6/4/2009 1:53:55 PM
6/4/2009 7:48:25 PM
while we are figuring out a bunch of meaningless ideological bullshit wrt to foreign policy philosophy, china is keeping its head down and doing what's pragmatic. they really are better capitalists than us.
6/4/2009 8:21:01 PM
I too respect how China runs shit.
6/4/2009 8:35:15 PM
So does anyone know how much of chile's resources are privatized?I couldnt tell if China was buying material from the chilean government or from chilean private businesses
6/4/2009 8:57:48 PM
6/5/2009 1:25:01 AM
6/5/2009 12:46:57 PM
United Fruits has basically destroyed Latin America
6/5/2009 1:28:19 PM
6/5/2009 2:12:02 PM
6/5/2009 3:06:39 PM
6/5/2009 4:14:52 PM
6/5/2009 5:36:18 PM
6/5/2009 5:57:53 PM
THOMAS (angrily): Well, the association don't like the government camps. Can't get a deputy in there. Can't arrest a man without a warrant. But if there was a big fight, and maybe shooting--a bunch of deputies could go in and clean out the camp.(Unfolding a newspaper)Like last night. Lissen. "Citizens, angered at red agitators, burn another squatters' camp, warn agitators to get out of the county."TOM (sick of the expression) : Listen. What is these reds? Ever'time you turn aroun' somebody sayin' somebody else's a red. What is these reds, anyway?WILKIE (chuckling): Well, I tell you. They was a fella up the country named King--got about 30,000 acres an' a cannery an' a winery--an' he's all a time talkin' about reds. Drivin' the country to ruin, he says. Got to git rid of 'em, he says. Well, they was a young fella jus' come out an' he was listenin one day. He kinda scratched his head an' he says, "Mr. King, what *is* these reds you all a time talkin' about?" Well, sir, Mr. King says, "Young man, a red is any fella that wants thirty cents a hour when I'm payin' twenty-five.
6/5/2009 6:01:17 PM
6/7/2009 11:19:08 PM
6/8/2009 12:19:46 AM
I doubt China is dumb enough to start a military war. What do they have to gain from defeating us? The debt they already hold?
6/8/2009 12:40:29 AM
they are a nuclear powerso the consequences are far more disastrous (and yes... I know they maintain a limited stockpile... but it would still suck for us to have to kill so many people)
6/8/2009 10:00:06 AM
I think this is a good thing. The world needs a colonial-type power to settle various parts of it, particularly Africa. Leaving these places to their own devices has resulted in decades of ruin and suffering. They strongly need someone to go in and tell them to stop robbing each other blind and get productive.
6/8/2009 11:21:08 AM
6/8/2009 11:29:33 AM
You are mistaken. There are no longer enough nuclear weapons on planet Earth to wipe out human civilization, much less humanity as a species. It is unclear that there ever were enough. And the U.S. military was ungodly sucessful in Iraq. The question is what are you trying to do. The U.S. military is very good as smashing organized military activity, it is just that they are not very good at putting a country back together, which is irrelevant in a conventional war. Since China is not an oil exporter, we wouldn't care about putting China back together. As such, it is merely a question of defeating China's navy and airforce, eliminating it as a threat to U.S. interests. We would never need to occupy Chinese territory, so we would never need to come into contact with China's multi-million man army.
6/8/2009 11:40:26 AM
^lol
6/8/2009 11:58:55 AM
6/8/2009 1:05:00 PM
And I think history has shown that while Colonialism was a huge waste of effort and resources and quite costly to locals, the alternative was not substantially better and perhaps even worse. Afterall, the parts of Africa that were never part of a colony are just as depressing as those that were.
6/8/2009 2:41:21 PM
6/8/2009 3:31:31 PM
6/8/2009 5:25:26 PM
Absolutely incorrect. The protected industry argument has been proposed throughout history but there is still no mechanism for it to be true. Nigeria's competitive advantage is the same as South Korea's was: cheap wages. That a few South Korean firms used those cheap wages to compete effectively internationally was inevitable, just as various American firms which set up shop in South Korea used the cheap wages to compete effectively internationally. The difference between Nigeria and Korea is that South Korea kept taxes low, allowed state enterprises to fail, and sucessfully kept corruption in check. Yes, Korea subsidized many domestic firms, many of which it eventually allowed to go bankrupt, but they never represented a substantial percentage of either employment or GDP. What really drove South Korea were all the other businesses which were not subsidised, both foreign and domestic, which prospered under light interference and low wages. From Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, to South Korea, their first big export earner in every case was toys manufactured in foreign owned factories. The path to prosperity does not start with state owned factories, or subsidised steel mills, but with foreign direct investment, a legal trick that only the most dedicated of judicial systems can sustain.[Edited on June 8, 2009 at 6:24 PM. Reason : .,.]
6/8/2009 6:23:12 PM
6/8/2009 6:58:56 PM
6/8/2009 11:30:22 PM