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China's One Belt One Road Initiative connects Asia to Europe.

However, visionaries have


wondered how to connect China to Latin America as part of this initiative. China-Latin
American trade has increased by 1,200% or from $10 to $130 billion between 2000 and 2009.
The challenge is physical. There is a vast Pacific Ocean separating China from Latin America.
China has the ability to create islands in record time with the MV Tian Kun Hao. Hawaii has
acted as a gateway to Asia for the United States. What about the equivalent of a Chinese Hawaii
from a strategic point of view? The author proposes that China will create an island in the
Pacific that is more or less equidistant from China and Latin American. This island will act as an
extension of the One Belt and One Road Initiative.
Would the island be sovereign Chinese territory? If China builds the island on the high seas
beyond any national jurisdiction, 200 plus nautical miles from a nation, then China may
construct artificial islands that according to Article 87 of the United Nations Convention on the
Law of the Sea treaty (UNCLOS) would be sovereign Chinese territory! If China was building a
military base in the middle of the Pacific Ocean then the US would be opposed to such a project
regardless of legality. However, the island proposed in this essay would have peaceful goals!

The island could be named after Zheng He the admiral who might have arrived in the Americas
before Columbus. The Island could also be called "Lucky Eight Island" for reasons that will
become apparent later in this essay. I think the Zheng He name could be the more official
formal name for Chinese audiences and Lucky Eight could be the more vernacular informal
name for none Chinese audiences. This island will have both commercial and educational goals.
Commercial Goals

A traveler traveling from Beijing to Mexico City wastes a lot of time using hub airports that do
not support the goal of connecting these two cities. The traveler has to go to hub airports in the
US such as Dallas, Vancouver, Chicago, Los Angeles and even Amsterdam that are out of the
way. The island will act as a hub airport connecting Chinese cities to Latin American cities. The
distance from Beijing to Mexico City is 12,450 km. The Boeing 777, the most common airplane
in the world, has a range of 9,704 to 15,844 km. An island more or less 6,000 km from Beijing
and Mexico City would allow a Boeing 777 to reach just about any city in China or Latin
American from that island. A Boeing 777 has a speed of 950 km/h. In theory with a one hour
layover, a traveler could travel from Beijing to Mexico City in 14 hours via the island versus the
usual 18-20 plus hours the traveler now has to travel.
The Chinese cities the island airport hub serves might include Beijing, Chengdu, Guangzhou,
Shanghai and Shenzhen. The following Latin American cities are economically important to
China. Bogot, Lima, Mexico City, Panama City and So Paulo. There are students from five
Central American countries that could easily go to the island from Mexico City or Panama City.
The diplomatically important countries are Belize, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and
Nicaragua.
The traveler to cities in China other than Beijing or Shanghai can arrive at other Chinese cities
with only one layover rather than two or even three layovers as is currently the case. As a
specialized hub airport, layover times should be minimal but longer layovers are inevitable. The
airport should be designed with pod style accommodations as a design priority rather than a
design afterthought.
Japanese tourists go to Guam to buy US goods! Could the Chinese island be a place where Latin
Americans go to buy Chinese goods? Conversely, could the island be a place where Chinese go
to buy Latin American goods? Business to customer sales are part of any airport. However,
could business to business also be done on the island?
The island will have advanced communication infrastructure that connects China with Latin
America either via satellite and/or an underwater fiber optic cable connection. The island could
house a submarine branching unit connecting Chinese cities to Latin American cities. Chile and
China are already working on an underwater fiber optic cable connection.

Educational Goals

The island will provide a place in which Chinese and Latin Americans can learn together and
from each other. The island will house a trilingual university. The best and the brightest
Chinese learn Spanish. The best and the brightest Latin Americans learn Chinese. English is
used as a transitional language in the first two years but eventually the students move to all
Chinese classes for the Latin Americans and all Spanish classes for the Chinese. Trilingual
graduates will be in demand in any number of fields. However, the university could focus on
creating top of the line aviation management, environmental studies, logistics,
telecommunications, translation studies and tourism-hospitality departments. The aviation
management students can do internships in the airport. The logistics students will act as
leaders that have the skills to increase trade between China and Latin America. The tourism
students will acts as leaders that can increase tourism between China and Latin America.
The foreign language department will focus on Chinese, English and Spanish. There will be a
further emphasis on translations studies and computer-assisted translation in particular. The
wide spread use of applications like Google Translate show that ultimately computers will play a
larger and larger role in translations tasks. The department may also offer classes in Portuguese
and Japanese for those students interested in becoming quadrilingual.
The advanced communications infrastructure capability on the island could be used to promote
distance learning between China and Latin America. This distance learning project includes
regular and guest professors from China that are on the island teaching students throughout
Latin America and vice versa. An advanced communication system will also allow Chinese and
Latin American researchers to communicate with each other more effectively. The university
can act as a convenient physical space where researchers can finalize research face to face that
has already been done largely in cyberspace. The university should be able to host international
conferences involving the Americas and China. The university hotel can be used by university
guests. The tourism and hospitality students will do internships in the university hotel.
A university affiliated online educational TV station based on the island will take advantage of
the communications infrastructure. Telecommunications majors will do internships in the
television station. The TV station will send Chinese television shows, with educational and/or
cultural merit to appropriate Latin American audiences including students and academics in
Latin America. The students in the translation studies program will translate the Chinese shows
into Spanish for Latin American consumption. Latin American television with educational
and/or cultural merit will in turn be translated into Chinese and aimed at appropriate audiences
in China. The translations studies students gain valuable real life translation experience via this
project. Large audiences in China and Latin America gain a broader international outlook from
this programming.
Later, original programming made by students under the direction of professors at the island
university could be part of the project. The student made programming could focus on Chinese-
Latin American connections. A series of modules designed to teach Spanish speakers Chinese
could be one of the projects of this television station. Also, a series of modules designed to teach
Chinese speakers Spanish could be a project of this television station.
Culture shock is always a problem when students study abroad but distance acts as a remedy of
sorts for the students in the college. The location of the island means Chinese students are more
or less seven hours from home in China. Obviously the Latin American students are also more
or less seven hours from home. This means students can more conveniently go home and
recharge than if home was 14 to 20 hours away! The communications infrastructure could be
used to allow the students easy two way video communication with friends and family back
home. The university should obviously have a rich extracurricular environment. Busy students
have less time to be homesick!
Student electives and student clubs can act as extensions of the cross-cultural focus of the
university. Classes in Chinese cuisine and Latin American cuisine would be logical electives.
Chifa is a fusion of Chinese Cantonese cuisine and Peruvian cuisine and could be the signature
cuisine of the university. A cooking club could be an outgrowth of these classes. The faculty
sponsor should probably be a member of the tourism and hospitality department and the
students of this department should take a lead role in the cooking club. Latin American
students teach Chinese member Latin American dishes and vice versa. The creation of original
fusion dishes that combine Chinese and Latin American elements should be encouraged.
China is of course famous for wushu and classes in wushu make sense in this university. Latin
America does have some very effective martial arts such as the Brazilian martial art capoeira,
Colombian grima, and juego del garrote. The author of this paper does have some martial arts
experience in both Chinese and Latin American martial arts. I think Chinese and Latin
American martial arts would complement each other. Latin American martial arts are more
modern than wushu and reflect modern realities such as the use of modern weapons like
machetes for offense and specialized moves that act as a defense against firearms. The use of
hand stand techniques in capoeira seem fantastical until you realize that shooting a moving leg
is a difficult task compared to shooting someone in the chest. A leg wound is also less likely to
lead to death than a chest wound. In contrast, Chinese martial arts use more ancient and even
exotic weapons and generally provide no defense against firearms but have no equal in terms of
variety of weapons and variety of techniques. A martial arts club might be a good place for
students to explore a fusion of these martial traditions. Surfing and scuba diving could both be
classes and clubs that do not serve a cross cultural function but take advantage of the island
location. The elective classes act as introductions to an area of interest while the clubs with the
appropriate faculty sponsorship allow the student to gain additional expertise in their interest
area.
As a central Pacific Ocean outpost of China, the island could make soft power inroads among
Pacific island populations. The children of local Pacific island elites could receive substantial
scholarships to attend the university or even have full-tuition scholarships depending on
circumstances. There will be a need for custodial labor and clerical workers on the island. Most
Pacific islands suffer youth unemployment that is estimated at being around 23 percent! The
educational television station could broadcast TV shows over the air that are of value to Pacific
island populations. China probably has a special interest in better diplomatic relations with the
following Pacific islands: Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Palau, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu.
Description of the Island

In an earlier megaproject proposal, I suggested there are several advantages to a donut shaped
island. Belgium has suggested a donut shaped island can store energy generated by wind power
as described in Wired. The center of the donut is a fresh water lake. This provides a source of
drinking water, fresh water fish and a shark free area to practice water sports such as sailing and
scuba diving.
If you have two donut shaped islands side by side and touching then you get a figure eight
shaped island! Eight is a lucky number in Chinese culture! One donut shaped island is used for
the airport. The airport island is bigger because airports use up a lot more space than
universities. Plus, there is always the possibility that the island grows from being a hub airport
connecting China and Latin America to becoming a hub airport that connects Asia and the
Americas as a whole! The other donut shaped island is used for the university.
The B2B center, B2C mall and the government service center sit where the two islands meet.
Perhaps the building housing both the B2C mall, B2B center and government service center are
in an eight story building. The top floor of the building allows a view of both lakes as well as the
Pacific Ocean and houses a 5 star fusion seafood restaurant as well as many other restaurants.
The B2C mall occupies the lower floors The B2B center occupies the top floors. Can a floor of
the mall be designed so that virtual reality entertainment is more immersive than in a less
modern mall?
The area where the two islands meet provides natural shelter for ships and yachts. My own
experience with harbors is that big cruise ships and relatively smaller ships such as yachts
should be kept separate to some extent but both types of ships need access to similar supplies.
The cruise ship harbor and the marina for small boats should have equal access to the B2B
center/B2C mall. Hopefully the island becomes a trilingual outpost in the Pacific that attracts
both cruise ships from Asia and the Americas and smaller boats from neighboring islands. The
marina with student interns from the tourism department can offer tours in Spanish/Chinese
and/or English of surrounding Pacific islands.
Security at the Eastern B2B center/B2C mall exits can prevent unauthorized personnel from
exiting into the university island. In general I would say the university island should be off
limits to all but university related personnel. Do you really want random travelers from the
airport, harbor and/or marina wandering around the university? The students of course have
free access to both islands with their student IDs. There could be a K12 boarding school next to
the university and that extra layer of security will make the parents happy. Cameras can be
mounted on the outside of the B2B center/B2C mall. The external cameras mean that the
airport, harbor, marina and university can be observed to some extent with these cameras.
One floor of the building should be dedicated to government services including city hall type
functions, customs, the police station and the coast guard. I would suggest a hardened
basement for the government services. Typhoons are common in the Pacific Ocean. The
basement facility should be strong enough to survive even a super typhoon. The people of the
island need leadership no matter how bad the situation.

Dubai is planning to create an underwater theme park. The airport island could have a similar
type of park from an infrastructure point of view but with a different theme! Swimmers and
scuba divers can explore Chinese and Latin American man made wonders of the world
underwater. The following Chinese wonders of the world could include wonders of the world
underwater from China and Latin America. China has several man made wonders that merit
inclusion in the underwater theme park including the Terracotta Army, the Hanging Temple, the
Great Wall of China, the Leshan Giant Buddha, Shibaozhai, and the Forbidden City. Latin
American is more famous for scenic wonders than man made wonders but the two big ones that
would look incredible underwater is the Pyramid of the Sun and Machu Picchu.

Another potential tourist attraction could be a recreation of the Glass Beach of Fort Bragg,
California but on a much larger scale. Glass is made of silicon just like sand. Glass left on a
coast will be pounded by the waves and turned into smooth rounded pieces! I doubt that China
needs to bring glass waste all the way from China. I suspect there is plenty of glass waste all
over the Pacific that populations will be more than willing to donate to China! The Glass Beach
in California was created by accident.

The new Glass Beach could have one beach that is a rainbow of glass but how about having other
beaches that use glass sorted by color. The most common colors for sea glass are kelly green,
brown, and white (clear) because many bottle are made of these colors. So building three
beaches of these common types of glass should be relatively easy. I would call the beach made of
brown colored glass the gold beach. I would call the beach made out of the clear glass the crystal
beach. Less common types of colored glass are jade, amber (from bottles for whiskey, medicine,
spirits, and early bleach bottles), golden amber or amberina (mostly used for spirit bottles), lime
green (from soda bottles during the 1960s), forest green, and ice- or soft blue (from soda bottles,
medicine bottles, ink bottles, and fruit jars from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, windows,
and windshields). The less common types of sea glass could be sold in stores and used in jewelry
also sold in stores. There could be a place in the mall were tourists can make their own sea glass
jewelry. The pieces of glass in loose form or converted into pieces of jewelry would be a unique
souvenir. Below is a picture of the Glass Beach in California.

One lake could have an aquaculture area that farms high value edible Chinese freshwater fish.
Another aquaculture area could farm high value edible Latin American freshwater fish. Fish of
course is also available from the surrounding Pacific Ocean. The university cooking club and the
B2C mall restaurants will have an incredible diversity of fish to use for fusion recipes! Fish
produce feces! I dont want to swim in fish feces or drink fish feces. The second lake is used for
water sports and drinking water.

The center of the lake in the university side of the island will have a giant statue of Confucius
since Confucius is considered a great teacher. The statue uses Luminor paint. Luminor paint
uses electroluminescence technology. Electricity passing through the paint causes the paint to
glow like a light bulb. In the day, the statue looks like a giant statue painted gold but at night the
activated paint glows! Paint of different metallic hues could be used to give the statue more
dimensionality. The center of the lake on the airport side of the island could have a statue of
Zheng He since Zheng He is considered a great traveler.

With the US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on climate change, China has become the
global leader in dealing with climate change. The island could be have an environmental center.
Since the island is in the Pacific, the Great Pacific garbage patch is one problem the center could
tackle. The Ocean Cleanup project is in interesting approach but I am sure Chinese and Latin
American researchers can come up with an improved version of this solution. In particular,
Marcus Eriksen et al. (2014) have found 92% of plastic pieces in the ocean is smaller than
microplastic and cannot be caught by The Ocean Cleanup's system. College students from all
over the world could be awarded internships to act as crews on university ships based on the
island that travel to different parts of the Pacific and perhaps all over the world in order to clean
up the world's oceans.

The island could have a casino! After all the island is shaped like a lucky eight! The island could
even have a five star resort area that allows recreational marijuana usage. The potential revenue
could be huge and that revenue could in turn fund the loftier goals of the university. A wall
could separate the interesting part of the airport island from the rest of the island.
The university offers dual degrees. You get a bachelors from a Chinese university and a Latin
American university. The students become trilingual. These are significant academic
advantages that other universities around the world cannot offer. Latin American middle class
students will probably be happy with the academic advantages. However, students that come
from Latin American elites and have the money to study in Western countries and party would
be valuable to China but might find the island "boring".
If the five star resort had a three day minimum occupancy then Latin American students could
go to the resort to "blow off steam" during a three day weekend. Marijuana will remain illegal
on the airport island and the university island except for the resort area. Marijuana is only legal
at the resort and you have to stay at the resort for at least three days or at least you have to pay
for three days at the resort. Chinese students with mainland China passports could be barred
from going to the resort or maybe not. Overseas Chinese that have passports from other
countries other than China can stay at the resort just like Latin American students. Wealthy
Overseas Chinese are another group that could be valuable for the projection of Chinese soft
power.
The rise of Frankencracy in the US means the US has given up on its traditional leadership role
in the Americas. The unilateral attack of NAFTA by the US means the Americas can no longer
trust the US as a reliable long term partner in regional development. The rise of Frankencracy
also means the demise of a potential tripolar global order. New political structures need to be
created for a prosperous global future. China's One Belt One Road Initiative will bring
prosperity to millions in Asia and Europe. Hopefully this proposal means that Latin America
can also benefit from China's One Belt One Road Initiative.

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