"I'm more Chinese than you are!" the guy sitting next to me suddenly cried out, causing me to jump and inhale the mouthful of noodles I had been enjoying at the time. It's not a sentence you hear often, even in China, and especially not from a 20-something Jewish man from California.
I am old enough to have witnessed, at an impressionable age, the moment when the evolution from dog to chimpanzee to man orbiting the Earth occurred, when "reaching for the stars" went from a figurative to a literal pursuit.
Editor's note: This year marks the 40th anniversary of China's reform and opening-up policy.
Some still believe the wheel is man's greatest invention (never mind big data, artificial intelligence, supercomputers, superconductors and nanotech).
Editor's note: This year marks the 40th anniversary of China's reform and opening-up policy.
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