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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • I’m a big defender of China when the “China Bad” crowd comes out, but this graph is meaningless beyond what people’s perceptions are.

    Real trade unions are banned. All must be part of the party, workers rights are routinely not enforced, and given the lattitude the government has to act, there isn’t really much of an excuse.

    The CCP enjoy massive support, though, this is undeniable. The reasons for this support is debatable and vary from person to person.

    I for one, very much enjoy when the Chinese government does things in line with my socialist ideals. But let’s not pretend like they’re actually keeping the capitalists in check. There are many, many billionaires in China, something that ought not be possible under an actual socialist country.

    It doesn’t take a genius to look at their system of voting to quickly conclude that you don’t really have a say, the People’s Congress functions as a rubber stamp for what the inner party has already decided.

    Again, my opinions aside, people in China generally are supportive of the government at this present time.


  • I feel like this is shifting the focus to imperialism, where the US is overwhelmingly and undeniably worse.

    However, domestically, if you wanna pretend that someone as a random citizen, has any chance of receiving political representation in China, well you enjoy your fantasy.

    The US and China are both deeply undemocratic places. I’m saying this as someone from neither country.

    Anyone who’s actually been to China would know this. It is authoritarian. It’s not even something viewed as bad by most people in China. It’s just the way things are there.

    There is pretty strong support for the government there, albeit that could be argued as product of censorship, repression and also genuine support. Many see the CCP as having done a lot of good things which they are grateful for, which in addition to the bad things, in fairness, they have done.

    I’m getting kinda tired of some leftists knee jerking “China Good”, just as much as I’m getting kinda tired of the “China Bad” crowd, when the truth is neither wholly good nor wholly bad.

    We can be leftists and not have a hard-on for any country claiming to be socialist, you know




  • Top comment is about how Chinese censorship is not overt, but behind the scenes to stop your speech from spreading. It’s definitely censorship, but no one is going to arrest you for criticising the government online (to a point), they’ll just stop you from reaching others with your message.

    I’m just saying that there definitely is censorship, just not what some “China Bad” people imagine.

    My comment was in opposition to the “China Good” crowd who also pretend like everything bad said about China is not true.

    Reality is inbetween, in my opinion. It’s a country with good and bad points.



  • MisterFrog@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlThe turntables
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    4 months ago

    I think the top comment is the real answer on this.

    There is censorship in China, as well as in the west. They just operate very differently.

    In the west, outside the US, I think it’d be fairly easy to argue there’s more censorship in China. (Even with the pretty depressing clamp down on right to protest, and suppressing of anti-israel speech in many forms happening at the moment)

    Equally though, people massively overblow what censorship is actually like in China. I’m not gonna get disappeared next time I go to China just for this comment. Or even if I overtly criticised the government on real-name social media.

    tl;dr “China bad!” and “China so good!” are both equally annoying positions to find on the internet.

    Reality is nuanced, but that doesn’t seem to make people happy.


  • My 5D chess move would be:

    • Go: ok bet, you wanna shut it down? Your stores are now in immediate administration under some eminent domain law
    • In order to mitigate political backlash, make it known that they’re able to sell their business to someone else, or the city, provided that the subsequent owner is bound to either run it, or sell it to the city

    Watch them get mad because you haven’t technically seized it, they can still sell the business (maintaining the sacrosanct rights to private property capitalists love so much), you’ve just prevented them from closing it down, and everyone gets to keep their jobs :)










  • I don’t work in software, I’m a chemical (aka process) engineer.

    Some project managers are superfluous if they don’t have a background being an engineer of some discipline themselves, but the vast majority I’ve worked with are excellent because they have a working knowledge of everything required to progress each stage of the project, and deal with most of the client interactions.

    Being able to say: “we’ve done x, but we still need y, z and aa to progress” and then the project manager organising this getting done together with the other discipline leads is a godsend, letting you focus on doing the actual calculations/design/nitty-gritty details. And the fact they manage the annoying role of dealing with clients and the disagreements around that is also great.

    This is working as a consultant, but I imagine if you replace clients with higher ups, I’d imagine the same still applies.

    Perhaps things are very different in software, but I do think there is some use for them.

    But I’ve never had one check up every 15 mins, more like once a day, and only if something is very time sensitive. Otherwise it’s once a week, or by email as required.