The Nostalgia Trap: A Tale of Two Resurrections
The world is currently obsessed with "Revenge of the Exes"—historically speaking. On one side of the Pacific, we have Make America Great Again (MAGA); on the other, The Great Rejuvenation of the Chinese Nation (中华民族伟大复兴). Both are masterclasses in political marketing, wrapped in the comforting, yet slightly dusty, blanket of nostalgia.
At their core, both movements are fueled by relative deprivation. It’s not about how much you have; it’s about how much you used to have, or how much you think your neighbor stole from you.
The Similarities: Mirror Images
The Golden Age Myth: Both rely on a curated past. MAGA looks to the 1950s (industrial dominance, clear social hierarchies); the Rejuvenation looks to the Tang/Han dynasties (tributary systems, being the "Middle Kingdom"). Human nature loves a "Once Upon a Time" because it's easier to sell a dream than a detailed budget.
The External Villain: You can’t have a comeback without a bully. For MAGA, it’s globalism and "woke" elites. For Beijing, it’s the "Century of Humiliation" and Western hegemony. Nothing unites a fractured populace like a common finger to point.
The Strongman Fix: Both ideologies whisper that the system is broken and only a "Man of Destiny" can bypass the red tape to fix it. It’s the classic Machiavellian play: people prefer a firm hand to an uncertain future.
The Differences: Chaos vs. Order
The divergence lies in the Business Model of Power. MAGA is inherently disruptive and individualistic. It’s a populist insurgency against its own institutions, thriving on chaos and the "outsider" energy. It’s a reality show where the script changes daily.
Conversely, the Great Rejuvenation is structural and collective. It is a top-down, hyper-organized marathon. While MAGA wants to "take the country back" from the government, the Chinese vision is about the government becoming the country. One is a riot; the other is a parade.
The Dark Reality
History teaches us that when nations start looking backward to move forward, it’s usually because the present is too expensive or too complicated to fix. It’s easier to promise a return to a "Pure Era" than to explain how AI and automation are going to delete 40% of jobs. We are witnessing two titans trying to out-remember each other, and as any historian will tell you, a memory is just a lie we’ve agreed to believe.