China Calls Out US On Internet Freedom
rsmiller510 writes "In an interesting case of the pot calling the kettle black, the Chinese government released a report criticizing the US government of being hypocrites where Internet freedom was concerned — criticizing others for cracking down, yet circling the wagons when it involves US internal security (WikiLeaks anyone?). And the Chinese might have a point."
Some keep saying:
"China should look at their own track record before criticizing the US on freedom an human rights"
and others keep saying:
"The US should look at their own track record before criticizing the China on freedom an human rights",
IMHO it's good any time *either* country points out abuses in the other and they should each aggressively push each other to improve.
Wikileaks is being handled the way it is, not because its an internet security or censorship issue, but because it's a military security issue with diplomatic security tacked on.
What do you think the PLA would do to a Chinese Bradley Manning who copied hundreds of thousands of documents?
Really think he'd be in pre-trial confinement still?
During the Cold War, the Soviet Union pointed to the civil rights issues, the freedom rides, the riots, excess of authority to argue that the US had no place in criticizing the Soviet Union for invading Hungary, Czechoslovakia or pushing the crack down on Poland.
Because racial tensions are equal to invading other countries.
China is just pointing at the US to justify it's own censorship.
The entire report, "Full Text of Human Rights Record of the United States in 2010", is worth reading. Most of the items on the list are well known, and have even come up on Slashdot.
These are problems the US has that aren't being fixed.
nothing compares to China's outright abuse of its people
Ironically, the United States currently imprisons more people than China, and most of those prisoners are not violent offenders. Yes, the Chinese have a record of abuses, but that does not exonerate the United States.
Palm trees and 8
You have missed the point completely, like a typical American politician. Before you spout off, learn what the word hypocrite means: a person who pretends to have virtues, moral or religious beliefs, principles, etc., that he or she does not actually possess, especially a person whose actions belie stated beliefs.
The point: China doesn't act like they don't filter. China has quite clearly stated that they believe that press should be limited. China has quite clearly stated that the group has more importance than the individual. China has quite clearly stated that they want to do what's best for their economy only.
The problem is the U.S. THEY say they are for freedom of the people, and install dictators in countries. THEY say the are for freedom of the press, and limit war reporting, harass reporters, and go after people who expose government abuses. THEY are for capitalism, and then bail out the companies that should have been allowed to fail.
Bel, the mostly sane.. "Of course I can't see anything! I'm standing on the shoulders of idiots." -- Me
Protecting citizens from dangerous ideas like democratic reform. It's a fairly simple dichotomy, the US censors to retain economic power, while China censors to retain political power. In the end it's always about power.
I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
And the appropriate response to the Soviet Union would be "You're right, we have civil rights issues. Racism is terrible, and we'll try to fix these issues." And to our credit, we have come a long way. In addition, we should respond "Hey guys, quit invading other countries!" (never mind the fact that the US continues to invade countries to this day...)
In this case, again, we should take a good look at the criticisms and not ignore them because of the messenger. Maybe we are doing a bad job of preserving internet freedoms, and should work to fix them. Maybe China is also doing a bad job.
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it dissolve.
Is this the same country which has "designated free speech zones" so they can keep dissenting opinions in fenced off areas away from everyone else?
Or the one that allows your laptop to be arbitrarily seized at the border?
Or how about keeping prisoners without trial or recourese in a foreign country using a ginned up judicial system so they can get around their own laws and procedures?
How about one whose Attorney General posited that things like Habeus Corpus don't apply to people who aren't citizens?
Sadly, over the last bunch of years, there have been a fair few instances of America having a "do as I say, not as I do" attitude.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Exactly. Bradley Manning did something that would be illegal, no matter what his justification, if it happened how it is supposed to have gone down. He didn't have the right to release any of that material. If he did that in China, he'd be in pre-execution detention right now, if they even wait that long.
I don't know what people expect the military to do if someone just goes off and decides to release material, slap them on the wrist? He knew what he was doing, it's not like it was some sort of accidental release. Even if he did it out of conscience and perhaps rates a pardon or something, he still has to go through the process and no one with a clearance does not know what the process and penalties are.
I can buy that some people might consider his actions heroic. I don't, but that's mostly because I think how he went about it was reckless. Sure, people may not have died because of the release, but he did absolutely nothing to make sure that wasn't the case first. Without care being taken with actions like these, even the best of intentions can backfire into something that no one could ever dream of. I think his point could have easily been made with less material, more carefully selected.
It's not going to be up to me what happens to him, but I don't see any reason he shouldn't be in Ft. Leavenworth for a few years, unless the trial brings up information that I am not already aware of.
More to the point, his treatment does not even come close to making the US anything like China. I can buy that the US might be held more to account because it holds higher standards, but you have to disclose the fact that you really are using two different standards. Otherwise, you are perpetuating an inaccuracy. When you compare China the to US, you are comparing apples to oranges and you can't just make blanket statements that equate them.
No, actually, the US imprisons a lot of people, relative to any other non-totalitarian country. That includes China.
Relative to their population, China does not execute anywhere close to that many people. That'd be a significant percent of their population.
China wouldn't go to war, it's bad for the economy - and they don't really care that much what the rest of the world thinks of them. No, they'd just make sure the documents were never spoken of domestically except in hushed whispers - first by making sure their equivilent of Manning was tried and executed (It's no good disappearing him, the people have to know about it), and then by making it clear that any reporter or even blogger who so much as mentions the contents of the documents faces many years in jail. It should go without saying that any forign site that published them or discussion of them would go on the blacklist, and I imagine they'd put key phrases from the documents on the filter too to ensure any new copies are swiftly detected and blocked likewise.