Admiral Valdemar wrote:That's definitely uplifting, and reminds me of why I always argued against the people who thought Google was like any other company and happy to kow tow the Chinese demand for censorship, so long as they got the monies.
Why is Chinese censorship for Google any more wrong than the censorship of their satellite maps and/or news results on demand by wealthy oligarchs? It's a hot topic here in Russia. Google is still
the whores they are and they will
do anything for money. As for their brawl with the Chinese, I doubt it will change much of their policies. A whore is always a whore. A capitalist is always a whore, too. Damn, I sound like Shroom, but it's well warranted.
So you all are cheering for Google when they attack the Chinese government for censorship, but it's okay for them to take money from Miller and other thugs who are basically glorified fucking bandits, hide their mansions and estates, it's all right. That's not "censorship" - once google got out of China, they are now the paragon of morality!
Google's "morality" is bullshit, like all megacorps. It's an oddity if anything that they'd even care; if the Chinese government hadn't been so blatant as to hack their accounts, they wouldn't have given
a flying fuck. And I think we all know it. They didn't give a flying fuck for years.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Now if this is a precedent that's being set for many anywhere near the size of Google, I'll gladly watch as the Chicoms weigh up which is more in their interest: losing billions of greenbacks, but losing their grip on the population or the alternative of cash, but dirt poor peasants seeing not everyone can move to those nice new cities cropping up everywhere.
China is not entirely dependent on foreign investment for industrialization; in fact, I'd say they have passed the threshold where they can do it on their own. It will be a lot of pain, but actually, that would help China become more independent in the long run, as opposed to having to constrain consumption in favour of First World exports.
The Kernel wrote:Doing business in India has its own sets of problems, but at least you aren't funding the oppressive Chinese government.
Yeah, you're funding the Indian government, which had less than stellar results in reducing human suffering (outside of a few places, like Kerala). Which is actually a good idea, maybe - China is already more wealthy than India, so perhaps it's time to help the Indians to rise. Not that it changes much, like I said. 25 billion from 8 trillion? That's 0,03%.
The Kernel wrote:This isn't about machines sold in China, this is machines manufactured in China and shipped to the US and Europe. Remember how China has that teeny thing called a massive trade surplus? This is one of the consequences of that.
Well then I guess the Chinese should start selling laptops to their own populace. Perhaps it's high time for China to look towards it's own domestic market rather than continue selling to the West.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:I would dearly love for this to come to something that really makes The Party take a long, hard look at their current status and question whether their wealth and power would still be there if everyone upped and went to India, for instance.
If it happens right now, this would probably cause an economic collapse of China and unmitigated economic hardship on a population which barely rose from agrarian poverty into industrialism. But hey, political pipe dreams make it perfectly well to wish folks suffering in the name of freedom, right?
Admiral Valdemar wrote:It's one thing to have the US as the superpower now, for all its drawbacks, but China with a very real tyrannical government would be much worse. Economic clout for a nation that is happy to censor and oppress dissent is not what I like to see the free market work for, so if Dell is following a trend Google has set in motion, then bully for them. Better still if others wake up and figure they don't need to stick around propping up a regime they're not particularly fond of, were it not for cheap labour.
China's advantage lies not only in "cheap labour". Labour in SEA is cheap overall. Indian labour is also cheap. However, China is institutionally stable, has a decent urban life standard which matters for the advanced industrial workforce, et cetera. The "free market" works to support anything so as long as it's economically profitable. It's absolutely irrelevant what it actually is.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:We shall see how this goes. It'd be nice for megacorps around the world to start making decisions based on the ethics of their business, rather than a healthy bottom line as the sole factor.
That's not going to happen en masse, unless you have a magic wand somewhere in the closet which would change some of the most ruthless institutions on Earth into their Hello Kitty counterparts.
Moreover, this seems to turn out much ado about nothing. The world is not changing overnight. Megacorps remain greedy ugly shit (at the same time moving industrialization forward, heh). The PRC remains an autocracy, and frankly, so far no amount of criticism's going to change that (not that China'd see any incentive to; they'd been doing better than their neighbors while remaining autocratic). People with money and power remain shit, in general.
I can't believe some sort of "moral stance" of a megacorporation can suddenly cause people to go all teary-eyed and loving caring care bear bullshit - "oh look at them, the moral knights in white armor, the Robin Hoods!"
If a thief who steals millions suddenly helps one malnourished child, he's still a fucking bastard. Some individual "moral stances" by megacorps change nothing. They didn't become one inch better or one inch worse. Even a bad institution can take a moral stance sometimes. The problem is all the other times it takes a "moral" stance which completely ignores morals. So what's the reason for the fiesta?