https://archive.ph/jts4M

  • o_d [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    13 days ago

    All this suits the Chinese Communist Party well. Xi Jinping, China’s leader, has expressed the same ambition as the company, to overcome American sanctions with locally developed technology. The state, already Huawei’s biggest customer, also supports it in other ways. To spur the development of the semiconductor industry, it provides subsidies and invests alongside Huawei. The company and the government both own stakes in Focuslight, Everbright Photonics and Xuzhou B&C Chemical, for instance.

    But Huawei’s relationship with the state is often misunderstood. The firm is not trying to indigenise its supply chain to comply with government directives. Rather, for Huawei and many other Chinese companies, self-sufficiency has become a commercial imperative because it is their only means of survival. Its investment decisions are market driven. This separates it from sluggish state-owned enterprises, which formulate their business plans based solely on state policy.

    They don't even bother to add paragraphs between their contradictions anymore.

    • DefinitelyNotAPhone [he/him]
      ·
      13 days ago

      Their sluggish state-owned enterprises which merely build 10,000km of high speed rail in 5 years, compared to our innovate, profit-driven corporations which have laid 7km of high speed rail in 20 years.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.ml
      hexagon
      ·
      13 days ago

      I also find the whole narrative of Chinese corporations being nefariously state driven hilarious given that US literally does exact same thing with their corps.

      • o_d [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
        ·
        13 days ago

        I struggle to come up with any criticism that the west directs at China that isn't projection. The entire subsidies narrative is completely absurd. When China invests less in an industry it's "China's state capitalism can't keep up with the free market". When China invests more it's " China's unfair state capitalism is disastrous to international markets".

        • HaSch@lemmygrad.ml
          ·
          13 days ago

          If they have something we don't have, it's theft; if they know something we don't know, it's fraud; and if they do something we don't do, it's sabotage

        • ℝ𝔼𝔻 ℂ𝕆𝕃𝕆𝕊𝕊𝕌𝕊@lemmygrad.ml
          ·
          edit-2
          13 days ago

          I’m a sinoboo but I’m willing to play Devil’s Advocate:

          1 Urban versus rural divide is still harsh. The big cities look like they live in the future but a great deal of the nation still lives in underdeveloped areas in the countryside.

          2 While a lot better than it used to be, air pollution can still be rather bad.

          3 Population growth is still too low.

          4 Too much of the new national wealth is tied up in real estate (which is a shitty industry for the health of a nation).

          5 While it’s to prevent CIA led coups, separatist movements and/or color revolutions… the security state is rather stifling and civil rights are cast aside.

          6 Poor soft power projection since the arts where largely abandoned by society with the Dengist government. They lack “anime”, or “Kpop” to push their narrative into the world. Lately the CPC has been promoting more domestically produced movies but they really need to step up their game.

          7 Their LGBTQ+ rights are garbage, and honestly it’s inexcusable.

          • ☭CommieWolf☆@lemmygrad.ml
            ·
            12 days ago

            "Poor soft power projection" is just revealed a most blatantly western lens when it comes to assessing a nation's culture. The idea of "soft power" as if its a good thing only works if you see your own cultural artforms and media to be superior to those of others, and subsequently end up supplanting that of a "weaker" culture. US "soft power" only serves to stifle local culture by overshadowing it with foreign US media and norms, and in some cases eradicating the interest and cultural norms of a people (particularly in the youth). Most Europeans all follow the same fashion, watch the same films and listen to the same music, much of which comes from the US, and this is supposedly a good thing? I'd say that regardless of who's doing it, this sort of "power projection" isn't something to yearn for.

          • o_d [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
            ·
            12 days ago

            I'm not sure if this was done on purpose, but you've just echoed the same criticisms that the western msm always directs at China. Each and every one of these examples is projection, whether or not you agree that China deserves the criticism.

            1. Take a drive through rural USA or Canada. I think that you'll find China isn't the only one struggling with this. China has prioritized equal development while the west continues to let its rural towns and villages fall further into poverty and disrepair.
            2. China used to have several cities in the top 10 for the worst air quality. Now they have none. China leads the world in renewable energy research, development, and deployment. The USA has placed large tariffs on Chinese made EVs and renewable equipment. The USA is doing its best to ensure our demise through climate change.
            3. Why is this a problem? All countries experience slowed population growth or even decline as they become more developed. What's so different about China that they can't simply increase immigration like other developed nations? What is actually different is that their economic system will allow them to transition low skill, manual labor industries to automation without increased unemployment that decimates the working class.
            4. This problem has been solved. The CPC popped the bubble. Some developers that didn't heed the warning went bankrupt. The state has said that they will fund purchasing the finished, unsold units and use it for affordable housing.
            5. The west's three letter agencies are the most invasive on the planet with their massive web of data collection and backdoors. The USA holds the largest population of prisoners on the planet while having about 20% of China's population.
            6. This one feels a bit out of place since it's not really something that the west's msm mentions. As a supporter of China, I do wish that they would do more in this area, but their non interventionist policy is likely an important factor in their ability to challenge western hegemony today. The arts, while important, isn't something that people have the time to care about when living in extreme poverty. It makes sense that they prioritized economic development above this. Meanwhile, the west is doing its best to replace artists with LLMs and generative AI.
            7. In what way? Because they don't have legalized gay marriage? It's silly to project the values of a society that has been at the top in terms of economic development on a society that has just reached the middle to high stage. As Marxist, we have to remember that everything is a process. I'm certain that as China develops, so will their culture, and as a result, so will their policy on LGBTQ+ rights. However, in the meantime, we should also understand that just because state policy may not take LGBTQ+ rights into consideration much at this time, that doesn't mean that discrimination against this group is a massive problem. Sure, Obama/SCOTUS legalized gay marriage (yes it was that recent), but there are still those in the country who will refuse service to members of the community and the state has completely politicized the issue using the msm to promote a culture war.