• DankZedong A
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    2 years ago

    I’m sometimes surprised by their bluntness about this. It’s not because of some vague human rights claim or whatever, just ‘our money is in danger and we need to do something’

    For people that claim to support a system in which the better and more efficient companies/countries etc get on top they sure do feel threatened when it’s not them.

    Instead of thinking ‘Hey, we could learn from how China does things!’, they’d rather sabotage China’s growth because it hurts them. Free market my ass.

    Like, it even seems dangerous for them to put it like this. People reading this could think: ‘but why does China needs to be stopped if it does better? Why can’t we do things like China?’ And their heads would roll.

    • ☭CommieWolf☆OP
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      2 years ago

      There’s a reason they’ve carefully constructed the image of China as an “Authoritarian” dystopia (Ironically by claiming that they do everything that the west already does ie. surveillance, credit scores etc.) so that when confronted about the contradiction, they can default to “BUT AT WHAT COST???”

      I had a genuine conversation with a liberal at a social gathering, where there was a discussion about how the west was losing influence. I brought up how maybe the world would be better off if China and the global south in general stood on equal grounds. Their genuine reaction was this: “Hmmm, I guess technically it wouldn’t be quite as bad for us in the west, since China mainly oppresses their own citizens, not us.”