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by FooBarWidget
1705 days ago
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That framework of thought is based on western history and experience, and does not fit Chinese history and experience. You say popularity doesn't matter, only facts matter. The hard facts state that historically, in China, the biggest problems occurred when central government was weak and when the country was divided. The hard facts also state that the past 30 years are the best in 3000 years. Liberal ideology state that transparency is absolutely essential for good governance. Yet COVID-19 has proven that this is wrong: the relatively untransparent Chinese government did better at fighting COVID-19 than the supposedly transparent western governments. One can point at the fuckup that were the initial first few weeks, true. Yet even this initial fuckup pale in comparison to the many months of outright denial by western countries that COVID-19 could be a problem. All the transparency in India has also failed to contain the spread of the Delta variant. The facts have shown that liberal ideology is dogmatic and lack empirical evidence. I am not against liberal ideology, nor against things like transparency. But I think the hard facts have shown that there is place in the world for an alternative governance model. China does not force their model on other countries; why should we force China to adopt ours? Why can't they be allowed to figure out their own path as long as they don't force us to adopt their ways? To each their own. |
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I heard the same from people living in other countries, sometimes ironically and sometimes (sadly) not. Things are going well; the same president is still around; those two circumstances must be connected—how can those dissidents even dare to think that maybe their well-being improved despite their government rather than thanks to it?
> Yet COVID-19 has proven that this is wrong: the relatively untransparent Chinese government did better at fighting COVID-19 than the supposedly transparent western governments.
Isn’t it paradoxical to state that the lack of transparency is what helped Chinese government contain COVID? Accepting that it lies (including through omission) undermines any official statistics coming from it, since it can be assumed to not report inconvenient facts and data like it did in the past.
(Perhaps you can see why I believe that transparency is a fundamental requirement necessary to take anything else the government does or says seriously.)
In addition, saying that “the lack of transparency is what helped China contain COVID” seems to imply that people in China can only be manipulated into doing the right thing by not being given the true facts. I hold a higher opinion of them.
> China does not force their model on other countries; why should we force China to adopt ours?
And thus we’ve circled back back to the possibility of China’s invasion of Taiwan, a country that appears to not want China’s model to be forced onto itself.
Addendum: I don’t think any country should be forced into changing its model of government, unless it somehow becomes an existential threat to objectively transparent, democratic governments elsewhere; but I do hope such a country evolves in that direction as its citizens become tired of being lied to.