China has added forest the size of Texas since 1990

(e360.yale.edu)

613 points | by Brajeshwar 2 days ago

32 comments

  • yanhangyhy 12 hours ago
    I don’t know how it is in other countries, but nearly thirty years ago when I was in elementary school, a Chinese propaganda slogan stuck with me: “If you want to get rich, build roads first; have fewer children, plant more trees.” Every part of that slogan has been put into action, continuously, for decades. Although low birth rates have now become a problem, back then it seemed like a solution.

    Xi Jinping may be a rather dull person, but his most famous saying is “Lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets.” As for building roads — the Belt and Road Initiative speaks for itself. We’ve built bridges in Croatia, in Bangladesh, in Mozambique, and roads and railways all over the world. That slogan is probably engraved in every Chinese person’s memory.

    • shubhamjain 10 hours ago
      > Although low birth rates have now become a problem, back then it seemed like a solution.

      They haven't, imo. I am from India, and I have been hearing for the last two decades how we have avoided same mistakes as China and the latter is headed for a demographic collapse. China is only marching forward, and focusing more on automation to hedge its bets. While overpopulation in India has choked almost every city in India. I honestly don't know what will happen as more people migrate from rural to urban areas.

      India's population will peak in 2065, while China's already has. It's depressing to imagine that 250-300M more people are left to be added before we finally see a decline.

      Just like 1970s claim "overpopulation will destroy the planet" turned out to be exaggerated, the modern idea that “a large population is a blessing” feels equally misguided.

      • simsla 4 hours ago
        European here.

        One of the problems is that many of our society's systems are predicated on a growing population. Social security and pensions, for example, are structured not unlike a pyramid scheme: for every old person we should have more than one working young person. People take more than they give. Fixing that will be painful, but possible.

        More worrying is how many countries' birth rates have fallen below the replacement rate. Some SE Asian countries are interesting case studies here (Japan, S Korea), but it's not looking good, and much of western Europe is heading in the same direction. Maybe the worry is overblown and populations will eventually stabilize at a lower point, but currently it seems like a declining population will just add to the stressors that are putting people off from having children, so it could just as well keep snowballing.

        All that's to say, I don't worry too much about over/underpopulation, but I do worry about a shrinking population.

        • jnurmine 41 minutes ago
          Exactly.

          In the current pension system (at least the ones in the Nordics), the new generation pays for the old generation. This mechanism is broken, as it expects (as you pointed out) an ever-growing population, which is of course unrealistic.

          Fixing [*] the broken pension system in a sustainable way is politically unpalatable and seems to have been so for decades. Lifting the pension age is the only "innovative" action available that is even discussed nowadays anywhere in public, as if that were the only viable alternative, which of course it isn't.

          I've pondered why. Hammering out the details of a new system and taking care of a transition period etc. cannot be unsurmountable problems. It probably has to do with pensioners being a large voter demographic, thus the reason is some form of political self-preservation on behalf of the traditionally large parties.

          So, instead of changing things to the better, a broken system must be maintained. Since the system is not only broken, it's essentially untouchable, therefore political decision-taking has to accept possibly sub-optimal decisions in related areas to avoid disturbing anything. In a way, the brokenness leaks.

          Then, a shrinking population only exacerbates the problems of the pension system, spreading the brokenness further into other societal systems and decisions. And that's a bad path to be in.

          [*] In an example of a better-working alternative system, any pension contributions would be personal, kept in an account managed by the state. The money is (low risk) invested by the state, profits/dividends reinvested, etc. Once one becomes a pensioner, the money can be withdrawn in whole or parts. Add taxes somewhere, such as when withdrawing the money. The state guarantees the lowest level of pension, something like today. Simple enough, and not tied to "children pay for parents".

          Edit: formatting

        • throw0101c 2 hours ago
          > Social security and pensions, for example, are structured not unlike a pyramid scheme: for every old person we should have more than one working young person.

          Canada saw the demographic writing on the wall, and solved its public/government pension problem in the 1990s:

          * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_Pension_Plan#1998_refor...

          Good book on the history of the CPP, and how the reforms were determined and enacted (Fixing the Future by Bruce Little):

          * https://utppublishing.com/doi/book/10.3138/9780802095831

          There's no reason other countries could not have done something similar earlier (or even now).

          In France it is reported that retirees now have higher (average?) incomes than workers:

          * https://archive.is/https://www.thetimes.com/business-money/m...

          This is completely ludicrous. For retirement planning purposes, it is often recommended to assume you'll need 70% of your working age income for the same lifestyle (you have fewer expenses—live not having a chunk of your income go to retirement savings), but in many situations it could even be ≤50%:

          * https://archive.is/https://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-inv...

          To have the same (or more) in retirement generally means you "over saved" while working, and you could have had more resources for enjoyment of life earlier (after all, we don't know when our time will come).

          • Jyaif 8 minutes ago
            > In France it is reported that retirees now have higher (average?) incomes than workers

            It may not be exactly true, but it's close to be true, and then like you said the workers have way more expenses (rent, children).

            I will point out that in the 90s we in France already knew that the retirement system was unsustainable. It is quite obvious if you look for 2 seconds at the population pyramid :-)

            Generations of politicians tried and failed to do something about it, thanks to the left (and sometimes extreme right wing) saying that there was enough money and we just need to tax the rich more.

        • consp 4 hours ago
          The problem with most current pension systems is the inability of the last boom to plan for that boom to become part of it. And people hating on immigration, not realising it is massively needed to offset the negative replenishment rate. We might also have a negative growth rate when the boom generation starts dying but that might not actually be a bad thing. Note: the boom lasted from about 1948 to 1974 so it will take a while.
        • zelos 2 hours ago
          > for every old person we should have more than one working young person.

          I never understood this thinking. Doesn't it assume infinite population is possible?

          • ahartmetz 1 hour ago
            At a steady population number, it just requires people to work for longer than they are retired. Which is mostly already the case.
          • jonathanlydall 2 hours ago
            It's not like people sat down and said "clearly we'll have infinite population and hence a pyramid like scheme for social support for the elderly is ideal".

            It was more likely something like "for the foreseeable future we'll have population growth and therefore a pyramid like scheme is a good solution for now".

            Ideally the scheme should have already started adapting to the changing population dynamics, but humans for the most part (unfortunately) tend to kick problems down the road.

            Politicians don't tend to get rewarded for solving tomorrow's problem when their populace tend to me more interested in having more money to spend right now.

            So here we are, living large today with little regard for the cost to our future.

          • Paradigma11 2 hours ago
            No, it does not. If, for example you define old persons, as persons above the age of 90, you suddenly have many young to old persons.
          • Thorrez 2 hours ago
            Occupy Mars!
        • globular-toast 3 hours ago
          We are already seeing the effects of this. Rich people still get to take more than they give, poor people increasingly do not.
        • thiago_fm 4 hours ago
          > Social security and pensions, for example, are structured not unlike a pyramid scheme: for every old person we should have more than one working young person.

          I'm from a western country and I agree with your statement and have a similar fear. My country is doomed because of the pension system.

          BUT this doesn't apply to China. Their system isn't structured this way, therefore this is mostly irrelevant for them.

          As long as China have a working population bigger than most countries, as well such amazing universities, they will perform better than all those countries.

          Even with the population decline, they'll still have more able workers than all western countries for at least the next 100 years.

          Let that sink in.

        • kingkawn 3 hours ago
          Neither Japan nor Korea are in SE Asia
        • ashanoko 11 minutes ago
          [dead]
        • nine_zeros 46 minutes ago
          [dead]
      • GolfPopper 9 hours ago
        >Just like 1970s claim "overpopulation will destroy the planet" turned out to be exaggerated

        <looks at the world today>

        Seems to me like that prediction is pretty on track.

        • zdragnar 8 hours ago
          The predictions of Ehrlich in "the population bomb" and the club of rome were undone within a few years with the "green revolution" which saw massive increases in food production.

          Ehrlich in particular was suggesting mass starvation by the 1980's. Conceivably, it is possible that too many people will cause problems, but nothing like what they actually predicted has come to pass.

          • Unearned5161 7 hours ago
            I encourage you to revisit what you know about the club of rome and what was actually published in the Limits to Growth paper. We have been disturbingly on track for a lot of the variables that were of interest back then in the “business as usual” model.

            People tend to dismiss anything and everything around resource constraint thinking by doing the quick Ehrlich quip, and never really dig deeper into where people like Ehrlich ever got their ideas to begin with.

            • fouc 3 hours ago
              What's fascinating is the the Rat Utopia[0] experiment in overpopulation from the late 60's that Dr. John Calhoun ran.

              As a result, more than fifty years ago, on tape, Dr. John Calhoun made some eerily accurate[1] extrapolations of where human population is going to be now, and how our TFR (total fertility rate) would collapse (which they basically are, particularly since Millennial & Gen Z generations).

              [0]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_sink

              [1]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOFveSUmh9U "John B. Calhoun Film 7.1, (NIMH, 1970-1972)"

            • throwup238 6 hours ago
              What were those variables?
              • Paianni 4 hours ago
                The scenarios were calculated based on hypothetical 'policies' of a society and the availability of natural resources. The scenario (from the 2004 book) we are tracking most closely is no.2, i.e 'business as usual' but with twice as much resources as was assumed in the 70s.
              • galangalalgol 4 hours ago
                I don't know the work in question, but the extremes of agriculture we have gone to aren't sustainable simply from a soil destruction standpoint. We may figure that problem out too, but just assuming our ingenuity will get us out of any predicament we create will eventually leave us with a catastrophe. Carefully planning demographics is going to be necessary for stable long term well-being. Doing that in a way that isn't dystopian is a good problem to point our ingenuity at.
        • throw0101c 2 hours ago
          > Seems to me like that prediction is pretty on track.

          For an interest take on this debate (?) I recommend the book The Wizard and the Prophet by Charles C. Mann (who also wrote 1491 and 1493):

          > In forty years, Earth's population will reach ten billion. Can our world support that? What kind of world will it be? Those answering these questions generally fall into two deeply divided groups--Wizards and Prophets, as Charles Mann calls them in this balanced, authoritative, nonpolemical new book. The Prophets, he explains, follow William Vogt, a founding environmentalist who believed that in using more than our planet has to give, our prosperity will lead us to ruin. Cut back! was his mantra. Otherwise everyone will lose! The Wizards are the heirs of Norman Borlaug, whose research, in effect, wrangled the world in service to our species to produce modern high-yield crops that then saved millions from starvation. Innovate! was Borlaug's cry. Only in that way can everyone win! Mann delves into these diverging viewpoints to assess the four great challenges humanity faces--food, water, energy, climate change--grounding each in historical context and weighing the options for the future. With our civilization on the line, the author's insightful analysis is an essential addition to the urgent conversation about how our children will fare on an increasingly crowded Earth.

          * https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/220698/the-wizard-a...

          * https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/34959327-the-wizard-and-...

          * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_C._Mann

        • shubhamjain 9 hours ago
          Partially, yes! Population is #1 strain on resources. However, the political climate around 1970s was more like population would create large scale food shortages, famines, and without interventions, population would keep on growing forever. We at least now know that population peaks with prosperity, and food is largely a solved problem.
          • darkmarmot 8 hours ago
            We're on the verge of ecological collapse, undergoing an insane mass extinction event with ocean acidification and methane release going off the charts. I can't even begin to conceive of your reality.
            • dgfl 7 hours ago
              The point is that this is not what people were worried about in the 70s. Even halving the population we’d still have all of these problems. While we obviously don’t suffer from famine, at least not globally.

              Those predictions have completely failed and were replaced by new issues.

              • tsimionescu 4 hours ago
                We're not yet suffering from famine, because new technologies allowed us to extract way more food than anticipated from the same surface area. However, these practices are not workable long term. You can't actually extract the amount of food we are currently extracting from our agricultural land for another 100-200 years. If we try, we'll ultimately leave the soil in such a bad state that will not grow much of anything - and mass starvation will happen long before then.
          • reeredfdfdf 5 hours ago
            "We at least now know that population peaks with prosperity, and food is largely a solved problem."

            Solved problem for now. A large part of world's agriculture is dependent on stable rainfalls and temperatures. If climate change gets bad enough, a big collapse in world's food production capability might happen.

            • sdoering 4 hours ago
              "Solved problem for now." With "now" being the important word here.

              We should not forget the significant amount of soil erosion. Not only, but especially in already vulnerable regions. While I will probably not get to feel it, the next generation will.

              There are quite relevant studies already showing how the erosion of soil is already impacting agricultural yields. And that it is likely only getting worse from here on out.

          • catmanjan 9 hours ago
            >food is largely a solved problem

            It really isn't...

            • dragonwriter 8 hours ago
              Distribution is an issue, but the imminent capacity issue perceived in the late 1960s when The Population Bomb was written was already being solved when it was entering the popular consciousness (but the impact of the solutions had not been fully appreciated) by the Green Revolution through high-yield crop varieties and other advanced in agriculture.
            • adrianN 8 hours ago
              Production of calories is a solved problem. Distribution of food to people in need on the other hand…
              • tsimionescu 4 hours ago
                It's not really a solved problem, we're depleting many extremely slow to recover resources in order to produce the amounts we are today.
              • matheusmoreira 5 hours ago
                There's more to nutrition than calories. Generally speaking: the more nutritive, the more expensive.
            • coldtea 6 hours ago
              Yeah, spoken like someone who only understands food as something that magically and without fail appears on their local stores.
            • samarthr1 8 hours ago
              *logistics of food is not solved?
              • jl6 7 hours ago
                Neither production nor logistics is solved at all. We have bought ourselves time, largely by racking up environmental debt on our planetary credit card. Food is still massively dependent on fossil fuel consumption (machinery, transport, fertilizer).

                The good news is that the answer is to reduce the cost and carbon impact of energy production, and we’re making great progress here, but we cannot afford to take our foot off the gas, because although Ehrlich was wrong about the timing, he wasn’t wrong in his fundamental observation that the Earth has a finite carrying capacity.

          • coldtea 6 hours ago
            >However, the political climate around 1970s was more like population would create large scale food shortages, famines, and without interventions, population would keep on growing forever.

            All of those things came to be - and we're on track for food shortages and famines too with the environmental crisis.

            The latter has the qualifier "without interventions". The interventions just happened (widespread acceptance of abortion, "1 child per family", increased neoliberalization attack leading to less people being able to afford to start a family, cultural changes around marrying, loneliness epidemic, etc).

      • alex_smart 22 minutes ago
        India’s problems have nothing to do with population and everything to do with complete collapse of all government institutions.
      • 6510 7 minutes ago
        My thought was that we should develop a good DSL to design pensions. You obviously cant have a formula with more money coming out than going in. Pensions can gradually scale up and down depending on all factors.

        It isn't even hard to create. Things currently work like that children's game where each participant has to write the next word in the sentence. No amount of effort or coordination will produce a good novel.

      • tossandthrow 6 hours ago
        The main issue with a demographic decline is that fewer people can live of their wealth.

        This is in particular a problem for the older generation.

        But if you are not a big believer in retirement, then there are no issues with demographic shifts.

        • ozgrakkurt 5 hours ago
          It is really astounding that there is not a clear divide between younger worker people and older richer people in voting if you think about it.

          Especially when basically every single thing is about money in politics

          • FuckButtons 1 hour ago
            What’s astounding is that for basically any obvious voting block or political pain point there’s basically no effective political organizing anywhere I’ve lived. We’re more connected than ever, and yet none of that connection matters if we can’t leverage it into positive action.
        • coldtea 6 hours ago
          There are MANY issues with a demographic decline, "that fewer people can live of their wealth" is the least of it.

          Less productive hands (60 year olds are not as productive as 20 and 30 year olds, especially in any industrial and labor intensive field, but also in intellectual ones - who would have thought?). More older people in need of health support. Less dynamic society. Slowing economy.

          Beyond some (not very low) point it's also a self-reinforcing feedback point to relatively quick (in historical term) elimination of a whole people.

          • tsimionescu 3 hours ago
            If the population is declining, it's not a problem that the economy is also shrinking, assuming the rates are equal. What matters is GDP per capita not decreasing, it doesn't matter if total GDP decreases because the population shrinks.

            The only real issue is the demographic shift - and old people will bear the brunt of that, not younger ones.

          • tossandthrow 6 hours ago
            From me what you mention seems to be derivative of the retirement argument where you clearly state that those not being able to work as much and have higher maintainance needs are the ones at disadvantage.

            Living of wealth does not only mean your own wealth. That is also state wealth as in getting services redistributed to you.

            • coldtea 5 hours ago
              >From me what you mention seems to be derivative of the retirement argument where you clearly state that those not being able to work as much and have higher maintainance needs are the ones at disadvantage.

              I state the opposite: the younger people, who are being able to work as much, are the ones at a disadvantage.

              That's regardless if the older people live off their wealth, have state services redistributed to them, or are just left to die. You could even confiscate their assets and kill those old people, it wont fix most problems associated with a shrinking demographics.

              The economy has fewer productive people, so the (fewer) younger ones have to work more, while at the same time the economy contracts around them because of fewer consumers. Infrastracture built at X level of population also can't be maintained (due to cost, political justification, and capacity) as the population drops far below X.

              The younger ones have to live in a staler society, which an increased average age (in some countries the average person is already over 45 - used to be the average person was merely over 20-25 in the same societies decades ago), more decisions taken by people on their way out and not to their benefit etc.

              • tossandthrow 4 hours ago
                This is simply not correct.

                The "the young people have to work more" argument is only valid as they are working for the older generation.

                If we follow your proposal to euthanize every one over 60 then there really is no additional work.

                • coldtea 4 hours ago
                  >The "the young people have to work more" argument is only valid as they are working for the older generation.

                  Nope, that's just a tiny part of the problem.

                  An economy has a certain size, which depends on how many people support it (work) and how many people buy stuff (consume).

                  Fewer young people means (everything else being equal) less productivity. That's regardless if the old people are kept around or euthanized (!) or whatever.

                  Seems you forgot that declining fertility also means less young people each year, not just a larger percentage of older people. Even if you ...kill anybody above 40 years old, the number of 20 and 30 year olds will still drop because of the declining fertility.

                  Smaller worker and consumer base then means contracting economy.

                  • tossandthrow 3 hours ago
                    I see what the issue is - you see a contracting economy as being a problem in itself. It is not, as another commenter pointed out.
        • kakacik 5 hours ago
          Old people all have massive long term health issues. That's where most of the healthcare costs in universal healthcares go. Change the balance way more towards old instead of young being generally still healthy and feeding the system financially, and it just doesn't work anymore and becomes unsustainable.

          There are partial solutions, ie adding some small fees for each visit (since a lot of retirees are lonely and go for the doctor visit just to talk to somebody or complain, and as I said they all have various mix of long term issues). Where we live healthcare isn't fully free and you have to chip in a bit, and this ain't such an issue (apart from wealthy old people).

          • tcfhgj 4 hours ago
            a better solution would be imo to move resources from mindless consumption to healthcare
            • Ekaros 4 hours ago
              And why would people work if they do not get to consume? Okay some amount of self-actualisation. But doing some real work say manufacturing goods used in health-care. The factory part of that?

              With such move, there would like to be move to general welfare as well. So enough people might just cut down their labour to match the minimum level they would be getting anyway. And then you have no more surplus for healthcare...

        • bell-cot 5 hours ago
          > But if you are not a big believer in retirement, then ...

          Unfortunately, "believer" or not, modern Western medicine has gotten extremely good at keeping infirm elderly people alive.

          From a Capitalist medicine PoV, that's optimal for extracting their wealth.

          From a macroeconomic PoV - "retired" or not, the net economic input from the top decades of the demographic curve will be nothing so positive as you seem to assert.

          • XorNot 5 hours ago
            Not at a whole-population scale level to any real significance though. There are just an abnormally large number of baby boomers, exacerbated by the subsequent massive fall in birth rates following them.

            It's a "law of large numbers" problem - if you have a big population, you'll just have more people who live longer within that population then a similar, but smaller population.

            US life expectancy has actually been falling somewhat recently - the whole "people are living longer" thing has always been a massive over simplification of long term historical effects and pressures (i.e. life expectancy didn't change all that much with the discovery of medicine, but it changed a lot because infant mortality stopped dragging down the average).

      • Dumblydorr 4 hours ago
        An inverted population pyramid is a huge problem. What does China do when it has far too few workers and far too many elderly? This is coming for them in the next few decades, a slow moving crisis in demographics.
        • SapporoChris 3 hours ago
          Optimistically: Advancement in gerontology and improvements in problems that the elderly face.

          Pessimistically: A society that doesn't support it's elderly, well it's a self correcting problem.

        • yanhangyhy 3 hours ago
          robots
      • sometimes_all 9 hours ago
        In my opinion, we might have avoided some of the mistakes, but that is still costing us.

        The best usually leave the country after getting the prime education India can provide, and support the retirement plans of other countries' aging populations more than their own - the Indian government actively seems to encourage this, looking at how our PM tries to negotiate for more visas during every first-world trip. Even with the demographic dividend, we do not have enough jobs, so the elderly are not supported neither fiscally, nor infrastructure-wise, since old people cannot walk on bad roads or take advantage of non-existent programs anyway. For the younger people, the insane competition makes both work and personal life hell.

        Whenever I see videos of China and their cities, and then look out of my window, it makes me both depressed and angry. I still don't understand how India can even be compared to China any more.

        • HexPhantom 6 hours ago
          The talent drain is real... when the system doesn't create enough high-quality opportunities at home, people are going to leave, no matter how patriotic they are.
      • coldtea 6 hours ago
        Overpopulation is not the problem of India. Mindset towards public areas and public behavior is - and the very much active in practice caste system, still excluding millions from full participation in all of society.

        And inversely, demographic collapse if fertility falls will be a problem, just because it will hit after 2065 doesn't mean it's something to ignore.

      • mensetmanusman 50 minutes ago
        China’s economy is transitioning to one of taking care of the elderly.

        With a shrinking workforce and more robots, maybe that productivity gain is good enough to stall the inevitable.

        Their crazy bad policy decisions resulting in 20% youth unemployment is a risk.

      • yanhangyhy 8 hours ago
        I believe automation can solve this problem. Perhaps the government believes it too. But there are still many people who don’t believe it. I sincerely hope automation can solve this problem.
      • unglaublich 9 hours ago
        The nice thing about being a growing, underpopulated country, is that you're very attractive to immigrants. China can just fill the demographic gap with migration policies.
    • andrewflnr 12 hours ago
      I would really respect the hell out of the nation of China if it wasn't for the authoritarianism and imperialism.
      • somenameforme 10 hours ago
        Not to be coy, but what do you mean by that? The reason I ask is because I think many of us use these terms, but without ever thinking about exactly which behaviors we're critiquing, or how they relate to what we truly value. For instance both the Roman and Greek Empires deserve immense respect, yet they were both often imperial empires ruled by dictators. The same is no less true of many societies that played key roles during The Renaissance, and patrons of the talents of the era.

        I hold immense respect for China, because I think they're achieving great things. I also think there is a high probability that they will be the first society to start creating permanent off-planet colonizations, which is what will probably signal the birth of the next era of humanity, so that in the future a name like Wang Yie might lie right alongside Neil Armstrong.

        On the other hand I certainly don't think the US should emulate them. It's important for the world to be multipolar, not only in alliances, but also in ideology, perspective, and behavior. What will happen to China once they inevitably find themselves with a leader who is not socially motivated, or who is incompetent? In such a centralized system outright collapse is not out of the question. Or perhaps they'll be just fine? Who knows? By maintaining a wide diversity of systems across the world, I think we maximize our chances of collective success and minimize our chances of collective failure.

        • BrenBarn 8 hours ago
          I wouldn't think the Roman empire was a good thing if we had it today. We can "respect" those older cultures in their context while still recognizing that they were in many ways horrifying by modern standards.
          • somenameforme 2 hours ago
            In what way would they be horrifying? The Romans advanced public works, infrastructure, and other such things on an absolutely monumental scale. Many roads built by the Roman Empire are still even in use today! And I think Marcus Aurelius is perhaps the best example in history of a genuinely socially motivated leader. And the lands under their rule were completely able to maintain their own unique identity so long as it did not lead to attempts at rebellion/revolution.

            Of course one practical issue you run into is that while Aurelius was perhaps one of the greatest leaders of all time, his son and heir - Commodus, was perhaps one of the worst of all time. But at least if we speak of the eras prior to its decline, Pax Romana in particular, I don't really see how the Roman Empire would be horrifying. And in any case dramatic deterioration of the quality of public leadership, probably presaging a more broad decline, is clearly not limited to systems of minority rule.

        • hunglee2 7 hours ago
          this is the way - 'multi-polarity' is another word for 'diversity' which is another way to understand resiliency. We have seen in recent days what over dependence on single point of failure looks like (AWS outage), so from a species level perspective, it is better that we have many different forms of organisation and narrative. We just have to ensure that these narratives are not evangelical and intolerant!
          • jcattle 4 hours ago
            I think hackernews might be the only place on the internet where a commenter uses an AWS outage as an example for why authoritarianism is a good thing.
          • libertine 3 hours ago
            That's not what multipolarity means, at least by those leading such propaganda.

            By their standards multipolarity means control ove different circles of influence without interference.

            That's what Russia wants for example, they want to secure the regime by controlling nearby countries (ideally turning them into Belarus, or by threat of destruction, like Georgia and Moldova, or by annexation, like Ukraine).

            China wants to control territories surrounding them as well.

            So don't be fooled by multipolarity, it's just a repacked imperialism and colonialism by right, not by earned influence.

        • andrewflnr 10 hours ago
          Indeed, I think Rome, Greece and other conquering powers get more respect than they deserve. There's no actual reason so many people have to die for these countries' national ambitions. Feel free to generalize to the US, etc.
          • foxglacier 8 hours ago
            Didn't Rome save a lot of lives by pax romana? Perhaps it was actually better in terms of loss of life to be conquered by Rome than have endless wars among yourselves. Applies to the US too.
            • plopilop 5 hours ago
              You can defend a lot of atrocities by arguing "for the greater good" and comparing to uchronic hypotheticals. I could as well argue that without Rome, the greek democracies would have been much more prevalent, and lead to modern democracies much sooner. Or that a world leader would have emerged, leading the ancient world to endless peace and prosperity.
            • curbedsidewalk 7 hours ago
              [dead]
        • coffeebeqn 8 hours ago
          > who is incompetent

          I just hope we never go back to Mao-levels of incompetence

          • ggm 8 hours ago
            Must.. resist.. temptation..

            Killing all sparrows, compared to defunding vaccine science in the wreckage of a pandemic..

            Village Steel making compared to literally cancelling construction projects for advanced wind turbines

            • yanhangyhy 7 hours ago
              Maybe this is a surprise. Nowadays, young people are increasingly fond of Mao. He wasn’t a perfect person, but he spent his entire life exploring communism and trying to finally eliminate wealth inequality and privileged classes. Older people might not like him as much, because they were more influenced by the West and dislike China’s system more. But with China’s rise and Trump’s hypocrisy, I can predict that Mao will become increasingly popular in China.
              • grumpy-de-sre 6 hours ago
                It's worth acknowledging that Mao became increasingly erratic with age. Some of his early achievements are still very much seen in a positive light (eg. as a nation builder).
                • yanhangyhy 6 hours ago
                  yes. in my earlier age, the offical statement from CCP of him is 70% achievement and 30% fault. but as the inequality increase in china, people has more positive view of him.
                  • grumpy-de-sre 5 hours ago
                    Yep, nationalism isn't something you can turn on and off at will.

                    For an example I'm reminded of the recent public backlash to the K visa scheme [1].

                    1. https://www.ft.com/content/01a0029c-9f7c-4b31-a120-d1652f198...

                    • yanhangyhy 5 hours ago
                      This question is actually quite interesting. It’s basically connected to almost every issue China faces today — the national confidence born out of a century of humiliation, population decline, the rise of Han nationalism, soaring unemployment, and so on. The overall domestic response has been quite negative, though I don’t have a clear personal view on it.

                      It’s somewhat like the Tang dynasty at its most prosperous — when envoys from all nations came to pay tribute, and many Japanese and Central Asians studied and worked in Chang’an. But interestingly, I’ve noticed that in recent years, public opinion toward the Tang dynasty has gradually become less positive, which might be related to this.

                      • grumpy-de-sre 5 hours ago
                        I have no idea from where I sit, but I wonder how much of this is down to the increasing demographic share of Guang Gun [1] vs the older conservatives.

                        1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guang_Gun

                        • yanhangyhy 5 hours ago
                          Well, I actually know this issue quite well. China’s “bachelor problem” isn’t really that serious, although it is one of the reasons for the declining birth rate. While the main cause of China’s low fertility rate is the soaring cost of having children, it’s also strongly related to the rise of feminism and the growing hostility between men and women. In China, Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea, this problem is among the worst in the world. Basically, men hate women and women hate men; the marriage system has managed to make both sides unhappy, so people just stop getting married.

                          As for the “bachelor problem,” it roughly falls into two categories. One group consists of older men — they’re actually quite fortunate, since they’re a key target of positive government assistance. In rural areas, for instance, the government often helps them build houses and provides them with monthly living stipends so they can survive without working. China’s living costs are relatively low, so this policy can be sustained.

                          The other group is younger men. Their solutions are either marrying foreign women or staying single and enjoying life. With modern technology, single life isn’t really difficult anymore. In recent years, the number of cross-border marriages has surged, mainly involving women from Southeast Asian countries. Thailand, Vietnam, and Laos’ red-light districts are also frequent destinations for these men. Currently, influencers who promote foreign marriages are very popular on Chinese websites.

      • scoopertrooper 11 hours ago
        They go hand in hand. The authoritarianism of China allows it to undertake generational projects of immense scale with mass popular support through propaganda.

        It works well when the government is pursuing welfare maximising initiatives, but limits self-correction when the government goes off track.

        A small example of it going wrong, was when Mao convinced peasants to exterminate Sparrows and other ‘pests’ only to severely disrupt the ecosystem and cause a famine.

        • leodler 11 hours ago
          Somehow we (the United States) accomplished generational projects that are currently out of the realm of possibility such as the interstate system without risking anything like a famine. I think a lot of people in America have been overly-empowered to stand in the way of the most modest progress through NIMBYism, litigation, local government, etc. To a lot of people it increasingly feels like a form of private authoritarianism over tiny fiefdoms for absolutely no benefit to a vast majority of people.
          • Arainach 11 hours ago
            "Somehow" we did that back when we believed in a strong federal government working for the benefit of the people. It's no wonder that we lost the ability after decades of anti-government propaganda and regulatory capture.
            • somenameforme 9 hours ago
              It's not that people turned against the government just randomly. Who was the last genuinely socially motivated President we had? I idealize JFK, but I think that's largely because of his charisma, how he ended, and obviously the space program. Yet how did he not just immediately condemn and completely dismantle the entire CIA when the proposal for Operation Northwoods [1] reached his desk, and was one signature away from execution? And that'll probably look benign as the actions from more recent decades are declassified in the future.

              And after his assassination everything went downhill fast with divide and conquer, all alongside global self destructive geopolitical nonsense that continues to this very day. We have spent, just since 2000 upwards of a very conservative baseline of $10 trillion on war and military related expenses. That's a starting point of about $30,000 for every single man, woman, and child in America. Think about all of the amazing things we could have done with that money. Instead we just blew it on pointless wars and have literally less than nothing to show for it since they not only made the US far less safe, but made the world far less stable.

              [1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Northwoods

              • Arainach 9 hours ago
                LBJ made more progress on social issues than any President with the possible exception of FDR. Certainly dramatically more progress per year in office. Jimmy Carter was also socially motivated.

                Reagan changed the game, Newt Gingrich destroyed cooperation, and now we're living in the world they created.

                • somenameforme 5 hours ago
                  Modern politicians are really good at framing everything as being the most socially motivated thing in the world. And I think LBJ is the grandfather of this stuff. When you read of his private discussions, socially motivated is just about the last thing he was. He wanted absolute political power and understood that he could create systems of dependency to achieve it.

                  It just so happens that systems of dependency can also be framed positively as 'solving hunger' or whatever. The fact that 60 years later 'solving hunger' has translated to having more than 41 million people completely unable to feed themselves without government assistance is not a coincidence. It a third stanza of that old saying 'Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for life. Give a man a fish every day and he'll do whatever you want to keep getting that fish.'

                  There's countless ways we could have spent that war money (no different during LBJ times with Vietnam) to help create ways for people to be able to genuinely provide for themselves. But I don't think this was ever the goal.

                  • triceratops 15 minutes ago
                    > The fact that 60 years later 'solving hunger' has translated to having more than 41 million people completely unable to feed themselves without government assistance is not a coincidence

                    Yeah it is a coincidence. The last 60 years also coincided with massive deindustrialization, job losses and reducing labor power, and multiple drug epidemics. I'm much more inclined to believe it was those factors, and not "welfarism".

                  • Aunche 2 hours ago
                    >Give a man a fish every day and he'll do whatever you want to keep getting that fish

                    This is complete nonsense. Certain demographics that depend the most on welfare oppose it the most. Mitch McConnell responded to concerns about the political impact of Medicaid cuts saying that voters would "get over it".

                    LBJ was certainly motivated by power, but he also genuinely cared about social issues as well. He knew that the Civil Rights Acts would overall cost him far more politically than he gained in terms of support from newly enfranchised black voters.

              • otikik 7 hours ago
                > literally less than nothing to show for it

                That’s not true! Some guys got really really rich with it. So, working as indented.

              • wahnfrieden 9 hours ago
                FDR was not generally socially motivated. He was responsive to labor pressure and other organizing.
            • brabel 7 hours ago
              There’s a good argument for America having been able to do all it did despite being a democracy without a strong central government, not because of it. Look around the world and see how many countries managed to achieve similar success using the same liberal principles? Most of Europe became rich under imperialist, authoritarian governments not with their current system. I would love to see a good counter argument that’s convincing since I find this realization extremely sad as for all my life I believed the propaganda about democracy and liberalism being the route to success just to see most countries that tried to emulate that fail miserably.
            • yonaguska 10 hours ago
              I don't believe we are capable of a strong government that will also work for the benefit of the people today. Anti government sentiment didn't just spring up from a vacuum.
              • Arainach 10 hours ago
                It sprung up from capitalist propaganda and intentional sabotage of the government by conservatives.

                > I don't want to abolish government. I simply want to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub.

                Grover Norquist said the quiet part out loud in 2001, but conservatives have been running that playbook since the New Deal.

                • GolfPopper 9 hours ago
                  >*"conservatives have been running that playbook since the New Deal"

                  I think one of America's many failures is allowing a radically revolutionary right-wing (that is currently headed full speed to fascism) to keep calling themselves "conservatives" when that label is about as incorrect as can be. They don't "conserve" anything. They're not actually reactionary, although they often pretend to be. They are not trying to be defenders of Chesterton's Gate[1]. They're radicals, who want to reshape society to their own whims and prejudices. And they ought to be address and treated as such.

                  1. https://www.chesterton.org/taking-a-fence-down/

                  • questionableans 7 hours ago
                    I agree. Of the two major US political parties today, one is primarily radical right with a small conservative branch that is struggling to stay in their party. The other is conservative to moderate with a small liberal branch that is fighting to make their party stand for something.
                    • jampekka 6 hours ago
                      That liberals are the left wing in US is quite telling. In Europe and Latin America liberals are (center-)right.
                      • b800h 4 hours ago
                        The word "liberal" means different things in different places.
                        • jampekka 4 hours ago
                          Maybe, although many policies by European liberal center-right parties are to the left of US liberals.

                          The main reason is probably that US never had the major socialist movements of 20th century Europe. Before those liberals were the left in Europe too.

          • chii 11 hours ago
            > To a lot of people it increasingly feels like a form of private authoritarianism over tiny fiefdoms for absolutely no benefit to a vast majority of people.

            that is what it means to have property rights.

            It prevents your interests from being usurped by someone else without first consulting you. Of course, like anything, it can be taken too far, but getting the balance right is important.

            If it tips too far towards gov't authoritarianism, the people who are not connected tends to suffer silently (while the majority who gets told these "nation building" projects benefits them).

            If it tips too far towards the private individual, then you get nimby-ism and such.

            • ryandrake 10 hours ago
              America's elevation of individuality and property rights above everything else, its inability to work together collectively to achieve a goal, and its citizen's infighting, distrust of and belligerence toward each other, are the main reasons it is incapable of doing big things anymore.

              The minute we had a huge health emergency that should have united the population, it was immediately politicized such that half the country was trying to fix it, and the other half were trying to prolong it and grief the fixers.

              We're done for if we can't stop pitting half the country against each other over literally every issue.

            • BrenBarn 8 hours ago
              More and more I think the mistake is seeing it as a tradeoff between "property rights" and "government authoritarianism". First, because authoritarianism is not much better when it happens to be non-government authoritarianism (i.e., when corporations become more powerful than government). And second, because it treats "property rights" as a single fixed notion, rather than recognizing that we can have property rights that are not independent of the amount of property owned. Just because "property rights" means that Paul the Peon has absolute dominion over his hovel, there's no particular reason it also has to mean that Oliver the Oligarch has absolute dominion over his dozens of mansions, factories, private security forces, etc. We can have a system where your rights over property decrease the more of it you have, so that in the limit there is effectively a maximum on how much property can be owned or controlled by a single individual (and therefore by a group of individuals).
          • tshaddox 10 hours ago
            Presumably many of the people who currently attribute China’s ability to build infrastructure to authoritarianism would also attribute America’s past ability to build infrastructure to authoritarianism. They would presumably also decry any future attempts to build ambitious infrastructure in America as authoritarianism.
          • Jackpillar 3 hours ago
            Yeah lets talk about them tax rates at the time of these accomplished generational projects (comment is in support of them)
          • omikun 11 hours ago
            The interstate was for the military. The new deal was in part thanks to left wing communists/unionists voicing for the gov to do more for the people. Then came McCarthyism.
          • EGreg 10 hours ago
            Actually, the US didn’t have a famine, it had the opposite. Automation like combines and tractors obviated the need for oxen and farmhands to plow and reap manually. The farmers competed in a race to the bottom (depleting the soil and causing the dust bowl). They fired most farmhands and still had a surplus. Food prices plummeted while giant dust storms became the norm.

            The government had to step in and pay farmers NOT to plant, to extricate them from the downward spiral / race to the bottom that the “free market” had producted in the face of automation / massive supply shocks.

            Meanwhile, the laid-off farm workers (20% of USA used to be employed in farm-related jobs) migrated to cities but it would be a decade before the manufacturing base was built up to employ them. They lived in Hoovervilles and shantytowns set up to house them. A third of the country’s banks failed and the money supply shrank. The fed sat that one out. You can read books by John Steinbeck and others describing life at that time (eg Grapes of Wrath).

            So eventually, projects like the Interstate Highway System, and even weapons manufacturing and mobilization for WW2 caused mass employment. At a time when people needed jobs, this was a good thing for the economy and didn’t need communist propaganda to attract workers. Capitalism’s race to the bottom created the desperation the workers needed for undertake large state projects. And it is about to happen again.

            Ironically, around the same time the US had a massive surplus, Russia and China were experiencing massive man-made famines under collectivization. Whether that horrific economic experiment ultimately led to more prosperity through 5-year plans is a contentious question (ideological leftists like Noam Chomsky have told me, quoting Amartya Sen, that supposedly China had less deaths from malnutrition afterwards than India, but that’s hardly a high bar considering their population density).

            PS: I don’t mean to pick on communism alone for extreme ideological economic system enforcement leading to famines. The Irish Potato Famine could probably be squarely put into the ideological capitalism column (landlords and property rights trumping people’s lives), or how Britain (a capitalist country) exploited India and the famines in Bengal were also largely due to requisition of grain, similar to the Volga famine during the Russian civil war.

          • 01HNNWZ0MV43FF 10 hours ago
            I'm a yimby but to be fair the welfare system is so broken in the US that it's kind of a de facto ongoing famine
        • throw0101c 1 hour ago
          > The authoritarianism of China allows it to undertake generational projects of immense scale with mass popular support through propaganda.

          Other countries were able to successfully develop with less authoritarianism than China (Japan did it twice: Meiji Restoration and post-WW2), and were able to move to more democratic systems.

          See the book How Asia Works by Joe Studwell for various case studies on what works and what doesn't:

          * https://profilebooks.com/work/how-asia-works/

          * https://bookshop.org/p/books/how-asia-works-success-and-fail...

          * https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16144575-how-asia-works

        • jopsen 11 hours ago
          > They go hand in hand. The authoritarianism of China allows it to undertake generational projects...

          Lack of free press makes it easy to look successful.

          It was the same thing with the Soviet union, was it ever really successful at any point?

          • deadfoxygrandpa 10 hours ago
            > It was the same thing with the Soviet union, was it ever really successful at any point?

            yes. the soviet union was wildly successful for most of its history. it went from a backwater poor agrarian country to an industrial superpower near peer with the US in a single generation, while simultaneously going through multiple brutal wars and crushing nazi germany at immense cost. despite all that, the soviet union had the fastest and greatest economic and quality of life rise of any country in the 20th century.

            of course it had problems that led to its collapse but you cannot be serious and say it was never successful at any point

          • overfeed 10 hours ago
            > It was the same thing with the Soviet union, was it ever really successful at any point?

            America had to go to all the way to the moon to win a "first" against the Soviet Union in space.

          • ActorNightly 9 hours ago
            You don't need press for everyone to see that China is straight killing it in almost every sector. Manufacturing, compute, you name it. Sure, they aren't without problems.

            And as for free press, look at where freedom of press took United States. You have companies like Fox news that "aren't actually news, just entertainment", who blatantly lie about election fraud. You have podcasters like Joe Rogan who are at the same time "just bullshitting", while also pushing ideological narratives. And most republicans still believe election was stolen in 2024.

            And overall, the party that was all about free speech, free trade, and small federal government power is pretty much doing the exact opposite in every single aspect, and people voted for them.

            Im glad China has reigns on all of that. It allows them to pass laws like this https://www.cnbctv18.com/world/chinas-new-influencer-law-wan...

            And yes, from a pure statistical standpoint, having centralized power isn't optimal since you don't want someone crazy having lots of centralized power, but at the same time, you also don't want what US has, where on the average 7/10 people simply just don't give a fuck about US being destroyed financially and socially.

            • refurb 4 hours ago
              This is a wild comment.

              It claims free speech is being taken away, then gets upset people use it (Fox News).

              Then it celebrates a law that actually curtails free speech.

              • hollywood_court 2 hours ago
                What's wilder is the fact that my generation was told that rock music, rap music, video games, etc would be lead to the decline of our society. But it turns out that Fox News was far more destructive than all of those things combined.

                In the US, organized religion and Fox News are the two most destructive forces in our society.

                • refurb 2 hours ago
                  If your theory was logically sound it would be interesting to hear more.
          • forgotoldacc 9 hours ago
            You can go to China and see it for yourself. The USSR made itself inaccessible to foreigners for the most part, but you can hop on a train and visit nearly any place in China freely. It's pretty easy with their extensive train system.

            I see a lot of cope with "c-China is lying! It's not really that good!" But lots of tourists such as myself have been all over the country, and tbh, I think the "propaganda" undersells it a bit. I thought there was no way it could be as nice as the travel videos I saw, but it was even better.

          • dangus 11 hours ago
            China is plainly and obviously many times more successful than the Soviet Union ever was, even if you ignore all the propaganda and just rely on yourself as a primary source - I.e., “hop on a plane and see for yourself.”
            • chii 11 hours ago
              China's success has come _after_ they economically liberalized in a way that resembles the west's free markets.

              Soviets never did any of this. They "stubbornly" kept to a command economy. While china does have their 5-year plans and command economy, they have loosened that up for private individual's enterprises, and allowed special economic zones for which free market capitalism thrives.

              With a bit of state help in infrastructure etc, this enabled china to leverage their enormous human capital to simply out-muscle their way into industrial dominance. Now with such a dominant position, they can call shots in a way that irks the US. Compounding the problem is that the authoritarian style of gov't in china enables long term strategic planning and execution - something that seems sorely lacking from the US for the past 3 decades.

              • dangus 11 hours ago
                Why does the added qualifier in your first paragraph matter?

                You’re literally just explaining why the Soviet Union was less successful.

                Nothing stopped the Soviet Union from liberalizing their economy and running it better like China. They just didn’t do it. Which loops us back to my original comment.

                I didn’t bring my point up as some kind of communism versus capitalism thing, I’m just plainly stating that as far as single-party mostly-authoritarian governments go, China is far more accomplished than the USSR was.

      • vishnugupta 10 hours ago
        I’m really curious to better understand what aspects of China’s government would hurt your day to day life.

        From what I read online the people there are free to rant and get things fixed. Their local government representative is held accountable if the people in his/her province are unhappy. Not too different from a typical democratic setup I guess? But this could be off because I don’t know anyone personally there.

        • SR2Z 10 hours ago
          > I’m really curious to better understand what aspects of China’s government would hurt your day to day life.

          For tech workers in particular, the structure of the economy would prevent high equity-based compensation. I also distinctly recall China's heavy-handed enforcement of COVID lockdowns, and the sudden about-face when discontent reached a boiling point. Then there's the censorship too - disagreeing on low-stakes local issues is one thing, but if you disagree with national policy, you cannot exactly discuss it in the open the way that we do here.

          I have known a few Chinese people, and they downplay this stuff. Some of them are even political refugees from the purges following Mao's death, and they downplay the level of authoritarianism in the country. As bad as the US has gotten recently, we're still not at that level.

          It really does seem like both nations are slowly converging on similar systems of government, but hopefully this authoritarian swing in the US can be limited.

        • eks391 10 hours ago
          I'm not sure where you are reading, but people are not free to rant in China. Many of my friends would lose privileges because they were foolish enough to openly speak poorly regarding certain topics, and suddenly they were banned from Wechat, which is equivalent to being banned from the internet, and from using money in noncash form. My sister was visiting and was dumb enough to get herself banned from way more services and she was scared she wouldn't be able to get back home. In a very few places, they check your social score to ensure that you aren't low-life enough to be barred from there too. I only spoke freely after checking an area for no cameras, so I always had all of my privileges, but me and a Chinese friend, after coming to the USA (I am not Chinese, only went there for school), hope we never end up back in China. Regarding day to day life in the USA, I am unaffected by China.
        • Liftyee 2 hours ago
          Have visited China often. My major gripe to living there would be digital freedom and surveillance - unlocking bootloader,etc are heavily restricted there. Plus the GFW, which does prevent the population being psyop'd by foreign social media, but is a small pain if you need to use outside services.

          That doesn't really affect my daily life though, especially for someone born there. If it's the tradeoff for the other aspects (high public safety, developed infrastructure...) then I would consider accepting it.

        • yanhangyhy 9 hours ago
          I can answer this question. I’m a native-born Chinese, and I’ve never studied abroad. This year I just completed my first trip overseas, visiting the UAE. First of all, I don’t think China is a fully democratic system, but it’s not an outright dictatorship either. At the same time, I don’t think the two-party voting system in the U.S. qualifies as democracy either. One of the biggest drawbacks of Western criticism of China for being “undemocratic” is that many Chinese people travel abroad and are exposed to the outside world. If the West had a better system, we would definitely be willing to follow it, but their proposals are worse than ours—especially after Trump took office, things have only gotten more chaotic.

          In China, the only real restriction is that you cannot severely criticize the Party and its leaders. I mean, minor criticism is acceptable—for example, pointing out areas that aren’t working well—but you cannot completely reject them. For instance, you cannot post offensive memes about leaders. This is different from the U.S., but I think the comparison is interesting. By sacrificing this particular freedom, we actually gain many other freedoms.

          The most typical case this year was a food poisoning incident at a kindergarten. The staff, ignoring safety regulations, added toxic chemical elements to the food. This incident went viral on the Chinese internet, and the public criticism was focused on the government and relevant medical authorities, but people did not(dared not)—blame the Party itself. In the end, a large number of the responsible personnel were punished or sentenced. The problem was resolved, and it did not implicate the Party itself.

          Many people don’t realize China’s major advantages, and I only understood them by observing foreigners who run businesses in China( i mean this video if anyone is intreseted https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-ozoOKhUO4&t=329s) . China has a system of accountability. If anyone travels in China, I highly recommend observing rivers, streets, and even trees—they all have markers indicating who is responsible. This means that if something goes wrong in that area, someone is accountable. Of course, corruption can undermine this, but the system is still operational. China doesn’t have problems like California’s high-speed rail, the UK’s HS2, or the charging stations under Biden that were barely built and with almost no one held accountable.

          As for why I chose the UAE: honestly, Europe has disappointed me too much these days. Our social media is full of reviews about being stolen from or robbed while traveling in Europe, and the same applies to Southeast Asia. They’re basically at the same level of insecurity. Even in the UAE, which is considered a relatively safe country, I was still worried about my credit card being lost or fraudulently charged. In China, I never have to worry about such things. Of course, Japan, South Korea, or Singapore might also be safe, but those countries are just too boring for me.

          Do I care about politics? Of course I do. The more sensitive topics can always be navigated with wordplay—everyone is familiar with these strategies. For more serious matters, a VPN works perfectly.

          (My English writing isn’t very good, so I often write in Chinese and use ChatGPT to help me translate.)

          • ThePowerOfFuet 1 hour ago
            >For instance, you cannot post offensive memes about leaders. This is different from the U.S.

            Well...

          • dgfl 7 hours ago
            Don’t you think you’ve been influenced by propaganda? You have admitted yourself that you couldn’t even find information on Naomi Wu.

            I’ve lived in Europe my whole life. I’ve never been robbed or felt unsafe. It’s also a very diverse region so it’s hard to generalize. But the supposed “decay of the west” is mostly internal propaganda from our very own anti-migration right wingers.

            But regardless, I’d take having a 0.001% chance of my wallet (which contains zero valuables) being stolen versus being silenced by the government for criticizing the regime or being unable to acknowledge your sexual orientation. Let alone all the history rewriting and censorship.

            • cobbaut 5 hours ago
              > I’ve lived in Europe my whole life. I’ve never been robbed or felt unsafe.

              Really, where?

              I have been robbed in Belgium and in France, have had a knife on my throat on a Sunday morning, and have had burglars twice (once in Antwerp, once in Leuven). About five of my bikes were stolen, and I've been conned by construction workers several times.

            • jampekka 6 hours ago
              In general Europe is quite safe, but tourists scammed in some more popular destinations does happen quite a bit.

              But Europe is also quite heterogeneous. E.g. in Scandinavia getting scammed or pickpocketed is really rare, but in say Barcelona or Rome the chance is a lot higher. Violent crime like robbery is in general very rare everywhere.

            • yanhangyhy 5 hours ago
              > But the supposed “decay of the west” is mostly internal propaganda from our very own anti-migration right wingers.

              it's not propaganda, i am talking some thing like 'yelp', real people share real experience after travel to EU. sure there are many good ones, but lots of bad ones.

              > unable to acknowledge your sexual orientation

              you can. but not in the public media. people share LGBT content on the Internet all the time. Right now the most popular influencer on chinese tiktok is a crossdresser

              not intent to change your view, just some clarification.

          • wahnfrieden 8 hours ago
            What do you think of Naomi Wu's case?
            • yanhangyhy 8 hours ago
              To be honest, I roughly searched around, including asking AI, but I couldn’t really figure out what happened. I hardly have any impression of her; her videos can be found on Chinese internet, but the recommendation algorithms have never suggested them to me. From what I’ve found so far, she seems quite controversial. She might have been limited in reach on Chinese internet. Maybe the government found a suitable reason, or maybe not — I really haven’t clarified that part.

              Also, Linux is invovled?

              • wahnfrieden 8 hours ago
                It seems she was silenced for publicly advocating for LGBT and visited by agents multiple times about it. But there are a lot more details I'm sure.
                • yanhangyhy 8 hours ago
                  It’s possible. LGBT issues and religion in China fall into a category of “you can exist, but don’t promote it.” There are cities, bars, and celebrities known for being LGBT, but the government never officially acknowledges them and doesn’t allow public advocacy. Discussion among ordinary people is fine. Some other places might not agree with this approach, but for me and most Chinese people, we really like it. In China, transitioning isn’t actually difficult: once you complete the psychological evaluation and surgery, the government will verify it and issue a new ID. But you’ll never see it publicly promoted because, in the eyes of the authorities, it doesn’t exist.
                  • M95D 43 minutes ago
                    This seems more reasonable than most other countries where LGBT advocacy / propaganda / public exposure and circus draws negative opinions and more discrimination and aggression.
                  • wahnfrieden 1 hour ago
                    You like that people are caged for publicly acknowledging LGBT? It’s hard to understand that, because it’s not just that it’s lowkey there, it’s something people are under threat of caging for.

                    (Yes it is coming under threat of caging in the US too now.)

                • bryan_w 8 hours ago
                  I think she got in trouble for exposing multiple companies that were violating GPL. They came after her by threatening her GF's family with deportation to the camps (allegedly)
                • FooBarWidget 6 hours ago
                  There's more than that. She was on the verge of exposing Chinese intelligence surveillance methods/technologies. The Shenzhen authorities know her well and were relatively lenient, but the moment she touched upon the intelligence area, she attracted the attention of much more paranoid security officials. Those officials then found out she had a Uyghur girlfriend and became even more paranoid due to suspected links with terrorism; those officials, after all, spent the 80s/90s taking bullets from Uyghur terrorists, so they are quick to jump to conclusions that Naomi is compromised and sends intelligence secrets to Turkistan Islamic Party.

                  I suspect these are much more of a reason to offboard her from social media than all the LGBT stuff, which she had already done for years.

                  Source: The Daily Mao on Twitter, who said he physically spoke with her half a year ago. Naomi said she's fine, she's just not allowed to have a public social media presence. She's very lucky not to have been thrown in jail for national security/terrorism reasons, especially given how paranoid the security officials are. Perhaps the Shenzhen authorities put in a good word for her.

        • piperswe 8 hours ago
          I mean, here are the obvious for this minority member:

          - My marriage is invalid in China

          - There are multiple clinics that can prescribe me gender-affirming care with little gatekeeping in my city (for now at least). My understanding is that there is significantly more gatekeeping in gender-affirming care in China

          - The government actively censors discourse related to my sexual orientation and gender identity

          While it appears the US is looking to become more like China in this regard, for now life under the Chinese government would be comparatively untenable for me.

          • otikik 7 hours ago
            > for now at least

            So much in such few words. It sucks immensely.

        • voidUpdate 5 hours ago
          I am a trans lesbian and thus I am ineligible for a legal gender change in china. The UK is bad about trans people, sure, but at least it is legally possible for me (for now)
          • yanhangyhy 4 hours ago
            This is false information. Gender transition is legal in China. There are many cases on Chinese social media. We even have a celebrity who is transgender.

            On Chinese internet there is even a joke. Because women retire earlier than men in China, people discuss whether they can exploit a loophole by changing their legal gender to female in the year before the female retirement age to retire earlier.

            • voidUpdate 4 hours ago
              I'm sorry, I got my information from The Economist, which says that you have to be unmarried, heterosexual and get permission from your family to change your gender, and you have to have surgery before you are recognised
              • yanhangyhy 4 hours ago
                In China, the process requires passing a strict psychological evaluation and surgery before one can change their legal identity and be recognized by the state. Since I used to be know some people from the community, so I have some understanding. I don’t know the policies of other countries, but for those who truly want to transition, I think this is necessary. The requirement to be unmarried is reasonable, since China does not recognize same-sex marriage. I’m not entirely sure about the family consent requirement, but China has the household registration system (hukou), which records family members, so it seems somewhat reasonable. As for being heterosexual, I don’t think that should be a standard requirement, since the main requirements are the hospital’s psychological evaluation and surgery. At least I know of many cases where people successfully changed their legal identity. Of course, these requirements might seem a bit strict in other countries.
      • blitzar 7 hours ago
        I would really respect the hell out of the nation of America if it wasn't for the authoritarianism and imperialism.
        • Imustaskforhelp 2 hours ago
          The fact that america can go to authoritarism this quickly and through democratic legal procedures itself is scary and I don't think that I can trust this in the same sense from now on.

          Trust is brittle. I looked even more into the facade of america, and honestly, i am confused by both parties to a certain extent which are both controlled by billionaires etc.

          The president I respect the most is teddy roosevelt, I have heard good things about kennedy too but I want to read so much more about the absolute chad known as teddy roosevelt.

          I think that there is hope for america but that's only if people actually try to understand what's happening, which is what I am hoping, its a shame bernie sanders couldn't have been a president but I am hoping that a new wave of american politics could arise to tackle corruption/politcal lobbying/bribery.

      • kaptainscarlet 11 hours ago
        As long as the cat catches the mice... :-)
      • marricks 10 hours ago
        I don't think any super power looks fantastic, and we definitely should not idolize China.

        But also, we should let that be an excuse for western powers. We have corporations forcing most of the decisions in our country for extremely short term gains.

        In the US we have... decrypt public transit, horrible healthcare, halting progress on renewable energies, we're probably going to make less than our parents while billionaires make more.

        Like it sucks, and if anyone tells you well at least you don't live in China you should roll your eyes, why does where we live have to suck. Oh, and we even have awful imperialism too.

      • Jackpillar 3 hours ago
        Imperialism? Please do divulge
      • onethought 11 hours ago
        Imperialism? Expand.
        • z2 11 hours ago
          The most charitable interpretation I can think of, if OP didn't misuse the word, would be, the generic "China bad" narrative being applied to things like equating the Belt and Road (loans, infrastructure projects) to centuries of old-fashioned exploitation of Africa. After all, it takes one to know one.
          • lwansbrough 10 hours ago
            It’s not that hard to find examples. Chinese incursions in the south China sea and the development of artificial islands to project power and control over the region. Their plans for Taiwan. The annexation of Tibet. Xinjiang ethnic cleansing. Erosion of democratic freedoms in Hong Kong SAR. And yes the entire Belt and Road initiative which is basically loan sharking.
            • z2 10 hours ago
              No. That list shows coercive or authoritarian behavior, not classical imperialism. Imperialism means establishing colonies or directly ruling foreign territories for economic extraction. China today doesn’t occupy or govern other sovereign states. The South China Sea, Hong Kong, Tibet, Xinjiang, and Taiwan are all disputes within--except Taiwan + the South China Sea--undisputed national boundaries.[1] Belt and Road loans, while allegedly predatory, are contractual and do not create colonial rule. So it’s perhaps aggressive nationalism and coercive influence, but not imperialism.

              1. Yes, looking way back, the occupying Qing dynasty established said boundaries through quite a lot of imperialism about a century before the US got busy manifesting its destiny.*

              • andrewflnr 1 hour ago
                You can use whatever word you want for naked ambition to conquer people who don't want to be part of your country. I'm still not going to respect it.
              • ivell 8 hours ago
                Tibet was a self governing entity until Chinese invasion. Though China would disagree. Tibet's leaders are still in exile and one of the key issues of China with India.

                If the argument is that Tibet was not a country, then the same applies to Taiwan. Taiwan is not internationally recognized as a country, except for a few nations.

                • z2 2 hours ago
                  Autonomy is not sovereignty. Tibet wasn’t “invaded” like a foreign country, it had been de facto autonomous after the chaotic Qing collapse, but no one recognized it as sovereign. If I were to guess at China's narrative, the PLA’s 1950 entry is probably seen as a reconsolidation of territory long claimed by China, not new imperial conquest. And Taiwan’s status only survived because US intervention froze the Chinese civil war’s outcome, not because it was ever outside China’s historical frame. Again, indeed, Qing imperialist actions 300 years ago led to the current map, and you might see me as pedantic here but calling China (or modern US/Japan/Britain for that matter) imperialist might feel satisfying, but analytically it dampens the real and harmful empire-building sense of the term used in history.
          • AniseAbyss 11 hours ago
            To be fair China challenging white people rule is kinda bad if you are white. I suppose us Westerners can now kinda feel how the Ming must have felt in the 19th century?
        • andrewflnr 10 hours ago
          They're plainly trying to expand their territory in Taiwan and the South China Sea. Building invasion barges that can only be used for invading Taiwan, harassing Phillipine ships. It's not subtle.
      • ImHereToVote 9 hours ago
        China isn't imperialist.
      • carabiner 8 hours ago
        How much is "freedom" worth to you? Do you think your average homeless person in San Francisco would be worse off with free healthcare, housing, and no right to vote?
      • csomar 8 hours ago
        We can argue and discuss the authoritarianism of China (and state control). But imperialism? Really?
      • FpUser 11 hours ago
        >"if it wasn't for the authoritarianism and imperialism"

        Oops, my hypocrisy meter just broke.

        • andrewflnr 10 hours ago
          You may be making assumptions about me.
      • jama211 11 hours ago
        And oppression of Tibet and the Uyghur people and other human rights violations…
        • onethought 11 hours ago
          A mean not to go too deep into whataboutism… but at least they only persecute their own Muslims rather than picking random countries on a map and persecuting them.
          • rangestransform 10 hours ago
            I would rather live in a country that points the guns outward, rather than inward
          • free652 11 hours ago
            Ohhh so they aren't like selling weapon to Russia? Right. Keep going.
            • picture 11 hours ago
              I see your point but, they're really not selling much more than golf carts and drones. If they go all-out with selling their actual military hardware (which they have a large stockpile and production capacity of), it would be get much more difficult for Ukraine to keep up the balance without increasing support from the west.

              It's really quite interesting to see China being labelled as imperialist mean while the western powers have been colonizing and meddling in all kinds of affairs for generations... (see Operation Northwoods as one example)

              • jopsen 11 hours ago
                Everybody makes mistakes.

                The US is able to mention its past mistakes.

                China still can't talk about students it murdered over 30 years ago.

                Yet, recent American presidents have no problem admitting that Afghanistan and Iraq wars weren't the best of ideas.

                • sometimes_all 8 hours ago
                  > The US is able to mention its past mistakes.

                  The entire point of being able to mention past mistakes is for future generations to be able to learn from them and avoid making the same mistakes. It seems, in recent times, that while this liberty is "afforded" to US/Europe, they're not able to use it effectively, if at all. Meanwhile, even though the Chinese might not be able to talk about their mistakes publicly, it seems evident from their progress and events that they have not forgotten them, and that it is in their minds, at the very least.

                  Edit: Not to mention, looking at how your current president is going after Canada just because of an ad, don't keep your hopes up on US citizens being able to "mention" things either.

                • blashyrk 5 hours ago
                  Okay and how many years is George Bush Jr and his entire administration serving currently?

                  What good is mentioning past mistakes if there's strictly zero consequences

            • omikun 11 hours ago
              Is that better or worse than aiding/supporting genocide?
        • omikun 10 hours ago
          Have you heard of this thing called the new Jim Crow?
      • jmyeet 10 hours ago
        Have you not been paying attention to what's going on this country?

        We're building concentration camps. We have the Gestapo rounding up brown people. We have people being deported to supermax prisons in countries they have no connection to for protesting America's material support for genocide on college campuses. We have a media that is increasingly owned by lackeys of this administration (just look into CBS and Bari Weis as the latest example). Every aspect of our government is for sale from pardons to merger approvals and ending SEC investigations. There is functionally no law and order where we may start simply ignoring inconvenient parts of the Constitution like the 22nd Amendment. We have the military in our streets to incite violence. We have the Navy blowing up random small boats off Venezuela, arguably to incite a hot war with Venezuela. We have people who are rapidly unable to afford a place to live, food or both (and that's a bout to get a whole lot worse when SNAP gets suspended in November as the administration refuses to use the $6 billion set aside to fund it). We have a Speaker who won't swear in a duly elected House representative because she'll be the 218th vote on a discharge petition that will force a vote on release of the Epstein files, which the president will be forced to veto and he doesn't want to be put in that position.

        I think about all these things when people bring up so-called "authoritanism" in China. Do you not see how dire the situation is not only in the US but basically all of the developed world? France, Germany and the UK are poised to have actual Nazis win their next elections due to these economic crises that governments absolutely refuse to address.

        And imperialism? What imperialism? Pretty much every conflict on Earth currently can be traced back to the US, either because a US ally is a proxy doing war crimes or simply because the US turns a blind eye because one or both sides are buying US arms to commit those same war crimes.

        Just this month the Nobel committee handed the Peace Prize to an opposition leader in Venezuela who has promised to make Venezuela more Israel-friendly and to privatize all the resource extraction to Western companies. "Peace".

        We are in 1930s Germany. Worrying about China seems crazy to me.

        • endorphine 9 hours ago
          Don't know why you're downvoted, this seems a pretty accurate take to me.

          It seems most of us in the West are mostly incapable of self-criticism and have been fed so much propaganda that we forgot how to see through all the bull**.

        • andrewflnr 9 hours ago
          What makes you think I disagree with any of that? These are dark times. Honestly, the West is so profoundly stupid right now that a part of me wishes China could be a beacon of respectability. It's just a shame about their being ahead of the curve on the malicious government.
          • dev_l1x_be 3 hours ago
            hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times
      • LAC-Tech 11 hours ago
        Really? I always thought people made a massive deal about an incredibly poor country that become... middle income, and seems to be stuck there.

        I'm glad they don't have self-induced famines anymore I guess, but it's not exactly japan in the 80s.

    • throw0101c 2 hours ago
      > “If you want to get rich, build roads first; have fewer children, plant more trees.”

      Having fewer children followed "naturally" as child mortality dropped and women's education and workforce participation rose. You can quite clearly see China's birth rate dropping before the one-child policy was enacted:

      * https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2015/11/20/will-the-...

      * https://populationmatters.org/news/2021/06/chinas-changing-c...

      Even India, which has also been growing in prosperity, has seen a declining fertility rate without a heavy handed government policy:

      * https://archive.is/https://www.economist.com/china/2015/07/1...

    • j-krieger 7 hours ago
      Not to glaze unelected uniparty governments, but this is what you can actually achieve if you don't have to focus on your new election the moment you enter office.
      • ChrisMarshallNY 4 hours ago
        This.

        Also, China has always taken the long view, and has, historically, leveraged experience.

        I’m no expert in their culture, and am rather worried about their influence, but I can’t but admire their incredible strategic vision.

        Also, as a retiree, I’m rather saddened by some of the discussions, here.

        • yanhangyhy 4 hours ago
          Maybe this topic is too hot. I originally just wanted to mention it in passing, since these are all slogans ingrained in our minds. Everyone's discussion is about groups, not individuals. It's about government policies. Just like in China, our generation basically doesn't expect to have a pension, nor to retire before 70. Our elderly enjoy life in the parks, benefit from free public transport and cheap tickets to attractions, while we work day after day, until we die. Any normal person would be dissatisfied.
          • ChrisMarshallNY 4 hours ago
            Well, one of the issues, is that younger folks look at retired older folks, and think “unproductive leech,” while ignoring wrecked hands, shattered spines, and cancers. I also know many veterans, and they provided a Service that I definitely benefit from, today.

            Also, speaking only for myself, I live off of investments and savings, created from 40 years of living frugally and sensibly. Every few months, I have to chase off people that try to steal those savings. It’s not surprising, but is annoying. There’s a huge industry, based completely around stealing money from older folks (usually ones without the means to defend themselves).

            Back when I was young, there was this rather silly movie, called Logan’s Run. Besides a brief flash of Jenny Agutter naked, it offered a vision of a culture that literally kills off anyone over 30. The interesting thing, was that the culture still had strategic vision, but that vision was supplied by a machine.

            • yanhangyhy 4 hours ago
              I find it hard not to suspect that some countries are using certain policies to subtly eliminate the elderly. Of course, I will also grow old, so the consensus is to rely on oneself—invest and save, just in case. Optimistically, household robots might change a lot. I often think of that example: in the past, people often imagined futuristic skyscrapers but could not imagine elevators. New technologies are always unpredictable. There is a Chinese saying: “Where the cart reaches the mountain, there will be a path,” so perhaps there’s no need to worry too much.
              • grumpy-de-sre 2 hours ago
                Eg. I'm pretty optimistic about some of the Chinese exoskeleton startups I've seen. If you can keep people mobile, living at home and avoid falls they will make a huge difference.

                Not to mention self driving vehicles allowing for more independence in old age.

                Sign me up.

                Pensions are an insane ponzi scheme but I'm somewhat optimistic that dignified aged care is a problem that can be solved.

                However there is no denying sacrifices will have to be made.

        • pjc50 4 hours ago
          A lot of the retirees vs young discourse (and, tbh, wider politics) is just mirroring the conflict people have with their own parents or children. Especially the "why don't you just" for getting a job/a house/a partner, without acknowledging the very different conditions prevailing.

          (sometimes it materializes more directly, in things like NIMBY planning conflicts or homophobia)

      • pjc50 4 hours ago
        You can achieve a lot of bad things that way too, with nobody to stop you. It's the promise of every totalitarian: free you from all the messiness of having to deal with conflicting opinions.

        It is remarkable how well the tradeoff of "you don't need political freedom if the economic growth rate is high enough" works for China, and also previously Korea and Singapore. Even, to a certain extent, Japan - fairly high levels of political freedom, but somehow it's still a one-and-a-half-party state.

      • Phelinofist 1 hour ago
        I know it sounds insane but I wish Germany had such a stable government that actually DOES something. For as long as I can remember German govs have been absolute dogshit. Not to say the CN gov hasn't done no wrong. But they are moving with incredible speed in the right direction.
    • devsda 11 hours ago
      > a Chinese propaganda slogan stuck with me: “If you want to get rich, build roads first; have fewer children, plant more trees.”

      Why call it propaganda though ? That doesn't sound like a biased, deceptive or misleading policy.

      It hasn't been thought through much which is universally common for some govt policies everywhere, but it results have been positive for the most part ?

      • londons_explore 11 hours ago
        Not all propaganda is deceptive.

        The best propaganda is 100% true and still achieves it's goal.

        • Aunche 3 hours ago
          Even deceptive propaganda isn't necessarily bad. Objectively speaking, the best thing to do for yourself would have been to dodge the draft in WWII for example.
        • devsda 10 hours ago
          So, the term is mainly used to convey an author's opinion on the subject of the topic and not necessarily related to the topic itself ?
        • steve_adams_86 10 hours ago
          Propaganda is deceptive or misleading by definition.
          • msl 7 hours ago
            What definition is that?

            Merriam-Webster: "the spreading of ideas, information, or rumor for the purpose of helping or injuring an institution, a cause, or a person" and "ideas, facts, or allegations spread deliberately to further one's cause or to damage an opposing cause" [1]

            Cambridge Dictionary: "information, ideas, opinions, or images, often only giving one part of an argument, that are broadcast, published, or in some other way spread with the intention of influencing people's opinions" [2]

            Wikipedia (quoting Encyclopedia Britannica): "Propaganda is communication that is primarily used to influence or persuade an audience to further an agenda, which may not be objective and may be selectively presenting facts to encourage a particular synthesis or perception, or using loaded language to produce an emotional rather than a rational response to the information that is being presented." [3]

            Wikipedia further quotes NATO's 2011 guidance for military public affairs definition: "information, ideas, doctrines, or special appeals disseminated to influence the opinion, emotions, attitudes, or behaviour of any specified group in order to benefit the sponsor, either directly or indirectly" [4]

            I think that OP's use of the word is well in line with each of those definitions.

            [1] https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/propaganda

            [2] https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/propagan...

            [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda

            [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda#Definitions

          • nextaccountic 10 hours ago
            You can deceive while telling the truth, like this ad from a Brazilian newspaper (dubbed in English) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PShbxd42JN8

            Truth needs to be put in context. Truth needs to be interpreted. There is no such thing as objective truth.

            Effective propaganda is like a filter that is everywhere you look. You don't know it's there because you never see the world without it.

      • hunglee2 7 hours ago
        propaganda is not necessarily a lie, it's more a call to action (which can sometimes be a lie)
      • FooBarWidget 6 hours ago
        Not all cultures/countries/languages have a negative connotation of the word "propaganda". In Chinese, in most contexts, the word is usually much more neutral, closer to "publicity".
      • yanhangyhy 11 hours ago
        I probably often use that term in a neutral sense.
      • MangoToupe 11 hours ago
        > That doesn't sound like a biased, deceptive or misleading policy.

        Propaganda doesn't imply any of these things; it just implies a polemic.

    • matheusmoreira 5 hours ago
      I'm envious of China's ability to define long term goals and execute them somewhat competently... In democracies politicians only care about reelection, and most people's voting patterns do not take long term strategy into account. Quite the opposite: short term profits and benefits are favored above all else.
      • yanhangyhy 5 hours ago
        China’s rare earth strategy was formulated roughly 40 years ago — this in itself is an advantage of a one-party system. Almost all nations that experienced rapid economic takeoff were built on one-party rule, strongman leadership, or authoritarian governance — such as South Korea, Japan, Vietnam, and Singapore... Taiwan had Chiang Ching-kuo, South Korea had Park Chung-hee, and Singapore had Lee Kuan Yew. At least in Asia, this pattern seems to hold true.
        • tw1984 2 hours ago
          > China’s rare earth strategy was formulated roughly 40 years ago

          what a joke! Just 8 years ago, there were hundreds of rare earth companies all fight against each other by pushing prices to the very bottom destroying any possible profitability of the business.

          as of today, Americans would end up in jail for working for some random Chinese companies in so called sensitive sectors, but American companies can freely hire Chinese rare earth engineers.

          is that the strategy you mean? lol

      • vbezhenar 5 hours ago
        That's why democracy is wrong path. Crowd is stupid and easy to manipulate.

        There should be hierarchy. 100 men should vote for one who will rule over them. 100 level one rulers should vote for one who will rule over 10 000 men. And so on.

        Imagine all Amazon workers to vote for Amazon CEO. It does not happen.

        • kakacik 5 hours ago
          Interesting idea. Trying to find an angle where it could all go wrong but it seems vastly better than crap we get now. More personal responsibility it seems.

          I would add that rotate those every 2 years maybe. But then there needs to be mechanism for some long term efforts to sustain velocity.

    • yndoendo 10 hours ago
      Are low birth rates a problem? The job market keeps being published about lack of employment. Recent was this UK having a 1,200,000 plus college graduates and less than 100,000 job placements. The USA market is also bad with very limited economic mobility based on years past.

      Is the job market too restrictive with maximize profit over maximum knowledge transfer and upkeep? Not properly balancing older and newer labor. That is the reason for "low birth rate problem"?

      ML is being pushed to condense the labor market even more. Along with growth of larger and more powerful businesses. Number of businesses are pushing to be an oligopoly and more to a duopoly or monopoly.

      The current and future labor market with modern business ideology does not seem to match the statement _low birth rate problem_. The problem seems to be elsewhere.

      • yanhangyhy 9 hours ago
        Based on my understanding, that’s still the case. I think the problems you mentioned are currently beyond what any government can handle, even one with extremely strong control like China. China is now facing both rising unemployment and a low birth rate. In the past, when China’s birth rate was higher, unemployment was not this high. The fundamental problem is not that there are too many people, but that the economy lacks vitality. Moreover, a declining birth rate will cause systems like pensions and healthcare—which rely on the next generation to support the previous one—to collapse.
      • seizethecheese 10 hours ago
        The relationship between the job market and employment is not so straightforward as you presume. After all, fewer people means less demand for labor as much as it means more supply. In general a falling population is considered an economic risk.
    • dzonga 3 hours ago
      why would you say xi jinping is dull ? I thought his works on xi jinping thought are enlightened, someone who is pragmatic. btw i'm not chinese so I read these things in english.
      • yanhangyhy 1 hour ago
        Compare to jiang. jiang is more open and funny. We like to make fun of him before.
    • HexPhantom 6 hours ago
      Wild how slogans from school can stick with us for life
    • wslh 2 hours ago
      In Midas World, The Servant of the People, by Frederik Pohl [1] robots gain voting rights and outnumber humans in elections.

      Also, in the context of this thread there is a famous quote by Pohl: "Nothing is so good that somebody, somewhere, will not hate it" [2].

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midas_World

      [2] https://pit.begghilos2.net/Sayings/Laws-Other.html

    • uvaursi 12 hours ago
      My grandfather rode a camel, my father rode a camel, I ride a Mercedes, my son rides a Land Rover, and my grandson is going to ride a Land Rover…but my great-grandson is going to have to learn Mandarin.
      • yanhangyhy 12 hours ago
        LOL. Probably no longer needed. China currently has no real solution for the low birth rate. I guess they are 99% relying on industrial robots and household robots(in the future).So China will desperately invest in the robotics sector. (The recently released 15th Five-Year Plan likely includes this). By then, language likely won’t be an issue—AI can replace everything.
        • uvaursi 12 hours ago
          Enlighten me - hasn’t Xi and the government recently demanded 2-3 children from each woman? I imagine they’ll push heavily for births again.
          • yanhangyhy 12 hours ago
            the government is trying to encourage more births through subsidies and other measures. In fact, experience from developed countries has already shown that this approach doesn’t work. Moreover, the subsidies the Chinese government provides are far lower than in developed countries and far below the actual cost of raising a child.

            The most common nationwide subsidy is 3,600 RMB per child per year, which is basically ineffective. For a woman on maternity leave, the government will subsidize her based on her salary, which can be substantial—in places like Shanghai it could reach 200,000–300,000 RMB—but still not enough to stimulate population growth.

            To put it in a darker perspective: the only way to truly boost birth rates would be to reduce women’s rights or compensation, which is unlikely in any civilized country. A historical example is Romania.

            So in my understanding, China has only two viable paths: solve the cost of raising children through household robots or by means of coercion, the government could require state-owned enterprise employees and Communist Party members to have children. China has 100 million Party members and roughly tens of millions of SOE employees. SOE employees usually have stable benefits and income, so childbirth could be tied to salary, benefits, or promotion opportunities. To some extent, this could be argued as reasonable—after all, they are supported by taxpayers and arguably should contribute to society. But it still counts as a rather dark idea, and I imagine it would be a last-resort option.

            • hollerith 11 hours ago
              >the government could require state-owned enterprise employees and Communist Party members to have children.

              Or Beijing could ban birth control and rely on the natural human sex drive to increase the birth rate.

              • yanhangyhy 11 hours ago
                China is a country that does not prohibit abortion at all. Maybe this could be a starting point…
            • onethought 11 hours ago
              Immigration would be another option… but not sure how willing China is to adopt that
              • yanhangyhy 11 hours ago
                I’ve actually thought a lot about this issue. My conclusion is that it’s not feasible. China has never been good at integrating other ethnicities and races. Even managing the 56 recognized ethnic groups within mainland China hasn’t gone very well; it has copied many mistakes from the Soviet Union, which has now led to a certain degree of backlash.

                So I’ve always felt that China’s ambition extends only to Taiwan, and Taiwan is the endpoint. After all, the people on Taiwan are Chinese too, sharing the same culture and ethnicity. Another point that people might overlook is that China’s approach to incorporating outsiders is based on cultural identity rather than racial identity, which is the opposite of the U.S. In the U.S., you can come in, bring your own culture, help reshape American culture, and still become an American. In China, you can only be considered Chinese if you adopt Chinese culture.

                Of course, sometimes we discuss online hypotheticals like whether it would be good for China to annex Mongolia or Myanmar. From a purely military perspective, it would be very easy for China. But almost no one supports it, because our way of thinking dictates that it would require an enormous cost to transform those populations into Chinese culture, and that cost is simply not worth it. Trade and cooperation are the best approach.

    • iberator 7 hours ago
      [flagged]
    • BurningFrog 11 hours ago
      "Have fewer children" implies that people are a burden, which can be true in a dysfunctional society, like perhaps China under Mao.

      But in a well functioning system, more people get more things done and make society wealthier.

      The old idea was that the planet can only produce enough food for a certain number of people. But it turned out that people produce the food, not the planet!

      • mitthrowaway2 11 hours ago
        Probably neither "larger n is always better, for any value of n" nor "smaller n is always better, for any value of n" adequately captures the nuance involved in assessing whether having more or fewer children will increase wealth.

        It also turns out that producing food requires some amount of both planet and people.

      • Unearned5161 7 hours ago
        Haha, what a delightfully backwards way to look at things. This ranks closely with “humans are not part of the ecosystem”.

        You should look into what carrying capacity means, and in particular how our access to abundant cheap oil enabled us to overclock our chip in a manner of speaking.

      • goatlover 11 hours ago
        There's only so much food people can grow on planet Earth, so it remains true, even if the number varies depending on the means available for producing that food. So yeah we can grow more food than people thought decades ago, but the Earth and the energy available to it, along with arable land are still finite.
      • yanhangyhy 11 hours ago
        So most people believe it was a mistake. We were misled by some so-called experts at the time. Conspiracy theorists claim that many of those experts weren’t Han Chinese, since the one-child policy only applied to the Han population.
        • scoopertrooper 11 hours ago
          The policy last about 35 years and didn’t end till 2015. Even today there a limit on procreation as the cap was only increased to three children in 2021. At some point the CCP has to own its mistakes.

          The problem isn’t that China instituted the policy (although its use of forced abortions to enforce was… problematic), it’s that its system of government prevented open discussion, reflection, and self-correction.

          • yanhangyhy 11 hours ago
            at least on this topic, i agree with you
  • hereme888 15 hours ago
    Wise to use forests to contain deserts. Problem is that China still plays a big role in importing deforestation-linked commodities and fund overseas projects that exacerbate global loses. There are low tree survival rates and falsified coverage, like the Three-North Shelterbelt program which is plagued by inefficiencies over its 40 years of operation.

    It's also hard to balance afforestation without causing scarcity of water and displacement of native forest habitats. For example, instances where shrubs are misclassified as forests inflate the report figures. China seems to be the global leader in biodiversity loss, with about 80% of its coral reefs and 73% of its mangroves gone since 1950. Everyone knows their abusive fishing practices, and the millions of tons of plastic pollution into the ocean every year.

    So, keep up the good environmental efforts, China, and hope you do even better.

    • fransje26 4 hours ago
      > It's also hard to balance afforestation without causing scarcity of water

      Is that not a bit of a non-sequitur though?

      From the reforestation reports I've read, bringing back trees was also coupled with bringing back springs, water and rain to the local environment.

      Do you mean that it can cause water scarcity in the original planting and nursing stages before the biotope becomes self-sustaining?

    • seanmcdirmid 12 hours ago
      It’s hard to reason about where China is today with forestation. Obviously their efforts from 20 years ago didn’t do much good, probably due to corruption and mismanagement. Today they seem to have solved so issues, is it could really be working. The primary resource they need to manage is water, and any effort that requires too much water (especially water diverted from local farmers) isn’t sustainable.
    • gchamonlive 14 hours ago
      Honest question, aren't coral reefs also very sensitive to climate change? How much of that loss is because of regional activities and how much is due to global environmental changes?
      • wraptile 7 hours ago
        Regional activties is a huge factor, much bigger than global imo.

        For example, South China Sea coastlines from Vietnam and China side are basically completely dead. There zero ocean environmental awareness in both countries and it's all about just devouring all ocean creatures with no self awareness.

        This is especially apparent if you take a look at the other side of the same sea. Philipines coasts are absolutely beautiful, full of life (well as much as you can get these days). Huge conservation efforts and really strong indigenous culture that respects the ocean made much more difference than global warming ever could.

        Completely different views from two vastly different regional activities.

        • AdamN 4 hours ago
          Yeah this is always my worry about the global warming debate. It's a crisis for sure but there are so many local initiatives that can be taken around ecosystem protection that are cheap and don't require national decision-making to be effective. They won't stop global warming but they will increase local resilience (and beauty).
      • andai 12 hours ago
        So, something has been bugging me. Coral is one of the oldest animals.

        They've been around for over half a billion years.

        They survived the Great Dying, which killed 80-95% of marine species.

        And now the ocean gets 0.9 C warmer and it's game over for coral?

        • zol 12 hours ago
          My guess is as a species it will relocate to somewhere with the right temperature zone but because coral takes so long to grow from the perspective of those of us alive the existing “old growth” coral will die.
        • mikeyouse 11 hours ago
          Nobody's claiming that all coral is going to go extinct.. the reef environment that has existed for the past few thousand years is at great risk though. Water temperatures that we know have been relatively stable for several hundred years are suddenly rapidly warming. Bleaching events due to high temps which infrequently occurred in the past are happening nearly every year now, which gives the reef no time to rejuvenate between them. The evolutionary process which protects species in their niches takes hundreds or thousands of generations to adapt to new selection pressures and the changes are happening over dozens of generations instead, which may be too fast for most species to respond.

          Coral and coral reefs will surely exist for the next few hundred million years but e.g. the Great Barrier Reef as an example of a vibrant reef ecosystem might not. We don't know exactly where the tipping point for these extremely complex systems lies, but we know that it's some point in the direction we're heading and we're starting to see examples of the outcomes that scientists predict to see near those tipping points.

        • jncfhnb 12 hours ago
          0.9 C warmer on average vs location specific volatility + acidification
        • AniseAbyss 11 hours ago
          [dead]
      • margalabargala 13 hours ago
        Considering that China is responsible for ~25% of cumulative CO2 emissions to date, there's not much difference between the regional and global inputs.
        • ethegwo 12 hours ago
          Request the source? I researched and calculated the cumulative percentage of global carbon emissions from major economies since the industrial revolution: - United States: 24% - China: 15% - Russia: 6.7% - Germany: 5.2% - United Kingdom: 4.4% - Japan: 3.8% - India: 3.5% - France: 2.2% - Canada: 1.9% - Ukraine: 1.7%

          source from Global Carbon Project, is this reliable?

        • gchamonlive 12 hours ago
          Isn't this 75% less responsibility than total responsibility in case it's only due to regional activities?
          • margalabargala 8 hours ago
            Sure, but 25% of responsibility for something like this is well into "consequences of your actions" territory.

            If the world had 25% less GHG emissions to date, warming may well still be sub 1C, and the reefs might be fine.

    • HexPhantom 6 hours ago
      It's a bit of an environmental paradox: ambitious at home, extractive abroad
    • rattan12138 13 hours ago
      yeahh,hope china will do better
  • aiauthoritydev 17 hours ago
    India too has been adding more green cover than ever. Higher CO2 in atmosphere leads to faster growth of forests. But more important factor is urbanization for India. As people move to cities the need to cut down trees goes down.
    • profsummergig 15 hours ago
      India doesn't do it in an organized way though.

      You'll read about some 70 year old woman/man in an obscure village who's reforested thousands of acres on their own, or resuscitated a lake (e.g. the lake guy in Bengaluru).

      But there's little effort to harness their knowledge in a systematic way, add knowledge from others into the knowledge bank, do peer review, and then systematically dispense the knowledge in the form of a kit to environmentalists and bureaucrats across the country. China did this, and that's why they're so successful.

      • xandrius 4 hours ago
        Do you personally know that or just from feelings?

        Because I know of several organisations doing this and are organising projects state-wide (they focused in Bihar and surroundings).

        • birksherty 3 hours ago
          Meh! Practical result matters not papers. Everything done in paper. What I've seen in India is trees are planted with publicity, photos, but are not take care of and dies, another program starts and plants thousands of trees, dies within a year, circle goes round. Otherhand seeing many hills destroyed for construction needs.

          The number of planted tree grows but benefit not seen, except for the group doing it. People are too into feelings, by seeing the headlines they need to feel good that's why so much publicity is needed, so many banners everywhere, ads in news-paper spending billions by gov.

      • PeaceTed 15 hours ago
        Yeah another example of the saying "India is a disappointment to both optimists and pessimists".
    • torginus 16 hours ago
      One nice thing about these developing countries is due to the power infrastructure tends to be not very good - which prompts people to take things into their hands and install solar, not to save the planet but to stave off brownouts, and be able to run the AC around the clock to stave off the heat.

      For residential, solar + batteries straight up beats legacy infra on cost, and with the upcoming cheap sodium batteries, things are only going to get better.

      • jkestner 13 hours ago
        Like how mobile payments took off in Africa early because they weren't held back by existing infrastructure.
        • taneq 6 hours ago
          In fact mobile infrastructure in general kind of leapfrogged land lines in many developing nations. Why run tens of thousands of kilometres of land lines when you could just dot self-sufficient wireless comms towers around the place?
          • hinkley 27 minutes ago
            Tokyo is so built up that cellphones were cheaper in the 90’s than land lines.
    • HexPhantom 6 hours ago
      While the trend looks positive on paper, it's worth digging into the quality and type of vegetation being added
    • navigate8310 17 hours ago
      Doesn't that put pressure on the cities itself especially the peripheral counties to pave way for housing and concrete roads?
      • roncesvalles 17 hours ago
        Cities tend to expand up. Almost all buildings in Mumbai that are under 5 stories are targeted for "redevelopment" i.e. a developer buying it out and building something taller in its place.
        • navigate8310 17 hours ago
          That is too costly for cities that have cheap and abandoned agricultural land waiting to be deforested and build upon.
          • nine_k 12 hours ago
            The time / distance of commute is a natural limiting factor.
          • mulmen 16 hours ago
            What does “deforested” mean? Isn’t agricultural land already deforested?
      • devnullbrain 16 hours ago
        Yes, and it's a good thing.

        Either way, you need to fit the needs of the same number of people. If they're in a dense city near everything they need, they use less space.

        Policies to limit urban sprawl just an expensive way to create more sprawl elsewhere - and roads to it.

        • worik 13 hours ago
          > Yes, and it's a good thing

          It is. I have seen the data

          But I live in a rural area of New Zealand and I also see how people moving onto farm land greatly increases tree cover (not forrest) and biodiversity, I assume because people plant gardens, and closely husband them

          In New Zealand farmers are grossly damaging to the environment. They clear everything and plant mono cultures and treat water as exhaustable and rivers as waste dumps

          So yes people in cities is a good thing, but people in rural areas are good, to

        • mc32 16 hours ago
          Guess it depends on whether subsistence living is more resource intensive than urban living where on average urbanites own more possessions per capita.
    • cyberax 16 hours ago
      > Higher CO2 in atmosphere leads to faster growth of forests.

      Sigh. No, unfortunately it doesn't. Natural plants are very rarely rate-limited by the CO2 concentration. So forests don't grow faster.

      However, higher CO2 does make the forests a bit more drought-resistant.

      • kulahan 16 hours ago
        This is opposite to everything I've ever read. A brief "greening" period was expected (and is now nearing its end) as climate change started taking off due specifically to this effect.

        Edit: to clarify, I'm saying the greening thing already happened due to increases in CO2 levels (though it's possible this is due to heat and not CO2 itself, I guess?).

        • Terr_ 10 hours ago
          Hmmm, separately of plant-types, I wonder if there may be a distinction here between how a surge in individual growth doesn't necessarily translate to a surge in the forest.

          Imagine a higher CO2 concentration allows a tree to reach maturity a whole +25% faster, taking 16y instead of 20y. However its happening in an established forest, already bounded by mountains, rivers, etc, where mature trees sustain for another 100y before they finally die off and take 10y to decompose, opening the spot for a replacement.

          In that case, the number of simultaneous trees doesn't go up very much, because the main effect is to reduce "downtime". The "duty-cycle" for a tree-sized patch of ground goes from having a mature tree ~77% of the time to ~79%.

          • kulahan 7 minutes ago
            Interesting theory. I imagine there would be a stratification of mature and immature trees that would be pretty striking if this is the case. It might not be hard to find out if it's true!
        • mitthrowaway2 11 hours ago
          So, it turns out that there are two types of plants: those whose growth is rate-limited by available CO2, and those whose aren't, as the latter evolved a more efficient pathway during a previous era of low CO2 concentrations.

          So depending on which kinds of plants, you can both be right.

      • gamblor956 10 hours ago
        The scientific research says that drought resistance is due to the increased vegetation growth.

        https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S09819...

        www.igb.illinois.edu/article/stronger-drought-resistance-urban-vegetation-due-higher-temperature-co2-and-reduced-o3

      • deadbabe 16 hours ago
        So why are the forests growing faster
        • Spooky23 12 hours ago
          Climate patterns are changing. My kids will retire with the cheap old farmland we bought that I’m planting black walnuts on.

          Upstate NY was ideal maple syrup production territory for years. Now, we’ve changed from USDA Zone 5 to 6, so the region will be more like western Virginia in 20 years.

        • cyberax 16 hours ago
          The TLDR is that they aren't. Global warming made some areas more hospitable to forests (warmer, more precipitation) and increased drought resistance counteracts some of the increased aridity in other ares: https://e360.yale.edu/features/greening-drylands-carbon-diox...
          • galagawinkle489 13 hours ago
            The atmosphere has so far barely changed in temperature compared to natural variations in temperature over time that had smaller and lesser effects than the effect we are seeing.

            The abnormally rapid rise in CO2 levels we are seeing is unusual and accords better with the unusualness of rapid global greening. It isn't climate change that is causing it. It is CO2, directly.

            • adornKey 6 hours ago
              If you look at the absorption spectrum of CO2 and historical data, I think it would be more correct to say, that CO2 has caused a noticeable increase in temperature in the past, but now absorption has reached a saturation level. The last 100 years temperature effects might have been dominant, but in the future direct effects of CO2 are absolutely going to dominate.
  • ksynwa 6 hours ago
    Wondering if I should also pitch in a backhanded compliment for doing something good or if we already have enough of those in this thread.
  • swagasaurus-rex 8 hours ago
    I think they’re doing a great thing.

    My area has seen some wildfire smoke season near the end of summer. It never happened when I was a kid. Now every summer there’s wildfire smoke for several days or several weeks.

    The climate appears to be changing and heavily forested areas of midwest US and canada are on fire every summer.

    Planting trees could be great for the environment, but without the moisture it could become a tinderbox for wildfires.

    • blitzar 7 hours ago
      Wildfires are only a problem for the matchboxes filled with trinkets we build adjacent to the pretty trees and live in - the forest likes the cleansing.
  • gnarlouse 16 hours ago
    I'm starting to think that we're the baddies.
    • thesmtsolver 13 hours ago
      Great quality comment.

      We shouldn't consider the fact China did much more deforestation to start with and even after all this reforestation China has lesser forest area than the US despite being larger in size:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_forest_ar...

      https://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2020-54719577

      > The US claims: "China is the world's largest consumer of illegal timber products." > And, according to studies, that is true.

      > The Environmental Investigation Agency says: "The immense scale of China's sourcing [of wood] from high-risk regions [of the world] means that a significant proportion of its timber and wood product imports were illegally harvested." And research by Global Witness last year said there were "worrying" levels of illegality in countries from which China sources more than 80% of its timber.

      • z2 11 hours ago
        Just as with CO2, a better comparison would look at per-capita figures and the destinations of consumption--for instance paper and furniture for export.

        It may also take into account the viable land area, lest we also want to condemn Australia for having so much less forest area despite being similar in size to the US.

      • deadfoxygrandpa 10 hours ago
        well, china also has gigantic northern and western regions that cannot be forested. the us doesn't have an equivalent of the tibetan plateau or the gobi desert
    • kulahan 16 hours ago
      Ecologically speaking, the US is an absolute monster of a nightmare. The American carbon footprint is incredible.
      • munk-a 16 hours ago
        The US was positioned to leverage technological and economic advantages to embrace and profit massively off of next gen energy infrastructure. It is a tragedy of our era that anti-conservationalism was able to gain such a strong foothold in the body politic.
        • votepaunchy 15 hours ago
          > embrace and profit massively off of next gen energy infrastructure

          Our children’s generation will never forgive us for abandoning nuclear energy abundance. Truly a crime against humanity.

          • kulahan 17 minutes ago
            This is the worst part. Wind and solar don't come within a thousand miles of being sufficient unless we massively improve our generation density, invent new magical batteries that aren't even on the horizon yet, and build out hundreds of thousands of square miles of solar panels and windmills.
          • golem14 14 hours ago
            I used to be a true believe in nuclear (in the 80s, 90s). Recently, I thought (with good justification) that it's a folly to build out nuclear if renewables' economics continue on the current path.

            Recently, I wonder if a nuclear winter (I mean this in the cold war context) is likely enough to make renewables massively less efficient. If the current administration were more competent, I'd assume that they are pushing non-renewables for that reason.

            But then again, after a nuclear winter, our energy consumption will probably drop to near zero (the population being near zero), so it probably wouldn't matter either way.

            • kulahan 19 minutes ago
              Nuclear is a renewable, and of course it still makes sense to build it out. In what world do you think our energy needs plateau? I'm always so surprised to see this 1970s hippie attitude making a comeback, especially since it makes less sense today than ever before.
            • chrneu 13 hours ago
              I was pretty into nuclear as well but it's pretty obvious that solar/wind with battery storage is the future. For the price of a single reactor you can build out like 5x the capacity with other renewables. That's also accounting for the down periods.

              It's kinda fitting that NOW trump jumps on board with nuclear, once the data says it isn't really necessary anymore. It's possible we can maybe build some useful small reactors for some stuff, but yeah.

              • Ericson2314 12 hours ago
                Don't forget to count storage and grid updates.
            • Spooky23 12 hours ago
              Nuclear doesn’t work in a market based electricity market. The capital costs are high and it’s difficult to make money if you aren’t paying down those expenses.

              IMO, the old style regulated public utilities were cheaper and more reliable.

          • rtpg 15 hours ago
            There was still a perfectly nice window of opportunity even scratching nuclear from the list.

            My other glib thing about nuclear is that France, a much denser nation than the US (though of course density is a local property...), has a bunch of nuclear, but even with "full" buy-in it's hard to make the whole thing profitable, and a lot of the nuclear reactors are running at like 80% capacity.

            Electricity is pretty fungible at smaller scales but when you start building reactors you need water and you need consumers of a lot of electricity to be close by, and that does cause its own sets of constraints.

            Would still be better if the US had built a bunch more nuclear reactors, but my assumption has often been that there are limits to how much it could be expanded in the US given those constraints.

            • xethos 10 hours ago
              > a lot of the nuclear reactors are running at like 80% capacity.

              This is presumably intentional. Beyond longevity, being able to shift one plant to 0 and take up the load across other plants allows for continued uptime even with a plant down (or just below capacity).

              > it's hard to make the whole thing profitable

              Considering France had the second-cheapest electicity for industrial use in the EU (in 2015, the most recent date from Wikipedia), this feels more regulatory-bassed than a properly fair shot at "Look how expensive nuclear is"

              • rtpg 8 hours ago
                > This is presumably intentional

                It's intentional in that people are making decisions to do things, but the people running the power plants really would rather run at much higher capacity

                I get what you're saying, but the line of comfort for these plants is above where it's at. I think the target is like 90% or something?

                > Considering France had the second-cheapest electicity for industrial use in the EU (in 2015, the most recent date from Wikipedia), this feels more regulatory-bassed than a properly fair shot at "Look how expensive nuclear is"

                Well... the State is present to make the whole thing work. This isn't a bad thing per se, though I think it goes against some US narratives of "well if the state didn't put in a bunch of regulations then nuclear would just be everywhere".

                It's more I guess a point about how there's unlikely to be magical economies of scale that make this whole thing work out.

                And the industrial use electricity point goes hand in hand with the reactor usage levels: there's a lot of electricity that EDF would like to sell but have few buyers for! It's a buyer's market!

                I like nuclear stuff in general, just think it's worth being clear eyed that nuclear power generation has Real Problems that even full state and societal buy in didn't solve in France's case. Though they did get cheap power for trains etc from the deal, so not like France's situation is bad by any stretch of the imagination.

          • PeaceTed 14 hours ago
            That will be one of many things they will not forgive us for. Alas most of us in developed countries have treated the world as a dumping ground for our excess.
        • potato3732842 16 hours ago
          > It is a tragedy of our era that anti-conservationalism was able to gain such a strong foothold in the body politic.

          It was the entirely predictable result of the policies we adopted. You don't get to be sloppy and shortsighted and then sail off into the sunset without consequences.

          Kicking the industrial layers of the economic pyramid overseas and telling people to learn to code is what you do when you want a quick win and don't care if people will rightly hate you in a couple decades (IMO it's a miracle we're discussing this now and not in 2002).

          Behaving that way isn't socially/politically sustainable and it doesn't take a genius to figure it out.

          • PeaceTed 14 hours ago
            Humans think on a scale of seconds, minutes, hours, and days. Nature operates at a scale of years, decades, centuries, and millennia. This mismatch is our biggest problem.
      • jandrewrogers 11 hours ago
        How do you figure? Carbon footprint only matters per unit of output.

        Americans produce 2-2.5x more output per ton of carbon emitted than the average country. And this despite the fact that the US is (1) the second largest manufacturer in the world, (2) one of the largest agricultural producers in the world, and (3) the largest oil producer in the world.

        The US has a surprisingly low per capita carbon footprint given its vast per capita carbon-intensive production.

        • myrmidon 2 hours ago
          What do you mean by "output"?

          If you compare emissions/export volume, then the US is behind lots of European countries, like Germany (or even Italy). Comparisons with the Netherlands (heavy agriculture) or Norway (big oil producer) are looking really bad, too: US is around 15 (tons CO2/capita/year), while China is at 8, Europe at 6ish and India at ~2.

          The only countries I would classify as "surprisingly low" is France (at 4.5, thanks to massive past investments into electrification and nuclear energy) as well as India (at 2, mainly a result of low industrialization, and likely to rise sharply).

          US + Canada is doing quite badly at CO2 emissions, even compared to wealthier nations like Luxembourg or Switzerland (!!). While part of it may be low population density, that is not the full story either (compare Norway).

      • gorwell 12 hours ago
        For context, here are the top 10 biggest footprints

        1. China 26.16%

        2 United States 11.53%

        3. India 7.69%

        4. Russia 3.75%

        5. Brazil 3.16%

        6. Indonesia 3.15%

        7. Japan 2.15%

        8. Iran 2.06%

        9. Saudi Arabia 1.60%

        10. Canada 1.54%

        The top 10 countries account for about ~60% of global CO₂ emissions.

        • moefh 12 hours ago
          That's not great context: China and India have huge populations, it's expected that they should be at the top.

          Better context can be found here[1] (countries by emission per capita). It's still not great because it shows a lot of small countries at the top. For example: Palau is the first, but it has a population of a few thousand people, so their emissions are a rounding error when compared to other countries.

          [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_carbon_di...

          • free652 11 hours ago
            Why? I would expect China to be at the top since it's #1 manufacturing country? But India is like behind Germany at (5).

            How about GDP per emission? And that would make China way higher than US.

            https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/co2-intensity

          • gorwell 11 hours ago
            Per capita isn't the useful metric in this regard for the reason Palau illustrates. The climate cares about volume.

            Per capita emissions is a way to assign relative sin by those who feel guilty about living large.

            Bill Gates today, "This is a chance to refocus on the metric that should count even more than emissions and temperature change: improving lives. Our chief goal should be to prevent suffering, particularly for those in the toughest conditions who live in the world’s poorest countries. The biggest problems are poverty and disease, just as they always have been. Understanding this will let us focus our limited resources on interventions that will have the greatest impact for the most vulnerable people.”

        • almaight 11 hours ago
          0.Earth 100%
      • refurb 12 hours ago
        You can’t look at carbon footprint in isolation. All carbon is a result of the production of something, often production which improves the state of human suffering.

        What is more important is efficiency.

        Otherwise the logical argument is “the US should have remained poor with more human suffering because our carbon footprint would be smaller”

        That’s an insane statement

      • jaza 15 hours ago
        I would have thought that, in saying "we", OP was referring to all of humanity, rather than just the US and/or the Western world.
      • ebbi 14 hours ago
        Not intending to make this political, but it's a relevant point to consider: we should also take into account the carbon footprint of all the bombs that were dropped by America and its proxies into the equation as well.

        The environmental impact from these would be immense, I'd imagine.

        • JBiserkov 14 hours ago
          I mean, just the nukes alone are incomprehensible, adding all the conventional munitions ... I'm out of words.

          A Time-Lapse Map of Every Nuclear Explosion Since 1945 - by Isao Hashimoto https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLCF7vPanrY

          1 second = 1 month

          • LMYahooTFY 9 hours ago
            All nuclear explosions themselves aren't even going to be statistically detectable.

            IIRC from assessments of the US military's carbon footprint, cumulative footprint of nuclear weapons infrastructure is probably significantly less than .1%

            There's a hundred other things to worry about first IMO.

        • cman1444 14 hours ago
          ...do nuclear bombs release significant amounts of CO2? I didn't think they did.
          • selcuka 14 hours ago
            Not the detonation itself (if we don't count the fires it may cause), but the total CO2 cost of nukes is high [1]:

            > A bomb on its own does not emit carbon dioxide… It’s the infrastructure, the construction (cement emits a lot), fossil fuel use, manpower, consumption, supply chains etc that all contribute.

            > A study published in the Energy & Environmental Science journal has documented that using 1/1000 of the total capacity of a full-scale nuclear war weaponry would induce 690 tonnes of CO2 to penetrate the earth’s atmosphere. This is more than the annual carbon footprint of the United Kingdom.

            [1] https://lakenheathallianceforpeace.org.uk/carbon-footprint-o...

            • chrneu 13 hours ago
              I feel it's worth pointing out that this is where some folks brains kind of break when the "cost" of a good is mentioned.

              It's the massive infrastructure to do the things profitably at scale that is often the problem with much of the stuff we consume and use. Then the "cost" of the environmental damage down the line. The "intangibles" get split up.

              Then we see these insane figures when these intangibles are all lumped together. This further disconnects people's brains from the real scale of what's going. Cuz our brains suck with big numbers.

      • porknaut 16 hours ago
        It doesn't even come close to China. So if we're a nightmarish monster, I would hate to think what that makes China.
        • tzs 16 hours ago
          China has 4 times the population. In any rational divvying up of the world's total emissions allowance by country China's share would be 4 times that of the US, but they are only emitting twice what the US is emitting.

          Both are over their fair share, but the US is over by a larger factor so is farther behind on getting to where they need to be.

          (This is not taking into account trade. Divvying up the world emissions budget by population gives the fair amount for each country if there is no trade. If there is trade the best way to handle it is probably to count the emissions for making things in country X that get consumed in country Y as being emissions in Y. With that correction China comes out even better).

          • jimbokun 13 hours ago
            Assigning blame and guilt is pointless. Just look at how well it has worked to motivate the US to change. That is to say, not at all.

            The only thing moving the needle is renewables and nuclear generating power more cheaply than fossil fuels, so it becomes stupid to not switch to them even if you have no regard for the long term health of the environment.

            • abdullahkhalids 12 hours ago
              It's not about assigning blame.

              Per capita emissions give us a better idea of which groups of people require the largest change in their lifestyle in order to hit net zero. The current numbers suggest that the typical person in the US will have to do a lot more to hit net-zero than the typical person in China. Obviously, you can do better and estimate per capita emissions for each province/state/city or by wealth level. For instance, in many poor countries, most of their emissions come from the top 5-10% of the population. Everyone else emits basically nothing.

              On the other hand, the total emissions of a country, absent other information, has little actionable value. It can only be uses to assign blame, so quite useless.

              • whatevertrevor 11 hours ago
                That still sounds like assigning blame and a vague call to "change lifestyle", instead of concrete action plans for energy, manufacturing, transportation and agricultural sectors. That is where the bulk of emissions are, not some billionaire's yacht or private jet.
          • throwaway6734 15 hours ago
            > If there is trade the best way to handle it is probably to count the emissions for making things in country X that get consumed in country Y as being emissions in Y. With that correction China comes out even better).

            Why?

            • dghlsakjg 14 hours ago
              A huge portion of China's emissions come from making things for people that aren't in China. The argument is that if a Chinese factory makes only widgets used in the US, those emissions from the Chinese factory are probably more accurately counted as US emissions.

              Its like saying that you are 0 emissions because you have an electric car with no tailpipe while ignoring where the electricity is coming from.

              • corimaith 14 hours ago
                The counter argument is that they'd have mass unemployment and would be in poverty without it. Virtually all rapid modern industrialization is reliant on exporting to foreign markets so characteizing it as American emissions is largely a misomer as it is really global emissions.
                • Tadpole9181 12 hours ago
                  While I fundamentally disagree, do you really not see how that would then mean all Chinese emissions are therefore a result of the United States? So that's... worse?
                  • corimaith 12 hours ago
                    What? No, because China is also exporting to other markets. The counterfactual is that we don't do global industrialization and let the global poor remain poor.
                    • Tadpole9181 11 hours ago
                      The US introduced China to western manufacturing markets. So if they would otherwise be poor and non-industrialized, the US is responsible for it all.

                      We can't claim we rose them from poverty while also denying culpability for the consequences thereof...

                      Though I think everyone is just saying Chinese emissions should be counted, proportionally, against the people they're making products for. And the US is one of their biggest customers.

                      • corimaith 11 hours ago
                        >The US introduced China to western manufacturing markets. So if they would otherwise be poor and non-industrialized, the US is responsible for it all.

                        Who is "We" here? I am speaking from a global perspective. Chinese industrialization has internal agency, drivers and motivation, the US did not force China to industrialize. Secondly Global Demand is not US-Specific, Europe, Japan and other markets contributed with their own agreements so the claim that the US is "responsible" is overstated here.

                        >Though I think everyone is just saying Chinese emissions should be counted, proportionally, against the people they're making products for. And the US is one of their biggest customers.

                        That's not what anyone serious is saying because it's just splitting hairs. Everyone buys from China, the US accounts for 15% of China's total imports so clearly their role here is exaggerated again. China also consumes much of their own manufacturing, while the US also exports many services elsewhere, so should US emissions be counted in other countries? And then there are also structural dynamics in how surplus economies intentionally suppress their demand to run surpluses.

                        In a world of comparative advantage, I don't see the particular value in performing funny calculations to divy up moral blame according to shifting trade dynamics, just much easier to point it out as shared global responsiblity in the path for Modernity.

            • fwip 14 hours ago
              Because China makes more things that are used in the US than the other way around.
          • enraged_camel 15 hours ago
            >> China has 4 times the population. In any rational divvying up of the world's total emissions allowance by country China's share would be 4 times that of the US, but they are only emitting twice what the US is emitting.

            For now. Look at the rate of growth on their per capital carbon emissions. Then compare it with that of the USA.

        • 2muchcoffeeman 16 hours ago
          China is also deploying a ton a renewables though. Its the worlds leading producer of renewables. It’s a mistake to think they won’t ween off carbon where they can. The US has a president that said “drill baby drill”.
        • manoDev 15 hours ago
          Not per capita.
        • IAmGraydon 15 hours ago
          It's funny this myth persists, primarily in conservative circles, it seems. We are far worse per capita than China. In 2023, the US emitted 13.83 tons of carbon per capita. In that same year, China emitted 9.24 tons per capita. There are few countries that are worse than us - that list includes Russia and Saudi Arabia.
          • corimaith 14 hours ago
            Shanghai's carbon per capita is 11.4. It's not really that different if you equalize the wealth per capita.
    • switchbak 14 hours ago
      Ahem: "China consumes over half of the world’s coal and contributes more than 20% of global CO2 emissions from coal combustion."

      But trees are nice.

      Source: https://wires.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wcc.918

      • lvturner 13 hours ago
        Your point reads strangely, it's almost like saying "Why even bother when CO2 emissions are so high" - surely ANYTHING that they are doing to turn that around should be celebrated and encouraged rather than saying "Yeah but..." - Rome wasn't built in a day and all.
      • seanmcdirmid 12 hours ago
        Are you trying to say something like perfect is the enemy of good?
      • ehsankia 12 hours ago
        is that per Capita? Also, At least they are going in the right direction with most metrics (switching to electric, installing renewable, planting trees, etc), whereas the US (under Trump) is hellbent on getting rid of renewables, focusing on coal/fossil fuel, slowing down electric cars, destroying national parks, etc.
    • Waterluvian 16 hours ago
      It’s becoming very hard to see China as the adversary and not the U.S. There isn’t even a pretend moral high ground anymore.
      • porknaut 16 hours ago
        What does your comment have to do with ecology? Just because China plants trees (news flash, so does the US) doesn't erase the fact they are far and away the biggest emitter of carbon emissions and have high levels of pollution.

        Glad they are trying to do good things though.

        • Hikikomori 16 hours ago
          US is far higher per capita and doing nothing about it.
          • mdeeks 15 hours ago
            This is one of the places where per capita doesn't matter as much as total emissions. We have one planet. The yearly total and cumulative matters the most.

            China is by far the leading emitter. Over double of the US as of 2023 (latest available data I can find). China's emissions also aren't falling, they are skyrocketing. The US emissions ARE falling.

            The US dominates in cumulative, which is essentially the measure of the total damage done to the planet. The US is doing something about it though. Yearly emissions have been dropping since 2007.

            https://ourworldindata.org/co2-and-greenhouse-gas-emissions

            • seanmcdirmid 12 hours ago
              Per capita most definitely matters. Every human is equal, there is no reason why one human has the right to emit much more than another. If we go by your reasoning, then all developing countries should figure out how to raise living standards without consuming more resources so the Americans don’t have to reduce theirs.

              You are incorrect that China isn’t doing anything to lower its impact. It’s emissions would be much much much worse for the standard of living increases it achieved without investments in clean energy and EVs, tech that it is exporting abroad to the benefit of the world and to the dismay of America’s petro dollar dependence.

              With such thinking, I now get why the rest of the world is beginning to hate America so much.

              • mdeeks 10 hours ago
                I didn't say China isn't doing anything. They are rolling out a mind boggling amount of clean energy right now. More than any other country by far. It's honestly incredible scale. It unfortunately isn't keeping up with their emissions though. The data is from 2023. It's very possible that in the last two years China has been able to stabilize emission growth.

                I actually disagree a bit on the first part. I think developing countries have a right to have higher per capita emissions as they raise their standard of living and economy where they can get to the point of widely adopting clean energy.

                • seanmcdirmid 9 hours ago
                  I visited Beijing in April and it was much cleaner than it was before, electric vehicles everywhere, but people were also much richer, before a car was some sort of luxury and now it was just something you could get if you could find a place to park it. It’s hard to describe.

                  The o the thing to consider is that China isn’t really a full on consumption economy yet, that they develop a lot of infrastructure and make a lot of stuff for export, all that would be counted in per capita emissions even if it wasn’t to the benefit of a per capita member. The infrastructure building is going to slow down someday (like it did in Japan), China should seriously consider its exports next (especially rare earth refining which is really dirty and resource intensive).

            • voxelghost 14 hours ago
              Why wouldnt per capita matter? By that logic, you are saying it would be OK for Tuvalu to emit the same amount as the US?

              Or actually, if per capita doesn't matter. Then China could fracture into 10 separate nations, and their output would sudenly be negliable?

              • raincole 8 hours ago
                Per captia doesn't matter.

                > Then China could fracture into 10 separate nations, and their output would sudenly be negliable?

                Don't you see the argument goes both ways? If the US merge with a few Africa countries, does it count as an "improvement" in regard of carbon emission?

                • myrmidon 2 hours ago
                  > If the US merge with a few Africa countries, does it count as an "improvement" in regard of carbon emission?

                  Yes? I fail to see what your point is?

                  But seems both unworkable and likely to fail/lose its positive effect in less than a decade anyway.

              • mdeeks 14 hours ago
                Qatar emits FAR more than the US per capita, but the total emissions are extremely small. The impact on the climate is tiny comparatively.
            • rtpg 15 hours ago
              In the "we only have one planet" angle, I think it's worth considering that China is not just burning coal for domestic purposes for fun. The fossil fuel consumption is an input to some output, a lot of that going abroad.

              If China is the factory for all of these products sold in the US (and elsewhere of course), then isn't China just accounting for even more US emissions?

              In that sense, some sort of eco-Trump could put all the tariff money into green tech or something, to balance out the exporting of emissions.

              Though to be fair, I gotta imagine that... a lot of chinese emissions are purely for domestic purposes.

              • thesmtsolver 13 hours ago
                >If China is the factory for all of these products sold in the US (and elsewhere of course), then isn't China just accounting for even more US emissions?

                China can't have it both ways, they are glibly blaming the rest of the world for their emissions while reforesting due to importing timber from rest of the world illegally.

                > The Environmental Investigation Agency says: "The immense scale of China's sourcing [of wood] from high-risk regions [of the world] means that a significant proportion of its timber and wood product imports were illegally harvested." And research by Global Witness last year said there were "worrying" levels of illegality in countries from which China sources more than 80% of its timber.

                https://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2020-54719577

                • rtpg 8 hours ago
                  I'm not talking about China's position, but thinking about texture of the emissions reductions in the rest of the world.

                  It's probably fairly unknowable what percent of emissions are for products that will be exported back out from China, but I think it's reasonable to say that when I buy some random wooden table from China and import it into Australia (for example), that I am at least somewhat responsible for those emissions, even if per-country emissions data doesn't reflect that!

                  I don't think this is some free pass for Chinese ecological behavior overall. My general hypothesis has been that at least some part of emissions reductions in the US and Europe are due to outsourcing. I just don't know how much of it is that.

              • mdeeks 14 hours ago
                That’s a really great point. Maybe their emission curve is what matters. It’s the measure of if they are investing enough into reducing emissions despite their production needs.
                • rtpg 8 hours ago
                  The thing is it's not _their_ production needs if they are the factory of the world.

                  If the US put a 1000% tariff on Chinese goods tomorrow, emissions in China would likely go down a decent amount, right? But is that an indicator of their production needs? Or the US's consumption patterns?

                  Not that this is some bilateral thing, there's a lot of people buying a lot of stuff from many places. Just thinking about a very simple example, and how I would like to see quantification on this front, but I don't know how doable it really is.

              • XorNot 13 hours ago
                Theres going to be a very entertaining set of mental gymnastics people will start doing once China's emissions growth peaks and starts falling compared to the US. They're building a lot of renewables, a lot of nuclear plants and are very obviously tooling up to replicate fusion from whoever nails it.

                Whereas the US is trying to increase its fossil fuel industry and cancelling renewable projects.

                • mdeeks 10 hours ago
                  They aren't just building "a lot" of renewables and nuclear, they are building an absolutely mind boggling amount of it. Last year it was more than the rest of the world combined!

                  Who cares about mental gymnastics. It's a win for literally everyone and I hope you ca see it that way instead. Competition is good. It drives others to keep up.

                  Despite what the current US govt wants, the economics of solar and other renewables will drive it. Worst they can do is slow it down a bit.

          • refurb 4 hours ago
            The US produces far more per capita to show for it.
      • refurb 12 hours ago
        There is the whole totalitarian human rights thing, so if you overlook that small, insignificant issue, then yeah, China is doing great!
      • thegreatpeter 15 hours ago
        Texas has the most wind farms & largest solar arrays in all of the US
      • mrits 15 hours ago
        I could see how you would come to that conclusion if your knowledge of China started 5 minutes ago
    • reissbaker 10 hours ago
      Based on forest cover? The US has nearly 50% more forest cover than China, and has been steadily growing it since the 90s as well.
    • mc32 16 hours ago
      During the same period the US also added 18MM acres and so has Canada, but additionally Russia, India and Europe have also net added forest… so the “baddies” are still Brazil, Indonesia and the democratic Republic of the Congo.
    • adrianmonk 14 hours ago
      Who is "we"?
      • gnarlouse 14 hours ago
        The US. Admittedly, it’s a kneejerk reaction.
    • raincole 9 hours ago
      Who the hell are 'we'? The US? The western countries?

      By the "forest baddies index", South America is the baddies.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deforestation_by_continent#/me...

    • k4rli 7 hours ago
      100% true. The US defaultism "we" is a cherry on top.
    • TheRealNGenius 14 hours ago
      [dead]
    • nine_zeros 16 hours ago
      [dead]
    • DSingularity 16 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • gnarlouse 14 hours ago
        This is a purely ecological/existential conversation. Of course the US has a horrible track record of policing the globe in its own interest. But if you want to wage selfish wars, you’d think you’d enforce policies that make sure there’s a tomorrow to be conquered.
  • maerF0x0 17 hours ago
    My immediate thought, yeah isnt that because they don't really naturally have the kinds of softwoods forests good for making boards and paper? And until more recently they were taking recycled paper/fiber from america in empty shipping containers returning.

    The real news is that it's also slightly happening in other developed countries too, another rhetoric point towards Steven Pinker's concept that as nations get richer they become more environmentally conscious, cause they can afford to care about it.

    • dj_gitmo 17 hours ago
      > The real news is that it's also slightly happening in other developed countries too, another rhetoric point towards Steven Pinker's concept that as nations get richer they become more environmentally conscious, cause they can afford to care about it.

      I'm not sure it's environmentalism. It's efficiency. From the article.

      > In richer countries, where farming has become more efficient, deforestation has slowed or even reversed

      You simply don't need as many people living in villages, farming marginal land. New England re-forested because the land was never that good for farming, and it made a lot more sense to work in factories.

    • smallnix 17 hours ago
      At least some projects run longer I understand: > Last year China completed a project, begun in 1978, to plant a 2,000-mile-long belt of trees
      • vondur 17 hours ago
        I’d heard that project wasn’t going so well. The trees weren’t really suited to the areas where they were planted, and many died off. I suppose even if only a small percentage survive, it’s still better than desert.
        • FooBarWidget 17 hours ago
          They had setbacks for sure, but they learned from them and continuously adjusted their methods.
      • xhkkffbf 17 hours ago
        I've seen some neat videos on YouTube that sound impressive. Are they impressive in real life? Anyone have any personal experience?
    • conductr 17 hours ago
      > as nations get richer they become more environmentally conscious, cause they can afford to care about it.

      Thus far, getting rich has been dirty business. This is what leads people to care more so than them being able to afford to care. Their richness is a side effect of their pollution, thus, caring is a side effect of richness but that's not the root cause. Pollution -> Money -> Caring. If you removed the money, people still care they just can't afford to do anything about it.

      I'm not familiar with Pinker or this theory, just poking at it :)

    • legitster 17 hours ago
      > Steven Pinker's concept that as nations get richer they become more environmentally conscious, cause they can afford to care about it.

      I think in this case it's more of a correlating factor. The countries struggling with deforestation have very little state capacity to enforce property rights or any sort of environmental regulations. Whereas in the developed world it's much easier to stop illegal logging or homesteading.

      • munk-a 16 hours ago
        I agree and would also add that food security is also a massive factor. With a high food insecurity clamping down on illegal expansion of farmland is politically toxic - but as land use efficiency rises and cities grow conservationalism becomes a much more important agenda to back.

        People like nature - all things held equal we want to live in a beautiful natural world... but if that world comes at the cost of having food on the table. Whether that inefficiency is technologically, environmentally (e.g. New England's poor soil) or conflict driven doesn't significantly change public opinion.

    • IncreasePosts 17 hours ago
      China is very large, has 90% of the population living on 40% of the land in the southern and eastern portion of the country, and some massive deserts that they don't want to expand. This leaves a lot of room for tree planting programs.
  • marricks 16 hours ago
    This and Bill Gates saying...

    > “the doomsday outlook [on climate change] is causing much of the climate community to focus too much on near-term emissions goals, and it’s diverting resources from the most effective things we should be doing to improve life in a warming world.”

    I guess it's cool there's something to be hopeful about, westerner's just seemed excited to make money off of melting ice in Greenland.

    • 9dev 15 hours ago
      Bill Gates is fundamentally anthrophilic, so his concern is above all human suffering. I think that’s a valid viewpoint, but also shortsighted; keeping this planet habitable will require tough decisions and sacrifices, and should stay the utmost priority, out of sheer necessity.
      • conception 14 hours ago
        Anthropophilic perhaps…
      • telchior 15 hours ago
        The population as a whole has a rapidly dwindling appetite for tech billionaires trying to impose "tough decisions and sacrifices" on everyone else, so Bill's probably in the right lane. He has already been the target of a vast array of conspiracy theories.
      • greekrich92 14 hours ago
        [flagged]
      • hooverd 15 hours ago
        ah, the classic "you are a sacrifice I'm willing to make"
        • mcdeltat 10 hours ago
          Oh no, to save the world we'll have to take the train to work instead of a car...
          • akimbostrawman 2 hours ago
            Shortly followed by eat the bugs and live in the post. Only for us plebs ofc....
  • lovegrenoble 15 hours ago
    Canada has added 20 million acres,

    India 22 million acres,

    Russia 52 million acres - an area about the size of Kansas.

  • jillesvangurp 17 hours ago
    I've been binging a lot of videos on things like rewilding and other approaches that can be used to restore landscapes. The Chinese have successfully executed a number of large scale projects over the decades. They started this early. Where other countries talked about doing things, the Chinese went ahead and did those things.

    One of their projects is allowing them to undertake infrastructure projects in the desert. They simply stick bales of straw into ditches to stop soil being blown away by wind. The straw traps soil, water, and breaks down over a few years allowing plants to take hold. It's a simple approach that works. Very pramatic, dig a ditch, stick in some straw. Done. Repeat.

    Outside of China, the green wall in Africa is a very pragmatic approach that involves digging a lot of half moon shaped ditches to trap rain water. Simple and effective.

    Other approaches involve using fences to stop sheep and other grazers from preventing anything vaguely green tinted shoots from being eaten and giving them a chance to actually turn into trees.

    What I like about these approaches is that some relatively simple measures can have big effects. People spend a lot of time hand wringing over seemingly insurmountable problems. The Chinese are showing that in addition to the power to destroy landscapes, we also have the power to remake them. It works. They aren't tree huggers. Better landscapes also mean local economies benefit. Deserts don't feed people. Water retention means agriculture gets a second chance.

    What I admire in the Chinese is the pragmatic can do attitude. Their motivations are of course self serving. They value having clean air in their cities, clean drinking water, and a landscape that can support agriculture and infrastructure. And in the end that's the best kind of motivation you can get. It's something worth copying. Whenever economy, science, and environment align, everybody wins.

    A lot of areas in the rest of the world that are subject to desertification, pollution, etc. are fixable. And there's value in fixing them that needs more attention. I don't see this as a green/left topic. If you exist on this planet, why wouldn't you want something to be done to clean up the mess we've all created in the last centuries? Breaking out this topic from the usual left/right day to day politics is key. The rest is just work. The Chinese put the rest of us to shame with hard work.

    • profsummergig 16 hours ago
      Do you know why the mounds with half-moon shapes? Why is it more effective than simply digging a circular hole in the ground?
      • jillesvangurp 16 hours ago
        The idea is that rain flows downhill, you dig the half moon shape to capture the water on the end without a ditch and then it sinks into the ditch instead of flowing unobstructed to the river and taking all soil with it.

        It's an ancient practice that was forgotten and rediscovered. The beauty of this approach is that it shows results within a few short years. Basically in Africa if there's water, nature shows up and consumes it. So you get lush growth and rapid soil restoration. Trees, vegetables, etc. on what was a heavily eroded flood plain before.

        It's easy to explain, the locals get why it works. And they get a very fast response from nature and all the produce and riches that come with that. And all they need is shovels and some elbow grease.

      • nkmnz 16 hours ago
        Same effect for half the work. Look up the videos on youtube, it's manual labor on very hard ground.
        • 0cf8612b2e1e 16 hours ago
          Why is it manual? If I had a mission to plant millions of trees, I am going to invest in a ditch witch.
          • WorldPeas 16 hours ago
            assuming you're not joking, construction equipment is incredibly expensive for countries to whom profiting from importing it is not a "sure thing", doubly so if their roads are not developed. This is why a 2000s hummer in central America still costs as much as a nice modern car.
            • 0cf8612b2e1e 16 hours ago
              A basic trencher is little more than a push lawnmower frame with a chain saw attached. Not enormous industrial equipment, but still a large boost to productivity vs a shovel.
              • taeric 15 hours ago
                I think the basic trencher would almost certainly still count as manual labor? Nobody is expecting that they are out there digging with bare hands.
                • jillesvangurp 7 hours ago
                  > Nobody is expecting that they are out there digging with bare hands.

                  Most of these ditches are dug out by the locals with shovels. We're talking subsistence farmers here in areas where people are more or less trying to live off the land. Their hands and some primitive tools is all that's there.

              • WorldPeas 10 hours ago
                again this is in a country that may have little to no debt infrastructure, so no way to take out a proper loan to buy the equipment, and many hoops to import it. The fact that it's small isn't the matter, it's that it's specialized. A used/legacy backhoe or skid steer maybe, but even if you can afford it, there's no tractor supply co or home depot, you are likely handling lading the thing yourself
          • blitzar 7 hours ago
            local labour is cheaper
    • seb1204 16 hours ago
      Any YouTube playlist that you can share?
      • jillesvangurp 16 hours ago
        Just search for things like "green wall", "china straw landscape", etc.

        A few good ones that I watched:

        - Inside Africa's Food Forest Mega-Project https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbBdIG--b58

        - China Buried Tons of Dead Plants Under the Desert Sand https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ev8DsPH_82Y

        - Green Gold: Regreening the Desert | John D. Liu https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E3nR3G9jboc

        There are way more. One channel that I might call https://www.youtube.com/@MossyEarth. They basically use donations to take on projects to do smalls scale nature restoration. I am actually considering making a donation to them because I like what they do. There are more examples of such channels.

        Not everything on this front is without controversy of course and I'm not blind to that. But I like the positive, constructive nature of these approaches. Just the simple notion that it's fixable with a bit of cleverness and lots of hard work. China is of course an autocracy that you can criticize for a lot of things. But they are doing a few things right as well. And it's worth calling that out and learning from them.

    • aarondf 16 hours ago
      This video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qwshdtijFY and his whole channel are a great binge for this topic.

      No nonsense, an actual practitioner, and not very "YouTubey"

  • beloch 9 hours ago
    How much of this is the result of reversing the deforestation caused by the Great Leap Forward and other anti-nature policies of the mid twentieth century?

    It's not a bad thing if this is mostly just restoring forests ravaged by bad policy, but it's a bit odd to compare this reforestation, quantitatively, to what's going on in countries that didn't have a "war against nature".

    • feverzsj 9 hours ago
      They've been doing deforestation for thousands years. The "Yellow" River is one of the results.
  • HexPhantom 6 hours ago
    I do wonder about the quality of those forests. Monoculture plantations aren't the same as biodiverse ecosystems. Still, if the goal is to stabilize soil, reduce dust storms, and push back deserts, it's a step in the right direction
  • legitster 17 hours ago
    It's really hard to understate how deforestation ravaged China - their forestry cover declined by almost half during The Great Leap Forward as the CCCP at the time pushed hard to exploit the land. As a result, there were severe and noticeable problems with flooding and desertification. So starting in the 70s they invested heavily in the "Three-North Shelter Forest Program" (aka the Great Green Wall). Although, probably more importantly, economic liberalization meant farming became more efficient and people could move towards cities and free up the land again.

    I think more fascinating has been Russia's surge in forestry growth, also very notable in the report. Unlike China their forests have expanded almost completely accidentally. Communist-era collective farmlands have slowly been getting abandoned. Their frontier has been shrinking and the forests have crept in, tree growth being aided by longer growing period and thawing permafrost.

    • RobotToaster 17 hours ago
      China was already extensively deforested in the Ming and Qing dynasties.
      • holoduke 16 hours ago
        And Europe in the golden era. A squirrel could jump tree to tree from north Scotland al the way to the south. Timber, grazing, charcoal are the prime reasons why everything is gone
    • ivan_gammel 17 hours ago
      According to WWF, there was some targeted effort on reforestation and sustainable forest management in Russia, which they claim to have assisted.
    • mistrial9 17 hours ago
      as an American that was my understanding also.. small nit (understate deforestation) -> (overstate deforestation).. the phrase means "even if I talked for ten minutes with all the emphasis I can find, it would not be enough to show it.. you cannot OVERstate how serious the impact was..
  • AuthAuth 16 hours ago
    This sounds big but its less than the bare minimum required. Their coal emissions are insane. In my opinion its all anyone should be talking about when it comes to climate change.
    • nitwit005 16 hours ago
      The project wasn't started as a global warming fix. As the article notes, it was about preventing desertification:

      > Over the last three and a half decades China has planted roughly 120 million acres of forest, according to U.N. figures, much of it added to contain the spread of deserts. Last year China completed a project, begun in 1978, to plant a 2,000-mile-long belt of trees around the Taklamakan Desert in the west. Work continues on a belt of trees around the massive Gobi Desert in the north.

    • lbrito 16 hours ago
      Can you tell everyone what their per capita emission is? While you're at it, compare that with the US per capita emissions. Also let us know the accumulated emissions for China and US in the last 50 years.

      Thanks.

      • jacobolus 16 hours ago
        Chinese CO₂ emissions per capita are only about 60% as much as the USA, but in the past 25 years US per capita emissions have dropped by about a third and Chinese emissions per capita have almost tripled and are still rising rapidly. Considering that China is about 4 times as populous as the US, this is a huge problem for the world. (US emissions are also a huge problem; we all need for them to decrease very quickly.)
        • hmm37 16 hours ago
          Is the per capita still rising rapidly? China's CO2 growth levels have already started leveling off, and actually showed a slight decline as of late.

          https://www.carbonbrief.org/analysis-clean-energy-just-put-c...

          • ben_w 15 hours ago
            Much as I wish to be optimistic, one year does not a trend make. As per the link:

              The shallow decline in 2015 and 2016 was due to a slump that followed a round of stimulus measures, while zero-Covid controls caused a sharper fall in 2022.
            
            We might be on the right path, but also the very rapid decarbonisation of primary energy and transport may be overwhelmed by growth in other sectors like cement, metal oxide reduction, or beef.

            (Or not, there's at least theoretical paths to make those examples better, this is just meant to moderate hope rather than to deny it entirely).

          • jacobolus 15 hours ago
            That would be great. I was looking at https://ourworldindata.org/co2-emissions
        • cma 15 hours ago
          China was exiting poverty and heavily industrializing during that period, along with building up massive amounts of infrastructure that could save some emissions over time, though of course also things like coal plants are included in the infrastructure numbers. But if we look at absolute instead of per-capita for some odd reason, an aspect to also look at is that a lot more of those CO2 emissions are from China manufacturing for the US and the world than vice versa.

          If we focus on rates of growth, China is building much more solar and nuclear than the US per-capita. And they don't have as much available domestic gas which with shorter carbon chains makes much less CO2, and that's the big problem. The US has twice as many natural gas reserves as China, with 1/4 the population, so, post-dissemination of fracking technology, that's largely down to geographical luck.

          There's going to be big spikes in data center energy consumption in both countries. It's still somewhat marginal at the moment at a little over 4% here and less there but it is going to be a main driver of energy consumption growth going forward.

          Banning China from leading nodes may result in doubling or more their consumption in this area as a direct US policy outcome.

        • whoevercares 16 hours ago
          China has been a developing country for most the time of the past 25 years. It is indeed a huge problem if it is still rising rapidly. But it is also not fair to limit China’s per capita growth for most of the past two decades
        • vasco 16 hours ago
          If they are still at 60% of USA unless your opinion is that Chinese people don't deserve air conditioning as much as Americans, you don't really have a point.
          • jacobolus 16 hours ago
            Air conditioning is a relatively small part of global CO₂ emissions (3%); you should be more worried about heating.

            I would expect air conditioning to also be among the easier energy uses to match with solar power as we go forward. Better building design and more efficient AC devices also make a huge difference.

            • vasco 16 hours ago
              The point is about quality of life.
              • ben_w 15 hours ago
                There's many ways to achieve improved quality of life. Our fancy-insulated new German house with triple glazing and a heat pump used an average of 250 W grid power last month, despite our PV being (1) a Balkonkraftwerk and therefore only 800 W peak, (2) summer's over, lots of clouds now, and (3) in a very sub-optimal location due to a builder's skip. (Still, the neighbours have trimmed the hedge last weekend and the skip has now gone…)
                • vasco 8 hours ago
                  There's easy ways and hard ways, the point is a country which has done the easy way cannot tell another country with less impact per capita they need to do it the hard way before cleaning up its act. Or you can but you're huge hypocrites.
                  • ben_w 6 hours ago
                    The easy way isn't the same from one year to the next.

                    China is currently building out all of this renewable energy and EVs, when the early industrial powers didn't, not out of the goodness of their hearts, but because it is now the easy way.

              • jacobolus 16 hours ago
                Everyone is going to have a bad quality of life, to the extent they're able to live at all, if we don't act quickly at massive scale in a coordinated fashion.
      • throwawaymaths 16 hours ago
        The earth doesn't give a shit about per capita, and us and eu are net reducing CO2 emissions since 2014 (even during trump I)
        • 8ytecoder 15 hours ago
          US: 335M / 5,000M ton / 15 ton

          Indonesia: 275M / 650M ton / 2.3 ton

          Pakistan: 240M / 225M ton / 1 ton

          Nigeria: 220M / 110M ton / 0.5 ton

          Brazil: 215M / 475M ton / 2.2 ton

          I can go on and on about the countries that are emitting less than the US. People and animals live in areas that are liveable. So countries near the equator and fertile countries will always be more populous. So how else do you propose we compare countries? Which are themselves mostly arbitrary lines as far as the earth is concerned - so why chunk by countries? It has to be per person right?

        • amalcon 15 hours ago
          The earth also doesn't care about national borders, so why are national numbers more useful in this regard?
          • ben_w 15 hours ago
            Governments have a lot of control over things within their borders, and are held responsible when bad things happen within them.
        • malshe 15 hours ago
          I am with you on this one. I have seen people making similar arguments about plastic dumped in the oceans where at least until about a decade ago China was well ahead of every nation. The oceans don't care about the per capita plastic polluting them.
          • throwawaymaths 15 hours ago
            Yeah currently the biggest source of oceanic plastic is phillipines IIRC
        • mtmickush 16 hours ago
          The earth isn't a person. I think it seems valid to consider the harm and or benefits being caused on a per person basis. Why should an individual in the US be allowed to release more CO2 emissions than an individual in China?
          • ben_w 15 hours ago
            > Why should an individual in the US be allowed to release more CO2 emissions than an individual in China?

            The lack of a single world government is why.

            Agreements between nations are only enforced by honour, and while that's more than nothing, it's not great.

            The practical outcome of this is that who is "allowed" to do anything is dynamic, and who may do something the most can be inverted extremely quickly.

          • GenerocUsername 15 hours ago
            Yes thats right.
      • AuthAuth 15 hours ago
        I couldnt care less what their per captia emissions are they have 1.5b people. Accumulated is about the same as the EU and will very soon overtake the US.
        • jurip 8 hours ago
          EU isn't a country, it's a union of 27 countries with their separate legislatures. I live in Finland, a country of five million people. According to your math I think I'm allowed to basically burn a lake of oil every day, right?
      • kvirani 16 hours ago
        Great question. Let's indeed make it a point of discussion then. I'd like to know too.
      • whoevercares 16 hours ago
      • mulmen 16 hours ago
        Per capita emissions aren’t relevant to climate impact. Neither are relative emissions between countries. This is a global issue.
        • vanviegen 15 hours ago
          No, but if some people are outputting way more CO2 than others, these are the ones we should be focussing on first.
          • AuthAuth 15 hours ago
            Yes China is outputting way more C02 than the next 6 biggest pollutors combined. Lets focus on them first. They are the only ones not reducing their emission growth.
          • api 15 hours ago
            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_carbon_di...

            The US is fairly high but below Canada, Russia, and many Middle Eastern countries. US emissions have also consistently fallen for the past 25 years or so.

          • mulmen 15 hours ago
            Serialization is a losing strategy here. “Focus” is irrelevant. We need fundamental shifts in energy production.
        • the-smug-one 15 hours ago
          Per capita emissions are relevant, because it shows how much each separate country needs to improve in a relative manner. Absolute emissions doesn't matter to what each state needs to do.
          • mulmen 15 hours ago
            We all breathe the same air. Every state needs to do everything it can.
        • umanwizard 15 hours ago
          Per capita emissions are relevant in the sense that if China broke into ten separate countries tomorrow, with each new country maintaining their current level of emissions, the effect on the planet would be the same even though an entity called “China” is no longer at the top of the leaderboard.

          There is some per capita carbon emissions budget such that if each human on earth stayed within that budget, climate change could be mitigated[0]. The average Chinese person exceeds that budget, but does so by significantly less than the average American. So the average American is more at fault for climate change than the average Chinese person is.

          Of course, your second claim, that this is a global issue, is correct. But if we solved the global issue in a fair way, China would still emit a few times more CO2 than the US.

          0: “Mitigated” rather than totally solved, because to go back to pre-industrial temperatures the budget would have to be negative. But let’s say we’re talking about staying within 2C or some similar goal.

          • mulmen 6 hours ago
            I don’t see the value of expressing a supply side issue in terms of demand. You can’t just ask people to choose clean energy. That happens from the top, not the bottom.
        • vkou 15 hours ago
          > Per capita emissions aren’t relevant to climate impact

          They aren't relevant to the climate, but they are relevant to how much energy and wealth you allow each person to have.

          Does a person in China deserve to have less energy or wealth than a person in America?

      • fcdssssx 16 hours ago
        [dead]
    • voxelghost 16 hours ago
      Well they're releasing 9.2ton CO2 per Capita, the US is releasing 13.5ton CO2 per Capita. And this while the US and the rest of the world is doing all of their manufacturing in China.
    • geysersam 16 hours ago
      This is propaganda. It's impossible to take this comment in good faith
    • hammock 15 hours ago
      Not counting the gobi desert , China is only 5x the size of Texas so it’s nothing to sneeze at
    • erikpukinskis 15 hours ago
      “Their” coal emissions
    • dumbledoren 16 hours ago
      Their emissions are the emissions of Western companies for whom they are doing manufacturing.
      • benjiro 16 hours ago
        > Their emissions are the emissions of Western companies for whom they are doing manufacturing.

        Spoken like somebody that never stept a foot in China.

        Sure, manufacturing for the West is part of it, but up to a few years ago, entering Beijing alone resulted in your naval cavities burning, the moment the airplane door opened.

        Because of the usage from coal in households. It was only until a few years ago, that they banned the usage of wood/coal around the city. Outside the city, its coal everywhere for the normal class people who own their (country)house. Near other large cities its still very coal centric in the winter.

        And the heating (communal for apartments) is mostly coal and while the coal may burn a bit more clean, and there is some filtration going on, its not a ton. So while open coal burning was reduced directly in the cities like Beijing, they simply moved a lot of it outside the 6th ring.

        All those EV's ... great, no more gasoline/oil usage but ... wait, where does a lot of the electricity come from? Oeps...

        But wait, all that crypto mining, where do you think that electricity comes from?

        And now AI...

        And the consumer goods.

        Your statement ignore a large part of the coal consumption in the country.

      • quacked 16 hours ago
        The global economy is so China-dependent it doesn't even make sense to talk about an individual country's emissions profile unless we look at their imports.
      • throwawaymaths 16 hours ago
        You should check the stats on that, it is not the case.
      • kwanbix 16 hours ago
        AS if they don't consume the products themselves with their 1.2 billion people?

        My home country we are only 40 million. I am sure they consume much more than us.

        • geysersam 16 hours ago
          So what? I'm sure I personally consume much less than your country of 40 million
          • kwanbix 14 hours ago
            The point is China consumes a lot, for the rest of the world and for itself.

            Was pretty obvious, but I wrote it down for you as you seem to be having trouble understanding the concept.

    • Mistletoe 16 hours ago
      Aren’t they bringing on incredible amounts of solar we could only dream about?

      Edit: for the downvoters

      https://gemini.google.com/app/6da2be1502b764f1

      • munk-a 16 hours ago
        And nuclear power - they have a large carbon deficit to make up so you shouldn't think of them as a green economy by any measure but... I think their strongest advantage is that there is a strong environmental pressure within the country and (while industrialists will be industrialists) there is no faction or movement within China that is dedicated to an anti-environmental agenda.

        There's a lot of work to be done and there's a lot of friction, corruption and economic pressures constraining that work but there seems to be a genuine desire to do that work.

        • Mistletoe 16 hours ago
          I wonder what kind of forest China is making? I was watching a really fascinating PBS documentary on Kanopy and it was talking about a lot of the planting efforts haven't been very good worldwide because planting a monoculture of trees doesn't do much and an old forest with tons of diversity stores twice as much carbon or more, which I thought was neat. So protecting existing forests is much better from a climate change standpoint. But either way, planting trees is better than nothing.

          https://www.kanopy.com/en/product/15418989

          • chrisweekly 15 hours ago
            Given the goal is to introduce trees to prevent desertification, in this case the relative benefits of old growth are irrelevant.
      • kulahan 16 hours ago
        They're building an insane amount of nuclear. It's the only thing with a hope in a country where a "small" city has like 6 million people.
        • pinkgolem 16 hours ago
          Are they?

          They build 10x more solar power (total numbers compared, in percentages solar nearly tripled since 2021, nuclear had a 10% increase)

          That seems more like a modest increase.

          Honestly solar seems to have an exponential growth, nuclear linear at best.

          Numbers from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_sector_in_China

    • nQQKTz7dm27oZ 3 hours ago
      [dead]
    • mliker 16 hours ago
      would you prefer zero trees being added?
      • munk-a 16 hours ago
        Of course not - but it is quite fair to examine articles like this with a critical eye given all the greenwashing that takes place.
      • moron4hire 16 hours ago
        Liking waffles!= Hating pancakes.
  • AoifeMurphy 12 hours ago
    Of course, planting is one thing, maintaining is another. Many areas turn green for a few years and then fade back to desert. The real challenge is building an ecological culture, not just a green map.
  • zahlman 13 hours ago
    > Since 1990 ... surpassed by China, which managed to add a staggering 173 million acres....

    > Over the last three and a half decades China has planted roughly 120 million acres of forest

    Where did the rest come from?

    • paulcole 13 hours ago
      When a mommy tree and a daddy tree love each other very much…
      • zahlman 13 hours ago
        I would have expected that to cause infill rather than spreading.
        • paulcole 13 hours ago
          Well you’re the tree expert, not me. So I dunno?
  • dukeofdoom 10 hours ago
    I always wondered why Western democracies want carbon taxes, when just reverting more land back to managed forests, seems like a much more reasoned solution. It would trap carbon, help wild life, and provide fresh air, and jobs in forestry, and renewable resources like wood. Seems to me Carbon Taxes primarily benefit the banks, and grow bureaucracy.
  • pksebben 16 hours ago
    This seems like gross, and I wonder what the net is. It seems impossible that there's no deforestation in the places mentioned int the article, and unlikely that the net is positive.
  • jo32 11 hours ago
  • Myrmornis 12 hours ago
    A very worrying number of people nowadays seem to think that forests are a thing to counter climate change. What is the species composition being planted? Is it appropriate to the location? Reforestation must be about recreating _forest ecosystems_, not about creating the photosynthetic counterpart of a vast fucking solar farm.
  • abhaynayar 14 hours ago
    How many football fields is that though?
  • Freedom2 17 hours ago
    Does this mean that you can drive in the forest for an entire day and still be in the forest?
    • iagooar 17 hours ago
      Probably, yes. This is possible in Sweden, if you go from South to North, you can travel for multiple days by car and if you avoid highways, you will not leave the forest at all.
      • Freedom2 17 hours ago
        The joke I'm making is that many Texans like to make that statement about Texas (with regards to size and driving) and claim it's unique to that state and to the US without realizing that it's common for many other parts in the world as well.
        • PeaceTed 14 hours ago
          Pretty much. Try driving from Perth to Broome in a day. It is about 24hours of straight driving and it is still a good 10 hours to the boarder.
        • iagooar 15 hours ago
          Fun fact is: I heard Texans saying it only a few weeks back. Now I get what you meant ;)
    • supportengineer 17 hours ago
      You can do that in Virginia if you drive slowly enough, stay off the Interstate.

      For example if you go from Cumberland Gap to Virginia Beach, a distance of 499 miles, it will take you 10 hours and 25 minutes.

      • palata 15 hours ago
        Well if you drive slowly enough, you can do that in my backyard :D
    • coliveira 17 hours ago
      This is common in Brazil.
  • yesbut 2 days ago
    finally some good news.
  • trhway 17 hours ago
    While Russia cuts more and more timber for export to China. In return for the support in the war (drone components, etc) China asks for even more and more timber and fresh water from Baikal.
    • ivan_gammel 17 hours ago
      The same article says Russia is on 2nd place in reforestation. They do export timber and can export more, while increasing the share of sustainably managed forests. But export of Baikal fresh water? That’s fake news. Didn’t happen and won’t happen, unless you mean just some bottled water.
      • trhway 16 hours ago
        >The same article says Russia is on 2nd place in reforestation.

        Reforestation alone doesn't matter. What matters is total result of deforestation and reforestation. Russia reforests only about 1Mha/year :

        https://www.statista.com/statistics/1059300/russia-reforeste...

        while the total resulting loss is

        https://www.globalforestwatch.org/dashboards/country/RUS/?ca...

        "In 2020, Russia had 748 Mha of natural forest, extending over 44% of its land area. In 2024, it lost 5.59 Mha of natural forest, equivalent to 816 Mt of CO₂ emissions."

        >But export of Baikal fresh water? That’s fake news. Didn’t happen and won’t happen

        https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/07/parched-chines...

        in Russian, that another waterpipeline - from river Ob' was approved at some Russian Parliament "roundtable on strategic projects with China and Kazakhstan".

        https://topwar.ru/159671-bajkal-xxi-veka-druzhba-druzhboj-a-...

        and there were strong leaks, not officially dispelled, that Baikal water was raised during the most recent Putin/Xi meeting.

        • ivan_gammel 14 hours ago
          Regarding your Global Forest Watch source I recommend to look below the tagline. The numbers that you picked have very specific meaning and the same page says that most of the loss (ca.75%) was due to wildfires and it grew more forest than it was lost due to logging. When including the loss for wildfires, the total balance is negligibly negative.

          Regarding you Guardian and Topwar links, you are citing the sources that speculate about rumors about some science fiction projects. Russia does not export water from Baikal or Ob River and won’t export it.

          • trhway 12 hours ago
            >Regarding you Guardian and Topwar links, you are citing the sources that speculate about rumors about some science fiction projects. Russia does not export water from Baikal or Ob River and won’t export it.

            Official state news https://ria.ru/20160503/1425318933.html

            "Moscow invited Bejing to discuss fresh water transfer project from Russia to China - stated the Russian Minister of Agriculture"

            and the further description of the proposed project is exactly the second project described in the topwar link.

            • ivan_gammel 4 hours ago
              One article in propaganda outlet from 2016 doesn’t count as fact. The fact is, nothing did happen, there’s no export of fresh water and there’s no such plans.
        • cpursley 16 hours ago
          Kind reminder - this is not reddit.
          • trhway 16 hours ago
            >Are you from country 404 by any chance? Because that's how these posts read.

            You may read it whatever way you like. If we look at the facts - statista and globalwatch is some Western sites/orgs, topwar is straight Russian and Guardian is Great Britain.

            >Kind reminder - this is not reddit.

            This is why you're using that offensive "404" notation (an expression of the Russian propaganda point that Ukraine isn't a sovereign independent state) when referring to Ukraine?

            • cpursley 15 hours ago
              Well, they aren’t. Never have been and never will be. Geopolitics is a ruthless game and those in the middle sometimes get crushed. Which is why you generally want natural borders (mountains, coast, etc).
              • trhway 13 hours ago
                >Well, they aren’t. Never have been

                Like Ukranians a number of nations - for example Hungarians, Chezh, Finnish, Latvians, Estonians, etc. - for centuries didn't have their own state and were parts of larger empires and got their own states only relatively recently.

                Like any other, the Russian propaganda thrives on people's ignorance. In this case "Ukranian people and Ukraine don't exist and never have existed, it is just an inferior kind of Russians on historically Russian territory". That is why nor Russian textbooks nor wide Russian info space never mention the 1651 book by French engineer D'Beauplan "Description of Ukraine, a Province of the Kingdom of Poland situated between Moskovia and Transilvania" where he clearly describes in detail a separate Ukrainian ethnicity living on their own separate territory (which is pretty close to the territory of modern Ukraine. Also note that Russia din't even exist back then, it was just a "Moscovia" duchy).

                >and never will be. Geopolitics is a ruthless game and those in the middle sometimes get crushed. Which is why you generally want natural borders (mountains, coast, etc).

                The same applies to all the above mentioned nations, and this is why they joined NATO, and why Ukraine is trying to.

    • coliveira 17 hours ago
      I don't think they're giving away the timber. It is a commercial exchange like any other.
      • trhway 17 hours ago
        Yes, it is a massive sale of natural resources with huge discounts in exchange for the war support.
        • olalonde 16 hours ago
          What "war support"? China trades with Russia, as it does with Ukraine. It doesn't support a side in particular.
          • trhway 16 hours ago
            There are a lot of thing which are clearly "war support", yet it would be a long and frankly pointless discussion, so i'll just refer to China's own words:

            https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/04/europe/china-ukraine-eu-war-i...

            "Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told the European Union’s top diplomat that Beijing can’t accept Russia losing its war against Ukraine..."

            • cpursley 15 hours ago
              Him or some other pointed out to some important EU person that if they (China, an industrial powerhouse) were actually supporting Russian war efforts, the war would already be over.
        • themafia 17 hours ago
          They've been selling forestry products for decades. North Korea is also a big customer. Unsurprisingly, nations with existing and exclusive economic ties, tend to "support" each other.

          North America does this with South America readily.

        • cpursley 17 hours ago
          Source for the discounts? (reddit and x are not a sources btw)
    • cpursley 17 hours ago
      This would happen war or not. Btw, they sell the same off-the-shelf drone components to Ukraine and anyone else willing to pay for them.
  • renewiltord 17 hours ago
    Much of Europe used to be forest. It just all got whacked in the few centuries prior to today. So you have Europeans making tiny recoveries to their rampant destruction of their environment celebrating that fact while preventing others from doing what they did. There is one path to this: first clear cut your forests so you can build your industry; then build your industry so you can be prosperous; then rebuild your forests. If you had 100 acres of forest, and cut it down to 1 acre, then you can build 1 acre at the end and claim a 100% improvement. The next year another acre still is 50% improvement. Can any who have retained their forest boast such improvement?

    China is following this path and we will celebrate it. As always, do not do what the developed nations say you should. Instead do what they did. After all, Norway did not become prosperous by keeping their oil in the ground.

    • sarchertech 17 hours ago
      > There is one path to this: first clear cut your forests so you can build your industry; then build your industry so you can be prosperous; then rebuild your forests.

      Sure if you need to bootstrap to the 18th century. It’s much faster and cheaper to skip a few hundred years ahead by importing equipment.

      • ahmeneeroe-v2 16 hours ago
        Checking in on the relative wealth of the countries who are only just now developing
    • nitwit005 15 hours ago
      > Much of Europe used to be forest. It just all got whacked in the few centuries prior to today.

      The deforestation goes back much further than that. Europe experienced significant deforestation in the middle ages. It was a major issue for many countries long before industrialism.

      • renewiltord 12 hours ago
        Yes, all that's happened is that we declared that morality started on Apr 22 2016. Slash and burn, cut and grow. Three hundred years from now, when the result is massive prosperity we can pontificate to whomever is cutting trees then.
        • nitwit005 12 hours ago
          You're not managing to be coherent I'm afraid.
          • renewiltord 10 hours ago
            Try an LLM. Sadly even an 8B model will exceed your powers of comprehension.
    • evoseven 16 hours ago
      You are wrong. In Gaule, most of the country was farmland. Wood consumption was huge.
    • oreally 12 hours ago
      Have an upvote. Site has too much FUD brigading for any positives on non-western aligned countries.
  • Bud 14 hours ago
    [dead]
  • tuktoyaktuk 17 hours ago
    [dead]
  • sodikidos 17 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • dustractor 15 hours ago
    Meanwhile we're speedrunning DustBowl 2.0 just in time for its 100th anniversary.
    • chemotaxis 15 hours ago
      How so? US forest cover bottomed out in the 1920s or 1930 and has been going up since. If anything, in the West, the forests aren't logged enough, which increases wildfire risk.

      China isn't following a particularly unique path, they just did a speedrun of economic development - they had nearly everyone living in extreme poverty in the 1980s. Before long, they'll be looking for cheap markets to outsource manufacturing and extractive industries to... which is why they're lending money to forgotten African nations. Keeping Russia an international pariah and making them economically dependent on China is probably up their alley too.

      • fwip 21 minutes ago
        I think it's due to topsoil depletion, which is only partly affected by local forests. Trees reduce wind speed which helps reduce erosion from wind, but much of our topsoil is lost due to our agriculture practices.
  • Stevvo 7 hours ago
    I'm curious how much of it is fake; at-least some of it is. To get financial incentives from the central government, local governments have pained rocks green and planted plastic trees to make it look like they planted trees in satellite photos.
    • Liftyee 2 hours ago
      Interesting... where can I read more about this?
  • lovelearning 14 hours ago
    > Drawing on national reports prepared for FAO, ...

    > Since 2005, the FRA has relied on data provided by a network of officially nominated national correspondents...

    My understanding is that these reports are heavily based on data reported by respective governments. I think "officially nominated national correspondents" means bureaucrats of different governments.

    But the governments of Russia, India, China are all known to lie. A lot. About a lot of things. I would know.

    My default stance is to be skeptical of such claims based on national reports. Independent verification using satellite imagery seems like a better approach.