I deeply disagree with Stollers position on China and find him to be an unhinged fool on virtually every foreign policy topic.
It's absolutely rediculous that you're defending free trade in a leftist forum though, and are blatently refusing to accept the fact that that's how the problem with tik tok can very reasonably be perceived.
Huawei bans are absolutely a different thing and are much more unhinged than what's happening with tik tok. The Huawei stuff massively hurt American enterprise as the electronics industry is highly globalized and integrated. That is not the case with tik tok and banning them presents virtually no risk to currently existing American jobs.
Just so we're clear here, I'd be against blocking any foreign enterprise from operating in any other country in any case where they do not allow an equal class of such corporations from operating freely in their country. If Sweden decided to ban Twitter I'd be in support for if the US banned Spotify in retaliation.
It is literally the job of the American government to protect American jobs, yes only American jobs should matter to the American government, just as China was correct to build out their own tech platforms as to create these jobs within their own country rather than being taken advantage of by the US. For far too long, the US government has favored private capital over building up domestic enterprises, but a tik tok ban alongside aspects of the various trade wars of the past few years are good. It was a key piece of Sanders platform to end PNTR and to protect American industry in this exact way.
And as I've said before we are not talking about Huawei at all and I think what happened there was completely unhinged. American capital has played a considerable role in the financing of bytedance so any damage a tiktok ban does to them hurts the American venture capital sector anyways.
I'm sorry that I view the status quo as set by the devos types that run the world trade organization as being a fundemental threat to the advancement of working class interests. There's a reason why Xi goes to speak at davos and talks about the dangers of populism in its desire to roll back aspects of free trade.
I deeply disagree with Stollers position on China and find him to be an unhinged fool on virtually every foreign policy topic.
It's absolutely rediculous that you're defending free trade in a leftist forum though, and are blatently refusing to accept the fact that that's how the problem with tik tok can very reasonably be perceived.
Huawei bans are absolutely a different thing and are much more unhinged than what's happening with tik tok. The Huawei stuff massively hurt American enterprise as the electronics industry is highly globalized and integrated. That is not the case with tik tok and banning them presents virtually no risk to currently existing American jobs.
Just so we're clear here, I'd be against blocking any foreign enterprise from operating in any other country in any case where they do not allow an equal class of such corporations from operating freely in their country. If Sweden decided to ban Twitter I'd be in support for if the US banned Spotify in retaliation.
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It is literally the job of the American government to protect American jobs, yes only American jobs should matter to the American government, just as China was correct to build out their own tech platforms as to create these jobs within their own country rather than being taken advantage of by the US. For far too long, the US government has favored private capital over building up domestic enterprises, but a tik tok ban alongside aspects of the various trade wars of the past few years are good. It was a key piece of Sanders platform to end PNTR and to protect American industry in this exact way.
And as I've said before we are not talking about Huawei at all and I think what happened there was completely unhinged. American capital has played a considerable role in the financing of bytedance so any damage a tiktok ban does to them hurts the American venture capital sector anyways.
I'm sorry that I view the status quo as set by the devos types that run the world trade organization as being a fundemental threat to the advancement of working class interests. There's a reason why Xi goes to speak at davos and talks about the dangers of populism in its desire to roll back aspects of free trade.
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