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zephyreks ,

The role of democracy is to make government responsible to its constituents rather than to the rulers: democracy was founded on the idea that the monarchy fucking sucks and wealth/power should be better distributed.

China’s government is still accountable to its constituents, just in a different way than the US. Instead of winning and losing elections, getting increased or reduced responsibilities (promotion and demotion) is the primary way of managing accountability. The primary failure mode of China’s government is rampant corruption that decouples the promotion/demotion mechanism from actual constituent well-being, which is why stopping that is the platform that Xi Jinping rose to power on.

People always talk about civil liberties in China, but frankly Asian culture is notoriously conservative. LGBT rights are still an active topic across East and Southeast Asia (and indeed even in the US). Religious freedoms are just… not really a big concern when most of your population isn’t religious. Freedom of speech exists up until they begin calling for government reform/replacement: protests are a dominant form of expressing displeasure to local and municipal governments (the Jasic workers protest was quelled, but the company was punished by government policy that fucked their short-term growth prospects), and can even influence national politics (see the protests against COVID-19 lockdowns and the resultant opening of policy on COVID-19). The War On Terror rears it’s head in ugly ways, but all indigenous minorities get handled with affirmative action policies that encourage economic independence.

Getting over the great firewall is fairly trivial in practice, particularly for the young and tech savvy. The prevalence of studying (4.4 million students) and travel abroad (who the fuck knows) makes it even more trivial to learn and spread news from other perspectives. Activism is prosecuted a fair chunk more, but it’s not like activists in the West are given carte blanche either.

Is it less progressive than urban West Coast/Northeast US? Absolutely. Is the government as accountable as in democracies like the Nordic states or Switzerland? Absolutely not. Then again, you wouldn’t expect it to be. Chinese culture is far closer to that of right-wing America (without the bible thumping and gun toting lol) than it is to that of left-wing America, nevermind left-wing Europe.

Aria ,

Is the government as accountable as in democracies like the Nordic states or Switzerland?

Bruv everyone in Norway wanted 10 politicians jailed last year. All that came from it was memes about how “I’m sorry I didn’t know corruption was illegal” is a laughable excuse and then it was memory-holed. The only person punished was one of the journalists and they shuffled some things around to reduce transparency. One criminal resigned but she got an emotional distress payout and is still at AP.

Fazoo ,
@Fazoo@lemmy.ml avatar

I’m sure Russia and China have the perfect democracy in mind.

ExLisper ,

It will be perfectly fair. Both Putin and Xi will have 55% of the vote.

CanadaPlus ,

Bold to think Putin would be more than a junior partner.

ExLisper ,

Then again, he has lots of nukes.

CanadaPlus ,

I think what we’ve seen over the last bit, is that just nukes are a very inflexible tool. They protect you from open invasion, and that’s it, because nobody’s going to believe you will end the world over whatever diplomatic slight.

HootinNHollerin , (edited )
@HootinNHollerin@sh.itjust.works avatar

Belt Road Initiative of China, Stupid

It’s another means for china to have influence

China is far from Democratic

Countries that have fallen for belt and road have already or will regret it

Now tankie whataboutism…

freagle ,

BRI is, in all ways, better than anything the West has ever offered or even considers offering in the future.

Microw ,

Bunch of BRICS countries arent democratic themselves, not to speak of their new additions.

The whole BRICS conference didnt allow journalist questions

jeena ,
@jeena@jemmy.jeena.net avatar

Democracy with Chinese characteristics they meant.

cecilkorik ,
@cecilkorik@lemmy.ca avatar

Democracy without dissent. China has achieved peak democracy. Once you mercilessly crush all opposition, your population becomes completely unified and elections are easy, straightforward affairs! The one secret of success that western democracies don’t want you to know!

freagle ,

A study by Harvard over 15 years show that the Chinese national government, administered by the CPC, enjoys a consistent 95% approval rating. You’re delusional if you think they achieved that with violence against 1.4 billion people

figaro ,

I used to live in China.

Yes, there are people that like the government. However, most people are very aware they can’t speak out against the government, and would if they could. Far more than 5%.

Based on my experience, the statistic of 95% feels highly flawed in some way.

Aria ,

You should use your insights to conduct your more scientifically based study. I’m sure the CIA will be happy to fund you if you explain it’ll refute Harvard’s 95% claim.

zephyreks ,

Overall satisfaction in my experience was still pretty high. Did people have complaints? Of course. But, well, looking at the alternative…

Fuck man, if the US didn’t pay so well it really would feel like a third-world country. Transit? Nonexistent. Roads? Falling apart. Drugs? A core component of society. Police? Insanely corrupt and racist. Crime? Rising as you sleep, but at least violent crimes are falling. Time spent on useless bureaucratic bullshit? Infinite. Wealth inequality? Of course. Healthcare? The fuck is that? Life expectancy? Low. Sanitation and drinking water? Clearly still questionable. Traffic accidents? Everywhere. Electrical grid? Literally falling apart in some places.

Plus, the democratic system inherently polarizes people towards dissatisfaction. In a democracy, you might be dissatisfied if you think someone could do better. Without a vote, you’re dissatisfied if you think the government is not acting in your best interests.

figaro ,

Ignoring the whataboutism, I wouldn’t use the US as an ideal alternative lol. Both China and the US have many areas in which they should improve. It’s in only one of those countries that it is potentially dangerous to say that though.

zephyreks ,

Ah yes, because the right to protest is very well-protected in the US and police never oversteps their bounds against activists…

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Floyd_protests

…wikipedia.org/…/January_6_United_States_Capitol_…

…wikipedia.org/…/Killing_of_Manuel_Esteban_Paez_T…

The government also doesn’t have a vast surveillance apparatus that spies on everyone and has public and fair justice system…

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRISM

…wikipedia.org/…/United_States_Foreign_Intelligen…

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act

And I’m sure that the US never conducts extrajudicial killings of US citizens in non-hostile countries, because that would be wrong…

…wikipedia.org/…/Killing_of_Abdulrahman_al-Awlaki

Meanwhile, weibo was full of posts condemning the COVID-19 lockdowns. It’s still full of posts asking how the government plans to revive the economy. Hell, the lockdown protests in China literally forced the government to change COVID-19 policy significantly.

When was the last time a major US protest achieved anything?

figaro ,

Dude, I just said I’m not trying to say that the US is an ideal country to compare things to. I agree with you, the US sucks in a lot of ways.

I am saying that speech about sensitive topics can be dangerous in China. Hong Kong stuff, tiananmen square, Uighurs in Xinjiang, those kinds of things - the people I talked to seemed to be afraid to talk about those things, to the point that people would tell me “we should not talk about this.” That isn’t something that happens in places with stronger freedom of speech protections.

Please don’t respond by a list of ways America is bad. I know that already, and it isn’t the point.

Aria ,

If you’re an obnoxious foreigner who only wants to talk about Hitler in Germany, you’ll get similar responses. Or I know you said stop using USA a comparison, but in this case it’s a very easy and apt one. If you only want to talk about how the WTC attack was an inside job in the USA as a foreigner, you’ll get similar responses. It doesn’t mean they accept your version of events, just that it’s awkward to talk to you about it. Or I guess a similar one but back to Germany. If you’re a yank who wants to commiserate about how fucked the GDR was with someone who lived in the GDR, they’ll give you one half-arsed rebuttal then ask to change topic.

figaro ,

Lol thanks but no, I was not an “obnoxious foreigner.”

Also super cool that you compared 9/11 conspiracy theories to disgusting shit with actual historical evidence. They know Tiananmen square happened. They just know not to talk about it, for fear of literally being arrested. Not the same.

Aria ,

So exactly the same then. Sep 11 conspiracy theorists also believe the attack happened. They just don’t attribute it to terrorists but the local government. Which is exactly what June 4th conspiracy theorists believe. And from experience, obnoxious foreigners are usually June 4th conspiracy theorists, because those conspiracy theories are pushed by western propaganda outlets like Radio Free Asia and BBC. They sometimes also believe they drove over people with tanks and shot people in the square. Same with Uighurs. Maybe you just wanted to talk about Uighurs or Xinjiang, but the conspiracy theorists believe Uighurs are being oppressed, and obnoxious foreigners are more likely to be conspiracy theorists. Even if you aren’t a conspiracy theorists, obnoxious foreigners usually are so at a certain point people just stop engaging.

figaro ,

Talking to people like this is frustrating because I feel like I have to clarify every single point I make, then clarify all of the incorrect presuppositions you made in your comment, then clarify all of the wrong points you made. It is exhausting.

The thing is though, I think we actually agree with the principals at play.

Lets just agree that people should be treated with dignity and respect, and have the right to speech without fear of negative repercussions from the government. If there are places where that is not happening, it should be happening.

Aidinthel ,

I’m sorry, what? Are they defining “democratic” to mean that each government has a say, regardless of how democratic that government itself actually is?

joyjoy ,

We can call it The Democratic People’s Republic of Earth.

shreddy_scientist OP ,
@shreddy_scientist@lemmy.ml avatar

Sanctions and wide spread use off the of the dollar needs to be addressed in a global democratic fashion. The USA hasn’t resembled anything near democratic for a bit, yet kill innocent citizens globally in the name of democracy. In the same way each vote should mean something in a democratic country, each country should have a say in what takes place globally. Makes sense when they’re orchestrating multipolar international rule.

RotaryKeyboard ,

The USA hasn’t resembled anything near democratic for a bit

What fantasy land are you living in?

EnderWi99in ,

Russia, probably.

TokenBoomer ,
flambonkscious ,

No, really. America has fucked up their democracy… It started good, for sure, but it keeps getting eroded (unrealistic time constraints, arbitrary boundaries and silly vetoes or weightings). I’m just sitting from the hip here, certainly no expert

downdaemon ,
@downdaemon@lemmy.ml avatar

Only white male landowners could vote when it started

flambonkscious ,

That’s a very good point, I do concur. But it used to be a lot better just a (few?) decades ago

…And yet most of the rest of the world is streaking way ahead in terms of basic liberties

PolandIsAStateOfMind ,
@PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml avatar
PolandIsAStateOfMind ,
@PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml avatar
BartsBigBugBag ,

Tell me, what is the likelihood that a publicly supported measure will become law on a federal level? And what about one that the public doesn’t support?

LibertyLizard , (edited )

US democracy is flawed but still stronger than most BRICS countries. Maybe all of them.

There are many shades of gray on the slide to authoritarianism.

This headline is strange. It doesn’t seem to be a quote that I can find, and none of the proposed policies really would involve more global democracy. They are mostly aimed at increasing the influence of BRICS countries at the expense of the US and its allies.

Giving more of the world’s population a greater say in global governance and decision-making is a great idea. But unfortunately there really is no one trying to push for such a thing currently.

SeventyTwoTrillion ,
@SeventyTwoTrillion@hexbear.net avatar

Just because a country does not conform to a Western definition of “democratic”, doesn’t mean that that country is not a democracy.

I would personally say that the United States is not a democracy by a typical definition, because voters don’t actually have the choice to vote for anything they like, and not just crank things but even things that are very popular and very important - medicare for all is a popular policy that neither party represents for example, and third parties are so disempowered by the voting system that it is essentially impossible (but not technically! as if that matters!) for any other party to gain power in their place. The generally low approval ratings for various parts of the government (the Senate, the presidency, the Supreme Court) are an indication of this. Is the mere ability to choose between two options, especially bad options, really a good definition of democracy? Might, perhaps, there be better ones?

Compare this to China. Sure, it’s a one-party state, but it’s a communist one-party state, as opposed to the United States’ capitalist one party state that is merely separated into two separate parties to meet their own, bad, definition of democracy. That being said, it’s actually quite a highly decentralized country, with regional and local officials elected by the people. More importantly, it has very high approval ratings and the people’s needs are generally met. I think this is a much better definition of democracy because where the people’s needs are made the priority. It’s harder to game that kind of system - the former definition has the “cheat code” of just splitting one party in two and then having the rich “lobby” both of them (AKA, legalized corruption) to have the same policies where it counts, whereas the latter can’t do that, it actually has to deliver the goods. Of course, it’s not as if you can’t have both - a system where you can choose everything about your country, and one where most people’s needs are generally met and most people approve. But if we have to have one or the other, the latter is the more important feature, IMO.

orizuru ,
@orizuru@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Sure, it’s a one-party state, but it’s a communist one-party state

Wasn’t communism supposed to be a classless, stateless, and moneyless society?

people’s needs are generally met

Except if you’re a political dissident or a Uyghur.

You also seem to overlook the massive state surveillance apparatus. The NSA and FBI are probably jealous of how far reaching some of the Chinese systems are.

China is essentially an autocratic state-capitalist country, with some communist aesthetics.

But then again, your comment is nothing I wouldn’t expect from someone from hexbear.

EnderWi99in ,

The US has never pretended to be a pure democracy. It's a representative republic. A truly democratic system would work fairly poorly in most places.

jeena ,
@jeena@jemmy.jeena.net avatar

It seems to me you never lived in a real existing communist country.

SaltySalamander ,
@SaltySalamander@kbin.social avatar

China is an authoritarian dictatorship. It bears very little resemblance to Marx's communism.

morry040 ,

It it incorrect to state that voters don't have a choice. The barriers are high to make radical change at the Federal level, sure, but that doesn't mean that it cannot be done. One of the biggest problems is disenfranchisement and disengagement. People feel like they cannot make any change so they believe that the system is broken, but for all of the talk about politics, very few people actually vote in all of the possible elections.

Here's an example of US voting in action...

The 2022 Dallas County elections covered a population of about 2.8 million residents in a large urban area, yet voter turnout was only 218,000 residents (7.8% of the population).
The county level of government manages a significant part of daily life for residents (e.g. police, utilities, public education, roads) yet the resident population seems disinterested with guiding local government. If you look at the election records, some roles voted into power are not even contested.
https://www.dallascountyvotes.org/election-results-and-maps/election-results/historical-election-results/#Election

If one wanted to run for office, the requirements at county levels are fairly simple. Fill in some forms, be a resident in the country for 6 months (12 months in the state), and you might need to arrange for 25 people to sign a petition for your nomination. That's it. You don't need to be a Democrat or a Republican - you just need the nomination.
https://www.sos.state.tx.us/elections/candidates/guide/2022/qualifications2022.shtml

And if you need more convincing about how easy it could be to make a change in local politics, meet the animal opponents: https://www.insider.com/dog-mayors-of-america-2019-7

iridaniotter ,
@iridaniotter@hexbear.net avatar

Yes, the author chose that word and the content of the article suggests it’s meant as respecting countries’ sovereignty and reducing the concentration of global political power.

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