arthwollipot
Limerick Purist
Certainly Plato's Utopia does not purport to describe an achievable society.And can't or doesn't read.
In fact I just realised that Utopia is simply Plato's Cave applied to politics and culture. Huh. Go me.
Certainly Plato's Utopia does not purport to describe an achievable society.And can't or doesn't read.
China thinks in decades or centuries, not weeks and months the way the west does.
Ironically, TGZ himself has already acknowledged that command economies cold suck at responding to market lag - something that free market capitalism handles quite well by comparison.
China's nuclear reactor buildout isn't so much an achievement on their part but a failure on ours. We have the industrial capacity to build reactors. We CHOOSE not to for political, not technical, reasons. And their solar/wind buildout is going to turn out to be a waste of money, just like their high speed rail was.
I think you've missed the point - China isn't interested in having carriers like America's.
America's are there to project power around the world; China's military focus is near China and they already have [fairly] indestrucible bases in the SC Sea that are much more useful than any carrier. Their carriers are for show for their 3rd world pals who vote with them on economic/geopolitical fora.
If you look at what's happening in the south Pacific, China & US are involved in a battle for friends and China's pulling them in nicely. One of the island groups changed allegiance just the other day, and they don't have any interest in what kind of carrier either side has. When it ties up in port and the crew start spending money, the locals won't care if it's loaded with F35s or Fairey Swordfishes.
Thinking China is imperialistic in the way America is is an error. China is aggressive close to home and uses renminbi diplomacy elsewhere. I'm not aware of any Chinese troop involvement in Africa or the ME right now, and I'm sure there aren't because it's a stupid move. They've quietly put a base in Djibouti and that's all at the moment, more will come but not through force - it's one thing Wolfman used to note: China thinks in decades or centuries, not weeks and months the way the west does.
Actually, China's foreign policy is a near complete bust. Yes they've picked up a few of the small island nations in the south Pacific as (very temporary) allies, but they've also alienated every significant country in the south-east Asian and Pacific regions. They picked up Djibouti on the belt and road initiative but nobody else, largely because the scheme was more geared towards further enriching their own billionaires than enhancing diplomatic ties, so much so that all their wanted pickups in the Sahel decided to do deals with Wagner instead, which amounted to little more than signing over significant national assets for the illusion of protection.
China's international policy is so successful they are now deepening ties with Ruzzia, a state they distanced themselves from two years ago after realising that it is a failed state.
This has been conventional wisdom for decades, but it isn’t actually true.

I think you got it wrong.
Capitalism is extremely reluctant to change, because once you have a monopoly, you can stop innovating.
That is because Capital will always prefer a calculable win over a gamble.
It takes State Investment to do really risky or long-term projects.
One look at US Pharma should prove this beyond any doubt.
We're not talking about market forces here, China is building things for political reasons, not because they make economic sense.Ironically, TGZ himself has already acknowledged that command economies cold suck at responding to market lag - something that free market capitalism handles quite well by comparison.
I think you are laboring under the misapprehension that I think Marxism the a System of Government.
Yes, all command economies suffer from lag, and the more restrictive they are the more they do so.
On the other hand, they are way less wasteful than pure market economies and can execute large scale projects faster and cheaper than pure market systems.
In short: it's unlikely that 17th Century entrepreneurs have figured out the perfect way to run an economy for all times. Neither has a 19th century philosopher.
Is is just sad and scary that we have come to the point, as Frederic Jameson said,
"It's easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism"
this is extremely dangerous and, objectively, bad for most humans.
never mind the fact that we are not living in a capitalist system, but in a system of Capital Welfare, Laissez-faire capitalism for those without capital.
Capitalism is always a system of Privilege and Classism, as an entire set of the legal system has to be set aside for a selected group with outsized power and influence.
not in evidence.
with almost no exception, no Western State has managed to build any new reactors in decades that were not decades behind schedule and orders of magnitude over budget.
We can NOT build nuclear reactors, unless the State takes all the costs and risks - there are no investors for it.
and when it comes to renewables, its certainly not a waste when you build up production capacity for export - which is exactly what China has done and the US has completely failed to do.
Because Capitalism didn't want it.
So absurd I wonder why I'm bothering answering.
China has lifted nearly a billion people from poverty, growing their economy to number 2 in the world
and poised to take over the number one spot in the next 20 years.
Of course they've made some errors along the way,
but their national debt is roughly equivalent to the amount of US debt they own, so the idea that their economy is a bust is beyond laughable.
Still, it's nice of you to show your total understanding of economics. The idea of an American laughing about anyone else's high-speed rail is a nice touch, too.
And the presence China has in Africa is decades ahead of anything the West will be able to do.
The only hope, really that the EU/US block has is for China to become super unpopular and thus push countries into the western embrace.
As their debt traps begin to spring, that may very well happen. They’re already pushing Southeast Asia into the American camp with their island adventures.
Plus, it won’t matter in the long run. China is a dying country, no amount of diplomacy will change that. Every year that passes, their work force gets smaller, their population older. They have committed national suicide.
The end goal of the CCP is not really to better the condition of the people of China, or to promote marxism, or even communism, it is to keep the CCP in power, forever.
That is their most important and overriding consideration.
They manage to combine kneejerk reactions with great ideological inertia
Plus the idea that China is some kind of green pioneer is just rubbish. Don't buy into the facade that modern China presents, again its a myth. It approved 2 new coal power stations PER WEEK all through most of 2023.
It is easily the largest polluter in the world. Its air pollution is 6 times higher than WHO standards.
If you didn't know, the property market is 25% of the Chinese GDP, and its going down the toilet fast.
There is far more reason to be pessimistic about China than to be optimistic. Don't believe the myths or the hype.
I can't be the only one creeped out by the "a Yugo accelerating from 0 to 60 is competitive with a BMW cruising at 120, because acceleration" rationale.
Weak metaphor is weak.
Better to have a cheap car that everyone can afford and gets them out of misery quick than an expensive car hardly anyone can afford.
Weak metaphor is weak.
Better to have a cheap car that everyone can afford and gets them out of misery quick than an expensive car hardly anyone can afford.
Not going to happen. If you think it is, you haven’t been paying attention to demographics.
You don’t understand what’s happened in the real estate market there, do you?
What is it with people who treat high speed rail like it’s holy? Like running at a massive loss doesn’t mean anything?
If that's where the metaphor were going, sure.
But TA isn't saying that the Chinese economy is doing well for its people, even though it's not on the same level as the American economy. He's saying that the Chinese economy is on track to outpace the American economy, because it's currently building more things faster than the American economy is.
You're making less sense than usual.
While people continue to buy Chinese goods, their economy will overtake yours.
Let's look at China/US trade, shall we?
Why? Is China the only country we trade with? No, it isn't. Our trade balance with only China doesn't say much of anything. For example, China imports more from Australia than Australia imports from China. So does that mean Australia is ahead of China? Does that mean Australia is ahead of the USA? That would be a naive way to look at it, since Australia imports more from the USA than the USA imports from Australia.