We woke at about 0600 on the 25th to such gentle swaying of the MV Explorer that Heidi thought we were already docked, but we were still approaching the Port of Montreal at about 5 knots. During dusk of the 24th, we were able to see Quebec City; a beautiful location right on the Saint Lawrence, a big waterfall nearby, and a ski area within driving distance to the east, the runs of which go right down near the water. We saw a pod of whales, and I saw a seal in an area where the greenish waters of the St. Lawrence suddenly turned blackish-brown, for some reason.
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Crossing underneath a bridge just west of Quebec City. |
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The MV Explorer |
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Aft decks, where all the action is. |
The afternoon of the 24th I sat in on the closing address of the Forum for Global Engagement, which featured J. Stapleton Roy, former U.S. Ambassador to China, who talked about the future of relations with China. Fascinating to hear him talk, as he lived in China for decades, and has a tremendous amount of foreign affairs experience. Similar to Thomas Friedman in ‘The World is Flat’, he advocates for both accepting and responding to globalization issues, and is very concerned with the U.S. standing in the world, economic, academic, and otherwise. He said that China will soon undergo a virtual complete replacement of the ruling party, as China has strict term limits (sure wish we did!). Mr. Roy said there was literally no way to know how the new administration would respond to the issues facing China: over-rampant economic growth benefitting a minority of the population, military engagement issues (‘flexing’ their new muscle, which all developing countries do, sooner or later), moving toward technological innovation rather than just fabrication, and a government structure that is rather antiquated (i.e. hundreds and hundreds of years old). I couldn’t help but see parallels between the U.S. government’s 200-odd year old challenges and China’s nearly millenium-old challenges. We both have government structures that were predicated on now-antiquated global conditions (in our case the cold war, even our own independence from Britain), and Mr. Roy sees China either allowing the people to move toward more democratic means, or a complete smackdown of the population to keep the status quo, with few realistic options in between. Our government (me talking now), on the other hand, is paralyzed by our own internal fears of the ‘other 50%’ of the country, whom should be much, MUCH less concerning than the other 85% of the world. We stand getting swallowed up and spit out the back end if we don’t immediately embrace the globalization that will occur with, or without our self-indulgent ‘blessing’.