Seems like the author is conflating ethnicity with culture.
Generally speaking though, if you've thoroughly integrated with a culture you weren't born into, I don't see why you shouldn't be accepted as part of it.
....
I might be missing the part of the human brain that makes people really want to fit in to a predefined identity, because I can't figure out why it matters
This.
I also don't see what the big deal is. Being a foreigner in China, especially from a Western country has too many benefits. Why would a normal western expat even want to be considered Chinese given how it would make life 100x times harder?
I don't know, but I mistrust tribalism and nationalism. Humans tend to be better the less we burden ourselves with divisions.Should some countries be "allowed" to decide that they don't want to accept outsiders?
For someone that lives in China for 15-20 years, how would it make life 100x harder?
I mean the preferential treatment for too many things to list.
I would assume getting married to a national would clear up the rest of what you posted also. But actually even if it didn't I have absolutely no interest in any of those things and don't know if they would even effect your "average" expat.
Don't know about that. I've lived in the US almost my entire life yet people always ask where I'm "really" from. My sister was born here and gets the same questions. It gets pretty annoying after a while.
I mean, he does have some weird views, but the general idea isn't wrong. If someone from China has lived for 20 years in Germany, speaks the language, has a passport etc. you'd be kind of an asshole to not consider that person German.
The average expat that lives in China for 15-20 years may be interested in those things. Just like a Chinese-born person living in the US for 15-20 years would be interested in things only given to Americans.
But if he can get citizenship then he'll technically be Chinese regardless?
Wait is this guy angry that his geographically close peers wont' consider him real chinese because he's a white canadian
so he makes the strawman of a chinese woman raised in america who doesn't identify as Chinese for his defense on why he should be considered chinese
...
However, in countries like China, even after you have assimilated into the culture and language, you are always seen as an outsider because of the race you look.
Maybe I reading it wrong, but I took it as a dude wants to accepted as Chinese (not just Chinese citizenship) , that brings all the baggage along with it.
The conformity to Chinese culture that would be expected for things like marriage, diet, parents, huokou, education, etc... Would be, for lack of a better way of putting it, insane for your average westerner.
All that just so I can trade some stocks in HongKong? nah.
I don't know any expat that has got those things. I do know expats that were caught trading Chinese stocks and had to dump the stocks.Its almost impossible to get a chinese ID as a foreigner.
The average expat, if he has enough guanxi, considering if he lived there for 15-20 years he should, can still easily get those things. Not just "as legal" as a Chinese.
As a foreigner you need to be a really big shot to get chinese citizenship or be a celebrity.
No, he acknowledges that the current concept of Chinese is race-based. You are harping on one of his paragraphs where he explains why the current concept is not based on language, culture, or legal concepts of nationality.
On the first example, yes. If someone moved to China and wants to be a Chinese citizen, they're Chinese and honestly should be treated that way if they want. In all likelihood, people will see them as white or foreign, and it won't go away for generations. That sucks and that attitude should change. I agree with the author on this point.
But reducing "being" Chinese to ... wearing traditional garb and studying a single kind of Chinese religion, is ridiculous. I am not going to immigrate to Japan, put on a kimono to a business meeting, read about samurai, and use that to prove I am more Japanese than other Japanese people. While the author has a legitimate point, this part just sounds like he's fetishizing a culture.
I understand where this guy is coming from because I do understand the stupid ideas some Chinese people hold about Chinese purity. That you're not "really" Chinese unless you're Chinese by blood. Even my own parents express this idea - one of my friends, whose family considers themselves China as they immigrated from there, was not considered "pure" Chinese by my parents, all because "originally" their grandparents were from Vietnam. It didn't make any sense to me. There's also the idea that "mixed blood" Chinese people aren't the same as those who are not mixed, even if you're mixed with other Asians. There's all sorts of insane and frankly downright racist ideas that revolve about Chinese blood, and that's not even getting into the whole where were you born thing. So yes, I personally think those ideas should stop, and that in general we shouldn't gatekeep sincere people who want to join our group (this applies for all things). However, I am definitely skeptical of what this particular guy is trying to say about being Chinese when his example includes being the only person to wear "traditional Chinese clothing" to meetings. Like... what.
Because again, that paragraph calls into question his perception of what Chinese is. This is why multiple people have brought it up.
And it's not like I'm the only one to understand and sympathize with part of his argument, but run into that stumbling block in his statements. As an example for another poster:
Should some countries be "allowed" to decide that they don't want to accept outsiders?