- 35 Posts
- 30 Comments
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•China wants foreign scientists, the public says no, thanks: Since Beijing announced a new visa to attract young science and technology graduates, a backlash has erupted onlineEnglish23·2 days agoHomosexuality was a crime in Canada till 1969.
It is in China in 2025.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgto World News@lemmy.world•Chinese freighter halves EU delivery time on maiden Arctic voyage to UKEnglish12·3 days agoYeah, as the Clean Arctic Alliance recently said in response to China’s new containership route through the Arctic:
An increase in shipping in the Arctic will lead to
- an increase in shipping’s global climate impact due to black carbon emissions – which have a disproportionately higher impact when emitted in the Arctic,
- an increase in disturbance to wildlife and to communities dependent on marine resources due to increased ship pollution including underwater noise in a comparatively quiet ocean, and
- an increase in the risk of damaging oil spills.
As one report said, as the Arctic ice vanishes, maritime traffic boom fuels the climate crisis.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•China detains dozens of members of underground church as government pressure on Christianity increasesEnglish193·3 days agoThere are 10s of millions of muslims, christians etc in the PRC, one private underground church group bring restricted is not the CPC cracking down on religion as msm would have you believe
Be skeptical, reuters founding is tied back to Thomas Reuters, who in the 1850s had a monopoly over mines, tobacco and railroads in Iran, their hearts are not in the right place
Yes, there are indeed, among others, muslims like Uyghurs in Xinjiang. China’s genocide there is well known.
You should always being skeptical when consuming media, but thank you for the reminder.The founder’s activities in 1850 have, of course, nothing to do with the current agency stance, though. And a certain “Thomas Reuters” has nothing to do with it. The agency’s founder was Paul Reuter. The company has been called Thomson Reuters after Canadian media company Thomson acquired Reuters.
Do yourself a favor and stay away from wherever you receive your information. Your statement is out of touch by any means.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgto World News@lemmy.world•Western executives who visit China are coming back terrifiedEnglish912·4 days agoI don’t hate a country or an individual. This is your weird interpretation.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgto World News@lemmy.world•Western executives who visit China are coming back terrifiedEnglish148·4 days agoHere is practically the same article, posted less than three weeks ago. It’s the same narrative posted by the same user.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgto World News@lemmy.world•Western executives who visit China are coming back terrifiedEnglish1624·4 days agoA few weeks ago there was a report on some US VC investors who made a similar trip to China and were then ‘terrified’ … Now this. Is it somewhat similar to the influencer trips to Xinjiang that then tell the world that the genocide of Uyghurs is not true?
How much do you see in such PR trips? Go a bit upstream the value chain to get the full picture …
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgto World News@lemmy.world•Britain's Starmer denies trying to appease China, says spying case dropped on legal groundsEnglish2·8 days agoMark Elliott, Professor of Public Law at the University of Cambridge, provides a good analysis on Starmer’s comments.
The Prime Minister insists that the dropping of China-related espionage charges occurred for reasons entirely outwith the control of his government — but his argument that his hands were tied by the previous government’s position on China is, at best, highly contestable …
The reality is that it is open to the government today to say that it considers that China was a threat to national security in 2021–23 and to offer that view as evidence for the purpose of criminal proceedings …
The entire comment makes a good read: https://publiclawforeveryone.com/2025/10/08/on-china-the-official-secrets-act-and-enemies-is-the-prime-minister-wrong
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgto World News@lemmy.world•Almost 500 anti-genocide activists arrested as Starmer government moves to ban protests outrightEnglish82·10 days agoI guess they at least oppose the (2022) Russian invasion of Ukraine so they’re not completely bonkers. Not Chinese propaganda level, but still disappointing.
They frequently portray Ukraine as an aggressor in its war, rather than Russia (they call the Kursk incursion of Ukraine the “imperialist-backed incursion of Russia”, and they write that Taiwan’s ruling party DPP “must renounce its confrontational approach to China” in an obvious disconnection from reality that Russia started the war in Ukraine, and China is becoming increasingly aggressive against Taiwan including threats of an military invasion - Source, but you’ll find ample evidence that this site is conveying authoritarian talking points in practically all its reports, and barely properly citing a source for their claims).
This is outright Chinese propaganda.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgto World News@lemmy.world•Almost 500 anti-genocide activists arrested as Starmer government moves to ban protests outrightEnglish5213·10 days agoI don’t support the UK crackdown on peaceful protesters, but this wsws.org is a de-facto Chinese propaganda medium. That’s not a good source.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Inside China’s gigantic iPhone factory: long hours, discrimination and pay delaysEnglish2·10 days agoThese are measures. What I ‘think’ they are is simply irrelevant.
But I think the linked report has nothing to do with this. It clearly suggests that Chinese workers suffer wage delays, discrimination of minorities, work overly long hours, and things like that. It’s a devastating report on both Chinese working conditions and a U.S. company exploiting the local policy.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Inside China’s gigantic iPhone factory: long hours, discrimination and pay delaysEnglish1·11 days agoMedian and average is not the same, the comparison doesn’t make sense as you say yourself.
And it has nothing to do with the linked report. This is not only about pay. It’s is essentially about poor workers’ rights in China.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Inside China’s gigantic iPhone factory: long hours, discrimination and pay delaysEnglish12·12 days agoTrue, but the problems are grave still. A situation described in the report would be impossible in the EU, let alone for such a long period.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Inside China’s gigantic iPhone factory: long hours, discrimination and pay delaysEnglish3·12 days agoThe report is about much more than ‘only’ the pay, but as you mention it: We must distinguish per capita disposable income from GDP per capita. GDP per capita calculates the total value of all goods and services produced in a country divided by the population, which doesn’t reflect the income available to individual citizens and households.
For this reason we must look at the disposable income per capita, which measures the amount of money people can actually use, and we see a completely different picture.
In 2024, China’s national per capita disposable income reached RMB 41,314 (US$5,800 at the current rate), according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics. Income disparities between urban and rural areas remain significant as already mentioned.
If it’s true that you can “rent a 2bd in most cities that aren’t Beijing and Shanghai for 2000RMB/mo”, you’d spend half of your disposable income on the rent (except in cities like Beijing and Shanghai, where you spend considerably more).
It is noteworthy that this data comes from official Chinese sources.
But again, the linked report clearly suggests that workers suffer wage delays, discrimination of minorities, are work overly long hours, and things like these. It’s a devastating report on both Chinese working conditions and a U.S. company exploiting the local policy.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Inside China’s gigantic iPhone factory: long hours, discrimination and pay delaysEnglish94·12 days agoNo, unfortunately it is from this week. China has sadly done nothing for the workers since.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Inside China’s gigantic iPhone factory: long hours, discrimination and pay delaysEnglish24·12 days agoThank you for your comment.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Inside China’s gigantic iPhone factory: long hours, discrimination and pay delaysEnglish125·12 days agoThis is a major reason why the company produces in China. There are practically no workers’ rights.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•Controlling information in the age of AI: how state propaganda and censorship are baked into Chinese chatbotsEnglish1·12 days agoRead my other comment in this thread.
Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOPto World News@lemmy.world•China launches a new visa to attract tech talent, but locals aren't happyEnglish42·13 days agoThe BCC decided to make the downside the headline. Which means they agree with Trump who scared off foreign talent.
No. The BBC decided to report that Chinese people are unsatisfied with their government’s decision and the government doesn’t care. Vews contrary to The Party are being censored as usual.
This is what the report says. I guess there are weird people everywhere, here in the West, in China, everywhere else. It’s just that given the strict censorship in China, the government does not much against this racism. One report is here.
China’s government suppresses its minorities. If you are not Han Chinese and not a member of the CCP, you may not climb to high up the career ladder to say the least.