[-] [email protected] 12 points 3 months ago

what no dialectics does to an mf

22
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Reposted from lemmygrad: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/6776380

So over the past year or two I've read a LOT on china. I thought it might be a bit inappropriate not to share with ya'll. I've definitely read much more, but these are the ones that are the most memorable/I've saved. These won't be organized in any sort of way, but each article will be accompanied by a short description.

Personally I wouldn't treat this as a checklist to read, but just read what you find interesting and go from there. I think it would be incredibly cool if people drop more resources here in the comments and this becomes a one-stop shop for China resources.

I just made an effort-comment and I thought, huh I haven't made an effort-post in quite a bit, so here we are.

Qiao Collective

I've practically read every single article published by qiao collective and I cannot recommend it enough as a place to get started. https://www.qiaocollective.com/ A few in particular I will point to

Shattering the Iron Wall about China, Palestine, and Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar.

This is a Great Struggle About lenovo, compradors, and socialist construction.

The Revival of Capital and the Left Turn of the Mental Laborer. Amazing piece on the history and development of chinese capital, and how material conditions radicalize(or de-radicalize?, because becoming a commie in china is conforming rather than being non-conformist?) people. Material analysis of internal contradictions and the contradiction of capitalist and marxist thought in China itself. If you can't tell by how long this description is I love this article.

Why Rebel? A chinese person looks at america and goes like god damn ya'll's contradictions r bad there.

American “Revolution”: The “Black Hole” of American Electioneering and the Lessons China Must Draw A (different) chinese person looks at america's electoral system, goes god damn, and gives a very good analysis of how it serves to placate dissent.

I love the chinese person looks at america and writes an analysis genre, there's another on the texas snowstorm and american covid response, but for the sake of brevity I won't delve into them.

How Chinese Socialism is Defeating the Coronavirus Outbreak

The Metamorphosis of Yuangudui, a piece on poverty alleviation.

I linked a bit more of Qiao Collective than I intended, but I truly stand by my statement that they've done some truly good work translating and writing articles.

Inside China Business

I really do quite enjoy his channel and analysis. I've heard from some other people here that he has some bad takes, but those bad takes don't make it onto his analysis videos. I am a regular viewer of the channel and would recommend if you like stuff on industry.

CGTN Documentaries

The lockdown: One month in Wuhan , on the Wuhan pandemic response.

China's war on poverty (Must watch), a documentary behind the process of the campaign on poverty alleviation. It's genuinely incredibly well thought out and incredibly uplifting to see the amazing work being done. Again, please watch this it's incredible I think.

Gay Leap Forward: LGBT in China

More Articles

Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom: My Experience of China Today (2024) good account of the development that china has gone through

Article on Xi Jinping Thought .

"Managed competition" in China's state firms

How a Chinese Engineer on the Ground Reveal About China-Africa Relation?

For my chinese-american comrades, a poignant reflection on chinese-americanness in the modern day.

Giving immigrant workers urban identities: what can be done?. On the Hukou system.

Is High-speed Rail in China a "Gray Rhino"?, tl;dr, no.

Ma Dugong: glad that we are all clowns in different makeup. Not directly related to Communism but a good read.

How Chinese TVs chip away at U.S. market shares

How China Is Like the 19th Century U.S.

Chinese economy hinges on market reform & rule of law, NOT monetary or fiscal policy, says Zhang Weiying. Very interesting take that I haven't had the time to re-read and digest but interested to hear other people's thoughts on.

shanzhai. on counterfeit, and open source

Authors/Blogs to check out

CriticalResist. CriticalResist, in the case that you are reading this, love your articles and keep up the good work. Your article about design has actually helped me in college as well, it's always a treat to see you pop up in my inbox.

Construction Physics, not exclusively about china, but some good writing about china, and just construction in general.

East is Read Good articles to keep up with china news.

Bejing Channel, just some news.

Crossing the River. Very much a blog type author. Hear about china and real chinese people through the author's experiences.

Ginger River Review. Explainers and things about chinese society.

Threadings not about china(sorry!), but I absolutely adore their work.

Red Sails, good articles would reccomend

dessalines. Not about china but very good primer to people to, hey maybe capitalism isn't all that great.

The East is Still Red - Book. decent. Red Star over China. Account of the CPC before the revolution.

In Defense of the Soviet Union. Not about china either, but good video.

Dongsheng news, but their website seems broken... I believe some of their stuff can be seen here, but I have not really checked it out yet.

Jerry's Take on China, chill dude i like him good videos

___

49
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

So over the past year or two I've read a LOT on china. I thought it might be a bit inappropriate not to share with ya'll. I've definitely read much more, but these are the ones that are the most memorable/I've saved. These won't be organized in any sort of way, but each article will be accompanied by a short description.

Personally I wouldn't treat this as a checklist to read, but just read what you find interesting and go from there. I think it would be incredibly cool if people drop more resources here in the comments and this becomes a one-stop shop for China resources.

I just made an effort-comment and I thought, huh I haven't made an effort-post in quite a bit, so here we are.

Qiao Collective

I've practically read every single article published by qiao collective and I cannot recommend it enough as a place to get started. https://www.qiaocollective.com/ A few in particular I will point to

Shattering the Iron Wall about China, Palestine, and Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar.

This is a Great Struggle About lenovo, compradors, and socialist construction.

The Revival of Capital and the Left Turn of the Mental Laborer. Amazing piece on the history and development of chinese capital, and how material conditions radicalize(or de-radicalize?, because becoming a commie in china is conforming rather than being non-conformist?) people. Material analysis of internal contradictions and the contradiction of capitalist and marxist thought in China itself. If you can't tell by how long this description is I love this article.

Why Rebel? A chinese person looks at america and goes like god damn ya'll's contradictions r bad there.

American “Revolution”: The “Black Hole” of American Electioneering and the Lessons China Must Draw A (different) chinese person looks at america's electoral system, goes god damn, and gives a very good analysis of how it serves to placate dissent.

I love the chinese person looks at america and writes an analysis genre, there's another on the texas snowstorm and american covid response, but for the sake of brevity I won't delve into them.

How Chinese Socialism is Defeating the Coronavirus Outbreak

The Metamorphosis of Yuangudui, a piece on poverty alleviation.

I linked a bit more of Qiao Collective than I intended, but I truly stand by my statement that they've done some truly good work translating and writing articles.

Inside China Business

I really do quite enjoy his channel and analysis. I've heard from some other people here that he has some bad takes, but those bad takes don't make it onto his analysis videos. I am a regular viewer of the channel and would recommend if you like stuff on industry.

CGTN Documentaries

The lockdown: One month in Wuhan , on the Wuhan pandemic response.

China's war on poverty (Must watch), a documentary behind the process of the campaign on poverty alleviation. It's genuinely incredibly well thought out and incredibly uplifting to see the amazing work being done. Again, please watch this it's incredible I think.

Gay Leap Forward: LGBT in China

More Articles

Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom: My Experience of China Today (2024) good account of the development that china has gone through

Article on Xi Jinping Thought .

"Managed competition" in China's state firms

How a Chinese Engineer on the Ground Reveal About China-Africa Relation?

For my chinese-american comrades, a poignant reflection on chinese-americanness in the modern day.

Giving immigrant workers urban identities: what can be done?. On the Hukou system.

Is High-speed Rail in China a "Gray Rhino"?, tl;dr, no.

Ma Dugong: glad that we are all clowns in different makeup. Not directly related to Communism but a good read.

How Chinese TVs chip away at U.S. market shares

How China Is Like the 19th Century U.S.

Chinese economy hinges on market reform & rule of law, NOT monetary or fiscal policy, says Zhang Weiying. Very interesting take that I haven't had the time to re-read and digest but interested to hear other people's thoughts on.

shanzhai. on counterfeit, and open source

Authors/Blogs to check out

CriticalResist. CriticalResist, in the case that you are reading this, love your articles and keep up the good work. Your article about design has actually helped me in college as well, it's always a treat to see you pop up in my inbox.

Construction Physics, not exclusively about china, but some good writing about china, and just construction in general.

East is Read Good articles to keep up with china news.

Bejing Channel, just some news.

Crossing the River. Very much a blog type author. Hear about china and real chinese people through the author's experiences.

Ginger River Review. Explainers and things about chinese society.

Threadings not about china(sorry!), but I absolutely adore their work.

Red Sails, good articles would reccomend

dessalines. Not about china but very good primer to people to, hey maybe capitalism isn't all that great.

The East is Still Red - Book. decent. Red Star over China. Account of the CPC before the revolution.

In Defense of the Soviet Union. Not about china either, but good video.

Dongsheng news, but their website seems broken... I believe some of their stuff can be seen here, but I have not really checked it out yet.

Jerry's Take on China, ~~chill dude i like him good videos~~, disclaimer: apparently transphobic according to a commenter below. Do approach videos with care and take what he says with a grain of salt, but good source to send to libs and introduce people who might not know much about china.

EDIT: somehow I forgot about ben norton, https://www.youtube.com/@GeopoliticalEconomyReport very good analysis on china, and the broader world highly reccomend

___

[-] [email protected] 23 points 5 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

it’s a big internal contradiction within china. your hukou(where you’re registered) determines what benefits you have and so its a lot harder for rural residents to work/get benefits/get schooling for their kids. I’ve also heard my mom mention there’s some discrimination/you’d get looked down on from being on the countryside. However, it was necessary to prevent slums from existing and now the restrictions are being relaxed, primarily starting in like 2nd/3rd tier cities i believe.

Edit: Here's an article about the progress and rationale behind the hukou system(in english). The rural-urban divide is very clearly noted to be a primary contradiction

“What we now face is the contradiction between unbalanced and inadequate development and the people’s ever-growing needs for a better life,” he said. The evolution of the principal contradiction represents a “historic shift that affects the whole landscape and that creates many new demands for the work of the Party and the country,” Xi said. Previously the principal contradiction was described as one between “the ever-growing material and cultural needs of the people and backward social production.” (quote not from article, from here)

52
submitted 10 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Hi, I thought'd i'd make a separate post on hexbear for HSR/CRT. The main china summary post is on lemmygrad if yall wanna check it out.

I rode the HSR 3 times total, and I've said this a couple times, but the biggest compliment I can give is my lack of complaints.

The experience was super smooth, very quick security check and quick ticket check into a very smooth train ride. I will say I really do not like how loudly people speak on calls but that is more of an old person thing and noise canceling headphones do the trick.

As for the Chongqing Rail Transit, the CRT was probably the cleanest metro i've ridden on before(I've only been on the NY subway and the Toronto TTC before).

Pricing was from 1-7 yuan(0.15-0.95 dollar)

There was communist imagery(only on line 5 though)

images aren't uploading so i'll try and edit with them or add them to the comments

There were different AC settings on different cars(a lot of older chinese don't like too much AC), and overall very good experience. Not too notable either except cleanliness which I think is a plus.

[-] [email protected] 14 points 10 months ago

right? it's mind blowing to me how cheap everything is in comparison. The most expensive part about my trip was my plane ticket... hopefully it goes down to precovid prices.

[-] [email protected] 13 points 10 months ago

Personally, I feel american in that I've absorbed a lot of parts of the culture, which I think there are parts that I prefer to chinese culture as i've kinda alluded to above, but I hold more national pride for China, personally. I cheer for China in the olympics, and personally am a lot more interested in Chinese history. I'm still not sure what I fully consider myself, maybe still chinese-american?

For most ABCs I feel that they either have a very negative perception of china, or a positive perception of china with a negative perception of china. The people who were with me on the camp pretty unilaterally would be against the chinese government(no democracy, etc...) but they could just feel that the environment was just better I think.

Hmm... For example the rock climbing place I went to was a bit cheaper than the rock climbing place I usually go to(and a lot smaller) in absolute terms, but relatively it would be much more expensive. I couldn't tell you about the skiing, baking, or art studio though. My guesses is that they'd be pretty expensive for regular people. In addition, my cousin said that most locals don't frequent the super big chongqing mall that i showed, but rather just go to smaller local shops as while it's not unaffordable, it's just much more cost effective to buy things elsewhere.

122
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I will be a bit vague with parts of this but hopefully this will be of interest to some of you. Apologies in advance that this might be more a list of disjointed thoughts than really a chronological recount.

I was born in the US and I am part of the Chinese diaspora. I haven't been back since before covid.

I've mentioned this on a couple other parts of lemmygrad but I went on a trip that was funded by the chinese government, essentially a group tour around china. My one complaint is that 13+ museums in a 10 day span is... a bit much.

One thing I found interesting was the amount of communist imagery present. You'll find it if you're out and about on the city, or in the entrance of museums/parks if you're looking for it. Especially the "Socialism Core Values" sign, I saw a ton of those signs. I know that because I was visiting I saw a ton more than I would in day to day life, and I don't think it would feel too intrusive in day to day life, but it maybe felt slightly excessive to a visitor? I definitely prefer them than advertisements, like on Line 5 of the Chongqing Metro.

As for the cities, they were really nice. Really interestingly, though, because the second tier cities I was at developed later than for example Nanjing, the environment was a lot cleaner and modern than Nanjing actually. The cities are decently walkable, tons of metro/bus, didi(chinese uber) is incredibly cheap, and there are tons of public bikes/e-bikes to rent. Streets were clean of trash, tho the older places didn't have trash per se, but rather gave a dirty vibe. The new parts of china are better than the US, and the old parts are worse. China is still definitely a developing country, which is sometimes easy to forget with how fast it's developing.

On another note, the common sentiment i've heard is that 发展, development, has been really fast. This is obvious to even us from the west, but it's really hard to think that there are people living from pre-解放(pre-1949, pre-liberation, pre-cpc? idk the best term to translate this), serfs, essentially, who have seen the country develop to this extent. For example, a taxi driver I was talking to on the way to a HSR station, mentioned that the district we were driving through was just barren dirt when he was a child.

The superiority of the socialist system is demonstrated, in the final analysis, by faster and greater development of those forces than under the capitalist system. As they develop, the people’s material and cultural life will constantly improve. One of our shortcomings after the founding of the People’s Republic was that we didn’t pay enough attention to developing the productive forces. Socialism means eliminating poverty. Pauperism is not socialism, still less communism …

- Deng Xiaoping

It was also really interesting to see things i've read about like, 绿水青山就是金山银山(i think it translates to lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets?, it works a bit more poetically in chinese i swear). However seeing it in like the really pretty parks they've constructed is a lot different than just reading about it i think.

There still are definitely contradictions within china. One thing i've heard is the pressures of having to provide a house and car from the son's family(tho the tradition varies by province and is better in some), housing prices, and not great state of the economy.

as for food - really good. i typically eat chinese food at home anyways so it was so great coming back to china eating-wise. Also there is this mountain in chongqing that is literally full of just hotpot restraints.

As for traditions, i think it can be a bit overbearing at times. 面子, face, and like gift culture is much too roundabout for my tastes. However, I do get a pass for when i don't follow them because i'm a foreigner(it'd be even more if you were like white), but still I feel like it's a bit much... mandatory gifts at every occasion makes it almost like less special to give gifts and also genuinely a burden to get gifts for everyone...

Prices - oh my god everything felt so cheap. Some of the best milk tea i've had for 20 yuan(3 bucks). didi(ubers) for like 10-20 yuan for like even a (10+) min ride. My friend got meituan(chinese doordash?) delivery for neck pillows right before his flight and it came same hour. Everyone uses QR codes here(!!), and there are portable chargers for rent everywhere. I'm not joking when i say everything is so much more convenient here. FRUIT IS SO CHEAP, my heart can't take $6 watermelons at sams club after the prices in china... I don't think people in china understand how bad it is in the west like living/convenience wise. I mentioned to a massage lady that the wage for a service worker is like 40k+ and they got so excited about that prospect because in china that would be a very large wage. However, because they're considering china prices they don't understand how hard it would be to live on that much because of how insane housing and cost of living prices are in america.

TO ADD ON, hotels are so cheap. Genuine 5 star hotel for $100, luxury chinese hotel for like $50 too. Like for rent you can actually star for multiple months in a nice chinese hotel.

Speaking of prices, qinghua(tsinghua uni), beida(peking uni), and other schools are less than 1k a year in tuition. what the hell. I'm going my state uni and i'm still having to pay 20k in tuition.

I swear the malls here are so much better. a random mall i went to in a second tier city was better than literally any mall i've been to in america. And look at this mall in chongqing(the pastries were so good, not too sweet)

And a mall in Xiamen had rock climbing, an art studio, indoor skiing(which idk how that works), a rentable kitchen space, and such good milk tea.

And finally, the HSR and metro experience.

Honestly, I don't have many comments on the HSR, and I think that's the biggest compliment I can give it. You go through security that's really quick, wait for your train(unfortunately it was so jam packed i didn't get a seat some of the time i've ridden it) then get on and you really don't feel much when riding it. It's quite quiet and not much vibration at all. The fact that it was so non-memorable makes it all the more impressive. Big cool station and trains and good smooth experience.

As for the metro, it was very nice a lot cleaner and more modern than the NY and toronto metros. The fare ranges from 1-7 yuan depending on how far you go, (0.15 cents to 1 dollar), and you can just scan a QR code on wechat to pay. ALSO they have different air conditioning depending on the car which is really cool. Full platform screen doors too(and not screen doors, but other barriers at elevated stations).

ya'll should ever go back to china if you get the chance. The most unforunate part is that there are a lot less flights and they're a lot more expensive post-covid. Your flight will probably be the most expensive part of your trip...

anyways that was a lot of yapping, i'm still a bit jet-lagged so i'll end it here. feel free to ask any questions

26
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Back in china for the first time since pre-covid. Shanghai pudong airport people mover, connected terminal 1 to a satellite boarding area(which apparently is the largest in the world, opened in 2019 and very nice i liked it). The people mover rolling stock consists of crrc class A with full ass platform doors.

i did see the sign for the maglev but did not end up riding it, didn’t have a need to.

Anyways riding HSR tomorrow so expect pictures of that tomorrow.

i’m not sure what community to post this on so i’ll post it here for now. if there is a better community for this lmk!

edit: oops the image didn't attach fixed

28
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Kinda what the title says. When like outside in public I know I like to wear my airpods w/ noise canceling and avoid loud spaces. What do you guys usually do when you notice you're like "it's all too much."

Also what do you guys do when you're at home to relax and kinda reset after too much sensory stuff?

[-] [email protected] 26 points 1 year ago

to be fair the shanghai metro also has security(which imo kinda unnecessary but fair ig). but even then they have an actually nice metro

[-] [email protected] 36 points 1 year ago

Wow that article was just full of anti-china sentiment and sinophobia. I especially found it funny when they mentioned how liberal democracies also had their own training schools, but that's okay because it's liberal democracy.

China exporting it's system is not okay because it's "authoritarian," but when we it it's promoting freedom. There's this inherent white-supremacy, this racism that the western system is factually better, and they make their conclusions from there. They don't justify it, it's just viewed as a fact.

But either way, it's really inspiring that China is doing this.

[-] [email protected] 64 points 2 years ago

but at what cost

[-] [email protected] 47 points 2 years ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Hmm for me a pretty recent 180 i took was on Deng Xiaoping. I was a commie but I really wasn't super educated on the state of AES(even though i am part of the chinese diaspora) and was always under the impression that it was capitalism. That deng xiaoping turned china capitalist. Probably not really as big of an 180 as some other people here but really learning about china was really inspiring and restored my hope in the world ig. I feel way more patriotic towards china right than amerikkka.

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