Is there anywhere worth living anymore?

  • Corbyn [none/use name]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Education seems like the West. Private’s generally higher quality; state varies, there are excellent state schools (where Party kids go) and less-excellent ones.

    Healthcare overall is efficient and pretty cheap. Quality varies. You’ll probably get better treatment if you go private, but I trust public for little things.

    Sounds worse and more privatised than the education and healthcare system of many European countries. Sad :(

      • Corbyn [none/use name]
        ·
        4 years ago

        Well, I hope that works out. I am not the most positive person when it comes to actually reducing privatisation. Would be great for the Chinese, and my optimism.

    • keki_ya [none/use name]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Some parts of China’s economy are dystopian and hyper-neoliberal, and some parts are fairly left-wing and vestiges from the Mao era. It’s a massive economy with a million different industries, and time will tell if the CPC takes a hold of them, or continues to privatize

    • Veegie2600 [none/use name]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Definately not great, but somewhat unsurpsing considering European countries grew to fund such expansive welfare states from the massives proceeds of Imperialism, a "luxuary" which China does not really posses. Whatever our objectives are: ending commodity production, free healthcare, etc., they all are much harder to accomplish when you arent sucking insane amounts of wealth from the rest of the world. I hate that America has been one of the most bloodthirty empires in world history, but i like that this had the unintended consequence of preparing the productive forces and relations of production for an eventual transition to Socialism. But the same is not yet true for China, essentialy what I am saying is America could hit the big red communism button but China cant yet; but hell a lot of places cant even hit the SocDem button because of not only Imperialism but simply the desires of global financial markets, and this rings true for China to an extent too.