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Greenleaf [he/him]

@ Greenleaf @hexbear.net

Posts
20
Comments
841
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Yo I heard you like trains that go through snow…

    That’s a Union Pacific Rotary Snow Plow. 17 feet / 5.2 meters tall. 150 RPM. It’s not self-propelled and had to be pushed by 4 locomotives. It was used in Wyoming up into the 1990s to cut 14 foot / 4.25 meter wide paths through the snow.

  • This is why US politicians fought tooth and nail to get TikTok banned. Facebook, Twitter, Google, Reddit et al do whatever the government wants to do to ensure the “wrong” information doesn’t get out there. The fact that TikTok is Chinese is irrelevant, it’s that TikTok doesn’t censor the views that the government wants censored.

  • None other than President Xi himself has emphasized the role of markets and downplayed the use of “central planning” in the Chinese economy. I think the state control of the banking system works hand-in-hand with this type of central planning (where there’s an overall strategic plan developed by the state and the plan is implemented in the market sector). It’s a fascinating model that I’m trying to learn more about (just downloaded Roland Boer’s Socialism With Chinese Characteristics)

  • Yeah Netanyahu’s claims are obvious BS

  • Locked

    Jump
  • ngl blaming RFK Jr on Russia just feels kinda lazy. The dude is just a brainwormed guy who has a bunch of incoherent views largely held together by conspiracy theories, like basically most of all Americans do. He was pulling votes from Trump so Trump gave him a promise that he totally won’t renege on, so he dropped out. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar…

  • I don’t think he had to step down because of polling on his Gaza policies but I also think (respectfully) you are overthinking this. Biden was incredibly unpopular for a whole host of reasons - less popular than LBJ when he dropped out because he was unpopular. The debate performance was bad. And every time he’s spoken in public since it’s clear he is degrading fast. I can’t imagine how incoherent he will be by Election Day. I really don’t think he will live to finish out his term. Keeping him in the race would have been a certain loss, literally any other party democrat would have given them a better shot so he was forced to step down. I don’t think it’s more involved than that.

  • All US client states in the region only have the individuals at the very top - kings, some of the national bourgeoisie - who are allied with the US. The overwhelming majority of the people despise the US. Not a stable situation for an ally. The client states also have their own allegiances and enemies across the region. Those entanglements make unilateral action harder. Israel is a completely foreign entity to the region without any sort of entanglements - everyone hates them. And as you have seen over the last year, these clients have to tread very carefully with their own populations in terms of being seen openly helping the US. Israel has a population that is bloodthirsty and loves it when their military causes death and destruction in the region.

  • Thank you, I suspected that I was being far too generous to the west.

  • The Beam has fried this guy’s brain.

    (I do have a soft spot for this lib, his older novels are pretty great ngl)

  • I largely agree with you. I just finished reading Socialism Betrayed (great book, highly recommend it). That book’s thesis is that the major contributor to the collapse of the Soviet Union was the development and growth of a “second economy” - economic activity outside of official channels that could either be legal, illegal, or something in between. The growth of this second economy led to the development within the USSR of an entire social base of individuals with a material interest in seeing the overthrow of socialism. A base about which not only did the CPSU do nothing about, but actually many party members were deeply entrenched in this “second economy”. The book cites a quote from someone who stated that there was NO illicit enterprise in the USSR that would have lasted a month without support from someone in the party.

    China is not the topic of this book, but the authors do spend a page or two commenting on what is an obvious question: if this is what helped undo the Soviet Union, what does that mean for China, who has a more legal but vastly larger second economy? The authors express concern and maybe even a bit of skepticism, but not outright criticism (and keep in mind, they were writing in 2004 and in the last 20 years quite a few western Marxist have changed their views on China, like David Harvey).

    Reading between the lines, I think they are saying it could work, but what we’ll call Dengism is a very risky move. You have a massive social base in China of people who may very much like the CPC, but also very much like their ability to own a business and get rich. People who will revolt against any strong measures to curtail these markets. In the USSR, this social base saw socialism as a hindrance to their potential. In China this same social base faces no real limitations on their material advancement, so they have no reason to rock the boat.

    Long way of saying, I think “boiling the frog” is the only move the CPC can make. And actually, if that’s the move the CPC wants to make I think they will be successful. The bigger question to me is, is that actually what the CPC wants to do? Even talking about the CPC as if there is one voice is a mistake. I’m sure this is the direction Xi would like to go in, but there are also plenty of liberals in the party (IIRC the #2 in the party is a huge, unabashed lib). The party itself is very opaque when it comes to things like this, but I do think it is NOT a foregone conclusion that the dedicated Marxists in the party will win in the end. Boiling the frog I think will work but the party itself needs to be committed to that line, which I am not sure they are there yet.

  • This was the path that was open to them in 2014. Arguably, it’s the path most Ukrainians wanted. That big economic deal that Yanukovich tried to make with Putin would have kept them neutral, because they had to make a deal with someone and Putin was more interested in keeping Ukraine away from NATO than pulling them into Russia’s orbit.

    But that was unacceptable to the US and NATO. So they fanned the flames of Maidan, which in itself led to tremendous division in Ukraine. And when Ukraine was looking to make a deal to end the conflict quickly, that’s when Boris Johnson came by with either threats or lies (or both) to keep them fighting. For any Lemmy libs who may wander in here, that is why I give my critical support to Russia in this fight. In no way is some inevitable, ancient conflict between Ukraine and Russia. In fact, every time Ukraine has had a chance to pull the car over to side of the road, the US has been there to jerk the steering wheel back and step on the gas.

    Death to America.

  • He was also managing the empire before the era of neoliberalization. From the Great Depression up until the 1980s, it was generally understood and accepted among the powerful regardless of party affiliation that you have to intervene in the market. There was no interest in laissez-faire libertarian capitalist, in the US that only came about with Reagan.

  • Also ignored everyone who said “don’t go along with Elise Stefanik’s little congressional university president witch-hunt”, much less totally debase yourself in front of her. They will not see you as one of the “good ones”, they will just smell blood in the water.

  • The most far-reaching price controls in US history were initiated by noted communist Richard Nixon…

  • Incidentally this applies 100% to Israeli settlers, too.

  • It’s 100% faked.

  • Saying this as an outsider, so I can only speak to appearances, which means I may be very wrong.

    But it seems to me that China still trusts the United States way too much. It’s almost as if they can’t see why the US would be will to throw away a relationship that has been so profitable for both countries for so long. Or at least, they do not quite see the full threat that the US poses.

    It could just be that China doesn’t feel like they are in a position yet to make strong counter-moves against the US. I mean, yes, I think they do recognize this and that’s part of the rationale for the belt and road initiative, for dumping US T-bills and moving into gold, etc. But I don’t know if they realize the speed at which the US is moving.

    I really enjoy board games - those complicated ones that can take hours to play. And I usually play with a good friend of mine since we were little kids. This friend of mine is absolutely brilliant, too. And whenever we play games together, he wins almost every time. Why? Objectively, the strategies I take are usually “correct” and well thought out. I don’t think my strategies are any worse than his. However, my friend operates on another level when it comes to speed. I will have this whole machine built in my head, but I will say to myself that I still need to do X and Y to win. And then by that point, my friend will already have won.

    Maybe that’s a silly parallel to the China/US situation. While I don’t think China actually trusts the US anymore, I do hope they realize the implications of what the US is planning on doing, and realize that they may need to rapidly speed up their plans to counter.

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    I’m genuinely surprised how unpopular Israel is among under-40 y.o. conservative Americans

  • politics @hexbear.net

    If Kamala Harris becomes the nominee, the GOP is gonna try and make the fact that she “has a Marxist dad” into a big deal

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    Joe Biden has more empathy for Donald Trump than he does children in Gaza

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    Reminder to my comrades to drink plenty of water this weekend

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    The US is where Rome was at in the 5th century CE - where like every other emperor was a literal child

  • Games @hexbear.net

    Looking for a TTRPG recommendation for absolute beginners

  • videos @hexbear.net

    Contrapoints playing “The Frog Galliard” on a harpsichord

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    Criticizing the government of China is racist and sinophobic

  • memes @hexbear.net

    Garak explains the IOFs strategy

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    Without USD hegemony, American daily incomes would fall 27-57%

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    Yes, I am a single-issue voter

  • news @hexbear.net

    Photo of Palestinian woman holding her murdered 5 year old niece is the 2024 World Press Photo of the Year

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    I’ve seen way more white Americans getting mad over one man “getting away with murder” 30 years ago (OJ Simpson) than the Zionist entity murdering a bunch of children on a playground the other day

  • memes @hexbear.net

    (Through tears) “Please China, your efficient socialist economy is making our industries uncompetitive!”

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    I distinctly remember around 2005-06, I had two friends who were school teachers who bought houses

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    We should have a :powmia-cool: emoji

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    I've been trying to think of how to highlight hypocrisy over the 1932-33 Soviet famine and Gaza

  • bloomer @hexbear.net

    Comment of the day, from @ShimmeringKoi

  • memes @hexbear.net

    The only time a non-Trump GOP politician was ever funny

  • Chapotraphouse @hexbear.net

    My investment strategy is put everything Chinese index funds