• queermunist she/her
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      7411 months ago

      What’s funny is I can’t tell if you’re talking about younger Americans refusing to hate China or older Americans chanting “China Bad!”

        • queermunist she/her
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          2211 months ago

          300,000 people are on the organ donor wait-list in China at this very moment.

          You’re a perfect example of the power of propaganda lol

          • @FMT99
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            911 months ago

            The organs I don’t know about but the reeducation camps are not exactly secret, both for Uyghurs and their own people. There are many issues the US has but at least the average citizen doesn’t have their government disappearing them for thinking the wrong thoughts.

              • @FMT99
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                311 months ago

                The US has a ton of problems, I’m not saying it’s a great country to live in necessarily (I wouldn’t move there given the choice). But it’s not a dictatorship where laws are optional for the government.

                Maybe freedom doesn’t mean anything to you when you’re not the one being reeducated though.

          • @Zaderade
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            411 months ago

            That’s back when they first started being detained, waitlist dropped to zero, now they have run a little low on supply. This was two years ago or more. Go look up information before sounding stupid on the internet.

          • @Zaderade
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            11 months ago

            https://worldwithoutgenocide.org/genocides-and-conflicts/genocide-of-the-uyghurs-in-western-china/forced-organ-harvesting Here’s the first result on Google if you took 15 seconds out of your day to look something up before calling bullshit on someone.

            Edit: this guy is massively in support of China, saying that anyone that still believes in China’s Uighur genocide is brainwashed. Also saying “look at the real genocide going on in Israel.” No shit hey it’s been demonstrated on a world scale multiple times that you can get away with it, Israel is just the most recent country to hop on the opportunity train.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        2011 months ago

        Both tbh

        American failures are being used to prop up Chinese successes. This is particularly true in urbanism discussions. China is by no means perfect and thinking that they are is harmful to progress.

  • sylver_dragon
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    4211 months ago

    This kinda looks like a bad poll. The wording seems to setup a bad choice of extremes. The respondent has to either choose “friendly” or “an enemy”. But the relationship between the US and China is a much more complex thing. The US and China are certainly in competition in a number of areas, economically and geopolitically. The induction of China to the WTO in 2001 impacted the US’s manufacturing sector negatively (see: https://www.bls.gov/opub/btn/volume-9/forty-years-of-falling-manufacturing-employment.htm). The US and China are at odds over the fate of Taiwan. But, in spite of all that, the US and China have deep trade links which benefit both countries greatly. And both countries are likely better off than they would be without the other. Global trade is generally positive for the economies involved, though global trade can also fuck individuals inside each economy, including driving wealth concentration and harming the economically disadvantaged and people whose skills don’t align well with the industries their country is focused on.

    Trying to boil US-China relations down to either Friendly or “Enemy” misses a lot of the nuance and may mean people aren’t giving an accurate picture of how they view China.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      Those options seem fine for a poll imo. If you ask the same question to older demographics and more people pick “enemy”, then isn’t the conclusion in the headline valid?

      • Shazbot
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        711 months ago

        A lot of nuance will be missed without some gradation between “I <3 China” and “Down with Pooh!” For example, if we added “Slightly favorable”, “Neutral”, and “Slightly unfavorable” we would begin to see just how favorable younger generations are. Rather than presume there is a deep divide on trade policy, if two bars are almost equal, we may see they are largely neutral. Similarly we could see just how favorable their views of TikTok really are by looking at the spread between neutral to “I <3 China!”

      • @madcaesar
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        611 months ago

        I know what you’re saying, but it’s still a shitty poll. I think people in the past were way looser with the word enemy. Everyone was an enemy, the Russians, communism, drugs, immigrants poverty… everything was a fucking enemy that needed a war.

        So, even though just as many people might distrust China the language has changed and we wouldn’t call them “enemy”.

        The Chinese government is authoritarian, evil and awful but I still wouldn’t call China an “enemy”. Because life isn’t black and white, and once you call somone an enemy you’ve shut off your brain and nothing good will come out of it.

      • _NoName_
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        11 months ago

        The issue is that your reducing a multivariable spectra to a single binary. That kind of data compression destroys a massive amount of valuable data, and alot of nuance along with it.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      I’m neither a friend nor an enemy to most people in the world.

      But when it comes to orgs, I’m an enemy of most od them, and definitely an enemy of every State.

  • @PlantDadManGuy
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    3911 months ago

    Sounds like it’s time for a reminder to FUCK THE CCP and the clown emperor Xi. Never forget Tieneman square. Long live free Taiwan.

    • @Sho
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      11 months ago

      Wonder how the democracy protests are going? Ya know the ones before covid… oh! And their concentration camps…God I hate this timeline.

  • @iyaerP
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    3411 months ago

    Tiktok is doing its job.

    We need to ban it.

      • @iyaerP
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        011 months ago

        Yeah, except in this, the Aliens have the neighborly board game that teaches you to be friends while they’re secretly planning to genocide you.

        China’s a xenophobic, genocidal imperialist state with the explicit goal of expanding itself and its powers at the expense of its neighbors and the rest of the world.

  • @[email protected]
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    3311 months ago

    Isn’t it a general trend that younger people, on average, are less xenophobic / racist / bigoted than the previous generation? I also remember reading somewhere that younger Chinese people are friendlier to Japan, South Korea and the US than their parents.

  • @nucleative
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    2711 months ago

    My company has an office in China and I’ve been there many many times.

    Chinese people are like all other people - same needs, same hopes and dreams, same fears, same drivers. In the city where our office is located, they are extremely hard working and want to ensure a better future for their family. Just like most American cities.

    Their city is very high tech, moreso than many American cities because they skipped a lot of legacy technology.

    They don’t necessarily subscribe to the same moral/value system as Americans, for example they often see copying each other’s ideas as a compliment whereas Americans see it as stealing. Kind of like - if it’s possible to copy, then it’s fair game - so don’t make it possible if you don’t want it copied. Perhaps that drives a different kind of innovation.

    Obviously there are many more cultural differences. But as a people, we are all essentially working with the same needs.

    All that being said I don’t appreciate the great firewall when I’mthere, the censorship, and the fear they have about discussing banned topics. I don’t appreciate the high-tech security cameras at every corner, or all the tracking of activities. The younger generations tolerate this for now because they are wealthier than their parents and told to cooperate, but that may not hold long term.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    We can be nice to Chinese people

    But fuck the CCP. If this is about the youths’ friendliness towards the Chinese government, I wholly blame TikTok

  • @[email protected]
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    2211 months ago

    I visit China frequently for work and feel that the impression most older Americans have of China is incredibly out of touch. The traditional media portrayal of the country is definitely a part of this. Yes, it’s certainly an authoritarian state, but this doesn’t change whether the people are nice or what they want in life.

          • @cucumber_sandwich
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            -211 months ago

            the state maintains that this is a moral and legitimate use of force: that it has the authority to do this.

            I don’t necessarily agree with “moral”. In western democracies laws and use of force doesn’t legitimize itself by a call to morality usually. Just using some kind of authority, doesn’t make a government authoritarian by any common definition of the word.

              • @cucumber_sandwich
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                -411 months ago

                It absolutely does imo, it legitimises itself through an appeal to an underlying moral framework.

                Yes, but very indirectly. We don’t have a “moral police”, but one that enforces laws which are, as you say, legitimized by the people as a sovereign.

                So you don’t see police stopping people on “moral grounds” in some vague interpretation.

  • @Sgt_choke_n_stroke
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    811 months ago

    living through remnants of cold War with cccp

    have access to internet to research what happend to america afterwards

    everything made come from China

    seemingly life is worse today compared to the 80s and 90s.

    Yea I can’t imagine why young people don’t give a fuck about a new cold war with China

  • acargitz
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    711 months ago

    Wasn’t part of the promise of economic globalization that increased interdependence would lead to less conflict? That a smaller, more connected world, would lead to intercultural communication and understanding, leading to a more stable international order?

    I mean, wasn’t this supposed to be a feature? Why is it being reported as a bug?

  • LiberalSoCalist
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    11 months ago

    The majority of that age range still considers China an enemy, but a tiny fraction of ambivalent onlookers out of an overwhelming majority of a reflexively anti-China populace is enough for the Economist to dedicate an article to a fucking YouGov poll.

    It’s just another pearl-clutching “what’s wrong with today’s youths” headline to panic the elderly while flattering compliant millennials/zoomers for being one of the few (despite still being the majority!) “good ones” that march goose-step with consensus Western political thought.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 months ago

    A lot of American youth are just anti-america and uncritically reverse engineer their opinions based on that. That’s how a bunch of tiktokers promoted bin ladens manifesto.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    I got a highly upvoted post removed for saying “be nice to Chinese people but f#$ the ccp.”

    Guess what t@nk!e instance just got added to the filter list. I recommend everyone else do the same