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Spineless apologetics (Read 4543 times)
Karnal
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #45 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:05pm
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:46pm:
Quote:
human rights have gone down


Do you have any evidence of this?

Between 1958 and 1961, between 15 and 55 million Chinese were denied the right to life. Not deliberately of course. Bureaucratic error. This is what Athos means by merit.


You have enough evidence, you don't need mine.

Stop quibbling. If you're trying to pretend China is on some steady path of liberal reform, you're more of a spineless apologist than I thought.

Sticking up for the Saudis is bad enough (for someone so loathsome of Islam). But promoting the reversal of the one-child policy as an example of Freeeeedom?

Come come, dear, you've had better days. Your reference to Athos shows you have a pretty good idea what trajectory China's on.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #46 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm
 
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.

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freediver
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #47 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:12pm
 
Quote:
If you're trying to pretend China is on some steady path of liberal reform


I wouldn't say steady.

Quote:
Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.


The growth you see is a result of rapid economic liberalisation. Population is only part of it. You complain about them destroying a company, but not long ago they sent up to 55 million people to the grave to show their dedication to communism.

60% of their GDP comes from private enterprise, which did not exist in China until recently.
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Karnal
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #48 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:23pm
 
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.



Wow. The art of war, internecine Mandarin politicking for the 21st century.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #49 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:25pm
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:12pm:
Quote:
If you're trying to pretend China is on some steady path of liberal reform


I wouldn't say steady.


Neither would I.

The word: retrogressive, comes to mind.

Deng would (do a half) turn in his urn.

Mao would do a cartwheel.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #50 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:27pm
 
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:23pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.



Wow. The art of war, internecine Mandarin politicking for the 21st century.

Yes. And it's proof positive that our primate instinct for hierarchy, and the striving for high-status within it, has not escaped our DNA.
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Conviction is the art of being certain
 
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Karnal
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #51 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:53pm
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:12pm:
Quote:
If you're trying to pretend China is on some steady path of liberal reform


I wouldn't say steady.

Quote:
Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.


The growth you see is a result of rapid economic liberalisation. Population is only part of it. You complain about them destroying a company, but not long ago they sent up to 55 million people to the grave to show their dedication to communism.

60% of their GDP comes from private enterprise, which did not exist in China until recently.


Sorry, what does GDP have to do with human rights?

I'd hazard the Saudis have a larger private sector and still behead their political opponents with surgical bone saws in broad daylight. 

You'd probably have a better case if you wanted to present capitalism as a force for liberalism with the Saudis, but then you'd be stuck trying to defend their human rights record too.

But do you know? We wouldn't be having this debate if you didn't try to make out the Taliban was responsible for Sept 11 during one of your more absolutist pronouncements.

Most of us are happy to accept that things are complicated. You prefer to see the West as a beacon of shining light, shadowed only by the backward forces of Islam, socialism and tintedness.

The last five years of US politics, at the very least, should show you just how impossible this vision is. Not only have the shadows come from white supremacism, authoritarianism and the religious right within, Islamist outfits like the Taliban have gone almost unnoticed.

Now, we'll be watching them join forces with Russia and China, testing the West where it's most sensitive. As China quietly builds up its strength, as Putin quietly sows the seeds of resentment, and as the white supremacists on this board and elsewhere drum up a cacophony of fear and loathing to drown out any semblance of reason or rational informed debate, we'll all see that quaint, post-Cold War vision of American-led capitalism saving the world fade into a distant memory.
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Karnal
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #52 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:59pm
 
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:27pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:23pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.



Wow. The art of war, internecine Mandarin politicking for the 21st century.

Yes. And it's proof positive that our primate instinct for hierarchy, and the striving for high-status within it, has not escaped our DNA.


Well, that's a rather Chinese argument, but yes.

I'm surprised Aquascoot didn't say that.
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chimera
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #53 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 7:03pm
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:12pm:
Quote:
If you're trying to pretend China is on some steady path of liberal reform


I wouldn't say steady.


It's steady, they reformed Hong Kong into true patriotism. The liberal part is almost unrecognisably loyal and so Xi, the resemblance is unstoppable.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #54 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 7:10pm
 
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:59pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:27pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:23pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.



Wow. The art of war, internecine Mandarin politicking for the 21st century.

Yes. And it's proof positive that our primate instinct for hierarchy, and the striving for high-status within it, has not escaped our DNA.


Well, that's a rather Chinese argument, but yes.

I'm surprised Aquascoot didn't say that.

Well, on prophecy: a clock is right twice a day. On truth: Any fool can tell you the sun will rise in the east.
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freediver
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #55 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 9:15pm
 
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:53pm:
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:12pm:
Quote:
If you're trying to pretend China is on some steady path of liberal reform


I wouldn't say steady.

Quote:
Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.


The growth you see is a result of rapid economic liberalisation. Population is only part of it. You complain about them destroying a company, but not long ago they sent up to 55 million people to the grave to show their dedication to communism.

60% of their GDP comes from private enterprise, which did not exist in China until recently.


Sorry, what does GDP have to do with human rights?

I'd hazard the Saudis have a larger private sector and still behead their political opponents with surgical bone saws in broad daylight. 

You'd probably have a better case if you wanted to present capitalism as a force for liberalism with the Saudis, but then you'd be stuck trying to defend their human rights record too.

But do you know? We wouldn't be having this debate if you didn't try to make out the Taliban was responsible for Sept 11 during one of your more absolutist pronouncements.

Most of us are happy to accept that things are complicated. You prefer to see the West as a beacon of shining light, shadowed only by the backward forces of Islam, socialism and tintedness.

The last five years of US politics, at the very least, should show you just how impossible this vision is. Not only have the shadows come from white supremacism, authoritarianism and the religious right within, Islamist outfits like the Taliban have gone almost unnoticed.

Now, we'll be watching them join forces with Russia and China, testing the West where it's most sensitive. As China quietly builds up its strength, as Putin quietly sows the seeds of resentment, and as the white supremacists on this board and elsewhere drum up a cacophony of fear and loathing to drown out any semblance of reason or rational informed debate, we'll all see that quaint, post-Cold War vision of American-led capitalism saving the world fade into a distant memory.


China can't rely on oil reserves to lift the starving peasants out of poverty. Instead they have to rely on economic liberalism.

GDP has a lot to do with human rights. Why do you think human rights are so strongly correlated with high GDP? Yes, this is a test of your ability to see the wood, despite all the trees in the way. Open your eyes.
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People who can't distinguish between etymology and entomology bug me in ways I cannot put into words.
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Karnal
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #56 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 9:15pm
 
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 7:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:59pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:27pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:23pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.



Wow. The art of war, internecine Mandarin politicking for the 21st century.

Yes. And it's proof positive that our primate instinct for hierarchy, and the striving for high-status within it, has not escaped our DNA.


Well, that's a rather Chinese argument, but yes.

I'm surprised Aquascoot didn't say that.

Well, on prophecy: a clock is right twice a day. On truth: Any fool can tell you the sun will rise in the east.



The revolution rises in the east
Made glorious by the sun, Marx, Lenin, our beloved Chairman Mao
Through sound revolutionary principles, the people come together
Like steel in a furnace, forged by fire
Tempered by the Party
Father, mother, brother, sister,
Unite for the revolution!
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Bertie
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #57 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 9:17pm
 
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 9:15pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 7:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:59pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:27pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:23pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.



Wow. The art of war, internecine Mandarin politicking for the 21st century.

Yes. And it's proof positive that our primate instinct for hierarchy, and the striving for high-status within it, has not escaped our DNA.


Well, that's a rather Chinese argument, but yes.

I'm surprised Aquascoot didn't say that.

Well, on prophecy: a clock is right twice a day. On truth: Any fool can tell you the sun will rise in the east.



The revolution rises in the east
Made glorious by the sun, Marx, Lenin, our beloved Chairman Mao
Through sound revolutionary principles, the people come together
Like steel in a furnace, forged by fire
Tempered by the Party
Father, mother, brother, sister,
Unite for the revolution!

You are gagging for a banana.
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Karnal
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #58 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 11:20pm
 
Bertie wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 9:17pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 9:15pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 7:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:59pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:27pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:23pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:10pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:58pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:35pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 5:19pm:
As pay and conditions have gone up, human rights have gone down. If you put GDP per capita on a graph next to political detentions, you'd see a steady rise; perfect correlation.

And add to that how much corruption a state tolerates ... then we're not talking about getting paid, but how much an apparatchik must get paid; before those who earned it may get paid.


The CCP recently retaliated against a big, new Uber-style service that made the decision to float on the New York stock exchange.

The CCP put them out of business. A billion-dollar taxi service could have been a Chinese global brand - punished for not playing by the CCP rules.

Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.

But that's the price they're prepared to pay. No Chinese people I've talked to can imagine things changing. There are no incentives in a system like that to liberalise. Examples like Ma frighten everyone and keep things tight.

And just to make the point, the regime published images as a deadly warning to Ma.

Jack Ma's direct English-name translation is Cloud Horse (Or Horse Cloud if you're eastern).

The regime sent out messages to him with (literally) a cloud shaped like a horse... A reminder (apparently immediately translated within Asian sensibility), that Jack the Ma, like a cloud, can evaporate in an instant.



Wow. The art of war, internecine Mandarin politicking for the 21st century.

Yes. And it's proof positive that our primate instinct for hierarchy, and the striving for high-status within it, has not escaped our DNA.


Well, that's a rather Chinese argument, but yes.

I'm surprised Aquascoot didn't say that.

Well, on prophecy: a clock is right twice a day. On truth: Any fool can tell you the sun will rise in the east.



The revolution rises in the east
Made glorious by the sun, Marx, Lenin, our beloved Chairman Mao
Through sound revolutionary principles, the people come together
Like steel in a furnace, forged by fire
Tempered by the Party
Father, mother, brother, sister,
Unite for the revolution!

You are gagging for a banana.


Defeat foreign imperialist enemies!

Unite to fight old boy class traitors!
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Karnal
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Re: Spineless apologetics
Reply #59 - Aug 22nd, 2021 at 11:35pm
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 9:15pm:
Karnal wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:53pm:
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2021 at 6:12pm:
Quote:
If you're trying to pretend China is on some steady path of liberal reform


I wouldn't say steady.

Quote:
Economic growth in China comes down to its population, not its economic policies.The CCP retards growth precisely because it won't allow liberalisation.


The growth you see is a result of rapid economic liberalisation. Population is only part of it. You complain about them destroying a company, but not long ago they sent up to 55 million people to the grave to show their dedication to communism.

60% of their GDP comes from private enterprise, which did not exist in China until recently.


Sorry, what does GDP have to do with human rights?

I'd hazard the Saudis have a larger private sector and still behead their political opponents with surgical bone saws in broad daylight. 

You'd probably have a better case if you wanted to present capitalism as a force for liberalism with the Saudis, but then you'd be stuck trying to defend their human rights record too.

But do you know? We wouldn't be having this debate if you didn't try to make out the Taliban was responsible for Sept 11 during one of your more absolutist pronouncements.

Most of us are happy to accept that things are complicated. You prefer to see the West as a beacon of shining light, shadowed only by the backward forces of Islam, socialism and tintedness.

The last five years of US politics, at the very least, should show you just how impossible this vision is. Not only have the shadows come from white supremacism, authoritarianism and the religious right within, Islamist outfits like the Taliban have gone almost unnoticed.

Now, we'll be watching them join forces with Russia and China, testing the West where it's most sensitive. As China quietly builds up its strength, as Putin quietly sows the seeds of resentment, and as the white supremacists on this board and elsewhere drum up a cacophony of fear and loathing to drown out any semblance of reason or rational informed debate, we'll all see that quaint, post-Cold War vision of American-led capitalism saving the world fade into a distant memory.


China can't rely on oil reserves to lift the starving peasants out of poverty. Instead they have to rely on economic liberalism.

GDP has a lot to do with human rights. Why do you think human rights are so strongly correlated with high GDP? Yes, this is a test of your ability to see the wood, despite all the trees in the way. Open your eyes.


The only thing you're missing is the Ministry of Propaganda's signature at the bottom of your post. 

No one denies you can't have human rights without economic development. China is currently developing economically, and has no intention whatsoever of allowing individual human rights. Its government holds this up as its political model: collective economic development at the expense of individual liberty.

On the measure of GDP growth, China is currently surpassing the US. The contrasting covid responses of the two countries gives us some insight into how the two political systems operate when it comes to individual liberty and economic growth.

Ask the old boy for a banana. He's keen to give you one.

Will you take it?
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« Last Edit: Aug 23rd, 2021 at 11:01am by Karnal »  
 
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