Good day comrades and welcome to my first Hexbear post.
Like many others here, I have participated with delight in the Western invasion/migration to 小红书. Hearing from the Chinese people directly has truly restored some of my faith in humanity.
Also like many others I am grateful every day for their revolution and steadfast and peaceful development over the decades, especially lately with climate change looming and no other nations rising to the challenge.
Thirdly, after understanding CIA media operations and anticommunist agitprop I now don't personally object to what we call "censorship" over here. It seems legitimate to me for the dictatorship of the proletariat to manage the "Overton Window", (lest it be managed instead by capital and its convenient alliance with jingoism).
Now for the hard questions.
I spoke with a Chinese citizen and acquaintance about all this. Aside from their reluctance to discuss politics I was also troubled by their assessment of the labor situation in China.
According to them, there are unions but they are state controlled and useless. They say the work culture is brutal and unsustainable and that doing true organizing will result in imprisonment.
I am coming to this question from a place of wanting to learn from the premier Marxist country and government, but I can't make it reconcile in my head. I would perhaps ask this question on 小红书 but I don't think this discourse would be welcome in that community.
Were unions weaponized by foreign powers in China's past? Is my acquaintance biased/unrepresentative? Is the connection between organized labor and Marxism less ironclad than I always assumed? What do you think comrades?
The right to strike has been removed from the constitution since 1982. Joining the WTO in 2001 stripped off the rest of our labor protection rights. That’s the price you have to pay to become integrated into the world market.
Read my effort post on the labor conditions for BYD Zhengzhou vs Tesla Shanghai I wrote a couple weeks back. It’s not representative of the whole country, but it gives a pretty good idea on what it is like working for two of the world’s largest factories.
The right to strike may have been removed but I have seen plenty of examples of strikes happening since then. It's not like striking doesn't happen in China
Of course you can strike, but it’s not constitutionally protected.
Wow, that is incredible, thank you for writing that up and sharing