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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)T
Posts
74
Comments
235
Joined
4 yr. ago

  • The rule of law isn't an exclusively Western concept. But since you're speaking so confidently you must be an expert in the Chinese legal system.

  • I'm almost done with For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway. I've quite enjoyed reading it and was surprised by the complaints of some people online regarding Hemingway's writing style. The book indeed reads like it was literally translated from Spanish, but it was a creative choice given that the plot is set in the Spanish civil war. Hemingway navigated censorship of profanity in a humorous way by replacing slurs like "fuck" and "shit" with "muck," "obscenity" and "unprintable." Also, the protagonist's inner dialogues are insightful.

  • All of a sudden, Europe now cares about international law?

  • They've been playing this sectarian card for decades now. They only care about dividing Syria and weakening it regardless of who's in charge.

  • With boredom comes dedication and commitment. I recommend The Count of Monte Cristo. Long but very captivating.

  • Again, you're ignoring the fact that socialism is not a defined set of policies that gets to be uniformly applied in a vaccum. The trajectory even has historically varied from one socialist state to another. To attribute the accomplishments of the PRC to "capitalism" is inaccurate. What there is in China is a market economy that is predominated by public ownership and state-owned enterprises, which is nowhere close to capitalism.

    You condemn the consequences of the early Maoist policies, and then equally condemn Dengist reforms. What's the point of critiquing for the sake of critiquing, whem there is no constructive effort on your part to properly assess and understand the material and historical circumstances that have led to China's development into what it is now, only being guided by emotions and a confident lack of theory. One recent book on the matter that I recommend is Socialism with Chinese Characteristics by Roland Boer.

    China has always and will always be imperialist

    This is ahistorical and untheoretical thinking on your part. Imperialism is an advanced form of capitalism. An imperialist state is one that has saturated its domestic markets and as a consequence seeks to expand its markets and the reproduction of private capital overseas, by all means possible and most notably by force. China simply does not possess the features of imperialism. Prolewiki has a very informative article that explains the concept.

    Until now, you've only indiscriminately sprinkled terms like imperialism and capitalism and fascism without much thought in the process, and so we've reached an impasse.

    As to the Xinjiang matter, your views reflect those of the western propaganda machine. I've already mentioned above a FAQ compiled by Dessalines (yes, Lemmy's lead dev) which contains many articles and documents that may at the very least give a different perspective on this matter.

  • Why did the Chinese lose so many citizens fighting fascist just to adopt capitalism and produce more billionaires than the US this and last year while also being an obvious oligarchy. Why did all these innocents need to die just for China to become fascist themselves?

    Capitalism and socialism are not some clear cut systems or categories that can be merely "adopted." They are modes of production that are dictated by the material and social relations of production in a given space at a given time. For instance, the transition from feudalism to capitalism did not occur neither swiftly, nor neatly nor universally; rather, capitalist bubbles existed at the epitome of feudal rule and did not expand until the favourable material circumstances emerged — abrupt demographic changes in the 14th century, colonialist ventures by private companies in American continent, and so forth. And even after capitalism became the dominant mode of production, feudalist relations of production still existed at the peripheries.

    A similar perspective should be adopted in China. The existence of markets is not a core aspsct of capitalism; and regarding billionaires, the PRC prosecutes even more of them, in addition to the tens of thousands of millionaires who emigrate every year.

    This is exactly what socialism looks like, a transitional stage that will bring forth a post-capitalist society once the international contradictions (Chinese millionaires) as well as external (US imperialist encroachment) are extinguished. Some policies may succeed, while others may fail and become lessons for future policymaking. But to call this anything close to fascism is treason to the working classes of the Global South.

    Now they are openly committing genocide against Muslims.

    Just ask yourself a simple yet important question: what does the PRC stand to gain from indiscriminately persecuting its own citizens and making them suffer aimlessly?

    You can travel right now to Xinjiang and visit all of its towns and cities freely with total access and ease (as many tourists do every year), and you would see people openly speaking Uyghur, rituals and local events practiced publicly, and mosques operating normally. If you're adamant on believing what some white journalist from NYT or WSJ has to say instead of the locals and residents as well as tourists and independent, on-ground reporters, then this conversation should stop right here.

  • The concept of an independent Tibet never existed before the British imperialists in India plotted to expand their sphere of influence into China. See for instance the Lhasa Convention.

    Furthermore:

    Britain put before the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs a five-point demand, indicating the denial of China's sovereignty over Tibet. When the Chinese government rejected the British demand, the British blocked all the roads leading from the British Raj in India to Tibet.

    In 1913 the British government coerced local Tibetan authorities into declaring independence and proposed that:

    "Britain be the weaponry supplier after total independence of Tibet;" "Tibet accept British envoys' supervision of Tibetan financial and military affairs in return for Britain's support of Tibetan independence;" "Britain be responsible for resisting the army of the Republic of China when it reaches Tibet;" "Tibet adopt an open policy and allow freedom of movement of the British."

    Source.

  • You can't compare China, who hasn't waged a single war in 50 years, to a genocidal entity like "Israel" that is being constantly aided by the US empire and defended by the western propaganda machine.

    And regarding Xinjiang, you may need to look at the facts before throwing terms like "ethnic cleansing."

    EDIT: I have to add how despicable and of ill nature it is to shift the conversation away from the issue at hand, i.e. the war crimes of the imperialist machine, and towards discursive topics.

  • World News @lemmy.ml

    Ukrainian Embassy in Beirut sheltering top Mossad agent

    alethonews.com /2026/03/13/ukrainian-embassy-in-beirut-sheltering-top-mossad-agent/
  • The US doesn't need the Kurds anymore after Assad got deposed. So they were betrayed in favor of the new puppet president.

  • Most of the Arab peninsula was inhabited by nomadic tribes that continuously moved with their cattle and tents, with the exception of a few scattered cities that thrived on trade and light agriculture (dates).

  • This is clear case of capitalism at its most advanced stage: monopoly capitalism. The competitive system that produces winners and losers will inevitably progress towards the concentration of capital in the hands of the few. There is no point in creating inaccurate terminology such as "techno-feudalism" when Marx and his intellectual successors had already studied this phenomenon in depth.

  • Locked

    Dbzero has Defederated from Feddit.org following its Governance post about the later's "Zionist Bar Problem"

    Jump
  • Why do you feel offended by the fact that another instance wants to ensure a safe space for its users?

  • Locked

    Dbzero has Defederated from Feddit.org following its Governance post about the later's "Zionist Bar Problem"

    Jump
  • TIL that containing a zionist infestation is a petty war.

  • Scratch a liberal something something.

  • It's not about the users per se but the admin team whixh is adamant on appeasing zionists.

  • The discontent is directed at the admin team which is incessantly equating criticism to Israel as antisemitism.

    I'm also pretty sure that feddit-bashing won't improve the life of a single Palestinian one bit.

    We should always fight conflation between antisemitism and anti-zionism, the favorite tool of zionists to dissimulate their heinous acts in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon.

  • Western liberals when speaking of foreign nations suddenly become revolutionaries, but God forbid anyone raise a finger in their own country, all of a sudden preserving peace and stability become imperative.

  • F-Droid @lemmy.ml

    F-droid apps in my "favourites" list

  • Books @lemmy.ml

    Considering suicide? You might want to read Cioran's “The Trouble with Being Born” before doing so.

  • Open Source @lemmy.ml

    Any active forks of ViMusic/ViTune?

  • Piano And Keyboards @lemmy.world

    Price of the Roland FP-30X in Europe or North America?

  • Creepy Wikipedia @lemmy.world

    Herero and Nama Genocide - In 1904, Germany led thousands of natives in South West Africa to the desert where they died of dehydration, and subsequently imprisoned more in concentration camps.

    en.m.wikipedia.org /wiki/Herero_and_Nama_genocide
  • NoYank. Remove All American Media And Culture From Your Life @lemmy.ml

    Beirut Havana - Hanine y Son Cubano 🇨🇺🇱🇧

  • Creepy Wikipedia @lemmy.world

    Dracunculiasis - A worm disease contracted by drinking infested water which penetrates the body and induces a painful blister from which a worm slowly emerges.

    en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Dracunculiasis
  • Music @lemmy.world

    Yegor & Opizdenevshiye - Eternal Spring (1992)

  • lemmy.ml meta @lemmy.ml

    Federation with Hexbear?

  • Books @lemmy.ml

    A review of Thomas Pynchon's “Mason & Dixon” (NO spoilers)

  • Comradeship // Freechat @lemmygrad.ml

    Update on my lost work

  • Pop!_OS (Linux) @lemmy.world

    ...

  • Palestine @lemmy.ml

    Nathan Thrall | A Day in the Life of Abed Salama

  • Comradeship // Freechat @lemmygrad.ml

    Reminder to backup

  • Privacy @lemmy.ml

    Updates to LinkedIn's Terms of Service

    www.linkedin.com /blog/member/trust-and-safety/updates-to-our-terms-of-service-2024
  • Literature @beehaw.org

    Witches, zombies, vampires in Ottoman Empire through narrative of traveler Evliya Çelebi

    www.dailysabah.com /arts/reviews/witches-zombies-vampires-in-ottoman-empire-through-narrative-of-traveler-evliya-celebi
  • Books @lemmy.ml

    A Review of Jessica Whyte's “The Morals of the Market” (2019)

  • Books @lemmygrad.ml

    Why is Soviet literature so obscure? (or, a mini feedback on Bulgakov's Master and Margarita)

  • Books @lemmy.ml

    Why is Soviet literature so obscure? (or, a mini feedback on Bulgakov's Master and Margarita)