Do you know what a surplus of one trillion dollars means? It's like the Eight-Nation Alliance arriving at your doorstep 200 years ago. In recent years, we can clearly feel that the things we export are increasing in quantity and becoming more expensive, while the things we import are decreasing in quantity and becoming cheaper. For us, it is merely a return to our historical status. A few centuries ago, the Ming Dynasty relied on exporting tea, porcelain, and silk to bring in silver as abundant as seawater while sitting at home. The silver that Europeans plundered from America over the centuries ultimately ended up being presented as tribute to the Ming Dynasty. Centuries ago, our exported goods drained the world's silver; now, our exported goods can still drain the world's silver, but there was a certain time period when we could not earn silver and instead lost all of our own silver. China's current industrial strength leaves me speechless! Some manufacturing enthusiasts in the countryside can assemble helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft, large model aircraft that won't sink with a few people, pocket submarines, electric fishing boats, electric supercars, and even more. I was amazed to see someone assembling a J-10... With such industrial capabilities, how can automobile manufacturing, shipbuilding, and motorcycle manufacturing not sweep through southern countries? Moreover, with semiconductors, mobile phones, steel, and traditional export projects, the manufacturing industry is incredibly strong. Take automobiles as an example: in recent years, the number of cars imported into China has been particularly low, with only $39.2 billion in 2024, while exports rose to $117.4 billion, and this year will be even more exaggerated. Who would believe that ten years ago, Chinese cars were considered trash? The same goes for integrated circuits; we are constantly being told we are being choked, but in 2024, exports will reach $159.5 billion, and our highly sought-after mobile phone exports only reached $134.3 billion. The latest report for 2025 indicates that the added value of China's manufacturing industry accounts for nearly 30% of the global total, maintaining the world's largest scale for 15 consecutive years. China possesses all 41 major industrial categories classified by the United Nations, and in over 500 major industrial products, many of which rank first in the world. Just looking at industry or manufacturing, China can confidently say: bring it on, I can take on ten! Why is China's development so shocking? Because China has hit a bug in the process of industrial development. In short: industrialization is an irreversible process; as the degree of industrialization gradually rises, the country's economic level improves, its currency appreciates, workers' wages increase, competitiveness in low to mid-level industrial goods declines, and ultimately, low-end industries are naturally eliminated, transitioning into a middle-income industrial nation. If the transition fails, it will fall into the Latin American economic trap, which is also known as the middle-income trap. However, China says: I want it all. A win-win means I want to win twice. We no longer need to rely on imports for what we used to import; instead, we export to seize international markets, creating a historic first-time surplus of one trillion dollars in the process. Moreover, I have a feeling this surplus will continue to expand because our exports in automobiles and integrated circuits will keep growing rapidly, while imports of automobiles, integrated circuits, large aircraft, medical devices, industrial mother machines, etc., will decrease significantly. Additionally, the proliferation of electric vehicles and the utilization of new energy will further reduce oil imports. That’s why Trump got anxious and started a trade war with tariffs, but now it’s useless; with just one move on soybeans, you have to call him 'dad.' Why? Because your soybean farming relates to your voting base. China's incredibly rapid rise is an unprecedented event in history that the vast majority of people, possibly over 99%, did not foresee. Very few outside analysts were able to predict it, and even fewer domestically did so, not being mainstream, and even those at the top didn't quite understand it. The main characteristics are: a large population, unique civilization, excellent system, intense education, long-term planning, industrial competitiveness, performance-focused culture; as of today, it has already formed a complete body, capable of shattering all existing rules and rolling over everything. Any favorable conditions proposed by foreigners will lead to defeat as soon as they are implemented. The long-term planning forecast from the 16th National Congress indicated that by 2050, China could hope to become the world's second-largest economy. Official interpretation: the director of the National Bureau of Statistics' Accounting Division said that. This is not strategic bluffing; that's how the understanding was back then. The planning of major cities across the country has been following this path, and from the current perspective, without exception, none have kept up with the development. A huge surplus will lead to global countermeasures—didn't they think of that? They did not predict such rapid development! There is a fair principle in the world; effort will be rewarded. While Europeans are implementing a four-day workweek, working from home, and vacationing on sunny beaches, the Chinese are working 996 in offices and factories. The result is entirely normal. This is the result of favorable timing, geographic advantage, and human factors—all indispensable. This astronomical figure of one trillion dollars is the result of China's accumulated efforts over decades. The imperialist ambitions of the United States to interrupt China's rise have a very brief strategic window; by 2016, the South China Sea was their last chance, and even by 2016, it was already too late; they had missed the opportunity long ago. From the standpoint of strength, America has no right to speak to China in such a manner. The statement made to the U.S. was in early 2021 (March); nearly five years have passed since then, and this indicates that five years ago, the judgment was made that China was on par with the U.S. So what about now? Today, five years later, what has America become? What face does it have to call itself a superpower? Perhaps a super second! As for other countries? How many divisions do you have at home?