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Daily Inspiration Quote by Jiang Zemin

"It takes two hands to clap"

About this Quote

"It takes two hands to clap" is the kind of plainspoken metaphor leaders reach for when they want to distribute responsibility without sounding evasive. Jiang Zemin frames conflict and cooperation as physics: inevitable, simple, almost apolitical. A clap can only happen with two hands; therefore blame and obligation are, by definition, shared. The rhetorical power is that it feels like common sense, which lets it travel across audiences and ideologies while quietly narrowing the range of acceptable responses.

The intent is diplomatic pressure dressed as folk wisdom. In a negotiation, the line nudges the other side toward concessions while giving Jiang room to refuse unilateral moves. If progress requires two hands, then any stalled outcome can be blamed on the absent or uncooperative partner. It’s a principle that flatters the speaker as reasonable: China is ready to clap, the subtext suggests, but don’t ask for applause if you won’t raise your hand.

Context matters: Jiang governed during China’s rapid integration into the global economy, a period when Beijing needed stability abroad and legitimacy at home. The phrase fits a broader Chinese political style that favors harmony rhetoric while protecting sovereign flexibility. It also subtly rebukes Western moral framing. If your narrative is heroes and villains, Jiang replies with relational causality: there are no solo actors, only interactions.

Its brilliance is its ambiguity. It can mean mutual respect, shared culpability, reciprocal compromise, even “don’t point fingers.” That slipperiness is exactly why it works as statecraft.

Quote Details

TopicChinese Proverbs
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It takes two hands to clap
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About the Author

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Jiang Zemin (August 17, 1917 - November 30, 2022) was a Leader from China.

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