[-] [email protected] 14 points 5 days ago

Mullvad works, sometimes with some issues, but make sure you set it up before you go. Otherwise there is shadowsocks which is more of a proxy than a VPN. It doesn't help anonymize you as well in the US, but is more reliable in China. You can use an app called clash which works for most devices, there are others eg nekkoray which works on linux. These are mostly just different graphical user interfaces, the main thing is to make sure you either get or set up the proxy and have an app that uses an up to date protocol for it.

Also worth noting, if you have a US sim card, it will probably work for foreign websites and the like while in China. Depending on your data plan, eg. You might have unlimited but very slow data abroad, that can be a good backup in case something is not working.

On a similar note, you could look into getting a sim card from Hong Kong, which should allow you to use it for stuff in China while also having fast data and access to blocked websites.

Congrats on going to China, Chengdu is a great city. Make sure you take the opportunity to visit other places too, with the high speed train (and regular train if you want to save money) it's really easy to visit other cities & provinces and definitely worth taking advantage of.

[-] [email protected] 18 points 1 month ago

It's interesting to see just how asymmetrical the repercussions are so far. Bodes well for China.

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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

China's total import and export value in April reached 3.84 trillion yuan ($531.46 billion), up 5.6 percent year-on-year. Exports stood at 2.27 trillion yuan, rising 9.3 percent, while imports totaled 1.57 trillion yuan, marking a 0.8 percent increase, according to data released by the General Administration of Customs on Friday.

China's trade in goods in the first four months of 2025 reached 14.14 trillion yuan, up 2.4 percent year-on-year, with the growth rate accelerating by 1.1 percentage points compared with the first quarter, which continued the steady growth trend, according to official data.

...

The exports during the four months surged by 7.5 percent to 8.39 trillion yuan, while the imports went down by 4.2 percent to 5.75 trillion yuan.

In terms of trading with major partners, ASEAN remains China's top trading partner, with the trade value reaching 2.38 trillion yuan, up 9.2 percent year-on-year, accounting for 16.8 percent of China's total trade during the period. China's exports to ASEAN surged by 12.6 percent to 1.48 trillion yuan, while imports grew by 4 percent to 895.17 billion yuan.

The EU was the second-largest partner, with the trade value topping 1.78 trillion yuan, recording a year-on-year increase of 1.1 percent and ranking 12.6 percent of the total trade. China's exports to the EU grew by 6.1 percent to 1.21 trillion yuan with the imports declining 8.1 percent to 563.59 billion yuan.

The US was China's third-largest trading partner, with the trade volume at 1.44 trillion yuan, down 2.1 percent and accounting for 10.2 percent of the total. China's exports to the US declined by 1.5 percent to 1.07 trillion yuan while imports dropped by 3.7 percent to 369.95 billion yuan.

China's trade with the Belt and Road Initiative partner countries in the first four months recorded a year-on-year increase of 3.9 percent to 7.25 trillion yuan.

The GAC noted that private enterprises recorded the imports and exports of 8.05 trillion yuan, marking a 6.8 percent year-on-year growth, which accounted for 56.9 percent of China's total foreign trade value and represented a 2.3 percentage points increase compared to the same period last year.

Foreign-invested enterprises reported import-export volumes of 4.1 trillion yuan, reflecting 1.9 percent growth and accounting for 29 percent of China's total foreign trade value.

Product-wise, electromechanical products accounted for more than 60 percent of exports, which recorded a year-on-year increase of 9.5 percent to 5.04 trillion yuan. Specifically, exports of automatic data processing equipment and components grew by 5.6 percent to 458.71 billion yuan. The exports of integrated circuits totaled 405.15 billion yuan, marking a 14.7 percent increase, while the automotive exports grew to 264.98 billion yuan with a 4 percent rise.

Global Times

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202505/1333661.shtml

30
submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Article doesn't go into it, but thats amid the trade war.

[-] [email protected] 32 points 2 months ago

It's every stage of capitalism. The cumulative waste and suffering inflicted by capitalism might be humanities greatest tragedy.

[-] [email protected] 22 points 2 months ago

Most of the "futuristic China tech" is just every day life in the PRC. It's also funny to have to throw in the paragraph near the end the 'others' worry the Huawei device he brought would spy on him. Who is worrying? What proof is there? There is no elaboration, it's just inserted as it's seemingly impossible for western news to simply have a positive article about China.

[-] [email protected] 20 points 5 months ago

Realize that China has not been increasing it's military spending relative to GDP.

https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/MS.MIL.XPND.GD.ZS?locations=CN-US&start=1989

China does not have an expansive or aggressive posture. The US has about twice the spending as a share of GDP, with a larger nominal GDP. There is nuance to this, but China is absolutely not disproportionately or aggressively building up it's military.

[-] [email protected] 19 points 1 year ago

Not just infrastructure, payments are also convenient with Ali pay/WeChat pay. Everyone pays everything by phone, most haven't used cash or card in years, although you can if you want. Apps are also ridiculously well designed and integrated, less visible as a foreigner, as much if it is obviously in Chinese and you have a language barrier. But you can really do anything you can imagine in WeChat. Alipay can also translate in miniapps. Say you are in a restaurant, you will scan a qr code on the table, can have a menu that you can automatically translate if you so chose. You also can order and pay through that menu on your phone.

Bureaucracy exists like everywhere else, but tends to be faster and more efficient in my experience. It's not perfect, but the country does feel very different.

Also, it doesn't depend that much on the city. I have been to most large cities in China, many small and medium sized ones too. I have also been to the countryside. The latter is more relaxed, but everywhere has technology and infrastructure. Basically all cities are serviced by train. Towns will all have bus systems that mean you can get anywhere in the country with public transportation.

20
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/4045522

(Never cross posted before, if this is incorrect/wrong/breaks any rules mods please delete or let me know and I'll delete, I just thought this might be interesting and wanted some discussion)

Some thoughts and points I've noticed in/about China:

  1. Everything you hear from Global North media is wrong or misleading. Perhaps there are a few exceptions, but if you ever come to China you will find all the media narratives are false or misleading.
  2. You should always try to keep in mind the diversity, size, and expansive history of China when trying to analyze or understand it. China has 56 officially recognized ethnic groups, the land mass is slightly larger than all the US (any articles that say China is smaller are using the CIA world factbook which counts certain maritime zones for the US but not China), and China/Chinese culture has a history of some 5,000 years. (Liberal analysis is already unreliable, but also ignores just about all of this)
  3. On the topic of ehthic minorities, they enjoy quite a bit of support for their culture and socioeconomic status. Minorities with significant presence in provinces (e.g.: Xinjiang) and smaller administrative divisions will have special “autonomous” statuts. They have special provisions, for example ID cards will be written in Simplified Chinese and the language of the ethnic group. Minorities also have preferential treatment (similar to affirmative action) for university entrance. Moreover there are special universities for “nationalities” (ethnic minorities) such as the well reputed Minzu University in Beijing.
  4. Global North economic indicators like GDP per capita don’t measure the level of development well. While people work hard throughout the country, they also have a good quality of life and opportunities. This includes smaller cities which according to Global North statistics would be much poorer, and should have access to less services. (Also everywhere is extremely safe, both from petty and violent crime)
  5. Political sentiment is complicated, it’s not overwhelmingly negative, but there is differently a divergence and a plurality of opinions. In the countryside you will find many homes, including new ones, with large portraits of Mao. Shanghai on the other hand is very liberal. However the party has generally good support and no real political opposition internally.
  6. The party is ingrained into society. Many young people aspire to join the party, which is a competitive process. Institutions such as universities have official party committees, which jolw much of the power. Likewise, most companies also have a party presence and oversight.
  7. Despite developing rapidly, China is very large and still has some regions and areas in need of development. The party is aware of this and has is doing and exemplary job. Young people are encouraged to go to the countryside to volunteer and work. Many young officials are sent to work in such areas. There is a reason why a majority of the reduction in poverty globally is thanks to China.
  8. Global North, particularly American cultural hegemony has influence still. It’s is waning, but is certainly a challenge and is one of the key issues to address. While the youth has political education, it seems to not be particularly effective. The party should probably try it’s best to present attractive and engaging counter narratives. This has had success on geopolitical issues, such as Russia/Ukraine where most people have an ML or ML adjacent position. However, it remains to be developed for economic and social issues. “Western” economics is taught uncritically in many institutions.
  9. Relatedly, many people are pessimistic at times about China’s future economic trajectory and growth. This may be because of the Western influence in economic understanding. I believe China’s economy has good potential, as long as the party keeps steering the market and SOE well, as they have done. Also, China is fundamentally restructuring it’s economy to become green, which is at the expense of some areas/cities, e.g.: those that produce coal. That being said it is for the overall good of the economy and society. Moreover, the greening of China was pioneered by comrade Xi, which is a position he has held long before it was mainstream or popular in China or the West.

Sorry for any typos. I'd welcome discussion and to hear others thoughts.

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

Some thoughts and points I've noticed in/about China:

  1. Everything you hear from Global North media is wrong or misleading. Perhaps there are a few exceptions, but if you ever come to China you will find all the media narratives are false or misleading.
  2. You should always try to keep in mind the diversity, size, and expansive history of China when trying to analyze or understand it. China has 56 officially recognized ethnic groups, the land mass is slightly larger than all the US (any articles that say China is smaller are using the CIA world factbook which counts certain maritime zones for the US but not China), and China/Chinese culture has a history of some 5,000 years. (Liberal analysis is already unreliable, but also ignores just about all of this)
  3. On the topic of ehthic minorities, they enjoy quite a bit of support for their culture and socioeconomic status. Minorities with significant presence in provinces (e.g.: Xinjiang) and smaller administrative divisions will have special “autonomous” statuts. They have special provisions, for example ID cards will be written in Simplified Chinese and the language of the ethnic group. Minorities also have preferential treatment (similar to affirmative action) for university entrance. Moreover there are special universities for “nationalities” (ethnic minorities) such as the well reputed Minzu University in Beijing.
  4. Global North economic indicators like GDP per capita don’t measure the level of development well. While people work hard throughout the country, they also have a good quality of life and opportunities. This includes smaller cities which according to Global North statistics would be much poorer, and should have access to less services. (Also everywhere is extremely safe, both from petty and violent crime)
  5. Political sentiment is complicated, it’s not overwhelmingly negative, but there is differently a divergence and a plurality of opinions. In the countryside you will find many homes, including new ones, with large portraits of Mao. Shanghai on the other hand is very liberal. However the party has generally good support and no real political opposition internally.
  6. The party is ingrained into society. Many young people aspire to join the party, which is a competitive process. Institutions such as universities have official party committees, which jolw much of the power. Likewise, most companies also have a party presence and oversight.
  7. Despite developing rapidly, China is very large and still has some regions and areas in need of development. The party is aware of this and has is doing and exemplary job. Young people are encouraged to go to the countryside to volunteer and work. Many young officials are sent to work in such areas. There is a reason why a majority of the reduction in poverty globally is thanks to China.
  8. Global North, particularly American cultural hegemony has influence still. It’s is waning, but is certainly a challenge and is one of the key issues to address. While the youth has political education, it seems to not be particularly effective. The party should probably try it’s best to present attractive and engaging counter narratives. This has had success on geopolitical issues, such as Russia/Ukraine where most people have an ML or ML adjacent position. However, it remains to be developed for economic and social issues. “Western” economics is taught uncritically in many institutions.
  9. Relatedly, many people are pessimistic at times about China’s future economic trajectory and growth. This may be because of the Western influence in economic understanding. I believe China’s economy has good potential, as long as the party keeps steering the market and SOE well, as they have done. Also, China is fundamentally restructuring it’s economy to become green, which is at the expense of some areas/cities, e.g.: those that produce coal. That being said it is for the overall good of the economy and society. Moreover, the greening of China was pioneered by comrade Xi, which is a position he has held long before it was mainstream or popular in China or the West.

Sorry for any typos. I'd welcome discussion and to hear others thoughts.

21
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 30 points 1 year ago

Related, China has become the number one scientific destination with the largest inflow of researchers outstripping the US, according to OECD data as reported (archive) by Science Business. I can't cite the OECD data since it seems to be behind a paywall, but I believe you can find it here.

China also leads the world with nearly half of all applications for international patents (46.8%), trademarks (48.3%), and industrial designs (53.8%).

Japan's science and technology ministry also conducted a study, as reported (archive) by Nikkei Asia, and found China leads the world in research papers. Both in quantity and quality.

A report by Clarivate substantiates this. This report also describes how China is not reliant with collaboration with the Global North for research, and that China is expanding research with Global South countries.

Despite all this, in the imperial core they still believe China can't innovate. All while China is out-innovating the Global North.

[-] [email protected] 26 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I can confirm Lemmygrad is accessible. Hexbear is, but loads VERY slowly in my experience. No such issue for Lemmygrad.

By the way, the firewall varies slightly in different provinces. That being said Lemmygrad seems accessible everywhere.

ps: most sites are accessible. Only big American tech sites that don't want to follow local law (Google, Facebook, etc.) are blocked. Many other websites are not blocked but just load really slowly. Not certain why, part of it may be the websites throttling IP address from China.

[-] [email protected] 24 points 1 year ago

You will always be fighting an uphill battle in the academia of the imperial core. Global North historians in particular are on the front line of anti-socialist narratives. Of all disciples, the narratives of hustorians are probably the most powerful propaganda against radical though in the imperial core. Keep in mind that your professor is likely not sympathetic to leftwing thought, let alone socialism. This is compounded by the fact that even if they where, the structure of western academia makes it almost impossible to be a genuine Marxist that is critical of society. You won't get grants, promotions, etc.

Just know that you did your best to inform them, and don't waste your energy any further. Don't expect that professor to listen to reason or to genuinely consider your sources. As soon as you are outside the imperial narrative, they dismiss your opinion and sources as fringe. Why? Well, if they engaged honestly, they would have to change their mind.

Try to concentrate your energy on anything that will produce results and benefit you and the mouvement. Read, stay healthy, educate yourself and others. Organize if you can.

24
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Note that

  1. Western companies have good expectations about China's economy
  2. Bourgeois economics does capture the whole picture, even then China is doing well,
  3. Keep in mind the are stats from JP Morgan not the Chinese government
  4. While libs say China is collapsing, it is growing at more than 5%, while the US stagnates and Europe is clearly in recession
9
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
12
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Interesting to see how this will go. Often the US visits China. Also, note how, despite everything, China keeps trying diplomacy and peace. Meanwhile the US is fixated on war. War in Ukrane, Palestine, and eventually China; if the US has its way that is.

13
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
16
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

A humble leader.

Anecdotaly, I can confirm through an acquaintance who met him, Xi is very humble and friendly. He was described as much taller and thin than he appears in photos. When talking to him, my acquaintance said Xi conversed like one might with an old friend.

Some good Xi quotes from the article:

"You have read a lot of books, but there is much 'water' in the knowledge you learned. You need to squeeze out the 'water' by testing the knowledge in practice and in interaction with the masses."

"[A]im high while keeping your feet firmly on the ground"

33
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

This is likely insignificant, yet gives some hope. Japan may yet refrain from becoming a pawn, as it would surely be obliterated in a conflict with China. Unfortunately, this is probably but a squabble over blame for imperial incompetence.

Cup half full: either Japan is incompetent or ths US was and is trying to pin the blame on Japan, which will push them away. It could also be a pretext to warn Japan it can be dropped military in an attempt to draw them in, a sort of threat or loyalty test. Either way, imperial disunity favors multipolarity and AES.

[-] [email protected] 66 points 2 years ago

The point is that liberalism and facism are intrinsically linked. Liberalism does not seek to change the world and stems from philosophies instead seeking to explain it. Accordingly, liberalism is a philosophical justification for the capitalist status quo. As such, when contradictions in capitalism accentuate with time, such as those between classes, liberalism turns to fascism. Scratch a liberal and a fascist bleeds, because the liberal is a closet fascist when times are good; when class struggle poses a threat, it clamps down. You can see this throughout history.

That a poor, simplified explanation, but I hope it helps.

[-] [email protected] 19 points 2 years ago

An American being the spokesperson for a foreign country's military? Next you will be saying the president of Ukraine actually works for US interests. /s

[-] [email protected] 19 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Small aside, China has an extensive regular speed train network. Trains are still rather fast, but obviously slower than HSR. It is very beneficial to have both, as the slower trains are quite a bit cheaper. China has a large population, and many people take the regular train, even with standing tickets. These trains move a lot of people and are an important part of the transit system. Sometimes it feels like an inter-city metro since you can take trains at any time to any city.

20
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Wholesome solidarity; hope this improves your day.

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