He says he is planning to transition out of China after roughly thirty years there and describes the country as hopeless for the education reform project he has tried to pursue.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Relocation
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "I wasn't very happy with the students. I didn't feel as though I was reaching my full potential. And so I've left the school..."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "I wasn't very happy with the students. I didn't feel as though I was reaching my full potential. And so I've left the school..."
Key Notes
Jiang says New Zealand is unattractive as a relocation target precisely because too many elite-prepper figures are already moving there, and he suggests Chile as a safer refuge from nuclear war.
Jiang says that if he were forced to relocate his family quickly, Botswana, Chile, New Zealand, and Malaysia are among the countries he would consider because they seem relatively stable and distant from the main centers of conflict.
Jiang says his practical strategy is to stay quiet in China, avoid direct engagement with the Chinese public, and spend more of his future life overseas, possibly in Malaysia.
Jiang warns that trying to preserve wealth through gold, silver, or a perfect relocation plan will drive people insane because wealth itself will not be the thing that matters in the coming chaos.
Timestamped Evidence
"I wasn't very happy with the students. I didn't feel as though I was reaching my full potential. And so I've left the school..."
"moscow and saint petersburg these are great cities um christy asks what specific reasons do you have to leave china uh what do you..."
"from a nuclear war it'll probably be chili actually um okay okay this is a good question"
"Okay, first of all, because I have a family, I have three kids, I would not make any changes lightly. Okay, I would prefer..."
"And therefore they don't know what to do with me. And so what the AI system does is. It treats me as an edge..."
"Well, you know, we started school together, you know, and we can continue to use the school to do our online promotion of our..."
"all focused on all on spiritual, personal, personal fulfillment, um, I guarantee you'll, you'll live a very happy life if you even do that...."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
The stream begins as a thank-you and career update, but its real pressure is larger: leave China, refuse the influencer trap, build schools, democratize creativity, and prepare communities for a world Jiang thinks is...
A farewell class becomes a compressed world model: empire is a game with no friends, collapse is survivable if imagination and community survive, AI is funded for control rather than liberation, and the deepest...
The interview sounds scattered at first, but its logic is consistent.
Kim Iversen brings Jiang on because the channel has become a prediction machine.
Related Topics
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