• HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 months ago

    “Us versus them” politics are asking for a complete washout on the international stage.

    In the end, when the shit hits the fan, are you going to align yourself with the country that makes All the Things, or the one that can’t even pass a budget? COVID proved that it wasn’t just good-times, low-stakes gridlock: even existential crises weren’t enough to get America to cooperate and discipline herself.

    If real life were a survival movie, we’d be getting to the scene where the secondary characters decide whether to follow Grandpa Sticky, who’s in the midst of full-blown dementia and was at best a vaguely racist philosophy professor when lucid, or the 22-year-old trained soldier with a fully stocked supply line. And we’d be throwing popcorn at the screen and deriding how terrible the writing is.

      • bigboopballs [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        2 months ago

        reading Lenin’s Imperialism

        is that Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism? or Imperialism and the Split in Socialism? it’s about time I start reading these things

        • vovchik_ilich [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          2 months ago

          I’m talking about the former. It was written during WW1 and makes an analysis of the reasons why WW1 happened and why it’s an imperialist war that took place as a consequence of the capitalists within the different countries fighting for supremacy. I don’t expect the Chinese government to encourage militarism and conflict, but I do expect that from the US government, and I can’t say I feel like the US will give away its hegemony in the world stage without a “tantrum” first.

  • wombat [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    the maoist uprising against the landlords was the largest and most comprehensive proletarian revolution in history, and led to almost totally-equal redistribution of land among the peasantry

      • SkingradGuard [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        2 months ago

        From the article:

        Approved legislation would also block scientific cooperation with China, while banning the sale of US farmland to nationals of China, Russia, Iran, and the DPRK (North Korea).

        From the bill summary:

        “Science and Technology Agreement Enhanced Congressional Notification Act of 2023

        This bill requires the Department of State to notify Congress regarding science and technology agreements with China. Any existing agreement is revoked unless the State Department notifies Congress regarding the agreement no later than 60 days after enactment of this bill. The State Department must notify Congress 30 days prior to entering, renewing, or extending any science and technology agreement with China. A notification shall contain (1) the full text of the agreement, (2) a written justification for the agreement, (3) an assessment of the risks and potential effects of the agreement, and (4) a detailed justification for how the State Department intends to address human rights concerns arising from the agreement’s scientific and technology collaboration.„

        They’re essentially making any government-related researchers jump through hoops to enable any form co-operation and collaboration.

        This will significantly drop the amount of scientific collaboration between the two nations. Because even if you are not part of any state-wide project, this paranoia will still spill over into many institutions, especially because of the media circus surrounding current China -USA relations.

      • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        2 months ago

        This smacks of someone who never actually interacts with the working class in a political/organizing sense. Americans are, in fact, the most propagandized people on earth, swarmed with an endless array of anti-communist, pro-colonial lies from every possible institutional and media direction.

          • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            2 months ago

            Yeah obviously there’s a substantial section of the US “working class” who genuinely fits the description and material interest of labor aristocracy. But conditions for the working class in the US are genuinely quite bad in most instances. Propaganda instead of education, unhealthy food, the horror wrought by car culture, a massive internally colonized racial underclass, huge homelessness, medical and student debt, terrible housing quality for a terrible cost. There’s no widespread redistribution of imperial plunder except in the form of pure quantity. Americans - even most poor ones - are flooded with mountains of cheap garbage that actively worsens their quality of life. They are propagandized to being quantity of stuff = quality of life, but we know that’s bullshit, and so does a growing number of people.

            Things suck ass here. Most Americans will be better off under post-imperial socialism in large part because they will have less stuff. And then they get all the benefits of international solidarity, actual democratic systems, and a halfway decent sense of social responsibility towards each other.

            • blobjim [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              2 months ago

              I think even people who are part of the US “underclass” in a lot of cases have a quality of life better than most non-labor-aristocrats in the Global South. Hence why people migrate here. People go through hell even to work undocumented in the US.

              You’re not going to convince anyone to “support socialism” by saying “your quality of life will increase”. Spoiler: it won’t. People won’t care about “all the benefits of international solidarity” because equal distribution of wealth would make them poorer.

              You don’t grow a radical left-wing movement in the US by trying to sell people on their personal quality of life increasing. We already have organizations like the AFL-CIO who’s goal is trading quality of life in the global south for quality of life for people in the imperial core. All it takes is right-wing spokespeople to say “hey we’ll get you a bigger paycheck if we just screw these Venezuelans” and workers in the imperial core are like “oh sweet lets help them bring democracy to Venezuela and make ourselves richer too this is great there’s no downsides and no I don’t need the details!”

              We have like 100-500 years of history to show us that people in white supremacist countries will drop any kind of radical politics or international solidarity in a heartbeat in exchange for quality of life increases.

              The only way you’re getting the support of a majority of Americans for socialism is to continue to sell out the global south at the same time.

              • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                2 months ago

                I think even people who are part of the US “underclass” in a lot of cases have a quality of life better than most non-labor-aristocrats in the Global South.

                And yet it’s still extremely fucking bad. Maybe you aren’t American, I don’t know, but conditions here are not good. When the US destroys another country, it benefits American capitalists and a substantial slice of the proletariat (I think that’s a big group - probably like half of white people). The rest of us don’t get shit but plastic.

                As to your overall point: again, you’re just obviously not someone who actually organizes with real working class Americans. You’re assuming that everyone is on the propaganda game - so who is it for? Why do we do this enormous, elaborate system of propagandistic education and the world’s largest media apparatus if everyone is consciously on board? It doesn’t make any sense. Why on earth would capitalists poor massive resources into convincing everyone of a complicated series of lies if everyone as a unit agrees with and consciously supports the truth of imperialism? Why fund the propaganda campaign this post is about? Very unserious world view to think this is a coincidence.

                It also kinda looks like you think the US is a democracy, which is extremely strange.

                • blobjim [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  2 months ago

                  People (who benefit from imperialism) want a casus belli for their hatred and “authoriarian foreign rulers” and every other piece of propaganda gives them that.

                  I remember an article around when the Bolivia coup happened that mentioned that some indigenous people who had supported MAS and were beneficiaries of its economic policies to the point that they increased their financial class, had actually started supporting the right-wingers against MAS, who were using the usual talking points about unearned handouts or whatever.

                  I think there are lots of people who won’t visibly support awful politics until they’re given encouragement by the ruling class and shown in a “wink-wink” way that they should. A lot of anti-China or anti-anything propaganda does mention how imperialism benefits Americans (our “way of life” under attack, “taking American jobs”, violent criminals, “welfare handouts” to immigrants, other fascist type stuff). I think the propaganda that doesn’t tie in to people’s selfishness may actually be less effective. Really the propaganda seems to try to emphasize the worst in people.

                  People who imperialism doesn’t benefit may parrot those talking points but maybe they’re also the least attached to them, and them believing them has the least effect. Someone working in the service industry doesn’t affect whether imperialism or anything else goes as planned, someone working for a weapon manufacturer does.

                  It wasn’t jews in Nazi Germany that anti-Jewish propaganda was directed at.

  • peeonyou [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    right on track for the 2025 war… i was starting to wonder if they were going to delay it or something because the amount of ‘rah-rah Taiwan’ has been rather low lately

      • peeonyou [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        2 months ago

        totally… i just expect a lot more “Taiwan is America!” rah-rah first… just like the whole anti-semite bullshit on TV all of last summer before the single attack on an Israeli military base that somehow excuses them to spend a year bombing and slaughtering any Palestinian they see, and now Lebanese as well.

  • hypercracker@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    libs will see agencies get twice the annual budget of CNN to dedicate solely to fostering anti-Chinese sentiment and think they don’t have a propagandized view of the world

  • FeelThePower@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    taiwanese semiconductors and their consequences have been a disaster for the generation that’s about to be sent to die over them

    • PointAndClique [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      2 months ago

      千里之行,始于足下

      The hardest part is starting, because it’s hard to know where to begin (Grammar? Pronunciation? Characters?)

      I would say just pick one and run with it, and you’ll naturally move into the other areas as you need.

      So for example if you start by learning pinyin (the romanisation of the pronunciation), you’ll learn about how they represent tones, and then there may be a section about how the characters give ‘clues’ on how to pronounce them (the common example is 妈(吗)麻马骂 mā, má, ma3, mà) and before you know it you’ve learnt about radicals + components. Honestly it’s a good place to start.

      The first few months are going to be oversimplified in any case so it’s largely a matter of getting the ball rolling, and you may have to ‘unlearn’ some things down the track* these may be deliberately glossed over so you don’t get discouraged.

      Self study (free):

      • Chinese grammar wiki to learn the structure
      • italki for language partners online
      • WeChat to add them if they’re actually cool and follow articles/content creators
      • meetup or other event platforms to find IRL language practice events
      • Anki to learn the first 250/500/1000 most basic characters by sight †

      You should aim to learn with traditional materials until you get to HSK3 , then you’ll have more of a foundation for self-directed learning.

      If you can afford it, getting a 1:1 online tutor, and trying out a few tutors until you find someone you gel with can be the difference between foundering around hopelessly and actually achieving something in your first year of study. I can’t share the platforms I used (one no longer exists, the other is too niche/local). Some may be students of Teaching Chinese as an Acquired Language and want to build up experience, so they’ll have good formal teaching techniques, others may just be looking for some money on the side and could offer things like ‘conversation class’ which could be more or less your speed depending on your budget/learning preferences.

      If you want to practise hand writing, you can use manual spaced repetition:

      • use a 田 block notebook to practise writing out the characters using a ‘guess and check’ method (write the correct character on one side with the pinykn then cover up either the character or the pinyin. Go down the list trying to write each character or meaning from memory and then when you get to the end of the column, compare and revise. Write in missing characters/strokes/components/definition with a red pen, circle the mistakes and then continue. If you get a character right three times in a row, you can put it aside and add a new one in its place. After one week, revise all the ones you successfully got three times. After one month do the same for all that month. I used this method before my HSK exam

      I did some free online tutoring for beginner students, and I’ll have a look for them and if I find them and can anonymise it, I’ll try to share here if you’re interested.

      `* (e.g. the b sound in pinyin isn’t actually the same as an English b, it’s an unaspirated p, the tongue placement for some consonants is different too, but honestly it’s no biggie, e.g. there are more than four tones because there’s neutral tone and sandhi where tones merge, e.g. not all characters are 型声 component sound characters)

      † I say characters not words, because the aim here isn’t to learn 250/500/1000 words but the characters that make up words. Your vocabulary will be much larger because many Chinese words are made up of characters e.g. 手 shou hand + 机 ji machine = shouji cellphone/mobile phone. 飞 fei fly + 机 ji machine = aeroplane. If your approach were to treat shouji and feiji as discrete words, you’d miss out on recognising ji as the key for learning ‘machine’. Your deck should have words and their break down into characters and focus on combinations of the most commonly used 250/500/1000 to facilitate those ‘ah ha’ moments. It’s not quite exponential but as you learn more characters there’s gunna be more instances where you can guess the meaning of new words just by looking at what their components are.

      Don’t try to use anki to learn phrases, it’s disingenuous because you learn to parrot sentences in their entirety without really digesting them i.e. imo it’s better to learn 你 ni you + 去 qu go + 哪里 nali where rather than 你去哪里 ‘where are you going’?

        • PointAndClique [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          2 months ago

          I’m sorry it couldn’t be more like a study guide, it’s more just an assembly of thoughts I threw together on the bus ride this morning. I think my main takeaway for self learning is just start somewhere, because if you spend too long trying to find the perfect one-stop-shop starting point 1) you’ll never find it and 2) you’re wasting useful time. If you spend that time following a thread for a month or so, even if you need to slightly course correct down the line, you’ll be miles ahead of the people who tried to optimise their first step.