8 comments

  • AngryData 10 hours ago
    China isn't dumb, they saw what the US did to the USSR and anyone who else who was even the smallest possible threat to the US. And they knew how big of an actual potential threat they would become as they industrialized and hollowed out US manufacturing. And I think it is the right move on their part, surpass the US economically, let the US continuously drain its resources across the globe, and when the US is under pressure and decides China has too much control it will be too late and they can just starve the US out economically. The worst thing that can happen at this point to China is the US actually does build back a broad local manufacturing sector and reduces imports, but that still leaves China with a far larger domestic market. Every other potential outcome has China sitting in an even better position.
    • kashunstva 8 hours ago
      > as they industrialized and hollowed out US manufacturing

      Just to be clear about cause and effect - during the long period of globalization, the U.S. chose to off-shore manufacturing, trading high availability/low cost for domestic production. Off course, China has been an active participant in that process; but the U.S. could have chosen otherwise. Much of the rhetoric from the current administration's leader in the U.S. implies that the U.S. has been victimized unwittingly by the process, which of course is entirely unfounded.

      • andrekandre 5 hours ago

          > implies that the U.S. has been victimized
        
        it would be super easy to blame the industrialists who wanted to outsource at any cost (and still do, just not to china) but that wouldn't work because thats where the (campaign) money comes from
    • jokoon 40 minutes ago
      I don't think having less manufacturing is such a bad thing.

      In a world of technology, what matters is designing and expertise, not making things.

      China has a rampant cheating problem in its universities, and there is a lot of corruption. This discourages Chinese people to pursue innovation.

      The communist party is a big obstacles to innovation.

      China is dependent on stealing techs.

      Not to mention Chinese talents would rather work in the US.

      So it boils down to having the fairest political and regime system, which china is not, although it could be one day, but I don't think Chinese culture can absorb democracy very well.

      I'm not worried.

    • lvl155 9 hours ago
      What did they do to the USSR? They collapsed all on their own. If China were on its way up, people will flock there to find opportunities (just as they did briefly following the financial crisis) but the exact opposite is happening. China had its shot but they timed it poorly.
      • AngryData 9 hours ago
        Besides the repeated sanctions and embargos, propaganda, proxy wars, and military dick waving contests?

        I don't know how you can believe China is on anything except an upward trend right now. Many countries won't even let people buy Chinese cars because they are so far ahead of everyone else in cost and manufacturing efficiency and I don't know any industry where China can't match foreign companies in and compete against.

        They are in a prime position right now in my opinion. All of their industries have major players in cutting edge technology, yet they still have more population to modernize and sell to domestically, and they supply half the world's manufacturing needs and do work in basically every sector. They have tons of foreign investments into infrastructure and mineral extraction to keep feeding themselves raw materials, they have all the processing equipment to convert raw materials into base materials, they have all the manufacturing to turn those base materials into pretty much any goods they want or need. They have highly educated people and education programs and schools, a robust government, a domestic population still fairly far away from dropping off a cliff like every western nation, they have a strong enough military to be secure against basically any nation outside of global nuclear war, and a populous that broadly supports their government. Outside of multiple chartoonish sized blunders I don't see any path for the near future that doesn't result in Chinese economic growth and increased global positioning and power.

        • lvl155 6 hours ago
          Great, you can move there and I would wish you the best.
          • AngryData 1 hour ago
            Are we suppose to bury our heads in the sand and deny the reality right in front of us because it is inconvenient? Maybe if people faced reality we wouldn't have sold off so many western assets and industries in the first place and put us in a bad position compared to them. It wasn't their job to stop us from being stupid and gutting our own industries in favor of their exports and giving them everything they needed to quickly industrialize and modernize.
      • jrflowers 7 hours ago
        > What did they do to the USSR?

        The answer to that is kind of, globally, the thing that defined the second half of the 20th century. Like I can’t think of a subject that has been covered in more detail than “what the US did to the USSR”. There are roughly infinity books about it.

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War

        • lvl155 6 hours ago
          You mean all those things the US did to stop the spread of communism which we now know definitely to be a giant dead-end. People make it sound like USSR and communism was so great and it only failed because of the US. This is like saying Intel failed because of Nvidia. No, Intel failed because they sucked all on their own.
          • K0balt 1 hour ago
            Make no mistake, we spent the USSR to death. We made our military advances so expensive to stay at parity with that it simply overwhelmed their economic production capacity as a nation.

            Sure, they did it to themselves, but we made the situation lose/lose by exploiting our position as an economic powerhouse.

            With the very sad state of US manufacturing, where just trying to buy US made bolts and nuts can be impossible, it is entirely possible that China could use the same play against us.

            We don’t have the critical skilled manpower to recover overnight, it’s at least a 5-8 decade process just to get enough qualified die makers to build the tools we need to build the tools and products we want. Die making is a skill that takes decades to master, and a master can only teach so many apprentices in a lifetime.

            This leaves us in a very vulnerable position. We need to buy the tools from China at scale in order to build the tools that we need to rebuild our capabilities. We cannot build them ourselves at scale. If we had a BRICS embargo against selling certain tools to the USA, like we used to have with China before Reagan, we would be well and truly up a creek without the proverbial paddle.

            Right now it’s almost impossible to manufacture in the USA at any significant scale, and cheap and easy to do in China. We can assemble, but manufacturing not so much.

            The people with the skills needed to rebuild this capacity now number in the low thousands or even high hundreds , and the average age of those that are left in the field is 64. Deregulation and outsourcing, kicked off in earnest during the Reagan years, cut us off at the knees.

            Pointing out that China is much better positioned than we are to lead the world in economic and industrial production isn’t unpatriotic. The first step to a solution is to recognise the problem.

            There’s an interesting video that is on this tangent:

            https://youtu.be/3ZTGwcHQfLY?si=D3ngTOl7xvxN340q

            I believe he has made some headway since this video, but the trials involved in manufacturing in the USA even at a very modest scale are salient.

          • jrflowers 32 minutes ago
            If your position is that nothing the US did, despite how well-documented and agreed upon it is, had any influence on the fall of the USSR, then I can see how it would be easy to get confused.

            So if “what did the US do?” wasn’t a question and you actually meant to write “I as a matter of ideology do not accept any US involvement in history”, then okay, cool. Otherwise if you actually want the question answered there’s a ton of information available, likely even some from whatever ideological angle you would prefer, since, again, it was so incredibly well-documented.

            https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War_(1985%E2%80%931991)

  • jauntywundrkind 12 hours ago
    Related, China also speaking of a strong desire to keep the war in Ukraine ongoing, as distraction for the world & the US. https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2025/07/04/europe/china-ukraine-eu-w...

    Just feels like China has very little to do in this cold war right now. The US just funded a massive war against itself, that is absolutely going to suck up fantastic resources & deeply deeply weaken our nation.

    • 1over137 7 hours ago
      “our” nation?
      • jvanderbot 7 hours ago
        Is there a term for something that is correct and proper when OP says it but is trivially false and easily misinterpreted when stated back by a reply?

        That's what this is.

    • AnimalMuppet 7 hours ago
      You know, I recently saw someone speculating that China would be ready for war in 2027 (as is their stated goal), but that they would go after Siberia rather than Taiwan. Taiwan is very risky (have to cross the strait, and who knows what the US will do?), but Siberia is more straightforward.

      Well, if China is in fact thinking that, then China would love to keep the war in Ukraine going, because it weakens Russia.

  • dumbledoren 10 hours ago
    Could that be because the US think tanks and establishment mouthpieces published papers on how the US needed to destroy China to prevent it from becoming an economic competitor decades ago, and then started appointing people to the State Dept. to implement that plan?
  • Havoc 7 hours ago
    When you’re preparing to take on the #1 then yeah you prepare for a face off
  • akomtu 10 hours ago
    It's not really a revelation that war machine #1 has spent decades preparing for a war with war machine #2. That's the entire point of their existence: waging wars and preparing for wars.
  • aaron695 6 hours ago
    [dead]
  • zxspectrum1982 12 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • jauntywundrkind 12 hours ago
      The angst and anger and destruction of all of our shared cultures by radical extremist anti-wokers is 1000% worse. Such rage over letting other people exist.
  • animitronix 9 hours ago
    lol whatever, China's screwed
    • 1over137 7 hours ago
      Peter Zeihan, is that you? ;)