Murrmurr
SF VIP
- Location
- Sacramento, California
Addressing illegal to be unemployed first; In China, people are required to work. If you don't have a job, you must be registered at a university or training school.There are two parts to this (at least). One is their market specifically. The second is global influence. China is a major trading partner with Africa, and they fund a lot of infrastructure projects, and that's without the loans they've given. Africa is in serious debt to China, and that is used to exert control over ports, transport, etc. China supplies arms to Africa, and are expanding their military presence. China hold $750bn of US debt, second only to Japan.
In other words, their having a capitalist driven market place isn't close to happening. However, they're quickly buying influence abroad.
We'll agree to disagree here. I don't think China is any more obsessed with the US than vice-versa at all. And while the US recognizes Taiwan as an independent nation, let's not pretend that's not for strategic reasons.
And vice versa with what's going on now. So, is it a legitimate act, or a heinous one? Or is it simply part of the trade negotiation between nations?
Look, I'm no fan of China and how it does things. It's a very different system to the West, and a lot of exploitation and nepotism goes on. On the other hand, the West has been part of that exploitation by moving there to get cheap labor. The shoes we wear, the shirts, the cups we drink from, are likely from China. This has allowed companies to post greater profits, and pay dividends, putting that money into the pockets of westerners. We don't care about that as much because it's easily explained in our system - but for the people it does no good.
Also, it is not illegal to be unemployed in China. Not sure where you got that from. Mind, I'd not like to work there, let alone be unemployed there!!
Your job doesn't have to be full-time, which, in China, is 9 to 15hrs/day, 6 days/wk, and you don't have to work for a business, you can be employed by your parent as their care-giver, but you must show receipts and you have to earn at least ...I think it's 600 yuen/annual right now. But you cannot "lie flat" as they say in China, unless you can prove you are still a relative's dependent. And you can be that until both parents are dead; there's no age cap. Unemployment can get you time in jail. And after serving your time, you are required to either get a job or meet any of those other requirements (i.e., register for university, etc).
I've been studying China in-depth for about 10 years. It was a casual interest at first and then it became kind of an obsession. I get my information from scholarly men and women who escaped China, a few who still live there but are friendly to westerners, and a handful of escapees or whose parents are escapees and aren't scholars but just regular people.
One of the things all of them have been talking about for the past few months is that Xi Jinping has lost power and authority. This month, they said he was placed under house-arrest, and yesterday they said the CCP finally officially announced Xi's loss of power to the Chinese public, and so, the world.
Well, they announced it CCP-style, saying that a new committee has been created that will oversee basically everything, and that it has 5 branches: business, education, military, judicial, and governmental. Xi was not named as the head of any of them, which is extremely unusual...unheard of, in fact. It signals definitively that Xi is no longer the Supreme Leader. He'll still make decisions, but they won't be his decisions.
This is a coup - you might call it a "soft coup", since Xi isn't in prison or dead or exiled (yet) - and it was led by a military general named Zhang Youxia (which sounds like "Johnny O'Shaw" when they say it fast...as they do). He pulled it off in cooperation with 4 other top CCP officials plus a few "red prince-lings" (extremely wealthy sons of the original Chinese communist revolutionaries).
(cont'd in next post)