• pooh [she/her, love/loves]
    ·
    1 year ago

    China didn't seem very "totalitarian" when I was there, unless the definition of "totalitarian" includes friendly people and cute pandas. The police there are rarely seen (mostly in areas with large crowds), don't even carry guns, and have a helpful and polite attitude, unlike US cops who use their position as an excuse to bully people. Also Winnie the Pooh merchandise is 100% legal there (I have photos if you don't believe me), people can freely talk about politics and complain about the government without being taken away by secret police, and ethnic and religious minorities appear to be able to display their religion and culture freely. There IS ethnic discrimination to be clear (at least from what I've read and was told), which deserves to be criticized, but western countries really have no ground to stand on in this regard. They do have things like more cameras in public, but this is also not something unique to China (the UK is an example). It's also likely that the government has access to certain commonly used apps, like WeChat, but again this isn't really any different from western countries including the US, where the government simply buys your personal data from third parties without your knowledge. Overall, I'd say I felt the government in was China LESS threatening than the US (especially US police), but this is based on a limited window of being there for 3 weeks as a foreigner, so take it with a grain of salt.

    • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      1 year ago

      Yeah, but also, who can you really trust? Your own personal experiences? Or the US media/some white supremacist on youtube telling you how totalitarian it all is?

      Clearly, they just blasted you with the commie mind control brainwash ray while you were there so you're now forced to say crazy things like "China is a normal country really."

      • pooh [she/her, love/loves]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        It was mostly a pretty normal country. If you want to know about a truly scary thing I saw over there, though...

        spoiler

        KFC in China has a chicken taco. Like, not a taco with chicken in it, but a taco made from a huge slab fried chicken folded over. I'm vegetarian so I didn't try it, but it looked like some of the most out of control fast food I'd ever seen.

        • TreadOnMe [none/use name]
          ·
          1 year ago

          We have to stop China. Their fast food technology is going to surpass ours soon if we don't stop it.

        • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
          ·
          1 year ago

          Sounds like the "double down"

          Show

          Borger, but with fried chicken instead of bread. Either proof that God doesn't exist, or proof of his infinite mercy, as nothing less than infinite mercy could allow such a thing to exist.

          • Tachanka [comrade/them]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Either proof that God doesn't exist, or proof of his infinite mercy, as nothing less than infinite mercy could allow such a thing to exist.

            lmfao. gonna call this "Damarcus's Paradox"

          • aaaaaaadjsf [he/him, comrade/them]
            ·
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            This double down burger used to be popular in South Africa along with the KFC winter bowl, which was a mix of KFC crumbed chicken strips, mash, gravy, corn and cheese. Sadly KFC no longer carries those meals anymore.

    • PeeOnYou [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      1 year ago

      the US gov't definitely doesn't buy your data, they slurp up every electronic signal they can get and store it all in their yottabyte complex in Utah they've been siphoning off internet traffic from fiber cables at ISPs since fiber became a thing

      • emizeko [they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        they do both

        https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/us-government-buys-data-americans-little-oversight-report-finds-rcna89035

        https://www.vox.com/technology/2023/6/16/23762403/data-odni-report-wyden

        https://www.wired.com/story/ndaa-2023-davidson-jacobs-fourth-amendment/

      • pooh [she/her, love/loves]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Yeah, all of that too. The US also has 25% of the world's prisoners despite being only 5% of the world population. That sure looks like a police state to me.

      • pooh [she/her, love/loves]
        ·
        1 year ago

        I wasn't there for tourism and spent a decent amount of time with Chinese nationals. My views on this are also from speaking with people who lived there, but you are right that my own experience of it was fairly limited.

        • ElHexo
          ·
          edit-2
          3 months ago

          deleted by creator

          • TreadOnMe [none/use name]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Huge claims, new account, and not a single link. Yeah, I smell anecdotal bullshit time.

            • oregoncom [he/him]
              ·
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              Sounds like bitter sexpat to me.

              Edit: lmao this coomer freak literally went around asking for "porn instances" https://lemmy.eus/post/172123?scrollToComments=true

              Shills for NFTs, Check. Also confidently incorrect about how they work lmao. https://lemmy.ml/comment/2707218

              Inability to learn to Chinese renders him incapable of doing basic tasks while in China, blames it on phones while even other expats prove him wrong. https://lemmy.ml/comment/2690720

              Admits many Taiwanese consider themselves Chinese but decides some random sexpat knows better. https://lemmy.ml/comment/2483288

              Thinks Chinese people can't write "native level English" https://lemmy.ml/comment/1174241

              After having been kicked out of one Asian country, has decided to be a parasite in another one where they bitch about every minor detail. https://lemmy.ml/post/1648171?scrollToComments=true

              Weird insecurity about being unable to learn Chinese leads to him accusing random Chinese people of not being able to read. Common sexpat trait. https://lemmy.ml/comment/1186287

          • KarlBarqs [he/him, they/them]
            ·
            1 year ago

            All of this is stuff I learned, witnessed or experienced as a reporter working for state media.

            They weren't surveilling the people and controlling them, they were keeping an eye on a foreign propaganda agent.

          • CannotSleep420@lemmygrad.ml
            hexagon
            ·
            1 year ago

            Some guys on the lemmy.ml instance try to pretend China isn’t just North Korea with positive cash flow.

            The DPRK is an amazing country, so that is a compliment.

          • MolotovHalfEmpty [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            I'm not going to lie, aside from the hyperbolic tone of it, most of this sounds pretty ordinary to me, with just a few points that don't seem to match the evidence.

            All housing is designed to be a prison, locking in entire neighborhoods at the snap of a finger. See what happened in Shanghai last year. All apartment complexes and blocks of houses are behind gates and walls, with guards at each entrance. Older buildings are retrofitted to comply. These compounds are cheerfully called "communities".

            Every apartment building I've ever lived in has had multiple locking entrances and exits. Gated communities with guard booths are everyhwere in the US and many other countries. Many of the places I grew up had walls or high fences around them to deter crime and reduce road noise. The street ai live in now does at either end. You also say that every building and neighbourhood is like this, but there's tens of millions of people who live in different architectural styles and layouts. Plenty of larger towns and smaller city districts have medium density mixed use apartment buildings and low density houses, all accessible from the street. I have a professional curiosity in architecture and even aside from following various projects, reading about China's changing architecture etc, I watch a lot of walking videos of places I haven't been yet and while I've seen occasional instances of gated communities or walled courtyards between apartment blocks, most haven't shown what you describe. Do you have any more definitive examples of what you mean?

            All housing communities have a party member who is given an office on-site. These individuals do nice things to foster community (my local lady organized an annual musical talent show) but they also know the residents and can report on them if needed.

            Like Homeowners Associations do, or the people condo boards appoint, or 'block captains', or building ambassadors in apartment blocks I've lived in, or Community Watch captains when I was growing up in England.

            All public schoolteachers are required to maintain what we call "permanent records" of children, up thru university. All behavior is recorded. Romance and dating are officially discouraged by the CPC until after college. If a teacher knows a student is dating, it will be recorded and could harm that person later in life, especially if going for government jobs or attempting to join the party.

            Students all over the world have permanent records kept by schools and increasingly the details listed are a lot more than just grades and bad behaviour. And while 'dating' itself might not be against the rules in all schools here in the UK (it is in some) for example, a lot public displays of affection still are. I was genuinely curious about you point about the attitude towards dating and it potentially being harmful to their reputation later, so I went looking. Most anecdotal evidence, articles, and more seem to imply that dating in China is pretty similar to anywhere else, most people start dating in high school, and certainly by college. The closest I found to the idea of it doing reputational damage was the very poor way dating multiple people at once is looked upon (although that's true in lots of places too). I couldn't find any reference to the fact you dated in school harming your prospects later. If you've got some evidence for that I'd be interested in seeing it. Likewise, I read this academic paper from 2016 on attitudes to dating in China and it makes no mention of that. It does support that since the 90s Chinese dating culture has been modernising a fair bit to become more and more like it is in a lot of the 'West' although some cultural trends around family remain and young people seem to have sex for the first time slightly older (around college).

            All public school classrooms thru college level have a class monitor. This student facilitates communication and represents the students to the teacher. This student also is expected to provide information about classmates. For example, Boy A is dating Girl B. Boy C didn't study hard for his test because he went to a movie. Etc etc.

            We had / have a whole hierarchy of these in the UK too; class captains, prefects, head boy and girl etc. Some were nosy little snitches, some were chill and just student representatives. From what I hear from my many teacher friends that dynamic hasn't changed all that much, although the positions themselves are less formalised in some schools, more so in others.

            Do you want to ride the subway? You must line up even at rush hour and have your belongings scanned. This is every subway station I ever went through, in at least six cities, including remote and rural stations.

            New York and Los Angeles have not just metal detectors, but face scanners and body scanners at some metro stations. Most modern mass transit systems use extensive facial recognition programs with their cameras. Scanning your bags is different, I'll grant you that, but from what I've seen it seems pretty fast and cursory. Not nearly as intensive, lengthy, or invasive as going through an airport for example. Plenty of metro and transit systems all over the world have security or police that can and will do random bag searches and spot checks too.

            Do you want to travel to a neighboring city? You must receive official approval from the government before you can purchase train tickets. Driving? You'll need to show your papers.

            Can you link some evidence for this? Because honestly from the Chinese people I've known and everything I've ever read this sounds like total bullshit. Chinese citizens travel freely, although there can be certain restrictions or arrangements related to specific jobs where you're some kind of representative like certain civil service jobs and obviously there's still hurdles around travelling in Tibet. Everything I've read about train travel in China states that people with a Chinese credit/debit card linked to WeChat or other apps just book tickets that way, while foreigners or older people without smartphones use ticket kiosks or offices on stations. As a foreigner you may have to show your passport as ID when buying tickets, much like checking into hotels all over the world for example, but that's it. Basically every country on the planet requires you have papers (a licence) to show you can drive and you can be asked for it randomly, if stopped, at tolls etc. Again, not to mention traffic cameras and number plate readers.

            Do you want to move to another city and find work? You must apply for a permit and hope you're allowed to leave. Did you lose your job in the big city? If you don't get a new work permit soon, you'll need to return to your hometown. Your hometown is an officially designated place that you must reside in if you have nowhere else to be. Hometowns may recall residents, or so it seems to have happened to my friend.

            Do you have any evidence for this? I've never heard this. Much like elsewhere in the world you're required to keep your current residential address and other information up to date for things like legal and tax purposes. Obviously if you're a foreigner you need visas and work permits just like in other countries, but apart from some very specific potential restrictions in certain jobs and sensitive areas, all available information states they work just like anywhere else. Likewise for student visas.

          • oregoncom [he/him]
            ·
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            All apartment complexes and blocks of houses are behind gates and walls,

            As opposed to tent cities where the you people keep your underclass. Fuck off sexpat. Go bitch about being an illiterate parasite in an Asian country somewhere else. The horror, walls!

      • oregoncom [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        I'm Chinese, dipshit. I never understood the inability of you expat parasites to have any semblance of self awareness. Just because you struggle/refuse to learn our language does not mean the opposite is true. Go back to reddit.