- 70 Posts
- 133 Comments
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•NATO’s Pledges to Ukraine Fall Short for a Counteroffensive This YearEnglish93·1 year agoLmao citing MBFC when the NYT is actively trying to unseat the sitting head of the Democratic Party
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•South Korea to mass produce lasers that can take out drones at $1.50 a hitEnglish21·1 year agoLmao Ukraine is about to become devoid of birds
Any radar sensitive enough to pick up drones is going to have an insane number of false positives
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•China tells NATO not to create chaos in Asia and rejects label of 'enabler' of Russia's Ukraine warEnglish316·1 year agoUkraine literally praises the Chinese dual-use items that they received (drones, etc.) and calls them far superior to Western equivalents.
The problem is that if China were to pull out of trading with parties of the conflict, it would also deny Ukraine from much-needed dual-use equipment.
Meanwhile, Russia? They’ve spent decades figuring out how to skirt sanctions and their allies in Central Asia are more than happy to profit off of such dealings.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•China tells NATO not to create chaos in Asia and rejects label of 'enabler' of Russia's Ukraine warEnglish18·1 year agoWhat exactly do you think exports are? A DJI drone is manufactured in China. If it’s bought through Amazon or Alibaba and shipped to Ukraine, that’s classified as an export. The public market is how imports and exports happen.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Biden introduces Zelenskiy as ‘President Putin’ at Nato summitEnglish38·1 year agoIt’s a concern because Putin, Xi, Khamenei, Kim… They’re all well-spoken. They’re all quick-witted.
What kind of message does that send would-be American allies in Asia, in the Middle East, in Africa, in South America?
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Food safety scandal rocks China as report claims cooking oil carried in same trucks as fuelEnglish3·1 year agoGoogle has had suicides, but no prevention schemes
The real answer is that the Detroit car factories aren’t tall enough to kill anyone. People pick more practical locations like Hudson Yards or the Golden Gate Bridge.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Food safety scandal rocks China as report claims cooking oil carried in same trucks as fuelEnglish3·1 year agoGoogle isn’t the equivalent to Foxconn. It would be more like Ford or some Detroit automaker.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Food safety scandal rocks China as report claims cooking oil carried in same trucks as fuelEnglish11·1 year agoYeah some people are dying lmao
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Food safety scandal rocks China as report claims cooking oil carried in same trucks as fuelEnglish11·1 year agoChina just straight up doesn’t prosecute if they don’t have to, and when they do it’s typically following a civil law system that’s generally easier to prosecute than common law. It’s the same reason why Japan has a prosecution success rate of over 99.8%.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Hong Kong says school children sang anthem too softlyEnglish1·1 year agoIs your principal not elected by the school board (a municipal government)? A superintendent?
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Hong Kong says school children sang anthem too softlyEnglish2·1 year agoFair enough. I’m just saying that the fact that this is an article in the first place is because of “China bad,” not because it’s anything unique or special.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Hong Kong says school children sang anthem too softlyEnglish17·1 year agocute
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Hong Kong says school children sang anthem too softlyEnglish213·1 year agoBelieve it or not, there’s nothing wrong with telling someone to sing more loudly.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Hong Kong says school children sang anthem too softlyEnglish26·1 year agoDoes the principle count, or do you consider that a teacher? What about the superintendent?
People want to make a good impression on their superiors. There’s nothing wrong with that.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Hong Kong says school children sang anthem too softlyEnglish1229·1 year agoI remember getting scolded for not singing O Canada properly.
Why is this even a story? This shit happens in schools because wrestling kids to do stuff is hard.
Oh wait, I forgot, China bad.
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Taiwan to acquire more than 1,000 armed drones in new US arms saleEnglish31·1 year agoThe Altius 600 weighs 27 pounds and carries a maximum payload of 7 pounds. The Lancet weighs 12kg (~26 pounds) and carries a maximum payload of 3kg (~6.6 pounds).
What are you smoking?
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Chinese EV makers proposed a 25% tariff on large European ICE cars, state media reportsEnglish11·1 year agoHave you ever tried starting up a car that’s been sitting for a year?
That should tell you all you need to know about the reliability of digger man
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•China has renamed hundreds of Uyghur villages and towns, say human rights groupsEnglish32·1 year agoNobody commenting on this has ever visited Xinjiang. Nobody writing these articles has ever visited Xinjiang. Can you blame people for listening to the media they have access to?
There’s a funny thing about the notion of media literacy in China vs. the US: in China, media literacy is mostly “what is the media not telling me?” while in the US, media literacy is mostly “which media source is telling me the right thing?”
nekandro@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•China has renamed hundreds of Uyghur villages and towns, say human rights groupsEnglish1110·1 year agosigh
You know what the biggest cities in Xinjiang are? Urumqi, Korla, Aksu, Karamay. Those are some Chinese sounding names /s
Note that some towns have been switched to a Mandarin standard. This is especially true when Han populations dominate a particular city (e.g., Shihezi, set up by a Chinese general in 1951), or when a city relies on tourism from other provinces (e.g., Beitun, a ski towm). But… That’s not what the article is discussing, really. The article is much more interested in Romanization of these names.
Officially, the Uyghur name shares equal right as the Chinese one, however, sometimes the Uyghur Romanization is a pain in the ass to pronounce while the Chinese one is far easier (Ürümqi vs. Wulumuqi). This is as true in Xizang as it is in Xinjiang (the name བོད་ is still used to refer to Xizang by official Chinese standards, but that doesn’t phonetically map to Tibet). Of course, people are forgetting that English is neither the first nor second most common language in Xinjiang… In fact, given the number of ethnic minorities I doubt it’s even on the list. The English name is selected for convenience rather than anything else because nobody except Western tourists will ever use it.
There’s an interesting debate happening today in Canada as to whether this Romanization makes sense: while First Nations names like Squamish and Tsawwassen have been Romanized and are used colloquially, First Nations groups oppose Romanization because of its association with colonialism and instead would prefer names like “šxʷƛ̓ənəq Xwtl’e7énḵ”. The question is, which do you keep as the English public-facing name?
Of course, this is coming from the same The Guardian that reported that “the last major mosque in China lost its domes and minarets” when the Afaq Khoja and Id Kah exist and are widely known as holy sites in Uyghur Islam. The Guardian’s reporting on China has consistently been sloppy because they don’t have a correspondent in Xinjiang and their editorial teams don’t speak Chinese or Uyghur.
Exit polls run by US actors and by the opposition
Ah yes, my favourite. It’s been a while since we had a good old colour revolution. The CIA’s getting their mojo back.