NorthHawk wrote:What China fears most is nations forming a bloc against their way of doing business.
The TPP was going to be that bloc.
China needs to trade with the world to keep the population content. They desire
the things we have and if they are cut off or limited in access they won’t be happy.
And the political regime knows it.
Except that we differ dramatically on issues like socialized medicine and the defund the police movement, of which I notice that you've (apparently) ditched the thread rather than answer my question.
I-5 wrote:I don't want to defund the police FYI. Did I say that? In fact, I quoted Chris Rock saying police should get paid more, but that we can't keep doing the same thing and expect better results. Yes, more whites are killed, but there are more whites in the population. Blacks get incarcerated and suffer violence from police at a higher proportional rate in terms of the number of blacks in the population. I would be all for keeping police budgets the same and even more if qualified immunity could be taken off the table. Otherwise, how do you get bad apples out?
Except that we differ dramatically on issues like socialized medicine and the defund the police movement, of which I notice that you've (apparently) ditched the thread rather than answer my question.
I-5 wrote:I don't want to defund the police FYI. Did I say that?
River Dog wrote:Increase funding, make police work more financially attractive to prospective applicants, allow for more training, a higher rotation through problem areas, more monitoring and involvement by supervisors and other support personnel.
I-5 wrote:They've been doing that (increase SPD's budget) for years, and the problem has gotten worse. Should expect different results this time? I'm not saying defund is the answer, but there seems to be a problem within the system itself. Question: do you trust any police department to investigate itself when its officers are accused of abuse? That just doesn't make any sense to me if you apply that filter to literally any type of organization. Do you believe in qualified immunity that protects officers in almost all cases of abuse?
Since 2000, the annual SPD budget has grown to almost double in 2020 (from $229M to $409M), while meanwhile the SPD headcount has not maintained growth with Seattle's population boom, hovering just below and above 2000 headcount over the past 20 years.
I'm all for increasing budget, but something fundamentally different has to be done, otherwise we can expect more of the same.
https://sccinsight.com/2020/06/30/under ... nt-budget/
RiverDog wrote:So specifically what has the SPD done wrong to where you can say that the problem has gotten worse? Has there been any unjustified officer-involved shootings where suspects were killed or seriously wounded? Relative to other similar PD's, has there been an unusually high number of complaints of excessive use of force? Have there been an unusually high number of racial profiling complaints or unjustified harassment? Are their hiring/promotional practices in need of revision? Do they not have enough minorities/women officers or promoted them into management positions?
It's not good enough to just point at a PD in Minneapolis, Atlanta, or Houston and say that the problem at SPD has gotten worse. These departments are paid for separately and should be judged on their own merits, not by events in other cities.
They don't fear that at all. I suggest you do more reading on China. They have zero fear of anyone. Anyone telling you they care one minute of one second is lying to you. 1.4 billion consumers don't have much concern about TPPs or anything of the kind. China is the big dog of Asia. Their population is bigger than most of those nations combined. Their military is unassailable. They have as much fear of the TPP as we have of the European Union.
No one has any power over China or will any time soon. The days of China needing the world are gone. The days of the world needing China are here.
All you need to do is think it out more. The combined markets of America and Europe are more powerful than the combined markets of Asia except China. We already had Japan, South Korea, and The Phillipines on our side with very good trade agreements. It didn't stop China at all. You're fooling yourself if you think they give a rip about the TPP. You can mark my words right now. If the TPP somehow forms, it will allow easier access to China, not harder. China's growth won't slow at all. China will still sell more products and be more attractive to investors than any other nations due to its infrastructure, low costs, stability, access to capital, increasingly strong middle class consumers, and all the advantages China has over every other Asian nation other than perhaps Japan, who they outnumber 10 to 1.
Americans just don't get it. China is the future. Nothing is stopping them. They will continue to expand their economic and political power barring a world war or similar catastrophe. The only nation that could challenge China and the next market people want to see grow substantially is India. They have a 1.4 billion consumer market. Every nation in the world needs additional stable, wealthy, consumer markets to expand in to grow. Domestic growth always reaches a point of maturity where they have nowhere to go, which is why immature and growing markets like China and India make businesses salivate.
You have a fundamental misunderstanding of the power of the Chinese market and market economics period if you think the TPP will do anything but make the relationship between big business and China stronger.
I still don't understand why Americans are so ignorant of China. The amount of money being made by Wall Street and American business by China is immense. It has been one of the biggest growth catalysts for the world economy of the last 20 years. No one wants that train to slow down. Not China, not America. There is insufficient economic growth opportunities in the TPP to match what China provides.
So let me know what they need from America?
1. They have competitive phones with Huawei.
2. Their own oil companies that buy oil from other nations.
3. Their own computer and electronic brands.
4. Their own search engines and tech companies with Ali Baba like Amazon and Baidu like Google.
China produces nearly everything they need domestically. Most of their growth is via domestic sales to their 1.4 billion people. The main imports for China are agriculture and natural resources, which they are getting from other third world nations in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.
So if you believe what you posted, Northhawk, provide me evidence that China needs us more than we need them. I want to see that evidence. Because from an economic standpoint, it is America who will suffer if they can't produce in China, not China who will suffer as their market can sustain much more growth.
I'm all for increasing budget, but something fundamentally different has to be done, otherwise we can expect more of the same.
NorthHawk wrote:Then why did China ever open up at all? They needed and still need a source of money from outside to increase the total wealth of the country
and thereby make the people richer and give them a better standard of living. It's in part why the Soviet Union collapsed. They couldn't get
enough outside capital to compete with the west.
China needs to trade with the rest of the world so it can bully and steal its way to prosperity. Agreements like the TPP or variants thereof will
rein them in if they have access to the wealthiest countries capital and resources restricted.
It's what they are most afraid of, and Trump handed them a gift by pulling out of the TPP instead of shaping it into a more palatable agreement.
No society can increase their wealth from only the inside regardless of the number of people. It's simple economics - if you increase the money
supply, the value of the currency decreases and prices rise, but if you add in money from foreign sources that new money increases the opportunity
for more people to buy more things and generate more economic activity. The same amount of money in a system doesn't do that and simply
increasing the money supply will only create inflation.
Hawktawk wrote:Asea you are an extremely intelligent dude. Loved that breakdown. China and Russia have one thing in common. They are our chief geopolitical military foes and they are both playing chess to Trumps golf.
In the long-term China becoming economically powerful will help the United States as long their currency value rises. Then we have a market for our goods and we can become a producer for them rather than vice versa. A nation of 1.4 billion people should eventually buy way more from us than we buy from them.
NorthHawk wrote:Very true, but they have to play by the same rules as the rest of the 1st world and so far they haven't. They need capital to expand their businesses and employ their
people but they are doing it in an unfair manner. What Trump doesn't acknowledge is they are doing the same thing with the rest of the economically advantaged
countries. By forming a bloc like the TPP, pressure on China to change would have a huge influence. Right now they are just thumbing their noses at the rest of us
as they continue along the road of IP theft, buying politicians, reverse engineering technologies, stealing company secrets and more to give their companies a
big advantage.
Basically what we could say to them is if you want to play ball with us, you have to follow our rules and permit the same access to your markets as you have of ours.
Otherwise they will continue to steal our future for their benefit. That's what they really fear the most - being forced to play fair.
I-5 wrote:https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-election/joe-biden-donald-trump-debate-onscreen-fact-check-ticker-a9702021.html
Has this been done before? This election would be the perfect time to do it.
I-5 wrote:https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-election/joe-biden-donald-trump-debate-onscreen-fact-check-ticker-a9702021.html
Has this been done before? This election would be the perfect time to do it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:They could try it. Doubt it will do much. Not many fact checkers are considered unbiased. It's why we have people believing conspiracy theories. No one believes the facts as presented. They just believe what they want to believe and the evidence that supports their individual bias.
c_hawkbob wrote:This whole "fact checkers are biased" is BS. It's purely the right saying "don't call US liars!"
c_hawkbob wrote:This whole "fact checkers are biased" is BS. It's purely the right saying "don't call US liars!"
I-5 wrote:It is hard to get away from bias, but it's ironic that this forum does a more credible job of handling it than the media on both sides. It's crazy that disinformation has won...which means Putin has won. I don't know what else we can do.
I-5 wrote:It is hard to get away from bias, but it's ironic that this forum does a more credible job of handling it than the media on both sides.
I-5 wrote:It is hard to get away from bias, but it's ironic that this forum does a more credible job of handling it than the media on both sides.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Do you really think either side is going to seriously buy fact checkers? Maybe a handful of people, but both sides are dug in. You can post a deluge of facts and due to personal political bias they won't buy it even if it's true.
Hell, the fact that we have people who don't believe in the moon landing and "flat-earthers" is a small example the ability of individual humans not buying facts even if they are believed by the vast majority of people due to their obviousness. I still talk with religious people who think the earth is 10,000 years old and the science that says otherwise is lying.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I see Trump finally found a medical professional to support his propaganda in Dr. Scott Atlas. This will be an example of fact checking problems as people backing Trump will believe his facts. And the anti-Trump people will believe that these protests didn't spread the virus at all or immigration isn't a way for the virus to spread, when every indication is that both are risk factors for spreading the virus. Then they'll fight it out in the media, both trotting out scientists to support their assertions. Some will call it fact checking, but it's more of the media circus to push their agendas.
The fact that you believe Putin has won is more political bias as people buy into the idea sold by the media that Russia is some kind of threat to us, which they are not. How a country of 140 million with few world allies, a weak economy, and a declining population became the boogey man again I do not know. China is the main real threat for the United States in the world, not Russia. China overshadows Russia by like sun is larger than the moon.
I-5 wrote:Ok, so the FBI and Dept of Homeland security are wrong about their intelligence about Putin. China is a big threat, too. It doesn't mean that Russia doesn't have a lot to gain by keeping Trump in power, as we've seen in his actions the last 3.5 years. If Trump wins, there is a good chance the US pulls out of NATO, another benefit to Russia more than China, at least for now. Your assertions by the way are in direct line with Pompeo and Barr, who both are in the news for breaking longstanding protocol within each of their departments as they relate to the election (taking part in a political process and declinging to follow the 60-day rule, respectively).
I-5 wrote:None of that is suprising, nor are they mutually exclusive threats. Of course every country tries to influence, jut like the US does. The question, how does it affect the strategy to keep our elections legit?
I-5 wrote:None of that is suprising, nor are they mutually exclusive threats. Of course every country tries to influence, jut like the US does. The question, how does it affect the strategy to keep our elections legit?
Honest question: Has there been any actual vote tampering,
I-5 wrote:Not vote tampering per se, but that isn't the only thing that affects the votes; it's things like the release of damaging news at a specific time designed to hurt one political rival at the other rival's benefit. To be honest, though, I'd say Comey did more to sway the election in 2016 than anyone else did, with his self-reversal about the investigation into Hillary's email..which was not that consequential in the end, except that it probably did sway a lot of voters in the middle.
Honest question: Has there been any actual vote tampering,
I-5 wrote:Not vote tampering per se, but that isn't the only thing that affects the votes; it's things like the release of damaging news at a specific time designed to hurt one political rival at the other rival's benefit. To be honest, though, I'd say Comey did more to sway the election in 2016 than anyone else did, with his self-reversal about the investigation into Hillary's email..which was not that consequential in the end, except that it probably did sway a lot of voters in the middle.
NorthHawk wrote:But in the past the foreign actors had very little ability to influence voters on a mass scale like today.
Russia is the worst problem by far in elections as they have meddled in the UK and Brexit arena as well
as in German elections supporting the far right parties and candidates as well as in France where they
openly financed the party led by Marine Le Pen who fronts a right wing party.
The Russians are a lot more active than the Chinese/N. Koreans/Iranians, etc. in that they wish to
influence the immediate elections whereas the Chinese are taking the long road like they usually do.
The Chinese work in more subtle ways by gaining influence with lower level politicians and gain their
favor as those politicians move up the ladder. With enough influence, they can get control from
the ground up, but the Russians are going after the top players and wish to create havoc in liberal
democracies.
NorthHawk wrote:But in the past the foreign actors had very little ability to influence voters on a mass scale like today.
Russia is the worst problem by far in elections as they have meddled in the UK and Brexit arena as well
as in German elections supporting the far right parties and candidates as well as in France where they
openly financed the party led by Marine Le Pen who fronts a right wing party.
The Russians are a lot more active than the Chinese/N. Koreans/Iranians, etc. in that they wish to
influence the immediate elections whereas the Chinese are taking the long road like they usually do.
The Chinese work in more subtle ways by gaining influence with lower level politicians and gain their
favor as those politicians move up the ladder. With enough influence, they can get control from
the ground up, but the Russians are going after the top players and wish to create havoc in liberal
democracies.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The stupid inside the nation is what any foreign actors use to push the population. The stupid has to be here first for that tactic to work. How do you get rid of the idiots who believe Qanon? Who want to buy into Marxist philosophy? Who think the earth is flat or want to fight against perceived threats against their gun rights, race, and the like?
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