Apparently it's really hard to get citizenship or even permanent residency in China. There are under 1500 naturalized citizens and permanent residency requires either $1.5M in investments or at least triple the average salary for your city (with some exceptions for spouses and some very high level positions).
According to the FSI learning Mandaring takes about 4 times as long as learning Spanish and 3 times as long as learning German (for native English speakers).
Sometimes I think English literacy is the closest you can get in a letter based language to a character based language.
This is because learning English requires a lot of memorization. For example in English every vowel letter has more than one sound. An egregious example is how all vowel letters can make the schwa sound. In contrast, Spanish or Indonesian language have more standardized spelling. Letters generally make predictable sounds in those languages.
Yeah I took it in high school but didn't study very hard and haven't used it since, and it's depressing how little I learned and how much less I retained.
it’d be cool if the cpc would have some kind of asylum program for theory reading westerners who want to escape capitalism, seems win win, get some more actual marxists in the party
Holy the chauvinism in this quote.
Of course the largest and most successful ML party on Earth isn't full of "actual marxists". It needs to bring in more white westerners who proclaim themselves to be "actual Marxists" to not only live there, but be involved in governance.
Never mind that Western Marxists don't understand the material or social conditions in China (or even speak Chinese). China has nothing to gain from importing objectively the least successful tendency of Marxism. If it needed more people it'd be better off inviting people from Cuba, the former the USSR, Vietnam, etc.
This is like looking at the Black Panthers or BLM and going "man, they should really invite more white people, who are the real anti-racists."
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Apparently it's really hard to get citizenship or even permanent residency in China. There are under 1500 naturalized citizens and permanent residency requires either $1.5M in investments or at least triple the average salary for your city (with some exceptions for spouses and some very high level positions).
deleted by creator
According to the FSI learning Mandaring takes about 4 times as long as learning Spanish and 3 times as long as learning German (for native English speakers).
deleted by creator
Sometimes I think English literacy is the closest you can get in a letter based language to a character based language.
This is because learning English requires a lot of memorization. For example in English every vowel letter has more than one sound. An egregious example is how all vowel letters can make the schwa sound. In contrast, Spanish or Indonesian language have more standardized spelling. Letters generally make predictable sounds in those languages.
Yeah I took it in high school but didn't study very hard and haven't used it since, and it's depressing how little I learned and how much less I retained.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Holy the chauvinism in this quote.
Of course the largest and most successful ML party on Earth isn't full of "actual marxists". It needs to bring in more white westerners who proclaim themselves to be "actual Marxists" to not only live there, but be involved in governance.
Never mind that Western Marxists don't understand the material or social conditions in China (or even speak Chinese). China has nothing to gain from importing objectively the least successful tendency of Marxism. If it needed more people it'd be better off inviting people from Cuba, the former the USSR, Vietnam, etc.
This is like looking at the Black Panthers or BLM and going "man, they should really invite more white people, who are the real anti-racists."
Fuck right off.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
What socialist countries? In China people study communism in all stages of education, from school to doctorate.