• conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I appreciate that. It’s not lost on me that a lot of communist regimes got really fucked up by trade embargos, sanctions, counter-intelligence campaigns, etc. Power is rarely ceded willingly, of course. However, my primary concern lies with improving the quality of life for everyone, or at least maximizing the well being of the population. Part of that equation, for my point of view, includes the ability for people to think and speak freely without fear of reprisal by the government. Say what you will, but I’ve hosted eight different exchange students, including one from Russia; none were concerned about answering questions about their home country except for the kid from Hong Kong. I asked them whether they identified as a citizen of Hong Kong or of China first, because I was hoping to get an irl sample for how Hong Kongers actually felt, but let them out of the question when I confirmed with them that that was a sensitive question.

    If you’re living with a boot on your throat, does the distinction really matter if it’s a capitalist’s boot or a communist’s boot?

    • 🏳️‍⚧️ 新星 [she/they]@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      If you’re living with a boot on your throat, does the distinction really matter if it’s a capitalist’s boot or a communist’s boot?

      Try looking at it from the point of view of the oppressed class who is benefiting from communist rule, and being harmed by capitalist rule, rather than from the point of view of the super rich people.

      • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Unless I happen to be mistaken, poor people get the bullet, too. We just don’t hear about it because they’re not famous. I’m taking a wild guess here, but I suspect that the muslims in Xinjiang aren’t exactly what you would typically think of as the capital owning class. You can’t even (practically, I’m sure there’s some loophole or asterisk here) be critical of the bad ideas of your government, just shut up and kill more sparrows. As far as I can tell, it’s trading oppression for sparkling oppression.

        • KiG V2@lemmygrad.ml
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          1 year ago

          Nobody has been killed in Xinjiang. There is a reason its original liars had to specify it was a “cultural genocide,” which it isn’t, either. Like the full break down?

          • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Sure. I’d also appreciate some sources that would be considered reliable in the mainstream, but I won’t ignore you if you don’t have them.

            • Shinji_Ikari [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              I’m going to swing in and suggest reading/glancing over the Original Adrien Zenz report. Zenz is a fellow at the heritage fund and part of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation. Both notorious right-wing propaganda mills.

              Nearly every article you have seen has either cited the original Zenz report, or a thinktank that cites said report. Often times if you dig into the funding schemes of those think tanks, you’ll learn about all sorts of organizations explicitly tied to defense organizations. I saw one that was an Australian defense org funded by the US DoD.

              Anyway, the original report focused on a possible cultural genocide. What this is referring to is the return of 1-2 child policies in China. Previously, these policies excluded most ethnic minorities within China, including the Uyghurs. With this new policy, this group would now be included in the 1-2 child restrictions.

              Zenz extrapolated a slowed growth in Uyghur population, not reduction, or stall, but slowed. He concluded that these policies would result in a “Cultural Genocide”, meaning an attempt to destroy the culture of the group, not the group itself. This does not make sense, as these were not hard targeted policies, but sweeping across the population.

              The reeducation camps were something totally distinct from this report. Keep in mind that news media was using the report in order to call the reeducation camps essentially concentration camps.

              Something that is often left out of the conversation is that Xinjiang has been host to many Muslim extremist terrorist attacks. The solutions that China chose may not have been the best, but if we’re being honest with ourselves, are no worse than the immigrant camps at the US boarder. Except those are often privatized, profit centered, and have a constant stream of stories about neglect, abuse, and even forced sterilization. Most of the camps in Xinjiang have since been closed, as reported by AP.

              I’m sorry I’m not providing sources here, I don’t have my notes app set up on my current machine. below I’m going to give prompts to help you search.

              Nearly any article will link to the zenz report if you follow citations well enough.

              AP reported on the camps being closed.

              In the US, Migrants were given hysterectomies without being told prior to the proceedure, often times they came to the doctor for other ails.

            • Anuvin@lemmygrad.ml
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              1 year ago

              The burden of proof is on those who make accusations, it is not the responsibility of others to convince you of what isn’t happening. Further, you may have heard the adage that an extraordinary claim requires extraordinary evidence, of which there is none and can therefore be dismissed. Even further, when we look at who stands to gain from such a narrative despite the lack of evidence, it follows that US imperial power and Sinophobia driven clickbait news corporations stand to gain monetary and political standing by publishing articles like this. This is the same tactic as the Holodomor myth (which is literally an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory made by nazi propagandists and pushed by nazi lover William Randolph Hurst)

              However, I once had a similar outlook and needed to be convinced, so here’s three sources. Also this.

              • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                From the AP source:

                A convenience store cashier chatted idly about declining sales – then was visited by the shadowy men tailing us. When we dropped by again, she didn’t say a word, instead making a zipping motion across her mouth, pushing past us and running out of the store.

                Bruh, she got invited to lake Lao Gai for talking about sales slowing down.

                “Arabic is not the only language that compiles Allah’s classics,” the lesson said. “To learn Chinese is our responsibility and obligation, because we are all Chinese.”

                Uhhhh

                In one village we stop in, an elderly Uyghur man in a square skullcap answers just one question – “We don’t have the coronavirus here, everything is good” – before a local Han Chinese cadre demands to know what we are doing. He tells the villagers in Uyghur, “If he asks you anything, just say you don’t know anything.”

                There is no COVID in Ba Sing Se lol. Not gonna lie, I think Chinese propaganda picks some strange hills to die on, COVID is everywhere, but whatever, it’s not genocide.

                At one point, I was tailed by a convoy of a dozen cars, an eerie procession through the silent streets of Aksu at 4 in the morning. Anytime I tried to chat with someone, the minders would draw in close, straining to hear every word.

                Well, I’m sure they got the real story, or else.

                Within Xinjiang, Han Chinese and Uyghurs live side by side, an unspoken but palpable gulf between them. In the suburbs of Kashgar, a Han woman at a tailor shop tells my colleague that most Uyghurs weren’t allowed to go far from their homes. “Isn’t that so? You can’t leave this shop?” the woman said to a Uyghur seamstress.

                I’m thinking “you can’t leave this shop” is probably an inelegance of translation, and she likely means that the seamstress can’t leave the vicinity of the shop. Still, that’s uh… Difficult to fathom being applied to “most” of an ethnic population.

                Yes, the AP article talks about how the prison camps were closed and stuff, that’s all well and good. The minders didn’t show them any mass graves, so I suppose that in that regard, there is indeed evidence missing to support genocide. That said, it reminds me a lot of how the US and Canada dealt with native populations, minus the physical relocation. Had they had the same technological capacity as modern China, it seems quite likely to me that Andrew Jackson would have been equally as happy, uh, re-educating the first nations in the way we’ve seen here. I have limited time to respond, so I’ll get to the other articles as I can, but I wonder about choosing this article to defend your position. This reads to me like they’ve quite finished with their most extreme measures, which, given the state of the present, must have been quite impressive. I always admired the work of the early communist party in fighting for the rights and freedoms of black people in the reconstruction period, it’s disappointing to see Saturday morning cartoon bad guy behavior.

                  • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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                    1 year ago

                    I mentioned that it doesn’t talk about killings, but I also point out that the reporter’s entire visit was tightly minded and regulated by party officials. I don’t imagine that they were in a special hurry to show them so much as a carton of spoiled milk.

                • CriticalResist8@lemmygrad.mlM
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                  1 year ago

                  Can you be serious for two fucking seconds? Jesus Christ liberalism is a terminal disease. Stop quoting a children’s TV show and actually contend with real life.

                  Can you not think of any reason why the CPC in Xinjiang might be wary of weird AP reporters asking random people questions about covid and concentration camps on the streets? Have you literally not followed the RISE in anti-Asian hate crimes in the US? The accusations the US government flings at China every chance it gets?

                  do I come into your house and start throwing your plates on the ground? And then kick up a fuss when you ask me to stop? AP should be grateful they are allowed in Xinjiang, this isn’t the century of humiliation anymore.

                  “Arabic is not the only language that compiles Allah’s classics,” the lesson said. “To learn Chinese is our responsibility and obligation, because we are all Chinese.”

                  Uhh what? Use your words and stop acting like a child. China officially recognizes 56 ethnic minorities, including Uyghurs. They all form the Chinese nation. Chinese does not mean solely Han. You don’t know anything about China, maybe that’s why your only arguments are drivel pulled from literal fiction. China is literally called Zhongguo in Chinese, which means Central Country. Chinese is Zhongwen, “language of the middle [country]”. What about these words gives you the impression of [Han] Chinese supremacy?

            • brain_in_a_box [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              Literally no source outlet, western or otherwise, has made accusations of killings in Xinjiang. You can’t just make up allegations whole cloth and then ask people to provide reliable sources to debunk them.

                  • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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                    1 year ago

                    You can’t be bothered to read the thread you’re commenting on?

                    They offered to provide a breakdown of the situation in Xinjiang, and I accepted and also politely asked if they could also provide some sources along with it, so I wouldn’t just have to rely on “trust me, bro”. They were, of course, free to decline, but they were nice enough to provide some

    • KiG V2@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      If your concern is quality of life, then you should be glad to know that all socialist countries, including of course the USSR and China, have radically improved the living standards for their massive citizenries in every metric that matters.

      What use is being supposedly free to criticize the U.S. gov’t when 1) every living standard is worse, 2) our education and media feed us so much lies we blame our woes on everybody BUT the gov’t, or for the wrong reasons, 3) you secretly can’t because if you effectively do so you will be blackbagged and disappeared or assassinated?

      Your singular Hong Kong kid is not a representative of an entire country or even Hong Kong. Why was it sensitive? Because he feared CPC would come and turn him into meatloaf…or because he feared his parents would? In MY personal, anecdotal experience, fascist parents/grandparents are the greatest source of anticommunist fear.

    • Giyuu@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      In this post: what you get when your brain attempts to synthesize the concept of socialism on top of its liberalism instead of trying to discard everything you know first (liberalism) and learning again from zero to grasp Marxism.

    • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 year ago

      Part of that equation, for my point of view, includes the ability for people to think and speak freely without fear of reprisal by the government

      This is like the people who say “We’re freer than the Chinese because I can call Trump a peepee poopoo pants on Twitter without being arrested!” when that doesn’t actually do anything at all

      but if you try and protest and change conditions materially and meaningfully, you can absolutely bet your ass you will be disappeared like the horror stories you find on reddit about “totalitarian regimes”. The only reason why Americans don’t think it doesn’t happen in the West is either because it’s so completely internalized that it becomes memeified (“Haha, I hope the FBI agent watching me through my camera is having a nice day!”) or none of the media that they engage with reports on it.

      IMO, this entire point is just a liberal ideological bludgeon, a condition that can be applied at-will to any government they want to criticize because no government will be good enough all of the time. it’s one thing if you’re an anarchist and oppose every government equally for not fulfilling that condition, that I can understand and respect, it’s quite another when you’re like “Oh, no, I hate authoritarianism! That’s why we need to constantly criticize a country on the literal other side of the planet 99.7% of the time, and then only criticize our own country when somebody calls us out on it by saying ‘Oh, yeah, America also does bad things too!’” Especially when America’s role in the world for the last century at least, and more accurately really since its conception, has been a source of capitalist reaction across its whole hemisphere and later the whole planet, with hundreds upon hundreds of military bases and tens of millions directly and indirectly killed in wars. Criticizing, say, Cuba or DPRK for these sorts of things is effectively zooming in on a single corpse in righteous indignation while ignoring the seas of blood spilled by America behind you.

      • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I mean, yeah, I am anti-authoritarian before anything else. That’s basically where my problem with China, among many others, begins and ends. The US has a lot of big problems that need fixing immediately on that front, and that’s without getting into the bodies under the front porch. We could go into that, if you like, I just didn’t think it was particularly relevant at the moment.

    • brain_in_a_box [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 year ago

      If you’re living with a boot on your throat, does the distinction really matter if it’s a capitalist’s boot or a communist’s boot?

      “Does it really matter if I can expect to live to 75 instead of 30, if I can’t call the president a doodoo head on social media?”

      Yes, it matters a lot.

      • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Another commenter shared an article by the AP where the reporter got to ask people in Xinjiang how things are. One lady at a shop casually mentioned that business was slowing and got talked to by a party minder. You can’t even have idle chat without getting invited to camp. That’s not quite the same thing as being able to talk shit on social media.

            • brain_in_a_box [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              No, they used it to explain that there’s no killing. It also doesn’t contain your claim that “You can’t even have idle chat without getting invited to camp.”

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                1 year ago

                Okay, cards on the table, from my western perspective, being talked to by a party minder for mentioning that sales are slow is an experience I can’t even fathom. For me, it seems so backwards, heavy handed, and draconian that framing it in terms of “being invited to camp” didn’t seem like a big stretch.

                • brain_in_a_box [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  1 year ago

                  Imagine if a Chinese of Russian documentary showed up in an area of the US that had recently suffered from instability or disruption - like after the George Floyd rights for example - do you really think that there would be nobody would keep an eye on them; no local government employees, no PR people, no local community groups?

                  If that Russian/Chinese team interviewed a local cashier, and then someone said something privatly to that cashier, and the the cashier then said ‘no further comment’, would you immediately frame that in your mind as “A party minder threatening to send them to Guantanamo Bay?” Because that’s the same scenario that was described in the AP piece.

                  • CriticalResist8@lemmygrad.mlM
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                    1 year ago

                    Speaking of the George Floyd protests, there were videos of “workers” “innocently” leaving a pickup truck full of bricks in an area that the protestors were going to be passing through the next day. Like just parking a pickup truck and removing the tarp to reveal the neatly stacked bricks below it.

                    OP (the one from lemm ee) is just showing his privilege every time he comments.