China privacy? (Read 1718 times)

oldfart

China privacy?
« on: January 30, 2024, 10:53:05 PM »
I did not know that China had gone into full science fiction mode.
Including public display of rule violaters. This is a part of Steph's multipart travelog

China runs on digital currency, making everything faster, convenient and ... monitored https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2024/01/31/china-runs-digital-currency-making-everything-faster-convenient-monitored/

What, Me Worry?

changemyoil66

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #1 on: January 31, 2024, 08:03:38 AM »
I did not know that China had gone into full science fiction mode.
Including public display of rule violaters. This is a part of Steph's multipart travelog

China runs on digital currency, making everything faster, convenient and ... monitored https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2024/01/31/china-runs-digital-currency-making-everything-faster-convenient-monitored/

And social credit score. You cannot enter certain businesses if your score sucks.

oldfart

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #2 on: January 31, 2024, 08:23:43 AM »
There was a dystopian sci fi movie like this but I can't remember which one.

Seeing this story kind of helps me understand the Kit n gun mindset. The Chinese populace accept strict government authority as being normal.

It's completely opposite from how I grew up.
What, Me Worry?

QUIETShooter

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #3 on: January 31, 2024, 08:38:19 AM »
There was a dystopian sci fi movie like this but I can't remember which one.

Seeing this story kind of helps me understand the Kit n gun mindset. The Chinese populace accept strict government authority as being normal.

It's completely opposite from how I grew up.

The government is all knowing, and will take care of you.  Protect you.  Educate you.  Make you prosperous:  "Aye kissee yo assee and yoo make more training mandates so I makee mo moneeee!!!"
Sometimes you gotta know when to save your bullets.

changemyoil66

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #4 on: January 31, 2024, 08:49:27 AM »
There was a dystopian sci fi movie like this but I can't remember which one.

Seeing this story kind of helps me understand the Kit n gun mindset. The Chinese populace accept strict government authority as being normal.

It's completely opposite from how I grew up.

That's why there's the American fighting spirit.  I was watching The Lost Battalion and the after historians speaking.  There's a scene where a German officer is offering the American POW smokes and food. The POW said, nah' he's stuffed and rubs his belly. The Germans know they're short on both.  He doesn't understand why the POW was being so cocky and unwilling to cooperate.  Then a few scenes later the German general is confused as why the Americans don't surrender when it's obvious they're a lost cause.

The historian said this is a true thing that took place.

This is no fault to anyone who grew up under a different culture as they don't know what they don'w know.

macsak

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #5 on: January 31, 2024, 09:13:13 AM »
you forgot "madafakas"

The government is all knowing, and will take care of you.  Protect you.  Educate you.  Make you prosperous:  "Aye kissee yo assee and yoo make more training mandates so I makee mo moneeee!!!"

hvybarrels

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #6 on: January 31, 2024, 10:23:50 AM »
First they purposefully tear down western civilization from the inside, now they introduce the "solution"

Never mind the concentration camps, mass rape and organ harvesting of political prisoners, killing millions around the world with their bioweapons, or welding people inside their homes so they burn to death.

Or the fact that the Chinese economy is doomed because of the idiot central planners who disconnected them from traditional agriculture in exchange for chasing fast money bubbles

"SO convenient!"

I’m becoming clinically undepressed and thinking about beginning it all.

changemyoil66

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #7 on: January 31, 2024, 11:06:25 AM »
First they purposefully tear down western civilization from the inside, now they introduce the "solution"

Never mind the concentration camps, mass rape and organ harvesting of political prisoners, killing millions around the world with their bioweapons, or welding people inside their homes so they burn to death.

Or the fact that the Chinese economy is doomed because of the idiot central planners who disconnected them from traditional agriculture in exchange for chasing fast money bubbles

"SO convenient!"



Which is why I think people like Greta are full of shit. I don't see them in China or even calling them  out big time for pollution.  Greta's willing to be arrested in German, why not China?

Kuleana

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #8 on: January 31, 2024, 11:15:48 AM »
First they purposefully tear down western civilization from the inside, now they introduce the "solution"
The "solution"?

Do you mean the same kind of "solution" that the Israelis are currently implementing in Gaza with more that 20,000 dead consisting mostly of non-Hamas Palestinian men, women, and children?



Never mind the concentration camps, mass rape and organ harvesting of political prisoners, killing millions around the world with their bioweapons, or welding people inside their homes so they burn to death.
Have you ever been to China for an extended period of time?

Why don't you go to China for yourself to see if all your allegations about China are true.



Or the fact that the Chinese economy is doomed because of the idiot central planners who disconnected them from traditional agriculture in exchange for chasing fast money bubbles.
Doomed, like how the leaders of the US empire claimed Russia's economy was doomed a year ago?



"SO convenient!"
You got this one right.

There are many things in Chinese daily life that is far more convenient and efficient that in the declining US empire.

ren

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #9 on: January 31, 2024, 11:47:22 AM »
China planted madafaka derailleur
Deeds Not Words

hvybarrels

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #10 on: January 31, 2024, 12:05:04 PM »
China planted madafaka derailleur

CCP has entered the chat

I’m becoming clinically undepressed and thinking about beginning it all.

groveler

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #11 on: January 31, 2024, 12:31:06 PM »
There was a dystopian sci fi movie like this but I can't remember which one.

Seeing this story kind of helps me understand the Kit n gun mindset. The Chinese populace accept strict government authority as being normal.

It's completely opposite from how I grew up.
" The Chinese populace accept strict government authority as being normal.
It's completely opposite from how I grew up."
It is actually an Asian mindset.
That is why Hawaii government is so screwed up.
They simply can't handle people that can think and reason for themselves.
That is an alien concept.
That is why the monarchy was overthrown, and this is a single party state as is much of Asia.
 >:D

changemyoil66

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #12 on: January 31, 2024, 12:40:10 PM »
" The Chinese populace accept strict government authority as being normal.
It's completely opposite from how I grew up."
It is actually an Asian mindset.
That is why Hawaii government is so screwed up.
They simply can't handle people that can think and reason for themselves.
That is an alien concept.
That is why the monarchy was overthrown, and this is a single party state as is much of Asia.
 >:D

It took an Englishman to help HI fight for our 2a rights back.  Funny when he gets called out on social media by people who are supposed to be pro 2A and they ask what has he done for the cause.

hvybarrels

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #13 on: January 31, 2024, 12:47:11 PM »
It took an Englishman to help HI fight for our 2a rights back.  Funny when he gets called out on social media by people who are supposed to be pro 2A and they ask what has he done for the cause.

Facebook has a place for finding lost sheep but it was designed as weaponized behavior modification software, so not surprised.
I’m becoming clinically undepressed and thinking about beginning it all.

changemyoil66

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #14 on: January 31, 2024, 12:54:10 PM »
T

Have you ever been to China for an extended period of time?

Why don't you go to China for yourself to see if all your allegations about China are true.




I have in laws who live there who confirmed the camps for those arrested for practicing Islam.

Then there's the videos during covid of them taking peoples pets, pulling people from their homes, the camps for those with covid, etc...

Seems like their slide of hand is working on you if you don't think the above are true.  Control the flow of information (internet), and you control the people.

My friends cousin was also arrested recently for speaking against the CPP in Hong Kong (umbrella movement).  The arrest video is on youtube. Since he was arrested a few weeks ago, no one has heard from him since.

Flapp_Jackson

Re: China privacy?
« Reply #15 on: January 31, 2024, 01:31:19 PM »
It took an Englishman to help HI fight for our 2a rights back.  Funny when he gets called out on social media by people who are supposed to be pro 2A and they ask what has he done for the cause.

That's all too common in the US.  It's called "Taking your blessings for granted."

Everyone knows the phrase "taken for granted," but not everyone really thinks about what it means.

The Preamble of the Declaration of Independence begins with the phrase, "We hold these truths to be self-evident..."  Self-evident is synonymous with something taken for granted. It means we assume something is true, real, and unquestionable ... expected.

When it comes to rights, we are being taught that our liberty is a given, and that the government will unquestionably protect our rights. 

In the 1960s, Blacks and those who supported their cause did not expect their rights to be protected, as their experiences had proven otherwise.  They had to fight and protest and get arrested, beaten and sometimes murdered (MLK Jr) in order for Blacks to be treated as equals.  "All men are created equal" -- also in the Declaration.

Today, our standards have shifted.  So many battles for equality have been fought and won that we now take them for granted.  We expect (assume) that our rights are respected by government and will be protected.

It's gotten so that we are making up brand new "rights" (healthcare, a "living" wage, killing children through abortion-on-demand at any point in pregnancy, etc.).  even the right to "feel safe" has been argued after mass shootings. 

Now we have mentally ill people who believe they are living their lives in the wrong body convincing others they have a right to not only get free sex reassignment procedures and drugs, but that the rest of us must "affirm" their beliefs or be labeled transphobic.

We've stopped teaching what fundamental rights are.  Without those, none of these imagined rights would exist.  Poor people in Africa are not seeking to have their bodies mutilated to become the opposite sex from the one they were born into.  They find it laughable that any (sane) person can think a man can become a woman.  Check the Matt Walsh video for those interviews.

When it comes to the bill of rights, US citizens often take those enumerated rights for granted.  We will always have a free press, the right to worship, and the right to keep and bear arms -- because the government must follow the Constitution. 

The breakdown comes when the majority is convinced they have rights that countermand the right of the people to have guns (the right to not get shot by a psycho in a shopping mall). 

They aren't looking into the reason behind 2A.  It exists so WE can protect all our fundamental rights -- so governments remains in check, both foreign and especially domestic.

Kids are taught in school how things are, and they aren't given enough information to understand the "Why"" and the "What happens if those things cease to be protected or even acknowledged by government?"

I like to  compare our present society to a company with an outstanding IT department.  If for years there have been no hacks, no successful Phishing attempts, no ransomware payments demanded, and no hardware or network outages longer than the time it takes to fire up the backup routers, servers, etc., management begins to ask, "Why are we spending so much for IT?  I never see them doing much lately."

Management takes for granted that their IT infrastructure is going to continue working, even if they start reducing staff and cutting budgets.  Until they make those changes, they can't see how much work went into keeping everything running smoothly and protecting the company's operation safe from outside actors.  They assume IT will continue to be as reliable over the coming years even while gutting the resources that made it that way.

There have been individuals and groups calling for the repeal of the Second Amendment,  If the country continues to fall further into this pit of complacency, it's only a matter of time before the (major) majority overrules the minority, and government will no longer have that roadblock preventing it from going full-on tyrannical.

Civil Wars are still happening all around the worild.  The US is not immune.  In fact, we are probably due for another given the amount of division on display lately.
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world;
the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw