Biden team faced "tirade" at meeting with Chinese over America's poor human rights record in "Diplomatic humiliation"

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,406
3,199
118
Country
United States of America
I'm pretty sure hiring people is very unnecessary. If Bezos could make the jobs all robots, he would
That wouldn't really be capitalism anymore if there are no employees whatsoever.
 

Trunkage

Nascent Orca
Legacy
Jun 21, 2012
8,758
2,899
118
Brisbane
Gender
Cyborg
That wouldn't really be capitalism anymore if there are no employees whatsoever.
No, that would be peak Capitalism. That's where its heading. If everyone starved because there was no jobs available doesn't cancel out the Capitalness of a system. The only other way to go is to make most of the population slaves
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,406
3,199
118
Country
United States of America
No, that would be peak Capitalism. That's where its heading. If everyone starved because there was no jobs available doesn't cancel out the Capitalness of a system. The only other way to go is to make most of the population slaves
If everyone starved because there were no jobs, that would be a result of adherence to parts of capitalist ideology but it would not be capitalism. Capitalism requires employers and employees. When employers stop employing, they aren't doing capitalism anymore. They're doing something else.
 

TheMysteriousGX

Elite Member
Legacy
Sep 16, 2014
8,380
6,896
118
Country
United States
If everyone starved because there were no jobs, that would be a result of adherence to parts of capitalist ideology but it would not be capitalism. Capitalism requires employers and employees. When employers stop employing, they aren't doing capitalism anymore. They're doing something else.
You're technically correct in that Capitalism explicitly has two classes of people, Capitalists and Labor, and if Labor dies off entirely the Capitalist class is technically living in something that is Not Quite Capitalism

It's not really a useful distinction though, transferring from Late-Stage Capitalism to End-Stage Capitalism.
 

Gordon_4

The Big Engine
Legacy
Apr 3, 2020
6,197
5,481
118
Australia
If everyone starved because there were no jobs, that would be a result of adherence to parts of capitalist ideology but it would not be capitalism. Capitalism requires employers and employees. When employers stop employing, they aren't doing capitalism anymore. They're doing something else.
Yeah, it’s called 2000 AD
 

Generals

Elite Member
May 19, 2020
571
305
68
You can still spend some money to remain solvent and keep making profits and do what you want fully with the rest. I mean, China does actually build those useless african roads and whatnot too right? They don't just take the money and run away. So yeah you do pay some cost and provide something of value, but you still come out ahead afterwards. That's what you're supposed to be doing.

The real issue is that value is subjective, cause a road in a first world country is invaluable but when your people are too poor to even own bicycles in some cases that equation changes.
I don't think you choose the right example. Chinese "investments" in Africa come with a lot of conditions. There is always a counterpart.
Either the investments are built with money borrowed from China by Chinese companies and with the possibility for China to take full ownership of the infrastructure if the loan is defaulted.
Or it has to be paid by things like giving up fishing rights or other things which are often much more valuable than whatever China provides. The problem is that this happens in countries run by dictators or pseudo presidents with a lot of opacity and the people is either not aware of how much they are being ripped of or if they are there is nothing they can do about it.
It's a bit like how they sometimes by agricultural land by paying the corrupt leaders and than exploit said land with 100% Chinese labor and send the produce to China. Gain for African population? None. Gain for corrupt leadership? Money. Gain for China? Access to more agricultural land.
 

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
11,340
5,923
118
Country
United Kingdom
I did a quick ctrl-f for the word 'genocide', and all references appear to be "Mike Pompeo said so" or "the Biden administration agreed", which is basically the opposite of what you were intending by suggesting that it's not just shills of the State Department saying so. Would you like to review your other sources to make sure they don't share that pattern before I look at them?
That would be because for something to be officially designated as a "genocide", it generally requires recognition of such by specific official organisations, such as the State Dept. or the ICC.

It provides numerous other sources for actual details of what's happening-- including a Uyghur journalist, and escapee women with first-hand experience of assault and sexual abuse.

It's extremely speculative. We might come to the opposite conclusion based on similar reasoning from population sizes; given that the numbers of people involved are less per capita than the prison population of the United States even if we include Xinjiang and that there is likely to be an amount of "normal" (for lack of a better word) crime in any country, there may not be a significant number of political prisoners at all, because after all there is likely to be an amount of people incarcerated for more mundane reasons, and that could conceivably be basically everyone in prison. Do you think that's right? If you don't, then you should see the problem with the reasoning you employed and that I called 'speculative'. Because that's what it is. You need more than numbers and "surely...".
I mean, we do have the numbers for the numbers of inmates in the internment camps, and we have the numbers for the prison population in the US and in China.

It's scarcely "speculative" to say that the proportion of political prisoners in the US does not reach 80% of the overall population. Yet that's what would be necessary for the scale to equate with the scale of internment in the camps (which, remember, is solely on the basis of ethnicity and religion).

I don't think I can take seriously any source that approvingly cites Adrian Zenz or the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation given what I've seen of their work.
The content, leak and publication of the cables had nothing to do with Adrian Zenz. Cables themselves can be viewed here.
 
Last edited:

Hawki

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 4, 2014
9,651
2,173
118
Country
Australia
Gender
Male
if you ask the Vietnamese they do consider themselves communists just market communists
Which Vietnamese? The ones who remained in Vietnam, or the ones who fled?

and while we could sit here and discuss the incredibly complicated history of how it got to that point that simply misses the point or rebuke the obvious lie that the USA hasn't interfered with Cuba's economy's since 1962, I meant that's just denial of a flat out provable reality which simply googling American Cuban trade relationships will give you so many academic papers that prove it as false that I'm not even going to bother responding to that further, sure it's not a flat out trade blockade but it's still imperial economic interference that goes on to this day.
I did Google it.

The US does exert influence over countries to some extent, but it hasn't stopped many countries from trading with Cuba. The trade embargo hasn't been that effective in stopping actual trade, let alone the subsidies Cuba relied on from the USSR up to the bloc's collapse. As I pointed out, the EU trades with Cuba. Australia trades with Cuba. That the US refuses to is its own business. Key difference being that conditions in Cuba haven't gotten better, whereas in Vietnam, they have. And Vietnam did get improvements by opening up sectors of its economy, even if its economy remains tightly controlled.

In any case my point was ultimately not about Vietnam or Cuba so there's little point in discussing them as it adds little to nothing to the conversation other than distract from what I was actually saying, my point is that American Imperialism has been so abhorrent, violent and atrocious that to claim that they have some sort of moral high ground over China is absolutely absurd and hypocritical, it's the pot calling the kettle black as you Americans say, if you're going to criticize China that's fine they have done horrible things, but don't for a second claim that America is better, not after what they have done to México, Perú, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Bolivia and many, many other countries, seriously they're easily one of the worst empires that has existed throughout the entire history of humanity.
First of all, I'm not American (as my profile spells out), so I don't know why you're calling me one.

Second of all, I don't deny the crimes you listed (though I don't think Vietnam and Afghanistan is simply "America's fault," since both have been a battleground between multiple powers), but of the two, at least in the year 2021, I have to call China worse, for the reasons I've described in this thread.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Cicada 5

Hawki

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 4, 2014
9,651
2,173
118
Country
Australia
Gender
Male
Those roads are an investment. They cost China money now, but in two decades when all those African countries have a sizable middle class that wants imported consumer goods they'll be heading straight to China (who already has companies and infrastructure in place to transport goods to China) for them. So it is all profit for China, not wasting money on charity.
I think that's assuming that Africa will have a middle class in two decades.

Africa simply hasn't taken off in the same way that Asia has. There's many reasons for this, but I'm skeptical of the continent's future. And that's not even factoring in stuff like climate change, which is going to hit Africa the hardest.

And, paradoxically, an African middle class consuming more might only make that worse, but on the other, no-one with any basis of morality would say that Africa shouldn't aspire to wealth, which leads to debates of green growth vs. degrowth, and yes, this keeps me up at night, but this isn't the thread to debate that, so I'll shut up now. :(
 

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
11,340
5,923
118
Country
United Kingdom
As I pointed out, the EU trades with Cuba. Australia trades with Cuba. That the US refuses to is its own business.
Not quite; the US also sanctions companies that aren't based in the US, but also do business in/with the US. So it also depresses trade that doesn't have anything to do with the US, but could benefit Cuba.
 

Kae

That which exists in the absence of space.
Legacy
Nov 27, 2009
5,792
712
118
Country
The Dreamlands
Gender
Lose 1d20 sanity points.
Which Vietnamese? The ones who remained in Vietnam, or the ones who fled?
Fantastic argument, I am defeated, mocking aside that has absolutely nothing to do with what I'm talking about and is therefore completely irrelevant.


I did Google it.
Maybe you should learn how to read then.

The US does exert influence over countries to some extent, but it hasn't stopped many countries from trading with Cuba. The trade embargo hasn't been that effective in stopping actual trade, let alone the subsidies Cuba relied on from the USSR up to the bloc's collapse. As I pointed out, the EU trades with Cuba. Australia trades with Cuba. That the US refuses to is its own business. Key difference being that conditions in Cuba haven't gotten better, whereas in Vietnam, they have. And Vietnam did get improvements by opening up sectors of its economy, even if its economy remains tightly controlled.
I'll grant you one thing in that I get results in Spanish from latin american universities which are overall more aware and critical of economic imperialism so they tend to go into far more depth into how much it actually affects the Cuban economy and a lot less charitable to how shit the USA actually is, I'm guessing that you're getting results that are more biased into proving the contrary which is typical western minimising of the harm they actually do, still I'm sure if you put just a bit more effort you can find it on your own, just finished a 12 hour shift at work, don't really feel like explaining anything to anyone (In fact most of this post was written in the morning before work)



First of all, I'm not American (as my profile spells out), so I don't know why you're calling me one.
All imperialist countries founded on genocide seem pretty similar to me so, sorry if I get confused at times.
Joking aside I did notice after I already clicked post, and I don't really give enough of a shit that I'd go back to correct it.

Anyways, it's pretty astounding that I made my reply criticizing your whataboutism and yet you chose to continue with that exact same line of thought, but at least you did bother to engage just a little bit with what I was saying.

Second of all, I don't deny the crimes you listed (though I don't think Vietnam and Afghanistan is simply "America's fault," since both have been a battleground between multiple powers), but of the two, at least in the year 2021, I have to call China worse, for the reasons I've described in this thread.
You're right in one thing, the real fault is at it's core imperialism, more relevantly to this discussion euro-centric imperialism and the EU, UK, Australia, South Africa and so on aren't any better, though imperialism in general is bad, this shouldn't be a controversial statement, anyways the problem with your line of thought is that it's fundamentally flawed, it doesn't matter if the the USA or China is worse, what matters is that they're both bad and that we should want to stop both of them as their tyrannical influence is horrifying, by claiming that the USA is somehow the lesser of two evils your basically just spreading propaganda in order to sanitize the USA and claim that we should accept them as our evil overlords because otherwise we'd get China, you're saying all of this to me a Mexican person that lives near the border and has friends that have been locked up in ICE facilities, so I find your attempts as minimising and sanitizing the USA by making it "the lesser of two evils" laughable at best and insulting at worst, not to mention that moving the goalpost to just last year is pretty pathetic overall.

Look I understand that these are concepts that must be hard for "westerners" to come to terms with because it comes with the acceptance that their countries are the evil that is destroying the world, subjugating people and lifting up fascist and as an Australian a country that is definitely one of the bad ones as it does engage in the economic exploitation and basically enslavement of the global south, but sanitizing the actions of these regimes is in no way something that should be acceptable.

Honestly I often wonder if you overprivileged suburbanites from the "1st World" even have the capacity to understand all the deaths and suffering economic subjugation actually causes, I don't say that because of a lack of intelligence, just the fundamental truth that you live in a snow-globe completely separate from the actual suffering going on where you just get to hear about it in the news, to the point where you reduce it all to numbers and statistics as if it's something that can be quantified and measured, the sheer disconnect from reality is pretty astounding and I'm starting to think that you people wouldn't be able to understand it unless you lived through it as I have.
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,406
3,199
118
Country
United States of America
That would be because for something to be officially designated as a "genocide", it generally requires recognition of such by specific official organisations, such as the State Dept. or the ICC.

It provides numerous other sources for actual details of what's happening-- including a Uyghur journalist, and escapee women with first-hand experience of assault and sexual abuse.
So it sounds like the US prison system, then.

I mean, we do have the numbers for the numbers of inmates in the internment camps, and we have the numbers for the prison population in the US and in China.

It's scarcely "speculative" to say that the proportion of political prisoners in the US does not reach 80% of the overall population. Yet that's what would be necessary for the scale to equate with the scale of internment in the camps (which, remember, is solely on the basis of ethnicity and religion).
And yet they still have a prison population that is lower than the United States per capita. Why is that? Is it because the United States has deliberately made policy choices that tend to cause crime? Or define harmless behavior as crime? Where is this supposed moral high ground again?
 
  • Like
Reactions: crimson5pheonix

Hawki

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 4, 2014
9,651
2,173
118
Country
Australia
Gender
Male
Fantastic argument, I am defeated, mocking aside that has absolutely nothing to do with what I'm talking about and is therefore completely irrelevant.
Snark. I like it.

Actually, it is relevant, because Vietnamese fleeing Vietnam parallels Cubans fleeing Cuba, after both countries adopted socialist systems. Relevant in the sense that Vietnam is doing much better than Cuba these days, and as such, the refugee flow stopped.

Maybe you should learn how to read then.
Not an argument.

I'll grant you one thing in that I get results in Spanish from latin american universities which are overall more aware and critical of economic imperialism so they tend to go into far more depth into how much it actually affects the Cuban economy and a lot less charitable to how shit the USA actually is, I'm guessing that you're getting results that are more biased into proving the contrary which is typical western minimising of the harm they actually do, still I'm sure if you put just a bit more effort you can find it on your own, just finished a 12 hour shift at work, don't really feel like explaining anything to anyone (In fact most of this post was written in the morning before work)
Oh come on, I know you're desparate here.

First, if we're comparing countries, Australia ranks higher than Internet freedom than Mexico, so that doesn't hold up. Second, if you're browsing from Latin American universities (universities being left wing in general), then if anything, you're going to get more biaised results. I doubt that's actually the case, but that's not how search algorithms work.

Third, I have put effort into things. That's why, as opposed to decades ago I was under the assumption that the US was literally blockading Cuba, I'm less willing to simply go "US bad" and consider other factors, including the collapse of USSR subsidies, the Cuban regime itself, and its bizzare economic system.

All imperialist countries founded on genocide seem pretty similar to me so, sorry if I get confused at times.
Um, if you want to make the "founded on genocide" argument, you do realize that applies to Mexico as well, right?

Also, neither Australia or Mexico are imperialist in any real sense of the word.

Anyways, it's pretty astounding that I made my reply criticizing your whataboutism and yet you chose to continue with that exact same line of thought, but at least you did bother to engage just a little bit with what I was saying.
To make things clear, I try and avoid whataboutism, but the thread's morphed into the question of which imperialist power is worse - the US or China. That isn't whataboutism.

Again, to reiterate, I have, and will, happily critcize both.

You're right in one thing, the real fault is at it's core imperialism, more relevantly to this discussion euro-centric imperialism and the EU, UK, Australia, South Africa and so on aren't any better, though imperialism in general is bad, this shouldn't be a controversial statement, anyways the problem with your line of thought is that it's fundamentally flawed, it doesn't matter if the the USA or China is worse, what matters is that they're both bad and that we should want to stop both of them as their tyrannical influence is horrifying, by claiming that the USA is somehow the lesser of two evils your basically just spreading propaganda in order to sanitize the USA and claim that we should accept them as our evil overlords because otherwise we'd get China, you're saying all of this to me a Mexican person that lives near the border and has friends that have been locked up in ICE facilities, so I find your attempts as minimising and sanitizing the USA by making it "the lesser of two evils" laughable at best and insulting at worst, not to mention that moving the goalpost to just last year is pretty pathetic overall.
To respond to that:

-I don't know why you're throwing in Australia and South Africa. These aren't imperialist powers. Not in any real sense, in that Australia has no real ability to project power beyond its own borders, and South Africa even less so.

-Of course imperialism's bad, that isn't the question.

-I agree that the US and China are both imperialist powers who've caused harm to the world. If you think I'm arguing against that, you're misread me.

-I don't believe I've 'sanitized' the US, but even if I have, that's again irrelevant. The question is who's worse? China, or the US? That isn't the most pressing question in the world, but I've presented my case as to why I believe the former is.

-I didn't move the goalpost to just last year, that's a gross misreading of what I said. I'm not literally focusing on the year 2021, I'm making the case that what's going on in the present is more important than what's gone on in the past. It's why, if we're listing the 'sins' of both countries, I've focused on more contemporary events than ones centuries, or even millennia prior. It's why, for instance, when people try to excuse China's treatment of Ughyrs to the US treatment of Amerindians is frankly appalling. You're comparing a past genocide to a present one, and the present overtakes the past. Otherwise, we can play this game, go through all of human history, and therefore not have to worry about genocide ever again because there's barely a place on Earth that hasn't experienced it.

-Your friends have my sympathies. However, if we're going by the friends angle, I also have a close friend whose family had to flee China during the Great Leap Forward (and who had to flee Indonesia as well, but that's another matter). But if you want to press the case that the detention centres are the border are on the same moral level as China's mass detention centres, then I disagree. Both are bad, one is worse.

Look I understand that these are concepts that must be hard for "westerners" to come to terms with because it comes with the acceptance that their countries are the evil that is destroying the world, subjugating people and lifting up fascist and as an Australian a country that is definitely one of the bad ones as it does engage in the economic exploitation and basically enslavement of the global south, but sanitizing the actions of these regimes is in no way something that should be acceptable.
To address these points:

-Australia hasn't subjugated anyone. I mean, yes, there's the indigenous Australians, but Mexico belongs in the same club (technically most countries do, but semantics).

-Yes, the West has backed dictators. I never denied that. However, the Eastern bloc has done the same with dictators. Heck, China's still doing it. I can, and have, criticize(d) both. People outside both blocs are doing likewise.

-"Destroying the world" is hyperbole, no matter who you apply it to (same reason why I wouldn't say China is destroying the world), and to attribute all of it to economic exploitation is extremely naieve and dishonest. Probably in some cases (see the DRC), but hardly all. Furthermore, this conversation has focused on the US and China, but plenty of other powers are similarly involved in projecting power - some in the West (e.g. France), some elsewhere (Turkey, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, etc.)

-And even if you followed the train of logic that all conflict in the world is due to economic exploitation, what's China doing in Africa? What's its fishing fleet doing in the oceans? What's it debt traps doing? To come back to Australia, Australia is China's economic *****, and it knows it. Our leaders know it, the people know it, the media knows it, and thankfully, the government backed down when China told it to, because like it or not, our economy is dependent on China buying raw materials. So to claim that Australia is on the level of China, a country that practices literal enslavement, and backs regimes that do (North Korea), yet is also counted among the Global South...really?

(It's part of why I think "Global South/North" are terms that need to be retired, but that's another discussion.)
 

Hawki

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 4, 2014
9,651
2,173
118
Country
Australia
Gender
Male
Honestly I often wonder if you overprivileged suburbanites from the "1st World" even have the capacity to understand all the deaths and suffering economic subjugation actually causes, I don't say that because of a lack of intelligence, just the fundamental truth that you live in a snow-globe completely separate from the actual suffering going on where you just get to hear about it in the news, to the point where you reduce it all to numbers and statistics as if it's something that can be quantified and measured, the sheer disconnect from reality is pretty astounding and I'm starting to think that you people wouldn't be able to understand it unless you lived through it as I have.
I don't deny that I'm almost certainly more priviliged than you, and have had the fortune to grow up in the country I have. However, if you're talking about your personal experiences, those begin, and end, in Mexico (I assume). I don't need to live in China, or North Korea, or Saudi Arabia, or Iran, or any number of countries to accept that they're carrying out appalling actions, nor do I have to live in the US to know that its democracy is corrupt, its gun culture is insane, the level of inequality is unacceptable, and a myriad of other problems. None of us live in China, yet we're still accepting its crimes actually exist.

And again, I contest the idea that all suffering in the world is down to economic exploitation. Especially since, by any measure you care to use, the state of human existence is getting better on a global scale. Feel free to argue that it's not getting as better as it should, as quickly as it should (I agree on both counts), but again, the trends themselves remain. Even Mexico itself - over the course of the 20th century, infant mortality has plummeted, life expectancy has risen, PPP has risen overall (but fell in recent years, don't know why), literacy rate has risen (again, fell recently, but by a fraction - again, don't know why) etc. You're obviously in a better position to tell me about stuff on the ground, but the overall trend is clear. As it is for most countries.

Finally, I'm going to interject that this has gotten way off topic - this started off as "China vs. US, which is more evil," now it's gone...well, places. How/if you respond is up to you.

So it sounds like the US prison system, then.
Does the United States imprison political prisoners en masse?

Does it round up entire groups en masse?

Does it imprison its own scientists for trying to warn the world about health concerns?

Does it carry out more executions than the rest of the world combined?

Does it use more slave labour per capita than the US (spoiler: yes, and I'm not talking about hyperbole, I'm using the GSI)

Then, no. These are differences, and important ones at that.

And yet they still have a prison population that is lower than the United States per capita. Why is that? Is it because the United States has deliberately made policy choices that tend to cause crime? Or define harmless behavior as crime? Where is this supposed moral high ground again?
There's a saying I believe holds true here - "don't attribute to malice what you can to stupidity."

I'd argue that the US's prison population per capita is so high due to the following:

-Extremely punitive measurements of justice (e.g. the three strikes rule)

-A militarized police force that's led to a high incarceration rate and/or overpolicing

-The privatization of prisons (which creates an incentive for those running the prisons to get prisoners inside them).

Again, all of this is terrible (frankly, I have no idea who thought privatized prisons were a good idea), but if this conversation is still on which is worse (frankly, I don't know if it is anymore), then I'd still put China as being 'worse.' Everything above is down to a misapplication of justice. China's incarceration is direct application of state power. There's a chance for reform in the US prison system that simply doesn't exist for China.
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,406
3,199
118
Country
United States of America

Moral high ground?

Does the United States imprison political prisoners en masse?
It imprisons people arbitrarily en masse.

Does it round up entire groups en masse?
An approach that looks more like a lottery is not any better.

Does it imprison its own scientists for trying to warn the world about health concerns?
Does it properly heed the warnings given anyway?

Does it carry out more executions than the rest of the world combined?
Do drone strikes count? How about supporting military coups that go on to murder protestors? Or is that arms length enough that you don't care about it?

Does it use more slave labour per capita than the US (spoiler: yes, and I'm not talking about hyperbole, I'm using the GSI)
Please explain why I should give a shit about a particular opinion published by a particular group.

There's a saying I believe holds true here - "don't attribute to malice what you can to stupidity."
There might be a credible claim that the explanation is stupidity if there were even minimal effort by the ruling class to rectify the problems which have been evident for decades, or if the problems weren't outlined by people in Congress at the time that these "mistakes" were being made.


I'd argue that the US's prison population per capita is so high due to the following:

-Extremely punitive measurements of justice (e.g. the three strikes rule)
Moral high ground?

-A militarized police force that's led to a high incarceration rate and/or overpolicing
Moral high ground?!

-The privatization of prisons (which creates an incentive for those running the prisons to get prisoners inside them).
Oh, it's for profit, moral high ground!

Again, all of this is terrible (frankly, I have no idea who thought privatized prisons were a good idea), but if this conversation is still on which is worse (frankly, I don't know if it is anymore), then I'd still put China as being 'worse.' Everything above is down to a misapplication of justice. China's incarceration is direct application of state power. There's a chance for reform in the US prison system that simply doesn't exist for China.
And yet 'reform' doesn't seem forthcoming no matter how many protesters get beaten by police.