KentXie
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 25, 2006
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Man wants to be free and that isn't entirely the case in China. They can get as cosmopolitian as they want. But freedom is a basic human desire that won't go away ever. And eventually they might also have to care about their poor, that slows down business. Look at us and unions. Granted w/ unions they also got corupt and power hungry, but fair pay and benefits increases cost of production greatly. It also makes it way less enticing for a company to manufactor goods in China. I'm not saying China wont experience great economic growth. I'm saying once they eventually have eqaulity and freedom, the cost of doing business becomes much more expensive. Which is a pain America experiences. It may take a century, but it will happen. There is no way w/ all the interaction the free world will have w/ China that its' people won't want the freedom and equality that they see in so many other places.
That's true. However there is some things I would like to state and while it is somewhat controversial, it is something most people in capitalistic and democratic countries don't seem to know. Freedom, in the definition you stated is inefficient in certain ways. Not so much as inefficiency in a capitalistic definition, but development wise and progression. Label me socialist if you want but as you know most people in the world don't know how the world works. Blame Bush or Obama for the economic conditions all you want but they play a small part on how the economy changes. Aside from the policies and war expenditures, which I might add when spent on equipment made in the US actually benefits the economy as long as the companies that produces them spend it in other industries, the government have no control over how we spend. The other influence is the Feds. However the greatest factors are the consumers themselves. As I stated earlier, the majority of people do not know that, and blames whoever is in power for their problems not knowing that they are at fault for the poor economic conditions.
Which brings me to my point. As much as freedom is desired among all people, giving people too much freedom slows progress down in certain areas, not including investments. While in the US, people bicker over tax and how to spend the tax, leading to small bit by bit projects that take forever to be built and never a major project. When the Great Depression started, the government took over and funded infrastructure projects such as the Hoover Dam to put people back to work as well as benefit the country. Nowadays, a hostile debate would occur when such project arises because certain people won't benefit from it. It's always I GOT MINE AND SCREW THE REST. And this is where countries that are not democratic or capitalist seem to thrive. They control which projects will receive funds. And these are major projects that here in the US, people would be appalled because of the huge spending of tax payers' money. You think China would be able to build a HSR system at such speed under a system similar to the US today? Think again. Endless squabbing will result in nothing being built. I just read about the Masdar City in the visionary city thread that the UAE is building. It would be nearly entirely self-sustainable. Here we have trouble putting wind farms near Nantucket. You think people wouldn't protest against the ban on cars within the city?
This is why I don't believe the Chinese will have an uprising. As long as the country continue to improve its infrastuctures and economy they won't have much to complain. it's just the way they are bred. Call it brain-washing all you want but sometimes, you DON'T know better than the government.
There just needs to be a balance.