| > Does it matter? Judge the idea, not the person behind it I say. If the argument is not worthy to stand, it will fall. Of course it matters, what a bizarre statement. >> That democracies have corruption
> But it's not corruption. That's the issue. Either deliberately, though in-attention or personal need you, are mis-interpreting and or changing the subject. > It doesn't seem like that from the outside. Looking in, it seems like the CCP has successfully pulled an
> astronomical amount of people out of poverty and increasing QoL insanely, all while maintaining public ?
> legitimacy. There is no good way to assert that, but it's a pretty common refrain. > Honestly, all it seems like, is that America drunk the cool aid too much and now believes so hard in it's
> own propaganda that it looks like brainwashing, while the reality is utterly different. I'm not American. All this cycles round to what I was saying. You could just be an interested observer, passionate about seemingly connected ideas. Or you could be deliberately derailing, trying to muddy the waters. There's no good way to tell, but ultimately it still paints China in a bad light - eventually no one will believe anything. |
Why? Please elaborate.
As the person you replied to said, I feel that ideas should be judged on their merit, not on who came up with them. Plenty of "bad" people have good ideas and visa versa.