Both of these critiques could be applied to your views as well.
You can believe the state of China to be for the working class, but that isn’t an adequate explanation for censorship.
Despite censorship in the west, as I pointed out earlier, you can still find extensive criticisms of trump and the American regime in China.
you can absolutely find criticism against the CPC in China
Any examples of open media criticism against CPC in China? Direct and detailed criticisms of Xi Jinping would be the icing on the cake.
You have an utterly one-sided and unrealistically positive view of China yourself, I’ve been saying that for a while now. It’s just in the opposite direction.
I am not a Chinese national, so of course I am going to be getting my information about it from the internet, as I assume is the case for you. Or have you lived there yourself?
Censorship is less transparent in the west.
Highly doubt that. China and transparency are not words I’d put together.
I am choosing to ignore the term “imperialism” because we don’t share an understanding on the term, and I’m not boxing myself into a communist outlook to discuss things.
Both of these critiques could be applied to your views as well.
No, actually, they cannot.
You can believe the state of China to be for the working class, but that isn’t an adequate explanation for censorship.
You’re right, belief alone is not adequate. What’s instead adequate is analyzing the mode of production and distribution in China, the class character of the state, and the historical necessity to prevent capitalist disinformation from spreading uncontested. I don’t just believe China has a working class state based on hope alone, but based on concrete evidence. Over 90% of the public supports the government, and China is ranked even by western organizations as a thriving democracy even by western definitions of democracy:
Historically, capitalists have manipulated the press to spread disinformation. Radio Free Asia is an example primarily directed against China. In the USSR, Radio Free Europe contributed heavily towards pessimism regarding constructing socialism. Class struggle does not end under socialism, so the working classes need to continue to win the class war.
Despite censorship in the west, as I pointed out earlier, you can still find extensive criticisms of trump and the American regime in China.
Of course you’ll find extensive criticism of the west within China, the west is the world imperial hegemon.
Any examples of open media criticism against CPC in China? Direct and detailed criticisms of Xi Jinping would be the icing on the cake.
Criticism doesn’t work like that. People don’t generally make hit pieces. If you want an example of more liberal press in China that desires more liberalization, see South China Morning Post. Institutions are prevented from mouthing off, but people on the ground often consider political critique to be a national pass time. The difference between the west and China is that there is a national hope in China, rather than pessimism.
You have an utterly one-sided and unrealistically positive view of China yourself, I’ve been saying that for a while now. It’s just in the opposite direction.
No, I do not. Frankly, I’ve done far more research into China than you have, and I don’t mean that in a dismissive way, but in the sense that I’ve actually had to grapple with my skepticism of China in the past. I already admitted to many currently existing problems in China, but you’ve continued to make baseless claims about “Chinese imperialism.”
I am not a Chinese national, so of course I am going to be getting my information about it from the internet, as I assume is the case for you. Or have you lived there yourself?
Correct, I have not lived there. That’s why I focus on not making authoritative claims denouncing China, and instead seek to learn what I can from the outside while focusing on changing the world I live in, the west. That’s where my activism takes me. Where we differ is that I have done far more study on Marxism, Marxism-Leninism, and the history of AES countries.
Highly doubt that. China and transparency are not words I’d put together.
Why not? Again, look at the polling from the Perception of Democracy index, China is ranked very favorably by its own people:
I am choosing to ignore the term “imperialism” because we don’t share an understanding on the term, and I’m not boxing myself into a communist outlook to discuss things.
You’ve committed to denying a concrete, materialist understanding of imperialism as a stage in capitalism. I’ve made it clear that imperialism is a necessary evolution within capitalism once it reaches the monopoly stage, with dominance of finance capital, and switches from export of commodity to export of capital. This is a clear and coherent system with an enormous breadth of study, even if you don’t want to call it “imperialism,” the fact is that this system exists, that it’s the dominant mode of the west, and that China does not practice this system.
It does not matter if you do not consider yourself a communist. This was first analyzed by Hobson, a liberal. You do not have to be a communist to recognize it, if you leave this entirely in the hands of communists then you’re just ceding any right to be taken seriously in any geopolitical matter, as it’s the primary contradiction in the modern era.
I do agree that we are at an impasse, but I hope you’ll reconsider your viewpoints and actually commit to studying phenomena in a materialist and dialectical viewpoint.
You say the people of China view it “very favourably” but if you look at the columns for free speech and transparency it is on the lower side.
Incorrect, China is near the top of the list. See the bottom:
Free speech and transparency are the specific aspects I was talking about; public support is not a silver bullet and can be fabricated by state control.
Free speech and transparency are high in China, assuming you’re a part of the working classes, so you should have no problems.
Capitalists manipulating the press to spread disinformation is not an excuse for the state to suppress and censor all criticism.
Says who? And further, no, not all criticism is censored, institutionalized private owned disinformation is censored. The working classes need to be able to control which class’s speech is allowed to propogate and dominate, otherwise capitalists manipulate the press to spread nihilism towards the socialist project. This has happened historically, and it sounds like you don’t actually care if a socialist project succeeds as long as fascists and capitalists are given free speech.
I meant in America over there, not China. It is not difficult for an American to fire up YouTube and find an English video openly criticizing the trump administration.
Sure, it isn’t difficult to find that, because liberal societies have effectively drawn attention to individual figures, rather than the system itself. Criticize Trump all you want, don’t you dare start suggesting socialism as it exists in the real world is a better system though. What you are finding is Great Man Theory, the idea that history is driven not by material conditions but individual great men and women sporadically born throughout history, which serves as a pressure valve.
You can easily find Americans criticizing trump or the US on YouTube with millions of views, if not more. So this is just false. I can easily provide you with such a video(s) if requested. Can you do the same about China, from Chinese nationals in china?
Why would people in China make hit pieces on a beloved leader? Why are you taking the absence of such hit pieces as evidence that Xi Jinping is actually evil? You can find articles from South China Morning Post, itself a Chinese media platform, criticizing the CPC! You’re trying to have it both ways!
I have dropped the use of the term “imperialist” in this discussion, but yes I do believe China is violent and opportunistic.
Yes, you unilaterally dropped one of the most critical parts of this discussion because it wasn’t going your way, and you have not once provided evidence of China being “violent and opportunistic.” You’ve hemmed and hawed around these lines.
Yet you have no problem doing the inverse.
Do you mean I have no problems highlighting structural issues with the west? I live in the west, I know its problems well. Do you mean that I am more comfortable making claims about China? It’s because I have studied it far more than you have, including the ideology driving the CPC. I’m certainly no expert, but there’s a clear gap in knowledge here that would be silly to not acknowledge.
I’m not interested in discussing imperialism here. Jargon asides, I see China as being a violent state in its own ways, “imperialist” or not.
Yes, again, you’re not interested in discussing the single most crucial component of modern geopolitics. You’ve decided to ignore the topic completely because acknowledging it undermines your points. As for seeing China as a “violent state,” this is definitely true with respect to how it treats fascists and capitalists, but not towards the working classes.
I don’t find your views compelling so I’m not likely to reconsider my beliefs, much less to fit specifically within a communist box.
It must be very convenient to be able to refuse to discuss topics that are widely acknowledged and studied even by non-communists, in order to retreat to idealism and metaphysics (like race science earlier). I’m being harsh now, because this has become a farce. I am sorry, but if you are going to continue to retreat into vibes and gut-feelings over materialist analysis, then there’s nowhere for this conversation to go.
I am part of the working class, but if criticizing the state takes me out of the category then I’d have a problem.
Standing against the socialist state doesn’t take you out of the working class, it just means you have become a class traitor. Critique is valuable, and necessary. Critique based on metaphysics, idealism, and all manner of unscientific grounding is not genuine critique for the sake of a better future, but instead just a tool to be magnified by the bourgeoisie in restoring their rule.
Says me. That is my stance. You may be okay with that, I’d not be, though.
If socialism is dependent on censorship for its success, then I do not see socialism succeeding as a good thing. If socialism is truly good for the country, then under a system without censorship and with an education system that adequately teaches people to use reason independently and come to their own conclusions without enforcing propaganda, I would assume it should lead to the majority being in favour of socialism anyway.
And this, dear reader, is why we actually analyze history, rather than simply hoping that despite all historical analysis, surely this time letting capitalists have free speech will not backfire. There is no successful revolution that has not cracked down on the tools available to the bourgeoisie to restore their order, as all who failed to do so have crumbled. For the sake of your insistence that fascists and capitalists be given equal rights to that of the proletariat, you work against the socialist state, as a reactionary.
It’s funny you say this given socialist states disallow criticism of socialism too, so it’s really not different in that regard.
No, you’re conflating the censorship of disinformation and fomenting anti-socialist sentiment with all criticism. Criticism is necessary for growth, but all criticism has a definite class character to it, a definite class outlook. It is only working class outlook that should stand in socialist society.
Alright, if there was criticism against CPC that would be helpful, but the south china morning post you linked to apparently doesn’t have anything to do with the CPC but is about BiliBili cracking down on adult content? Searching for the terms “CPC” and “party” returned 0 results on that link.
Who do you think is censoring posts in BiliBili?
Positive claims, yes, I mean that. You’re admitting to working from a biased position where you don’t have a problem making authoritative claims about China when it comes to the positive, but then not doing the same when it comes to the negative (or discouraging others from doing so).
Everyone has biases. There is no such thing as an “unbiased” position. I have regularly encouraged you to do 2 things:
Study more, be it theory, history, and practice.
Focus on problems that you actually can impact, in your country. Oppose your country’s imperialism (as I’m near certain you live in an imperialist country). Organize for socialism.
I am not about to restrict myself to a hyperspecific and narrow definition of the type of violence that matters and warrants discussion. I will not waffle over specific jargon either because pedantic usage of certain words is not important to me. Violence is something I am concerned about and is however something I’d want to discuss, and China is not as innocent as you like to portray it as.
Class analysis is critical. If you ignore it, you equate all violence, when violence is sadly an unavoidable aspect of the class struggle itself. There have been no non-violent revolutions, and revolutionary violence is violence that ends the daily violence of capitalism and imperialism.
I can provide evidence for this, but I already know you won’t waste a moment to assert that every single instance of China’s human rights failures are a hoax and never happened to begin with, or that they are progressing, or some other framing that makes them less than what they are.
This is bullshit. Tibetan culture is protected, not erased. What’s criminalized is the desire to restore the slave-based system of earlier Tibet, back when the Dalai Lama was backed by the CIA and the PLA liberated it. Tibetan Review is funded by the exile government, the state based on slavery and torture.
There is no Uyghur genocide, this is an example of China censoring disinformation, and you’re proving this to be the correct decision. After all, the west gets to accuse socialist countries of all manner of atrocities in order to manufacture consent for war. Sorry to tell you, but the “free flow of information” you value in the west is just the free flow of disinformation. Read Xinjiang: A Report and Resource Compilation, nearly the entirety of claims of genocide circle back to US-paid propagandist Adrian Zenz of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.
After the introduction of the vocational schools and other de-radicalizing programs, western-backed ETIM terrorist attacks and mass murders went down dramatically, to practically 0.
As for Yang Li, I cannot find much on her, only that “human rights organizations” like Minsheng Guancha that seem to always be in trouble for opposing socialism seem to have her in a few articles. She may or may not even be real, or her story may be heavily doctored for western uses. The west uses accusations of “human rights abuses” all the time in order to give ammo against geopolitical enemies.
Given what you count as “proof” elsewhere, I’ll remain skeptical.
I have seen enough videos of Uyghur people being oppressed by China and them coming out and speaking about their terrible experiences to know the Uyghur genocide is not a hoax, and that is not something I am debating.
If that’s all it takes to get you to believe in atrocity propaganda, I can only assume you believe white genocide in South Africa is real, that Iraq had WMD, that Iran killed 40,000 protestors recently, and that Hamas beheaded numerous babies during Al-Aqsa Flood. If you aren’t already familiar with how disinformation works, and are more than comfortable using it as ammo, then yes, you probably would fall into the category of reactionary.
Though I don’t expect you to place any weight on any of the other areas either.
I’ve done more research on each of these topics than you have, I guarantee it. I place far more weight on them than you have, it seems you’re more interested in the narrative they present than their factual basis.
I am not trying to “win” this. You are free to view my disinterest as convenient.
Both of these critiques could be applied to your views as well.
You can believe the state of China to be for the working class, but that isn’t an adequate explanation for censorship.
Despite censorship in the west, as I pointed out earlier, you can still find extensive criticisms of trump and the American regime in China.
Any examples of open media criticism against CPC in China? Direct and detailed criticisms of Xi Jinping would be the icing on the cake.
You have an utterly one-sided and unrealistically positive view of China yourself, I’ve been saying that for a while now. It’s just in the opposite direction.
I am not a Chinese national, so of course I am going to be getting my information about it from the internet, as I assume is the case for you. Or have you lived there yourself?
Highly doubt that. China and transparency are not words I’d put together.
I am choosing to ignore the term “imperialism” because we don’t share an understanding on the term, and I’m not boxing myself into a communist outlook to discuss things.
Though it does seem we are at an impasse.
No, actually, they cannot.
You’re right, belief alone is not adequate. What’s instead adequate is analyzing the mode of production and distribution in China, the class character of the state, and the historical necessity to prevent capitalist disinformation from spreading uncontested. I don’t just believe China has a working class state based on hope alone, but based on concrete evidence. Over 90% of the public supports the government, and China is ranked even by western organizations as a thriving democracy even by western definitions of democracy:
Historically, capitalists have manipulated the press to spread disinformation. Radio Free Asia is an example primarily directed against China. In the USSR, Radio Free Europe contributed heavily towards pessimism regarding constructing socialism. Class struggle does not end under socialism, so the working classes need to continue to win the class war.
Of course you’ll find extensive criticism of the west within China, the west is the world imperial hegemon.
Criticism doesn’t work like that. People don’t generally make hit pieces. If you want an example of more liberal press in China that desires more liberalization, see South China Morning Post. Institutions are prevented from mouthing off, but people on the ground often consider political critique to be a national pass time. The difference between the west and China is that there is a national hope in China, rather than pessimism.
No, I do not. Frankly, I’ve done far more research into China than you have, and I don’t mean that in a dismissive way, but in the sense that I’ve actually had to grapple with my skepticism of China in the past. I already admitted to many currently existing problems in China, but you’ve continued to make baseless claims about “Chinese imperialism.”
Correct, I have not lived there. That’s why I focus on not making authoritative claims denouncing China, and instead seek to learn what I can from the outside while focusing on changing the world I live in, the west. That’s where my activism takes me. Where we differ is that I have done far more study on Marxism, Marxism-Leninism, and the history of AES countries.
Why not? Again, look at the polling from the Perception of Democracy index, China is ranked very favorably by its own people:
You’ve committed to denying a concrete, materialist understanding of imperialism as a stage in capitalism. I’ve made it clear that imperialism is a necessary evolution within capitalism once it reaches the monopoly stage, with dominance of finance capital, and switches from export of commodity to export of capital. This is a clear and coherent system with an enormous breadth of study, even if you don’t want to call it “imperialism,” the fact is that this system exists, that it’s the dominant mode of the west, and that China does not practice this system.
It does not matter if you do not consider yourself a communist. This was first analyzed by Hobson, a liberal. You do not have to be a communist to recognize it, if you leave this entirely in the hands of communists then you’re just ceding any right to be taken seriously in any geopolitical matter, as it’s the primary contradiction in the modern era.
I do agree that we are at an impasse, but I hope you’ll reconsider your viewpoints and actually commit to studying phenomena in a materialist and dialectical viewpoint.
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Incorrect, China is near the top of the list. See the bottom:
Free speech and transparency are high in China, assuming you’re a part of the working classes, so you should have no problems.
Says who? And further, no, not all criticism is censored, institutionalized private owned disinformation is censored. The working classes need to be able to control which class’s speech is allowed to propogate and dominate, otherwise capitalists manipulate the press to spread nihilism towards the socialist project. This has happened historically, and it sounds like you don’t actually care if a socialist project succeeds as long as fascists and capitalists are given free speech.
Sure, it isn’t difficult to find that, because liberal societies have effectively drawn attention to individual figures, rather than the system itself. Criticize Trump all you want, don’t you dare start suggesting socialism as it exists in the real world is a better system though. What you are finding is Great Man Theory, the idea that history is driven not by material conditions but individual great men and women sporadically born throughout history, which serves as a pressure valve.
Why would people in China make hit pieces on a beloved leader? Why are you taking the absence of such hit pieces as evidence that Xi Jinping is actually evil? You can find articles from South China Morning Post, itself a Chinese media platform, criticizing the CPC! You’re trying to have it both ways!
Yes, you unilaterally dropped one of the most critical parts of this discussion because it wasn’t going your way, and you have not once provided evidence of China being “violent and opportunistic.” You’ve hemmed and hawed around these lines.
Do you mean I have no problems highlighting structural issues with the west? I live in the west, I know its problems well. Do you mean that I am more comfortable making claims about China? It’s because I have studied it far more than you have, including the ideology driving the CPC. I’m certainly no expert, but there’s a clear gap in knowledge here that would be silly to not acknowledge.
Yes, again, you’re not interested in discussing the single most crucial component of modern geopolitics. You’ve decided to ignore the topic completely because acknowledging it undermines your points. As for seeing China as a “violent state,” this is definitely true with respect to how it treats fascists and capitalists, but not towards the working classes.
It must be very convenient to be able to refuse to discuss topics that are widely acknowledged and studied even by non-communists, in order to retreat to idealism and metaphysics (like race science earlier). I’m being harsh now, because this has become a farce. I am sorry, but if you are going to continue to retreat into vibes and gut-feelings over materialist analysis, then there’s nowhere for this conversation to go.
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Standing against the socialist state doesn’t take you out of the working class, it just means you have become a class traitor. Critique is valuable, and necessary. Critique based on metaphysics, idealism, and all manner of unscientific grounding is not genuine critique for the sake of a better future, but instead just a tool to be magnified by the bourgeoisie in restoring their rule.
And this, dear reader, is why we actually analyze history, rather than simply hoping that despite all historical analysis, surely this time letting capitalists have free speech will not backfire. There is no successful revolution that has not cracked down on the tools available to the bourgeoisie to restore their order, as all who failed to do so have crumbled. For the sake of your insistence that fascists and capitalists be given equal rights to that of the proletariat, you work against the socialist state, as a reactionary.
No, you’re conflating the censorship of disinformation and fomenting anti-socialist sentiment with all criticism. Criticism is necessary for growth, but all criticism has a definite class character to it, a definite class outlook. It is only working class outlook that should stand in socialist society.
Who do you think is censoring posts in BiliBili?
Everyone has biases. There is no such thing as an “unbiased” position. I have regularly encouraged you to do 2 things:
Study more, be it theory, history, and practice.
Focus on problems that you actually can impact, in your country. Oppose your country’s imperialism (as I’m near certain you live in an imperialist country). Organize for socialism.
Class analysis is critical. If you ignore it, you equate all violence, when violence is sadly an unavoidable aspect of the class struggle itself. There have been no non-violent revolutions, and revolutionary violence is violence that ends the daily violence of capitalism and imperialism.
Let’s see what you have to offer.
China is the second most populous country on the planet. You’ll need to do more than that.
This is bullshit. Tibetan culture is protected, not erased. What’s criminalized is the desire to restore the slave-based system of earlier Tibet, back when the Dalai Lama was backed by the CIA and the PLA liberated it. Tibetan Review is funded by the exile government, the state based on slavery and torture.
There is no Uyghur genocide, this is an example of China censoring disinformation, and you’re proving this to be the correct decision. After all, the west gets to accuse socialist countries of all manner of atrocities in order to manufacture consent for war. Sorry to tell you, but the “free flow of information” you value in the west is just the free flow of disinformation. Read Xinjiang: A Report and Resource Compilation, nearly the entirety of claims of genocide circle back to US-paid propagandist Adrian Zenz of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.
After the introduction of the vocational schools and other de-radicalizing programs, western-backed ETIM terrorist attacks and mass murders went down dramatically, to practically 0.
As for Yang Li, I cannot find much on her, only that “human rights organizations” like Minsheng Guancha that seem to always be in trouble for opposing socialism seem to have her in a few articles. She may or may not even be real, or her story may be heavily doctored for western uses. The west uses accusations of “human rights abuses” all the time in order to give ammo against geopolitical enemies.
Given what you count as “proof” elsewhere, I’ll remain skeptical.
If that’s all it takes to get you to believe in atrocity propaganda, I can only assume you believe white genocide in South Africa is real, that Iraq had WMD, that Iran killed 40,000 protestors recently, and that Hamas beheaded numerous babies during Al-Aqsa Flood. If you aren’t already familiar with how disinformation works, and are more than comfortable using it as ammo, then yes, you probably would fall into the category of reactionary.
I’ve done more research on each of these topics than you have, I guarantee it. I place far more weight on them than you have, it seems you’re more interested in the narrative they present than their factual basis.
More than that, I view it as dishonest.