顯示具有 Iran 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章
顯示具有 Iran 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章

2026年4月9日 星期四

The "Rogue Treatment" of States: Trump, Baoyu, and the Arrogance of Instinct

The "Rogue Treatment" of States: Trump, Baoyu, and the Arrogance of Instinct

1. Aesthetic Archetypes vs. Reality

In Dream of the Red Chamber, Baoyu rejects a valid medical prescription because it doesn't fit his aesthetic archetype of a "delicate girl." He ignores Qingwen’s actual physical constitution (a hardy servant) in favor of his idealized vision of her.

Similarly, Trump’s reaction to Netanyahu’s briefing was driven by an archetype of "Quick Victory." He was charmed by the "visuals"—the Mossad director on the screen, the charismatic leader, and the cinematic promise of a "secular uprising." Just as Baoyu saw a "fragile flower" instead of a "strong patient," Trump saw a "collapsing regime" instead of a "complex regional power." Both leaders replaced a gritty, professional diagnosis with a more "attractive" story.

2. The Selective Mutilation of the "Prescription"

Baoyu committed a "medical crime" by picking and choosing parts of a professional formula—removing the essential "bitter" elements (Ephedra/Bitter Orange) while keeping the "sweet" ones.

Trump performed the exact same strategic surgery on the intelligence assessment:

  • The Intelligence Diagnosis: To succeed, you need Steps 1 & 2 (Military strikes) AND Steps 3 & 4 (Popular uprising/Regime change). The professionals warned that 3 and 4 were "ridiculous."

  • The Trump/Baoyu Logic: "I’ll just take the parts I like." Trump decided that the failure of the latter half didn't matter. Like Baoyu, he believed he could remove the "harsh" realities of war (long-term occupation, depleted stockpiles, closed straits) and still get the "cure" (victory).

3. The "Zhiyanzhai" Enablers: Silence as Complicity

In the medical story, the commentators (Zhiyanzhai) didn't criticize Baoyu because they shared his elite biases. In the Situation Room, we see a modern version of this courtier culture.

General Caine, unlike the combative General Milley, adopted a "Standard Operating Procedure" of cautious ambiguity. By asking "And then what?" without ever saying "This is a disaster," he allowed Trump to hear only the tactical successes. Like the servants in the Jia household who didn't dare correct the "Young Master," the advisors provided a buffet of facts from which the President could cherry-pick his own reality.

4. The "Tiger-Wolf" Medicine

Baoyu feared "Tiger-Wolf" medicine (aggressive herbs) because he thought they were too "violent" for his world. Paradoxically, Trump is the opposite—he is attracted to the "Tiger-Wolf" action (assassinations and bombings) but fears the "bitter" follow-up (the long-term cost of nation-building).

Both, however, share the same delusion: that you can manipulate a complex system (a human body or a foreign nation) by ignoring the professional "dosage" required for a permanent cure.


Comparison Table: The Anatomy of a Mistake

FeatureJia Baoyu’s PrescriptionTrump’s Path to War
The ExpertHu the "Quack" (actually correct)Intelligence Community (Ratcliffe/Rubio)
The InterferenceRemoves "harsh" herbs due to sentimentIgnores "harsh" logistical risks due to ego
The MotivationProtecting an idealized image of a girlPursuing an idealized image of "decisive" victory
The WarningThe doctor's original intent was to expel the "cold"Caine's warning about depleted stockpiles
The ResultSmall cold becomes fatal pneumoniaLimited strike risks a "total war" with no exit
Historical IronyElite bias favored "gentle" ineffective curesPolitical bias favors "fast" cinematic results

Conclusion: The Tragedy of the "Good Intention"

Baoyu thought he was being "kind" to Qingwen. Trump likely thinks he is being "strong" for America. But in the cynical theater of history, kindness without expertise is cruelty, and strength without strategy is suicide. Just as Cao Xueqin used Baoyu’s meddling to signal the decay of the Jia estate, the "regime change" briefings in the Situation Room signal a world where the "Prescription for Power" is no longer written by those who understand the disease, but by those who find the medicine aesthetically pleasing. When the "Young Master" of a superpower decides to play doctor, the patient—in this case, global stability—is the one who ends up like Qingwen: dying of a preventable "cold."


2026年4月6日 星期一

The Chaos of a Thousand Kings: Why Washington Fails the I Ching Test

 

The Chaos of a Thousand Kings: Why Washington Fails the I Ching Test

Modern geopolitics has long been obsessed with "decapitation"—the surgical removal of a "head" to kill the beast. In Iran, the West has spent decades looking for a single throat to choke, convinced that if the Supreme Leader or the IRGC commanders fall, the nation will simply collapse into a manageable puddle. This is the classic Western fallacy: the belief that power must always be a pyramid.

The I Ching, specifically the "Yong Jiu" line of the Qian hexagram, offers a warning that Washington’s policy experts would do well to study: "A flight of dragons appearing without a head is good fortune." To the Western mind, "headless dragons" sounds like an invitation to anarchy; to the ancient sage, it describes a state of ultimate resilience. In present-day Iran, the "system" is no longer just a man; it is a decentralized, ideological hydra. Each "dragon"—the military, the clergy, the shadow economy, the regional proxies—operates with its own internal logic and self-discipline. When you remove a head, the body doesn't die; the other dragons simply adjust their flight pattern.

The U.S. continues to apply linear, Newtonian pressure to a Taoist problem. They keep looking for a "head" to negotiate with or to destroy, failing to realize that Iran has mastered the art of being everywhere and nowhere at once. By forcing the world into a binary of "Leader vs. People," the U.S. ignores the darker, self-organizing strength of a regime that has learned to thrive in the absence of a singular, vulnerable point of failure. If the Americans consulted the Book of Changesinstead of just their satellite imagery, they might realize that "headless" isn't a sign of weakness—it’s the most dangerous form of stability there is.