Commentary In a piece for The Atlantic, David Brooks laments the decline of American society. “These days,” writes Brooks, “your education level and political values are as important in defining your class status as your income is.” The country has split into two distinct, “separate class hierarchies—one red and one blue.” The “ideological divide” is fast becoming a chasm. The United States, according to Brooks, is in trouble. In China, meanwhile, the opposite is true. At least that’s the opinion of Fang Zihao, who recently wrote an opinion piece for the South China Morning Post. His article, provocatively titled “China’s secret of success: the country is more committed to inclusivity than you’d think,” deserves to be dissected. China, a country tightly controlled by a tyrannical regime, is not necessarily synonymous with the word “inclusivity.” Tyranny? Yes. Genocide? Yes. Inclusivity? But, in Zihao’s opinion, China’s predisposition toward inclusiveness motivates “the ordinary …