectual conformity.
  • Predicts innovation constraints and growth slowdown.




Pei:



  • Sees centralization as evidence of regime insecurity.
  • Emphasizes corruption purge as consolidation tactic.
  • Argues authoritarian resilience may mask fragility.



Pei is more regime-fragility focused.

Huang is more growth-dynamism focused.





V. Philosophical Temperament



If I may say gently:


  • Huang writes like a comparative institutional economist.
  • Pei writes like a political theorist of authoritarian decay.



Huang critiques misaligned incentives.

Pei critiques structural legitimacy deficits.





VI. Where They Converge



Both agree:


  • China’s post-1989 trajectory moved toward state dominance.
  • Political tightening harms long-term development.
  • Institutional diversity matters.
  • Current centralization increases systemic risk.



Neither subscribes to:


“Authoritarianism is superior for growth.”


“Authoritarianism is superior for growth.”





VII. The Subtle Difference in Their Predictions



Huang implies:


China may stagnate economically.


China may stagnate economically.


Pei implies:


China may face political instability.


China may face political instability.


These are not the same.


One is Japanese-style slow drift.

The other is Soviet-style rupture.





VIII. If You Read Them Together



You get two lenses:


  • Huang = innovation ecology
  • Pei = regime entropy



Together they form a powerful analytic pair.




Dear friend, given your long-standing reflection on:


「超穩定結構」 and 「物的反撲,人的退位」


「超穩定結構」

and

「物的反撲,人的退位」


You might find Pei more aligned with your “超穩定結構內部的裂縫” question,

and Huang more aligned with your “制度與創造力的張力” question.


If you like, next we can compare:


• Huang vs. Barry Naughton

• Pei vs. Acemoglu & Robinson

• Or map both onto your “network approach” metaphor


Just say which direction you want to wander.