Pro-China bias?

Niall said:
sitting, would you say that most emigrés are generally anti-Chinese, or are they ambivalent?

Hi Niall,

I think they're more likely pro-China than against.

Now there are those who suffered great tragedy and personal loss--and in them there's perpetual resentment. But with the tremendous economic growth that's taking place, even those families are seeking to make investments in the country.

China would not have prospered so quickly had it not been for the investment capital & managerial skills of the overseas Chinese contingent. That point cannot be overemphasized. John Naisbitt (of Mega-Trends fame) is a profound student of China's rise. He describes this well. His views are both broad and penetrating. Very good reads.

Interestingly, I recall C's once telling Laura they were in direct contact with him! And suggested she make contact as well. I suspect C's knew then (of course they knew), the significance of China's emergence. And pointed him out. That heads up an early hint--on China's eventual role. We see it now.

Recently C's also said silent waters run strong and run deep. I take that as further confirmation.

Given it's economic might, I think China is at least as important as Russia--for world balance. And the Chinese version of Putin is not so bad either. Together, this Eurasian entity is quite formidable, in my opinion. FWIW.
 
If overpopulation as the cause of poverty is a myth,
http://www.sott.net/article/295579-Paradise-Stolen-The-Myth-of-Overpopulation

then why is it ok to support a government that forces abortions?
 
hlat said:
If overpopulation as the cause of poverty is a myth,
http://www.sott.net/article/295579-Paradise-Stolen-The-Myth-of-Overpopulation

then why is it ok to support a government that forces abortions?

Name a government you can support, apply any ethical guideline you'd like, such as the golden rule on everything they do, and soon enough you'll probably find reasons not to support them too. It seems to me however that you really want people to agree with you that a bias for China is promoted by many people on this forum, but the more people reply to this thread, the more it demonstrates to me, that a bias isn't apparent and that people are just looking at China in the world context. I might be mistaken, but it comes across to me that you're holding on to this beyond reasonableness, which is usually a flag to look back in and see what might be behind it.
 
alkhemst said:
... see what might be behind it.

I think I somehow understand what hlat is willing to show, and what might be behind it, for me, is some kind of deep deception about the human condition, nowadays and in history so far as we usually know it...
And just looking at China in the world context could be seen as an acknowledgment that we are pretty far from getting our heads out of the trap... FWIW
 
Watching today's news about the riots in Baltimore: lots of violence, chaos, destruction. Maryland governor has declared a state of emergency, the mayor declared curfew. The chief of city police said that the protesters are criminals and will be put in jail.

But when protests took place in Hong-Kong, China, those were "freedom fighters," according to the US State Dept. And in Ukraine, Maidan orks and snipers shooting the police were also "freedom fighters."

When it's Maryland, it's emergency and criminals, when it's China, Ukraine et al, it's "freedom and democracy."

Just amazing that some people still think that there is no big difference between the US and China. One country is clearly degrading into chaos, while another is rapidly developing. One is threatening and warmongering all around the globe, the other one is building bridges and alliances.

If someone is expecting to see a perfect country, one can wait forever and never find such. It's the dynamics that counts. It's a choice who you prefer to align yourself with: the progressing in their madness Washington elites or the recovering and strengthening Chinese society. OSIT
 
Agreed, Siberia. To wait for a perfect country doesn't make sense at all. The evil, chaos, utter corruption, and regression of the Empire is more likely to approach perfect entropy than the countries trying to balance the extreme imbalance on the planet, and not acting in pathological ways at every step. While there isn't much hope for the way things are going, the more humans can act to bring a bit more balance, the less the Cosmos has to do the balancing in more extreme ways - so any hope is just mitigating how bad the Cosmic reaction will be. Or so I think.
 
hlat said:
If overpopulation as the cause of poverty is a myth,
http://www.sott.net/article/295579-Paradise-Stolen-The-Myth-of-Overpopulation

then why is it ok to support a government that forces abortions?

Hlat, you seem to have a really strong right-man syndrome problem. Have you been reading what others have been posting on China? Talk about a bias! Have you even questioned your own thinking? Ever? This seems to be a really big sacred cow for you.

alkhemst said:
I might be mistaken, but it comes across to me that you're holding on to this beyond reasonableness, which is usually a flag to look back in and see what might be behind it.

Looks that way to me, too.
 
I pointed to a policy, and some people demanded proof. I supplied proof, and people went silent on the facts. Instead, and not unexpected or surprising, a reaction from some is that I have a problem. A reaction is not that the Chinese government is a problem. This is probably because some of you cannot both support a psychopathic government and simultaneously see their psychopathic acts and the resulting horror.

I simply adopted a tactic of taking a really obvious psychopathic policy and holding it up to the light of day for us to see, because some people apparently are having a difficult time seeing the policy as psychopathic. The reactions range from denial (eg this is just one example so it can't be endemic) to rationalization (eg stopping overpopulation is the lesser evil, no government is perfect) to looking at me as the sole problem.

Apparently, some of you think that I cannot both frequently question my own thinking and also engage in a debate. Perhaps we can say both that the Chinese government is psychopathic and I have a sacred cow? No, it doesn't appear to me that some of you have the ability to acknowledge that the Chinese government is psychopathic. On the other hand, I don't need to be right or perfect, and from time to time I explicitly state I've been wrong in the past and will be wrong again in the future. So some of you say I have a problem. Sure, I will continuing working on it. Meanwhile, some of you have a problem too.

What exactly is so controversial when I said at the outset that both the US and Chinese governments are psychopathic? Why do some of you feel such a need to root for China like it's your new favorite sports team? It seems to me that both the support of the Chinese government and the support of the one child policy is to say: it's fine by me that they brutalize their women because x, y, and z. That's saying the ends justify the means. (As an aside, why hasn't anyone even suggested forced vasectomies of Chinese men instead?)

There is nothing reasonable about supporting forced abortions. That is your problem if you support it. I have problems, but supporting forced abortions is not one of them. (Think about this: forced vaccinations are a problem but forced abortions are not a problem?)

It is a false choice to present to people: support China or support the US, you must choose one or the other. You don't have to believe the nonsense that: criticism of the Chinese government = weakening an adversary of the US = supporting the US. There are other choices. No, you don't have to choose between them.
 
Going by that logic:

Forced abortions are illegal in China.

Therefore they are not Chinese government policy.

Therefore the Chinese government is not a pathocracy.

Forced abortion - People's Republic of China

Forced abortions associated with administration of the one-child policy have occurred in the People's Republic of China; they are a violation of Chinese law and are not official policy. They result from government pressure on local officials who, in turn, employ strong-arm tactics on pregnant mothers. On September 29, 1997 a bill was introduced in the United States Congress titled Forced Abortion Condemnation Act, that sought to "condemn those officials of the Chinese Communist Party, the government of the People's Republic of China and other persons who are involved in the enforcement of forced abortions by preventing such persons from entering or remaining in the United States". In June 2012 Feng Jianmei was forcibly made to abort her 7 month old fetus after not paying a fine for breaking the one-child policy. Her case was widely discussed on the internet in China to general revulsion after photos of the stillborn baby were posted online. A fortnight after the forced abortion she continued to be harassed by local authorities in Shaanxi Province. On July 5, the European Parliament passed a resolution saying it "strongly condemns" both Feng's case specifically and forced abortions in general "especially in the context of the one-child policy."

Part of the work of the activist "barefoot lawyer" Chen Guangcheng also concerned excesses of this nature. By 2012 disgust with forced abortion was being expressed by the public in China despite its reduced use, and repeal of the one-child policy was reportedly being discussed in some quarters for this and other reasons.
 
hlat said:
There is nothing reasonable about supporting forced abortions. That is your problem if you support it. I have problems, but supporting forced abortions is not one of them.

Hi hlat,

I'm getting the sense that this one issue is the driving force behind your total condemnation of the government. Yes?

The one child policy can be debated. And I think is being debated. And frankly I'm not sure where I would come down on this. Probably a moderation of some form. And this may happen--in due time.

But total condemnation based on this one thing alone is problematic--even if one is fervently pro-life. Sad to say, but the truth is our world is hanging in balance. Have you seen what's going on--in Ukraine for instance? A wider perspective is imperative.

It is from that point of view that most of us speak. FWIW.

PS
You say there are other choices. Can you explain what those are?
 
hlat said:
It is a false choice to present to people: support China or support the US, you must choose one or the other. You don't have to believe the nonsense that: criticism of the Chinese government = weakening an adversary of the US = supporting the US. There are other choices. No, you don't have to choose between them.

Seems to me there's a few presumptions here. One striking one is that the forum requires you to support the Chinese and not the US government.

If that's the case, to be sure - I'd ask myself if I am mandated by guidelines or covertly pressured to support the Chinese government and not support the US one while participating on this forum? Then I might ask myself - do all people participating on the forum share one opinion on the Chinese and the US government?

Or even this - how precise is one overall perception on a collection of unique people (whether a forum or even by that same token a government)?
 
hlat said:
I simply adopted a tactic of taking a really obvious psychopathic policy and holding it up to the light of day for us to see, because some people apparently are having a difficult time seeing the policy as psychopathic.

Hlat, one child policy is not psychopathic. It is actually reasonable for China because of its huge population and limited resources.

In Russia, we have the opposite problem: our population is relatively small. That's why Putin pays good money for every second born child which is called Mother's Capital program. This program shows significant results: the number of born children has been higher than the number of deaths for two years already (despite any sanctions). Our population is now growing after many years of reduction.

In China, it's the citizen who pays fine to the government for a second child. But does it mean that Putin is good and Xi is evil? Of course not. This is just a choice of demographic policy which suits better for a particular country.

It has been numerously pointed out that forced abortions are illegal in China. It is a crime. Are you suggesting that if some local officials in a country commit crimes, the whole government of that country is psychopathic?
 
Those of you who still take the position that forced abortions in China is illegal need to check your facts and sources. My source is the official Chinese news, Xinhua. What's yours?

hlat said:
_http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-06/14/content_15503461.htm
Forced abortion probed amid outrage
Updated: 2012-06-14 21:54
(Xinhua)
"According to law, mothers who are not entitled to have a second baby are indeed required to terminate their pregnancy at an early stage," an anonymous official with the Shaanxi Provincial Population and Family Planning Commission said Thursday.
 
hlat said:
hlat said:
_http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-06/14/content_15503461.htm
Forced abortion probed amid outrage
Updated: 2012-06-14 21:54
(Xinhua)
"According to law, mothers who are not entitled to have a second baby are indeed required to terminate their pregnancy at an early stage," an anonymous official with the Shaanxi Provincial Population and Family Planning Commission said Thursday.

Funny how a text changes flavor with colours.
 
Re: Pro-China bias on SOTT?

Just like Russia, China is going through changes:

Bobo08 said:
hlat said:
I'm probably suffering cognitive dissonance because it is quite obvious to me that the Chinese regime is a psychopathic one, on one hand, and yet on the other hand, intelligent and thoughtful people are saying the Chinese government is more or less objective.

I notice that throughout this thread we are talking about "Chinese government" as if it is one single consistent regime throughout its history from 1949 until now. I don't think it is the case. The Chinese government has changed substantially throughout the years, through subtle and not so subtle internal coups. So it is necessary to qualify which government we are talking about.

I agree that the early Chinese government, at least up to the early 1970s, is psychopathic. The government of Vietnam, where I'm from, copied many of its policies from China and this is one very dark period in our history, not even counting the war with America. But I also think that recent governments, both in China and Vietnam, are changing for the better. How do they do that? I don't know. But it is a good thing that they could do it without any (or much) bloodshed.

When I say changing for the better, I'm not under illusion that everything suddenly becomes perfect. There's still a lot of corruption, lying, manipulation going on both in internal and external policies, simply because the old faction is still active and it will take a lot of time to get rid of those. It is similar to the situation in Russia. But what is important is that it is changing for the better, unlike the US, which is changing for the worse. I think that can partly account for the position that SOTT has taken.

FWIW.

https://vidrebel.wordpress.com/2015/05/04/so-china-is-in-on-the-ww-iii-scam-but-our-deaths-will-be-real/

Back to Corbett’s Research: Yale Divinity School had established an outreach program of schools and hospitals known as Yale in China in 1903. It was an intelligence program. It favored the Communists over the Nationalists. They hated Sun Yat-Sen because he wanted to develop China. Please note that today China’s industrial output is shipped overseas and is not consumed for the benefit of the Chinese people.

Corbett told us that the Skull and Bones Society through Yale university had an outreach program in China in the city of Changsa. Mao attended meetings and was made editor of their magazine the Student Union of Yale and China in 1919. Mao renamed it Thought Reorientation.

Except during the Carter administration, every US ambassador to Beijing from Kissinger’s deal with Mao Tse Tung until 1990 was a member of Yale’s Skull and Bones Society. George Herbert Walker Bush who was a Bonesman and executive director of the Trilateral Commission was our first ambassador to China. He had been America’s UN ambassador prior to representing Wall Street in Beijing. He returned to the US and became CIA Director before David Rockefeller made him Ronald Reagan’s Vice-President.

In 1973 David Rockefeller said, “The social experiment in China under Chairman Mao’s leadership is one of the most important and successful in human history.” It was David Rockefeller’s good friend Henry Kissinger who opened up China with a series of trips there in 1971 so Nixon could make a spectacular show on his visit in 1972.

Mao had seriously harmed China with his Great Leap Forward and his Cultural Revolution. But Wall Street had a plan. Michel Chossudovsky wrote:

“The 1979 visit of Deng Xiaoping to the US was followed in June 1980 by the equally significant encounter in Wall Street of Rong Yiren, chairman of CITIC (China International Trust & Investment Corp), and David Rockefeller. The meeting, held in the penthouse of the Chase Manhattan Bank complex, was attended by senior executives of close to 300 major US corporations. A major agreement was reached between Chase, CITIC, and the Bank of China, involving the exchange of specialists and technical personnel to ‘identify and define those areas of the Chinese economy most susceptible to American technology and capital infusion’.”

We find this in December 27th 2012 ‘Bloomberg Report – Heirs of Mao’s Comrades Rise as New Capitalist Nobility’.

This is a fascinating story about a group that was known as ‘The Eight Immortals’ and yes, I am not making that up they’re known as ‘The Immortals’, and this is a group, a new class of people who have risen, that were connected to eight people specifically, who survived the Cultural Revolution of Mao and were in high-ranking positions in the Chinese Communist Party to start implementing a very different agenda from Mao’s agenda, in the reign of Deng Xiaoping. So picking up from that article:

“The people generally known as the Eight Immortals are now all dead, though all but three lived into their 90s. Their stature in China is on a par with that of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson in the U.S.
They are:

Deng Xiaoping;

General Wang, who fed Mao’s troops;

Chen Yun, who took charge of the economy when Mao assumed power in 1949;

Li Xiannian, who was instrumental in the plot that ended the Cultural Revolution;

Peng Zhen, who helped rebuild China’s legal system in the 1980s;

Song Renqiong, the Party personnel chief who oversaw the rehabilitation of purged cadres after the Cultural Revolution;

President Yang, who backed Deng’s order to carry out the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown and

Bo Yibo, a former vice premier and the last of the Immortals to die, at 98, in 2007.

The heirs of these 8 men run modern China.
 
Back
Top Bottom