this post was submitted on 26 Aug 2025
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Again, you're deeply confused. I gave you independent media, Qiao Collective is western independent media made up of those supportive to the PRC.
Secondly, again, you are merely gesturing at the possibility of overreach while erasing that the people of China support their system and are happy with the level at which speech of capitalists is curtailed. Influencial speech is absolutely allowed, and people are more politically engaged than in the US. You have this weird misconception of a dystopian society that just doesn't exist in reality, likely due to only consuming western media.
Apologies, I only saw the Qiao Collective described as a Chinese group, and thought that meant it was based in China, not just that it was made up of Chinese people. Still, they're very clearly a media organization made with the intention of supporting the PRC, and I've found claims they receive significant funding from the PRC, which I don't think makes them truly independent in the same way that the massive western media conglomerates are not truly independent because they must answer to their own capital interests. Point is, the conflict of interest is still very, very clear.
And no, I don't view china as a dystopia, I recognize that there's a lot going right there and that the people are, for the most part, doing fairly well. But conversely I don't view it as a communist utopia, it has genuine issues with surveillance, freedom of speech, and political persecution. And I haven't even mentioned its own imperialist tendencies with Taiwan, a country in which the opinion of reunification is in the overwhelming minority. And the country's massive participation in and influence from the global market makes me really doubt how free the country is of capital interests.
In my opinion, the idea that china is a utopia and the greatest country in the world is similarly naive to those who say the same about America.
It isn't a "conflict of interest," it is their interest. They are openly stating that Qiao Collective's goal is to combat western misinformation and connect Chinese political commentary and perspective with a western audience. You're the target demographic!
Secondly, nobody said China was a utopia. You're putting words in everyone's mouths with that one. I am defending the merits of the PRC and its socialist system, while stating that much of your criticism is ill-founded. That doesn't mean they are perfect, they have a long way to go.
Thirdly, you need to research Taiwan more. Qiao Collective also has a resource guide for it. China isn't imperialist.
Finally, again, you're claiming the people of China are oppressed with a lack of freedom of speech and political persecution, but what that translates to is you wish capitalists had free reign. I've already explained how the working class is in control, and their interests are supported.
Overall, you have a bunch of underlying assumptions and very little actual investigation. I am not trying to be rude or mean, I mean this purely as an attempt to get you to peak outside the western curtain.
Alright, I apologize for putting words in your mouth with the Chinese utopia thing, but you did the same to me, just to be clear.
As far as "conflict of interest" goes, I appreciate they are transparent in their interests, but what I mean by "conflict" is that if they have their interest is also to be fair and truthful (something I would hope is the case for any media) then they cant be fair and truthful about a conflict when their other interest is explicitly one side of that conflict. Again, I'm not dismissing the article as a whole but it's very clearly one-sided.
From the resource you provided on Taiwan:
I don't see how there is much conversation to be had beyond that. I don't care that the majority of its population is ethnically Chinese, they don't want to be part of the PRC. I recognize the American interests in keeping Taiwan independent and the problematic ties to the American military, but at the end of the day, if 92.4% of the population does not want to be a part of China then they should not be a part of China. And China, in wanting to control a foreign territory without the consent of its people, is imperialist in that regard. If the majority opinion of the people in Taiwan ever changes to be in favor of reunification, then I will change my mind on that matter.
Imperialism isn't just "annexing territory." China isn't trying to aggressively invade Tawian, they are waiting for when Taiwan wants to be reunited, and they have good reason to believe they will eventually.
Well, as I said, if the people of Taiwan are ever willing to unify with the PRC then I will support it. But they don't, they never have, and I see no reason to believe they ever will soon. China's insistence that Taiwan is currently and always has been a part of China does not seem to me like waiting for consent of the people.
It seems to me like, yet again, you haven't done the necessart research and are just parroting the US State Department narrative.
I couldn't care less about what the US government has to say on the matter. As I feel I've made abundantly clear, I do not believe Taiwan should be a part of the PRC because the people of Taiwan do not wish to be a part of the PRC. Any other factors are fairly insignificant compared to that. Even your pro-PRC article clearly states the statistics - that reunification is extremely unpopular to the people of Taiwan - so I really doubt that is western propaganda or the US narrative.
You don't care, you just stop any and all reading where it affirms your pre-existing bias, a bias formed largely by the State Department's influence over mass media. No situation is static, and if you ignore the forces at play you'll always be caught off-guard anytime change occurs.
As I said, if the opinion of the people of Taiwan change to be in favor of reunification then I will also support it, regardless of what western influences want. I understand the situation is complex but consent and self-determination are not.
Again, my stance on Taiwan is simple: because the people of Taiwan do not wish to be part of the PRC, I do not believe they should be. Do you disagree with me?
I believe you are deliberately ignoring the complexities of the situation, because reality challenges your preconceived notions.
If those complexities were significant enough, then the people of Taiwan would support reunification. Like you said yourself earlier, these people aren't stupid. If it was best for them to be a part of the PRC they would support that, but they overwhelmingly wouldn't. And, to be clear, this is not even close. Your own source said it was less than 8% of the population wanted reunification. That's one of the most overwhelmingly unpopular opinions I've ever seen in politics.
This conversation started with you arguing that the PRC was so great because the people of the PRC believed it to be. That the PRC should be the way it is because thats what the people want. And now here we are, talking about a people who overwhelmingly think they should not be a part of the PRC, and now suddenly "what the people want" isn't valid anymore? Why was that valid when it was in favor of the PRC but is invalid when it isn't? Maybe you're right that I have a bias and preconceived notions, but you clearly do too.
Again, nothing is static, and you assume long and protracted processes produce immediate results. Your deliberate refusal to read into anything that might challenge your pre-existing notions is not productive.
I know it's not static, thats why I said I would support reunification if the people of Taiwan did. You, however, are refusing to acknowledge your own biases and hypocrisy on this matter.
There are no hypocricies on my end. I am absolutely biased, and so are you. Everyone is biased. What's important is that I've done the research to support why I believe broad approval of the PRC will continue in China, whike you've refused to do the research on Taiwan's complexities. There is a large gap in knowledge, I don't simply believe that just because a single chart says China is democratic that it is, I believe it because it corroborates everything else I know to be true.