This isn't a new phenomenon but I figured we could use a thread to consolidate any discussion of China's rising influence in the world.Article today on the growing influence of China in Afghanistan:
11/22/2009 10:16:56 PM
China is buying up natural resources all over the globe - they own a huge amount of rare earth mineral mines... Other natural resources too... We keep sending them money and they keep buying up shit for the future.It's a good time to be Chinese, I suppose.
11/22/2009 11:15:59 PM
powerful in china, yes.everyone else, probably not so much
11/22/2009 11:16:48 PM
we got played, but whats scary is that once they get rolling no one will be able to stop them
11/23/2009 12:56:28 AM
scary in the sense that every other country is scared of us
11/23/2009 12:59:49 AM
i dont think countries are scared of us, we are a source of opportunity for them, china will be too but what else comes with it is what scares meyes we also do our share of bullying but im sure china will take that to a whole new level
11/23/2009 1:13:48 AM
China plans on the long term and extreme long term. Their culture predates the west. Nothing you guys need to worry your pretty little heads with. Just concentrate one what public gaff Barack HUSSIEN Obama committed recently and rant about that.
11/23/2009 3:52:52 AM
While I'm sure they love to believe that is true, I have seen nothing to convince me that today's Chinese meet that stereotype. Their entire financial system seems designed to destroy capital. The Chinese government is in a race to sacrifice long term economic viability for short term economic growth faster than modernization boosts productivity. Some day, the productivity will not be there, and China will collapse into anarchy. I guess their plan is to have sufficient foreign reserves to bail themselves out of that coming catastrophe, but it assumes the reserves will be worth something at that time, which I am sure they will, but it seems shortsighted for them to make their own survival dependent (but not sufficient) upon our survival.
11/23/2009 9:34:13 AM
Fuck China. They (corporations, govt) are pernicious. They don't give a shit about human life, Chinese life or otherwise.Oh wait, most government and corporations of most countries are the same, just differing degrees.
11/23/2009 12:56:18 PM
The chinese have taken the polluting and destruction of the environment to a whole new level.
11/23/2009 1:17:43 PM
11/23/2009 1:56:48 PM
Your #1 is not possible. The Chinese people would need to fight a decade long civil war before suffering the dissolution of the empire.
11/23/2009 2:07:34 PM
11/23/2009 2:12:26 PM
^^I suspect that the same was said about the Soviet Union twenty-five years ago. That outcome may be the result of civil war, but I'd hesitate to say that it's necessary.^So? The United States has knowledge of the consequences of its current environmental policies, and how often do our actions reflect that policy? Either they don't believe the information is true, or they'd rather get rich than protect the environment -- both of which can currently be said about much of America.If we'd been on part with China in terms of industrialization fifty, sixty years ago, we'd be working like mad bastards to catch up with the world, and we'd sing "Fuck the Earth" while we did it. You don't really start giving a shit about the environment until you reach a certain level of development where you can afford to.
11/23/2009 2:26:47 PM
There's a difference between when you KNOW the consequences. I wasn't around 100 years ago, but I'm pretty sure nobody had a clue what caused most cancers. You don't see US industries dumping heavy metal waste into drinking water supplies for nearby villages Now if you want to argue that what the US industries did 130 years ago with their level of knowledge = what the Chinese are doing today with 130 years of more scientific and medical knowledge, then by all means carry on.
11/23/2009 2:38:45 PM
11/23/2009 2:47:47 PM
11/23/2009 2:50:47 PM
^^green energy development huh? lmao
11/23/2009 3:46:13 PM
11/23/2009 4:06:48 PM
ah, if only we could go back to those harsh winters /global warmist
11/23/2009 4:09:52 PM
As the Chinese economy expands, the demands of the public are going to shift from simple raw economic growth to public goods. They're going to start demanding better roads, clean water, health care, social safety nets, and good governance. The real challenge is whether or not the current government can deliver on these needs. They're trying to retool to address these demands, but it is a real question whether or not they'll be able to meet them.China also faces their own equivalent of the baby boom which will add to the demand of public goods to serve old people.I don't think democratization will become a big issue until there is a general feeling amongst the public that the current system is no longer able to address their needs. Even then, it'll more likely be limited democracy at a local level than the traditional liberal democracy that we think of in the West. On paper, the Chinese system is capable of delivering some of this, but its a question of whether they can transform the political culture to accept it.I don't predict any sort of violent breakup or collapse of the PRC. What we'll probably see is the current system muddling through at least for the next decade or two. I'm not going to even try to predict beyond that given how dynamic the situation over there is right now.In some sense, the Chinese government is racing against the clock right now to build as much as they can while they still have an advantage. They must know that their manipulation of the currency is unsustainable in the long run, and they're trying to move up the economic ladder far enough where they can let their currency float while minimizing the disruptions it will cause to the system. Easier said than done of course.
11/23/2009 4:11:45 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJ4K0hHin9s
11/23/2009 4:33:12 PM
11/24/2009 12:31:01 AM
11/24/2009 11:18:01 AM
11/24/2009 2:23:47 PM
^ quite right, I failed to qualify my statements sufficiently. Tibet and a few other principalities certainly qualify as potential breakaways for China, just as Hawaii counts as a possible breakaway for America. But collectively they represent a tiny fraction of China's territory and people, just as Hawaii does for America. Compare that to the Soviet Union, whose breakaways represented more than half the soviet population.
11/28/2009 8:27:32 PM
11/28/2009 10:17:01 PM
11/29/2009 2:55:10 AM
11/29/2009 3:04:45 AM
#3 won't do it initially. In the long term, though, it can only lead to one of the others.
11/29/2009 3:07:08 AM
^what about a continual loop of #3's? or am i being too cynical?
11/29/2009 3:07:57 AM
In the long view I don't think that authoritarianism can balance on the very sharp edge of a society with prosperity and access to information.
11/29/2009 3:10:42 AM
by that point i'd think they had already won. in the long scheme of things.
11/29/2009 3:25:28 AM
I am pointing out a difference of scale. You seem incapable of comprehending the difference between Hawaii breaking away and the entire south breaking away as in the Civil War. America imports much of our oil and gas from Canada. Similarly, China already imports a large chunk of its coal from Australia. Do you suggest upon independence they would opt to starve rather than sell coal to their former masters?
11/29/2009 9:16:41 AM
LoneSnark, this is what I originally said and what you originally disagreed with:
11/29/2009 1:55:57 PM
Interesting audio bit on growing China - Mideast ties:
12/15/2009 7:35:12 PM
It's a good article and shows the potential challenges facing nations that do business with China. Unlike when they dealt with Western nations which usually try to flood third world states high end goods and services (leading to the complaint that the West is trying to keep them down, relegating them to cheap labor and material extraction), the Chinese pose just as dangerous a challenge by flooding their markets with cheap goods and wiping out their low end manufacturing (and thus relegating them to just material extraction). Take a look at the sort of aid that Chinese give to third world nations: they may build a bridge and highway, but they do so with Chinese workers using Chinese manufactured goods instead of local workers and locally produced goods.Interestingly, this provides a different angle of pressure on the Chinese to let their currency float as poorer nations trying to industrialize are essentially blocked out by heavily subsidized Chinese goods.Still, as long as it gives these third world nations an alternative to traditional Western states and their tendencies to demand conditions (both good and bad) with their funds, these governments will go along with it.
12/16/2009 1:28:42 PM
Not that relevant, but doesn't warrant another thread:
1/21/2010 3:43:53 PM
China has system to detect vulgar KaraokeDecember 26th, 2009
1/22/2010 4:15:04 AM
its all fun and games until someone busts out some vulgar karaoke
1/22/2010 11:29:30 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmevO2V2JxA
1/22/2010 3:26:53 PM
China Says U.S. Criticism of Its Internet Policy Harms Ties January 22, 2010
1/22/2010 4:16:39 PM
'Let The West Get Used To A Tough China'
2/4/2010 8:56:52 PM
This is where sanctions get us. Sanctioned.
2/4/2010 11:26:18 PM
The Chinese may have figured out that targeted sanctions could work, but the way they're going about it right now, they may accidentally trigger a trade war that will badly hurt both nations' economies. Both nations are tangled together so deeply, there's only so much they can do before bringing each other down.
2/5/2010 1:32:59 PM
http://www.spiegel.de/fotostrecke/fotostrecke-51314.html
2/18/2010 11:07:37 PM
Was listening to NPR today, and they said it right. China if they do anything to fuck us over, will end up fucking themselves over. As RedGuard said, we are too tightly linked. We borrow, buy their shit, they build and sell it to us on loans we take out from them. Thats why our govt isnt worried about the debt, they know if we fix it, China is fucked, and if China calls us out on it, they fuck themselves over. When they are fucked over, we dont have our goods and we suffer then too.
2/18/2010 11:33:13 PM
bump by request
9/26/2010 10:17:32 PM
What the hell happened this weekend about China? I had 3 old family members say the statement "We better start learning Chinese.." in conversation that had nothing to do with politics or economy... some paranoia going around I guess.
9/26/2010 10:26:25 PM
This is some fucked up shithttp://www.zerohedge.com/article/china-proudly-demolishing-buildings-completed-pursuit-great-housing-bubble-perpetual-engine
9/26/2010 10:28:24 PM