[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 53 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

"Getting?" Canada's racism is foundational. A bunch of trading corporations "given" supreme legislative authority over half of a continent that only became a country in order to cement the capital accumulation of railway investors who decided the best way to build their railways uninterrupted was slavery, primarily sino-immigrant labour, and torture schools with backyard mass graves. Literally had a "whites-only" immigration policy for like a hundred years, and now it's a points system that is held up internationally as a gold standard despite being nearly indistinguishable from the Kafala system in the Gulf.

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 32 points 3 weeks ago

That's fair, but an important thing to remember in regards to China: Patnaik (2020) notes that 64% of the number of persons lifted above the international poverty line since 1990 was entirely on account of China. Whatever economic complaints that people on the Internet have, China has made moves to alleviate the immiseration of a billion people in the face of an over-reaching hyperviolent global hegemony.

As far as hope, I always take to heart Mariame Kaba's assertion that "hope is a discipline."

" I always tell people, for me, hope doesn’t preclude feeling sadness or frustration or anger or any other emotion that makes total sense. Hope isn’t an emotion, you know? Hope is not optimism. I think that for me, understanding that is really helpful in my practice around organizing, which is that, I believe that there’s always a potential for transformation and for change. And that is in any direction, good or bad . . . hope is a discipline and. . . we have to practice it every single day. Because in the world which we live in, it’s easy to feel a sense of hopelessness, that everything is all bad all the time, that there is nothing going to change ever, that people are evil and bad at the bottom. It feels sometimes that it’s being proven in various, different ways, so I get that, so I really get that. I understand why people feel that way. I just choose differently. . . I believe ultimately that we’re going to win, because I believe there are more people who want justice, real justice, than there are those who are working against that. And I don’t also take a short-time view, I take a long view, understanding full well that I’m just a tiny, little part of a story that already has a huge antecedent and has something that is going to come after that, that I’m definitely not going to be even close to around for seeing the end of. So, that also puts me in the right frame of mind, that my little friggin’ thing I’m doing, is actually pretty insignificant in world history, but [if] it’s significant to one or two people, I feel good about that."

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 32 points 3 weeks ago

Cuba suspended the deal back in 2022 because they couldn't produce enough sugar and became a sugar importer instead, their sugar industry is in collapse. But yes, please tell me in more snarky and doomerist ways why China is a big bad bully for not continuing to buy sugar that doesn't exist

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 58 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Just an FYI for people getting angry about this: this deal to export 400,000 tonnes of sugar to China annually was suspended back in 2022, by Cuba, because Cuba ran into production issues, didn't have enough sugar, and became a sugar importer. The deal remained suspended in 2023, again, because Cuba could not produce enough sugar. This year the deal was finally cancelled because, shockingly, Cuba still can't produce enough sugar since their sugar industry has been in collapse for years.

And now the Financial Times of all places has made up some story about how China is punishing Cuba, and people are repeating it (literally no other sources exist for this, every article in English and in Spanish that I can find link back to the FT article).

https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/cuban-sugar-industry-restructures-another-bleak-harvest-looms-2021-11-24/ (Start of the collapse and the last year people were still talking about Cuba maybe fulfilling its export but probably not because harvest was bad)

https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/cuba-cuts-plans-export-sugar-with-output-expected-stagnate-2022-11-03/ (article from the following year about how Cuba can't export sugar anymore because they can't fulfill their contracts)

Edit: China is still Cuba's number two trade partner. Could they do more for Cuba? Yeah, they could do more for literally everywhere, but complaints about how China needs to deliver more aid are way different than uncritically accepting that China is cutting trade ties with Cuba to punish them. (By the way, China is also one of the largest investors in Cuban infrastructure, so the real energy should be at wanting China to double down on helping Cuba fix their currently faltering energy infrastructure)

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 34 points 3 weeks ago

It's just a contract being cancelled, that could have any number of reasons behind it (and the most likely reason is profitability, which is problematic in its own right but not at all what this thread is complaining about). But to accept that it is being cancelled as a punishment to fail to privatize is pure conjecture unless you have inside information you'd care to share.

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 40 points 3 weeks ago

I never said the deal wasn't being cancelled, but the outrage being generated here is that it is being cancelled as a punishment, which there is no evidence of that isn't from a US-backed source.

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 56 points 3 weeks ago

When you read an Atlantic Council article and then say "fuck Xi" I think the US has worked its propaganda well.

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 35 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Sure and maybe the news that China is cancelling a trade deal is true, but the point of these types of NGOs is to frame it with a lot of unsubstantiated spin. This article you linked writes specifically that the trade deal comes as a punishment for failing to privatize, but I can't find a single non-US funded source that links those as cause-and-effect. There is no evidence that this deal is being cancelled as a lever for privatization, which is the thing that you are criticizing China for doing.

That's why when you use sources like this you can't take their reasoning at face value, that's just spreading Atlantic Council narratives.

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 35 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Have you actually looked at the team of people who run this foundation?

"Founder and Executive Director - Parsifal D'Sola Alvarado. Parsifal is a senior non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council's Global China Hub. In 2019 he acted as an advisor on Chinese foreign policy for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the interim government of Venezuela (this is Guaido's fake government lol). Parsifal lived in Beijing from 2008 to 2016 where he served as communications manager and researcher for the China Files news agency."

Come on, at least use sources that aren't US feds.

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 71 points 2 months ago

Working at the (state-owned media) CBC is fine and raises no questions, but working for the (state-owned media) RT naturally casts a propagandistic shadow. Care to comment?

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 33 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I really recommend The Counter-Revolution of 1776: Slave Resistance and the Origins of the United States of America by Gerald Horne, it presents a very compelling bit of research into the pressure of burgeoning abolition on the 1776 "revolution." Abolition in totality may have been "a long ways off," but Britain had already started major court proceedings that paved the way, as well as begun arming African regiments in the military to combat France and Spain, which was a source of major unrest amongst the slave-owning American colonists. It's worth noting that the "Stamp Act" and other such "taxation" acts that American foundation myth loves to talk about, was in no small part an effort to curb the quickly-growing privatized slave industry and the tax on slaves was one of the largest component of these tax reforms.

[-] MuinteoirSaoirse@hexbear.net 33 points 4 months ago

Internet for the People by Ben Tarnoff is not an explicitly anti-imperialist perspective, but the book details the process by which privatization and American regulation strangled its potential in service of corporate profit. (including the privatization of those vital parts of internet infrastructure that were previously owned by the DoD)

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MuinteoirSaoirse

joined 5 months ago