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When you say "Chinese" becomes lingua franca, do you mean Mandarin? Cantonese? Yue? Hakka? Other? If Mandarin, do you mean Jilu? Jiaolio? Other?
I don't think "Chinese" or any sinitic language ever becomes the global language. Translation is becoming so simple, I would expect any new global initiative can work in 3-4 languages simultaneously.
UN headquarters relocating - I think it would be more likely the UN collapses and is replaced by something else with China leading.
The Chinese movie industry is already huge, we just don't see much of it in the US.
Lots of Chinese people aren't into fengshui. That's kind of a bizarre stereotype for you to pick out of everything mentioned.
The aerospace industry in China has a ways to go before they can be classified in the same tier as Airbus. They are getting better, but still heavily rely on borrowing designs instead of creating their own.
Baidu, HarmonyOS, a computer OS - fine by me to add more options.
What I actually hope is the idea of a single global superpower dies completely. It's not even the current reality for the US; it's just propaganda.
Mandarin Chinese. (I had this in mind when I was typing it, but then forgot to type it 😅)
Idk, my parents are very into it, so I just assumed its a standard thing. The friends that my mom talk to seems to discuss superstitions a lot. My parents wouldn't buy a house with the number 4 on the street address.
(For Context: My family and I were born in PRC)
I meant more like "Chinese Superstition" rather than just "fengshui", but the "fengshui" term was more widespread so I just used that instead.
Yea I don't like superpowers either, but this is more like a "If you had to pick" type of question.
Maybe it's a generational thing, or geographic thing?
My wife was born in a village near Xi'an, and lived there for ~22 years
She isn't into fengshui, and doesn't adhere to any major superstitions (I guess other than you have to keep your belly button warm 😂)