Defend China. How is it currently socialist?

Some things to respond to (the gatcha questions):

The rapid expansion of capital, foreign and local, and the reemergence of capital accumulation as a production goal in the end of the 20th century

The existence of megacorporations, especially private megacorporations such as tencent and foxconn

the state of labor rights in the aforementioned megacorporations, and the state of labor rights in the industrial sector as a whole

The repression of marxist and leftist protest and critique of the current state of the system

The apparent lack of repression of non-leftist critique (I could easily be convinced that this is just because they're amplified by American media)

The great firewall (I could be convinced this is protectionism to avoid Western silicon valley capitalism's supremacy on the internet)

The social credit system

idk i guess talk about the Uyghurs if you want, but I don't really want that to become the entire discussion, as it has a tendency to be, so if you talk about that, don't make it the entirety of your defense or attack

and let's try to keep this relatively civil? Like, a random post and argument between some leftists on the internet isn't actually going to like, collapse china's rising economic and political power into nothing. We can't actually do shit about china, good or not, so try not to make this a flame war?

  • claz [comrade/them]
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    4 years ago

    If you investigate the convictions and reasons behind them, it reveals a false equivalency. They have a "kill pigs list" for billionaires.

    More general sources 1 2 3 4 5 (a slideshow!)

    Some specific examples: Ding Yuxin

    Wu Ying - not executed, but sentenced to death and resentenced

    Wang Zhenhua (Punishment shoulda been greater) - doing what he is convicted of in the US would meant it gets swept under the rug - Epstein, Trump 👀👀

    oop, and as I say that, Zhao Zhiyong

    Liu Han

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      • claz [comrade/them]
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        4 years ago

        The ramp-up in punishment of these elites is more or less a part of Xi's anti-corruption drive, which, if I'm correct, was in response to the corruption and rot that had been normalised in the CPC partly due to economic liberalisation and the ossification of the bureaucracy. I think characterising the punishment of these elites as being to preserve the status quo of "Chinese capitalism", given the nature of Xi's background and goals, is incorrect.

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