Skip Navigation
Hezbollah strikes key Israeli bases in defense of Lebanon, its people
  • even if they don’t falsely report they can omit information

    That's why you always read the reports from all perspectives to fill in the gaps. You literally discount the "our freedom fighters" vs. "Their terrorists" speak yourself, instead of your convenient solution of appealing to mbfc (appeal to authority)

    In these cases it’s better as a rule to compare the reporting with that of other sources.

    It would be great if you actually lived by your own words and engaged with the topic at hand and not lazily cite mbfc.

  • It’s no longer glorious to get rich in China — it’s dangerous

    FT

    Opinion Chinese business & finance

    It’s no longer glorious to get rich in China — it’s dangerous

    Why no one wants to be the nation’s top tycoon any more

    > Last month, Colin Huang, founder of ecommerce powerhouse PDD, attracted the usual headlines when he rose to become China’s richest man. But shortly after, PDD surprised investors with a downbeat profit forecast. Its stock plummeted. Huang lost $14bn overnight, and ceded the top spot to Zhong Shanshan, founder of beverage giant Nongfu Spring. Within 24 hours, Nongfu Spring issued its own unexpectedly depressing outlook, and Zhong, too, soon slipped from first place on the rich lists.

    > On Chinese social media, chatter broke out about whether corporate leaders might be competitively devaluing their own stock prices to avoid the widening crackdown on excessive wealth, which is a centrepiece of leader Xi Jinping’s “common prosperity” campaign. It is not implausible to conclude, wrote one Wall Street broker, that “nobody wants to be the richest man in China” at a time when its government is turning more assertively socialist.

    > Whatever the true motive for these profit warnings, the way they were spun on Chinese social media reflects a real change in the national zeitgeist. When Deng Xiaoping became paramount leader in the late 1970s, he defanged the old Maoist hostility to wealth creation. To get rich would be “glorious” in his increasingly capitalist nation.

    > But there was a catch. It was glorious to get rich — just not too rich. China was generating far more wealth than other developing countries, yet its largest individual fortunes remained modest compared with those in much smaller economies, including Nigeria and Mexico. Even during the roaring boom of the 2000s, an unwritten cap seemed to remain: no single fortune would rise much higher than $10bn. China’s billionaire list was also unusual for the high rate of churn in its top ranks.

    > By the early 2010s, at least two tycoons had seen their net worth approach that decabillion-dollar barrier, only to land in jail on corruption charges instead. That is not to say the charges were baseless, only that the choice of targets did appear to reflect a lingering, levelling tendency among China’s leaders.

    > That instinct flowered anew under Xi. Coming to power in 2012, he launched a campaign against corruption that reached deep into the elite. The early targets were often public sector bigwigs — bureaucrats, Communist party princelings. With China’s economy slowing, the regime seemed reluctant to scare the one private-sector goose still laying golden eggs: big tech companies. Over the years, many Chinese would build fortunes bigger than $10bn. The first three to breach that threshold, and keep rising, were tech industry founders led by Jack Ma of Alibaba.

    > This quiet tolerance would turn in 2020, during the stimulus-driven market boom. China added nearly 240 billionaires — twice as many as the US — but late that same year Ma made a speech that helped bring this party to a halt. In a guarded but unmistakable critique, Ma questioned the direction of Communist party rule, warning that overregulation threatened to slow tech innovation, and that Chinese banks suffered from “pawnshop thinking”.

    >State retaliation was swift. Alibaba’s share price collapsed. Ma tumbled down the rich lists and dropped out of public view. Early the next year, Xi launched his common prosperity campaign and the crackdown spread to any company deemed out of step with its egalitarian values.

    > In this new era, it’s dangerous to get too rich. Stories abound of the state launching investigations against this business figure or that financier. The pressure is drying up venture capital funds, scaring the young away from lucrative professions such as investment banking. The number of millionaires leaving China has been rising and peaked last year at 15,000 — dwarfing the exodus from any other nation.

    > The private sector is in retreat. Since 2021, the stock market has been sliding, but state companies have grown their share of total market cap by more than a third to nearly 50 per cent. China now has the world’s only major stock market in which state-owned companies are valued on par with those in the private sector. Individual fortunes have shrunk dramatically over the past three years; the number of billionaires has fallen 35 per cent in China, even as it rose 12 per cent in the rest of the world.

    > China’s super-rich increasingly choose to lie low. Become the richest tycoon in the US and you might launch your own space programme. In India, you might throw gazillion-dollar weddings for your children. In China, you might look for a way to lose your new title — and the target on your back.

    !xi-lib-tears

    52
    Zorin OS 17.2 Has Landed
  • Pretty good tbh. I was torn between Zorin, PopOS and Mint and settled Zorin because it also syncs nice with Graphene/Android via the App. You can choose between Mac, Windows and other type of Desktop looks and don't need an Terminal if you don't want to

  • The real culprit behind all fascist movements
  • Yes? What do you think I'm saying?

  • The real culprit behind all fascist movements
  • OP implied Capitalism isn't the economic base of fascism, the way I read it and were I'm responding to.

  • The real culprit behind all fascist movements
  • Good, because you'd get dunked on lib

  • The real culprit behind all fascist movements
  • The naming of something decides the nature of the thing

    Lol

    So where does capitalism comes from?

    Volkswagen, Siemens, IBM, Hugo Boss, and many others. Also socialists known to like privatization, not like the Nazis invented that, rightt?

  • The real culprit behind all fascist movements
  • IBM, IG Farben, Coca Cola, Hugo Boss, Volkswagen, Krupp, and many others were just doing regular business. And "privatization" definitely wasn't something invented by the Nazis. Got it.

  • The 2024 Reddit mod experience
  • When you are concern trolling about a characters sexual orientation in the movie sub, then you had it coming.

    If you indeed asked in good faith, then there's a appeal process. Remember to more carefully word your questions pertaing to sexual minorities.

  • Iran backs China-Brazil peace plan for Ukraine war
  • Sovereign countries can’t choose their allies? Really? When long-time neutral countries have decided that not even being neutral will protect them anymore from invasion, your answer is that they should be invaded?

    History started only in the 2000s for you. I understand.

  • Iran backs China-Brazil peace plan for Ukraine war
  • You don’t care about the invaded people.

    Putting just randomly invading Ukraine. No interests, no security concerns, no geopolitics involved, am I right?

    Oh so you don’t care about the people then, got it.

    Oh so you don’t care about Israelis, just letting the Palestinians take hostages, got it.

  • Putin: Long-range missile approval will put NATO 'at war' with Russia
  • Russian military bases are visible on google maps

    https://kyivindependent.com/missile-strikes-kursk-apartment-building-russian-official-claims/

    I guess this building was also seen on Google maps

    Ukrainian troops have been training in nato countries since close to the beginning of the war

    It's one thing to train and supply a force, it's another man that supply

  • Putin: Long-range missile approval will put NATO 'at war' with Russia
  • The NATO long range missiles are dependent on (NATO) satalite intelligence, meaning the west provides targets to Ukraine. Also apparently the NATO provided systems take a while to learn, so NATO personell has to be mounting them. How this is not considered a direct involvement of NATO and a major escalation is beyond me. Fucken libs are gonna get everyone killed, just to make a nice dividend on their defense stock

  • Iran backs China-Brazil peace plan for Ukraine war
  • Can you explain why supporting US interests in the middle east is bad (among others arms sales in "Israel"), but supporting US interests in Ukraine (arms sales, privatization) is good somehow?

    Free Palestine, Fuck NATO.

  • Nuland has finally admitted that the Ukraine-Russia peace deal, nearly finalized in spring 2022, fell apart because of the US, UK, and other Western governments.
  • Even with a treaty in place, why would Ukraine not trying to become stronger with the Russian threat?

    Because "getting stronger" in this context means militarily. Why would you want to bolster your military, when the Minsk treaty guarantees safety from russia? Not implementing the treaty and continued prospect of joining NATO, bolstering Ukraines military antagonized Russia, as they saw that the Minsk agreement got ignored. Merkel admitting that it was just to buy time, proved the Russians right.

  • Is it me or is everyone in hexbear insane?
  • You can stop, I don't think BE will notice you

  • Is it me or is everyone in hexbear insane?
  • I did you even acknowledged the example of banning beards but then pretend like you weren’t given evidence.

    I acknowledged it, by telling you to focus on proving cultural genocide in the first place. No, targeting bearded people that espouse violent Muslim interpretations of Islam in order to "correct" their beliefs to non violent interpretation does not constitute cultural genocide (even if wasnt fully informed on the targeting of ideologically violent bearded people. That maybe constituting racial profiling, but not cultural genocide)

    No there aren’t.

    There are like this source BE uses https://medium.com/@sunfeiyang/breaking-down-the-bbcs-visit-to-hotan-xinjiang-e284934a7aab

    denying the Genocide

    Nothing to deny. You haven't proved it.

  • carl_marks_1312 carl_marks[use name] @lemmy.ml

    comrade/them

    https://carlmarks.com/

    Posts 3
    Comments 292