azanra4

joined 1 year ago
[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 5 days ago

These are fair points. Thank you for the response!

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 19 points 6 days ago (2 children)

Why should we listen to alarmist doomers who believe in near-term human exctinction? Climate change could take down industrial civilization and billions of lives within the course of a few decades or even years, but the idea that in about 1000 days the earth will look like venus and all humans will die strikes me as unhinged. this guy lowballs it, but I think there’s good reasons to be skeptical about the clathrate gun hypothesis

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 14 points 1 month ago

here's a video with english subs to explain why 云南 is so special. here's another video that's more about 昆明 tourism

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 11 points 1 month ago (1 children)

It's sad to see 苏州 (suzhou) characterized by its relationship to 上海 (shanghai), when 上海 is merely a city invented by China within the last 100 years to interface with the capitalist west. 上海's culture draws from the original, ancient cities of 杭州 (hangzhou) and 苏州. If history had played out slightly differently, 普通话 (common speech) would probably be their 吴语 (wu chinese) due to 南京 (nanjing)'s influence.

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 33 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Chinese people I've heard from generally say 昆明 (kunming) is the best place to live, at least from a natural scenery and weather perspective. Here's a map, where 昆明 is outlined in the 四季如春 (four seasons as spring) area, meaning the weather year-round is like spring. Beyond the climate, 云南 (yunnan), where 昆明 is located, is a mountainous province that is also a biodiversity hotspot. There's bountiful microclimates and many local cultures as well. Definitely not a "Max GDP" sort of place, but the other factors are incredibly good.

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 1 month ago

Yes because they didn’t build enough townhomes

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 month ago

The largest urbanized areas are all in the states, with cities of 7 million like Boston having more built-up area than 37 million tokyo-yokohama. Nobody can hold a candle to <1000person/km2 density in statesian cities. It’s absolute madness. I guess prodigious consumption of resources makes the economy looks good though.

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 6 points 1 month ago

here's a rec if anyone's interested. kinda fat-phobic but a heartwarming movie nonetheless

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 25 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I can’t wait until australia and new zealand are kicked out of the imperial core through economic warfare. Demographically, it’s already well on its way to becoming an asian country. The west can play in the north atlantic.

[–] azanra4@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

No, the author is not an anticommunist. This book would not be so widely promoted in China if it were anticommunist. His depictions of the cultural revolution are focused on the suffering people went through in a neutral way. I don’t think it’s controversial in China to say that there were issues with the cultural revolution that led to suffering for some. Here’s an official narrative to summarize the cultural revolution on Chinese internet:

文化大革命全称“无产阶级文化大革命”,发生于1966年5月至1976年10月,是一场由领导者错误发动,被反革命集团利用,给党、国家和各族人民带来严重灾难的内乱,留下了极其惨痛的教训。[1][3][4]

The full name of the Cultural Revolution is the “Proletarian Cultural Revolution”, which took place from May 1966 to October 1976. It was a civil unrest that was wrongly launched by leaders and used by counter-revolutionary groups to bring serious disasters to the Party, the country and the people of all ethnic groups, leaving an extremely painful lesson.

 

Kind of long + language barrier but I thought it was really incredible how these wind turbine blades make it from inner mongolia to xizang. It's crazy to see how narrow the roads are and how careful the drivers must be. The mountain roads even have a special tool to transport the blades at an angle. Bonus points for the neat food + lodging over the multi-day journey and the random guy playing CS:GO lmao

 

This isn't exactly Earth-shattering news but I thought it was neat and this community might enjoy it

 

The specific timestamp linked is where he explains China's current international position. The crux is that China supports Russia as a counterbalance to the US, and furthermore, the wars in ukraine and israel are keeping the attention off of China. Furthermore, he mentions that the Chinese understand the history of the 3 kingdoms in their strategy.

That probably isn't a revelation to this audience, but I can't help but indulge in 2 points. The first is a big LMAO since europe is not even in the discussion as a world superpower. The second is how intoxicating the Three Kingdoms analogy is for today's world. In my opinion, Russia would definitely be 蜀国 (shǔguó), since it's the most geographically isolated, the least powerful among the three, and has a strong history of repelling invaders. The question is how 魏国 (wèi guó), the most populous and militarily strongest power in the central geographic position, and 吴国 (wúguó), the maritime economic power, compare to today's China and the US. What do you all think of this analogy and its implications?

Some basic context is this talk is that it takes place at a NATO empire think tank called Asia Society with a former voice of america-pilled korean ambassador and audience being impressively Sinophobic, but George Yeo takes a more balanced approach in his responses and actually has some decent takes (although some responses are really pandering to the statesian audience) if you care to watch the rest.

 

Mayday and Jolin Tsai are probably top 5 artists in Taiwan right now and both made statements that amount to pro-unification positions in recent days. I'm happy Beijing is finally flexing its muscles to show Lai that he is not in the driver's seat of China's future.

 

Alternative title: man talks about how he is not Chinese but can be a Chinese Marxist

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