What question you want ask about socialism in China? — guanyun
How deep was the transition of Deng Xiaoping into the rule of market, or said it in other words, the "Modern China"?
YES.Maybe I understood wrongly, but it seems that you perceive Modern China as highly-developed in economics but undeveloped in terms of ethics or morality.
I don't think Mao has any legacy circulating in China today. We all walked out a long time ago, and some people still mention it today because they want to keep the regime coherent.I wonder if you perceive that the path taken by Deng Xiaoping went off from the real Chinese socialist culture perpetuated by Mao.
When Western businessmen do business in China, they have to rely on Chinese businessmen, but the previous or recent generations of Chinese businessmen were not necessarily well educated morally, and the new generation of businessmen are a little better.You state that whenever Chinese officials or entrepreneurs work along with Western citizens they tend to disrespect the law.
Not sure I understand your question correctly, the competition between China and the U.S. is both political and cultural, but I don't think that China would deliberately sabotage Western businesses, and in many cases it's the businessmen that Western businesses rely on in China that make mistakes, corrupt mistakes.I also wonder if this is a cultural conflict rather than a political one. We already debated this issue in the forum and I believe (I hope I am not wrong at all) that in China, Japan, Korea, etc... unethical actions such as corruption are more punished or socially rejected than in the Western world.
China's laws are not rigid, and I think it's a bogus question that they're actually being revised very quickly. It just means that there are political issues where China has no room for maneuver.On the other hand, we tend to see China as a rigid state where the law is effective. I do not pretend to say that it is perfect, but it at least works as it should be
I don't think the West really understands China, in fact, on many levels, Western attitudes towards China are being pushed by Western populations, and I of course I don't think China is doing exactly the right thing either.I do not want to sound so ignorant and say "China is a dictatorship" because we in the Western world are also blurred in terms of real representativeness...
On the other hand, it is interesting how you say that Mao's legacy is rarely seen as Chinese people nowadays. I do not understand if it is "good" or "bad" or if it is just a generational issue. But I think it is worth highlighting how impressive his revolution was. Maybe this belongs to the old days, but I think there was a "before" and an "after" in China due to Mao's doctrine. — javi2541997
My opinion,Mao was an emperor, not a leader, and I must make it clear that China now started with Deng Xiaoping, and while Mao did a lot, he didn't modernize China, and in a sense, China now looks like the Second French Republic. — guanyun
ethics and morality have decreased in terms of culture or civism. — javi2541997
China has not built up morality in the modern sense, but it is being built up at the moment. — guanyun
What do you think about socialism & Marxism? — guanyun
What question you want ask about socialism in China? — guanyun
At this moment, I don't think China is a socialist country. From my understanding, China has had a Nozick-style libertarian economic system since Deng Xiaoping. However, this system has changed in 2018. China has set goals for more economic equality and is trying to move towards a socialist system.Do you think China, since the revolution, was ever correctly labelled as socialist? — universeness
What for you, is evidence that the label 'communist,' is more apt, than socialist, for the current Chinese regime or is 'autocratic control backed by a rich/plutocratic/patriarchal, capitalist elite,' more accurate as a description of the current Chinese government, in your opinion? — universeness
The political reality is very complex, there are many places that still exist the worship of power politics and non-universal values. I am not endorsing the regime, but as someone who came from the bottom of China, I know that the reality in China is very cruel and complicated, which involves the clash of different clan concepts, different regional concepts and different ethnic philosophies. We are powerless to talk about China from philosophical concepts. So my libertarian ideals are all confined to my personal actions, without trying to influence others.How can a system be socialist, if it is one party rule and not based on the regular democratic vote of the people? — universeness
If you are typing on TPF from a networked computer in China, are you worried that the Chinese authorities, do have a system of monitoring the internet activity of its population, with the goal of identifying dissidents? — universeness
At this moment, I don't think China is a socialist country. From my understanding, China has had a Nozick-style libertarian economic system since Deng Xiaoping. However, this system has changed in 2018. China has set goals for more economic equality and is trying to move towards a socialist system. — guanyun
Again can you give an example of a current policy which exemplifies what you are referring to?But it is very clear that the current government is trying to create a more economic equality environment, so I could say that China is trying to be socialist and trying to get rid of elite capital, only the process is painful and the result is the current economic slide. — guanyun
All nations on this planet have this problem, but few agreed to a one party permanent governance with a party elected undemocratic autocratic leader, as the solution. The Chinese government does not seek the regularly renewed consent of its population, to govern. It is therefore in no way socialist and your reason for that current reality as stated above, is in my opinion, an unacceptable one.I know that the reality in China is very cruel and complicated, which involves the clash of different clan concepts, different regional concepts and different ethnic philosophies. — guanyun
What do you mean by this?We are powerless to talk about China from philosophical concepts. — guanyun
But personal actions of any significantly public kind, will influence others. Are all such actions you choose to take hidden and secret? You are posting on a public platform but I do accept that your identity and exact whereabouts are more protected, is that what you mean?So my libertarian ideals are all confined to my personal actions, without trying to influence others. — guanyun
Do you feel free enough to critisize the Chinese government in the same way as I can criticise the UK or the Scottish government here where I live, in Scotland, without fear of physical attack from that same governments military or/and police forces?Actually, the academic field in China is quite free — guanyun
I noticed you offered no opinion on the Tiananmen square protests and the many Chinese people who were killed by the Chinese authorities. That's fine, and I am sure you have legitimate reason why you choose not to comment. Does that also mean you would choose not to respond with your true opinion to such questions like:I don't support the surveillance of people, but I also see that people around the world are really not rational enough in their virtue. It's hard to evaluate. — guanyun
I know the words underlined in this 'first paragraph only,' from the wiki article regarding Nozick's work are at best 'a simplistic overview,' but even with the limits of that in mind, the people of China do not, to me, seem to have the individual voice or collective 'people power,' needed to achieve any such notion as that reportedly espoused by Nozick in the words I underlined above. — universeness
we're only a hundred years away from the Qing Dynasty today, and we're still in the middle of the modern era and the kingship era, although in terms of life, there is not much difference between our lives and those of other countries. — guanyun
What is the impact of Xi Jinping on 21th century China? Is it true that he owns more leadership and charisma than Mao's socialism? — javi2541997
was wondering if Xi will be remembered as one of the main artificers of Chinese modern history, as well as Deng Xiaoping or Mao. — javi2541997
Mao's legacy is rarely seen as Chinese people nowadays — javi2541997
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