• UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I’m arguing against the premise

    I’m discussing the actual material facts in these two countries.

    I’m listening to someone point to LBJ’s Great Society and calling it a Holocaust. You sound like one of those homeschool libertarians, screaming about how truancy laws are unconstitutional.

    what people/ the West take issue with is the rounding up of dissidents, sending them to reeducation camps, and forcibly sterilizing some of them

    Not when their friends in The Philippines or Israel are doing it. Not when they’re doing it to refugees in US prisons or UK detention camps.

    What Westerners object to isn’t Chinese policing. It’s Chinese sovereignty, Chinese technology, and Chinese trade they’re freaked out about.

    As far as the Chinese government goes, this part refers to taking Taiwan by force.

    What blockade are they running against Cuba Taiwan? How many military bases are they squatting on in defiance of the national government? How many times have they attempted to assassinate a Cuban Venezuelan Iranian Afghani Taiwanese head of state?

    How many homes have they bulldozed? How many citizens have they butchered? How many fishing boats have double-tapped?

    • NewSocialWhoDis@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      Your entire response is just Whataboutism. You’re still simping for the man, just the Chinese man instead of the American one.

      Not when their friends in The Philippines or Israel are doing it.

      In truth I don’t know anything about the government in the Philippines right now; if they are running camps then there is a shameful lack of media coverage about it.

      But vastly more people in the US are horrified by the plight of the Palestinians than that of the Uyghurs, primarily because they feel at least indirectly responsible for it. But the people calling out the mistreatment of the Uyghurs aren’t silent about the Palestinians.

      As far as the Chinese posture towards Taiwan, we have intelligence and data documenting their military buildup for at least a decade. They are building amphibious assault ships (https://youtu.be/DtrGMsGsZiU) and verbally making public statements about reunification.

      I don’t think we should expect China to do a bunch of random piddle-farting around with arbitrary bombing like US policy under Trump. Mainly because that is not at all what their consolidation of authority in Hong Kong looked like, but also because they’re not fucking dumbasses like Trump.

        • NewSocialWhoDis@lemmy.zip
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          1 day ago

          I think planning and posturing for their attack on Taiwan can still be counted as military adventurism.

            • NewSocialWhoDis@lemmy.zip
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              16 hours ago

              If the Chinese killed them, it’s relevant to a discussion about China. If the US killed them, it’s not relevant unless it caused some reaction within China.

              You cannot engage about the rightness/ wrongness of Chinese domestic policy without stopping to bash the United States. That is Whataboutism.

              Perhaps your goal is really just to point out America’s hypocrisy, but you certainly go out of your way defending China’s actions if that is your goal.

              • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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                14 hours ago

                If the Chinese killed them, it’s relevant

                If the US killed them, it’s not relevant

                You cannot engage about the rightness/ wrongness of Chinese domestic policy without stopping to bash the United States

                :-/

                As of May 2026, the U.S. has deployed NMESIS (Navy-Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System) anti-ship missiles to the Philippines, specifically on islands near Taiwan.

                Why would a country worried about its sovereignty and domestic security be worried about a neighboring territory bulking up its military in their backyard? You can analyze the US policy towards Cuba by considering the Cuban Missile Crisis and its consequences. Why would Chinese politicians not have similar concerns with Taiwan and respond in kind? Why would Chinese policymakers be obligated to ignore the history of Cuba when making their own Taiwanese policies?