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8 of China's Top 9 Govt. Officials Are Engineers

kkleiner writes "Did you know that the president of China is a scientist? President Hu Jintao was trained as a hydraulic engineer. Likewise his Premier, Wen Jiabao, is a geomechanical engineer. In fact, 8 out of China's top 9 government officials are scientists or engineers."

403 comments

  1. political SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    and all of ours are scientists.

    1. Re:political SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So what? Even most of the ministers of Iran including their president have a PhD (some of them from universities like MIT). But their government has been the most terrible one since last 30 years.

    2. Re:political SCIENCE by metlin · · Score: 2

      Eh. India's current Prime Minister is an economist, and used to teach at Oxford. And ironically enough, his son is an attorney for the ACLU (oops). However, the former President used to be a rocket scientist.

    3. Re:political SCIENCE by interkin3tic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Political scientists study politics, they don't BECOME politicians. It's the same as in biology: biologists don't become rats, they study them. Lawyers are far more likely than political science majors to become politicians.

    4. Re:political SCIENCE by dwarfsoft · · Score: 5, Funny

      And here I thought you were about to say that Lawyers are far more likely than biologists to become rats. Actually, that's about right too.

      --
      Cheers, Chris
    5. Re:political SCIENCE by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Funny

      Politics has nothing to do with science. Else they'd have to appeal to an ethical board or try it on mice before fucking with us.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:political SCIENCE by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Any discipline that includes the word "science" isn't.

      Political science.
      Library science.

      and so on.

      (Of course the idiotic slashdot summary is wrong:

      "Did you know that the president of China is a scientist? President Hu Jintao was trained as a hydraulic engineer.

      So he's an engineer, not a scientist).

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    7. Re:political SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We feel Iran is terrible because we demonize them, for our political reasons. Saudi Arabia is a terrible place. Women are not allowed to go out of their home without a male chaperon. They are not allowed to drive! Just a few days ago, a Saudi woman felt the urge to revolt, knowing the dangers to her life and wellbeing. What did she do? For the first time, she went out driving, for four days. Now, this is scary! Iran does not restrict women on driving, nor do they force them to dress up like ninjas. Read up at http://newsfeed.time.com/2011/05/16/rebel-on-the-road-saudi-woman-protests-driving-ban/

    8. Re:political SCIENCE by 228e2 · · Score: 1

      Computer Science isn't a Science?

      --
      Since when does being a Socialist mean 'someone who has a different opinion than me'?
    9. Re:political SCIENCE by mangu · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that the usual biological analogy for lawyers were sharks. Well, then of course, this being slashdot, someone would ask about lasers...

    10. Re:political SCIENCE by japonicus · · Score: 1

      How many falsifiable hypotheses do you test?? Which is obviously not to say that computer 'scientists' don't contribute scientifically to many other disciples - but computing per se isn't a science.

    11. Re:political SCIENCE by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Computer Science isn't a Science?

      Yes, but it isn't about Computers; so it's ok.

    12. Re:political SCIENCE by arisvega · · Score: 1

      So he's an engineer, not a scientist

      One out of many Oompa Loompas of science.

      --
      The three laws of thermodynamics:(1) You can't win. (2) You can't break even. (3) You can't even quit.
    13. Re:political SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computer science?

    14. Re:political SCIENCE by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      No.

      (BSc in Computer Science, UEA, 1980).

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    15. Re:political SCIENCE by gregor-e · · Score: 2

      I thought the usual biological comparison was to sperm cells, since both lawyers and sperm have about one in a billion chance of one day becoming a human.

    16. Re:political SCIENCE by cashman73 · · Score: 1
      Actually, the National Institute of Health (NIH) just announced last week that they were going to start using lawyers instead of rats in their experiments. Naturally, the American Bar Association was outraged and filed suit. Yet, the NIH presented some very good reasons for the switch.
      1. The lab assistants were becoming very attached to their little rats. This emotional involvement was interfering with the research being conducted. No such attachment could form for a lawyer.
      2. Lawyers breed faster and are in much greater supply.
      3. Lawyers are much cheaper to care for and the humanitarian societies won't jump all over you no matter what you're studying.
      4. There are some things even a rat won't do.
    17. Re:political SCIENCE by demonbug · · Score: 1

      Eh. India's current Prime Minister is an economist, and used to teach at Oxford. And ironically enough, his son is an attorney for the ACLU (oops). However, the former President used to be a rocket scientist.

      Umm, according to the wikipedia article you linked to that would be his daughter that worked for the ACLU, and apparently she now works at the Open Society Justice Initiative (whatever that is).

    18. Re:political SCIENCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Political scientists study politics, they don't BECOME politicians.

      Actually a large portions of them DO become politicians, but you are right it is not the name of the degree in self. Kind of like English Majors doesn't study for 5 years to become Walmart greeters, it is just something that happens.

    19. Re:political SCIENCE by Celestialwolf · · Score: 1

      And here I thought you were about to say that Lawyers are far more likely than biologists to become rats. Actually, that's about right too.

      I was thinking the same thing. XD

  2. Slavery by hinesbrad · · Score: 2

    9 our of 9 Chinese top officials promote blatant economic slavery in an attempt to increase their power. These people aren't stupid, but they are very dangerous and exploitative of the population.

    1. Re:Slavery by tmosley · · Score: 0

      Yeah, those guys are slaves, with their no regulations and income tax rate half of ours.

      Those evil exploitative bastards!

    2. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slavery Gets Shit Done!

    3. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes, the "no regulation" that leads to sweatshops and companies like Foxconn having their employees commit suicide due to shitty working conditions.

    4. Re:Slavery by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      So how would YOU take a billion people out of poverty? The fact is, when there are a billion people waiting in line for a job, wages will be low. Institute minimum wages you say? Say goodbye to companies who will setup their factories elsewhere. Give everyone a social safety net? How, when you have nothing to give? Because of China's economic policies, people are taken out of poverty every day.

      Compare this to the current US government: tax cuts for the richest, bailouts for the big banks (TARP and the Feds ~0% interest rates), subsidies for the oil companies. This comes all out of the pocket of its taxpayers, to further enrich the richest.

    5. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That reminds me of the Dead Kennedys song Holiday in Cambodia.

    6. Re:Slavery by Rik+Rohl · · Score: 1

      Those bastards!
      In the west, we leave it to the private sector to do that!

    7. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      tmosley: Your comment is perhaps the most ignorant one I've read this entire month.

    8. Re:Slavery by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Yeah, those guys are slaves, with their no regulations and income tax rate half of ours.

      Indeed. The regulations they often lack are for the workers' protection. And you have to have your head buried pretty deep in conservative propaganda to equate income taxes with slavery on any level. Actual slaves don't earn -any- income.

    9. Re:Slavery by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Right—but at least their lobbyist have to fight each other to the death in order to get the right to do it. Isn't that what democracy is all about? *half-hearted rimshot*

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    10. Re:Slavery by dbIII · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's right - living the Libertarian dream!

    11. Re:Slavery by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      So how would YOU take a billion people out of poverty?

      Not having a 12 step plan to create a billion jobs doesn't disqualify one from criticizing human rights abuses.

      Institute minimum wages you say? Say goodbye to companies who will setup their factories elsewhere.

      I don't hear anyone saying "If China would just raise minimum wages, everything would work out PERFECTLY!!!" Hell, I think even morons on cable news would propose a more nuanced plan than that.

      The fact is, when there are a billion people waiting in line for a job, wages will be low.

      Citation needed. What's the critical mass of population at which you are doomed to have low wages?

      Compare this to the current US government: tax cuts for the richest, bailouts for the big banks (TARP and the Feds ~0% interest rates), subsidies for the oil companies. This comes all out of the pocket of its taxpayers, to further enrich the richest.

      I think there's a false dichotomy going on here. The US being screwed up does not make the Chinese good.

    12. Re:Slavery by agm · · Score: 2

      No regulation? Ever heard of the "great firewall of China"? Falun Gong? Tienanmen Square? No regulation indeed.

    13. Re:Slavery by syousef · · Score: 2

      Yes, the "no regulation" that leads to sweatshops and companies like Foxconn having their employees commit suicide due to shitty working conditions.

      They've promised in writing not to do that anymore, and we've put up nets. Now get back to work before I beat you.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    14. Re:Slavery by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 2

      Of course, Foxconn's employee suicide rate is less than that of the rest of the Chinese population taken as a whole, but don't let that derail your derp.

    15. Re:Slavery by Balthisar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually I'm getting ready to accept a three year assignment in China. My tax rate rate (due to my income) will be 50%. Fortunately for me my company equalizes all of my taxes (a burdensome process in itself, described below), so I won't see the effects, but that's versus a net rate of only 26% (federal only) after my itemized deductions.

      Tax equalization (I've been through this before when on assignment in Mexico): I owe 50% to the host country, and (say) 26% to my home country (only over about 90,000 when not in the USA). But because my company pays my foreign taxes, the USA regards that as income to me. So the company pays that back, which both China and the USA recognize as income to me. So that tax that, too. So the company pays that back, too, which is taxed by both countries.

      In effect, I come out okay, the Chinese take well, well over 50% of my true, earned income, and the fact that the United States gets anything is just stealing from my company (every other modern country in the world doesn't tax overseas personal income).

      Of course we all know the Chinese are communist in name, and in order to continue professing such they're socially obligated to tax us rich (compared to their workers) bastards at exploitative rates.

      --
      --Jim (me)
    16. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Of course, the article you quote is written by a liberal arts major like yourself, and, like you, lacks basic understanding of statistics.

      You can't really compare the average Chinese (who still lives in extreme poverty, is lacking education and prospects for the future) to the person, who is allowed to live in Shenzhen (where Foxconn's main facility is located). Shenzhen's population is very far from a representative sample of the Chinese population. People there are much, much better educated (1/5 of China's PhDs work there), paid substantially more than elsewhere and, generally, have much better lives than the norm in China.

      But don't let your ignorance stop you from spewing the cliches that you hear on the conservative radio broadcasts while you drive to your cleaning job.

    17. Re:Slavery by purpledinoz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My main point is, whenever the name "China" comes up, people scream "Human rights abuse", "slavery", etc. Yes, they have a point. China needs to improve its attitude towards human rights. I would say the same to Burma, Russia, Pakistan, etc. But people single out China for such strong criticism, ignoring any progress they have made. I also wish people were so critical of their own government as well and its human rights abuses, like Guantanamo Bay.

    18. Re:Slavery by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      Which gives an opening for the company to "suicide" someone, and claim that against next of kin.

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    19. Re:Slavery by Adayse · · Score: 1

      Yes. The suicide rate in China looks like bullshit, and you could question the competence of the countries engineer leaders for that crap but the the foxconn rate looks pretty normal especially if the majority of those 400k workers are young men. The point being that 10 suicides per 400k workers in a 6 month period does not indicate slavery.

    20. Re:Slavery by quadrox · · Score: 0

      Rarely does a post deserve to be modded up more than this one does. Unfortunately I don't have any modpoints right now.

    21. Re:Slavery by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Well, that's certainly true. I guess I'd say China tends to come up a lot more often than Burma, and the US (which most slashdotters live in) deals a lot more with China as equals than we do with Burma or Pakistan*, so we're less focused on them too. And when discussing an article about China, criticisms of China's human rights are more germane than Guantanamo Bay or the others.

      (* Russia escapes the treatment purely because of the "in Soviet Russia" jokes)

    22. Re:Slavery by captain_sweatpants · · Score: 2

      He meant no regulations for the rich. Of course the peasants need to be regulated, they are too stupid and lazy to know what's good for them!

    23. Re:Slavery by shmlco · · Score: 2

      Okay, the suicide rate in the US is 11.3 individuals for every 100,000. That would be 45.2 suicides for 400,000 people (city the size of Shenzhen), giving us a difference of almost 3-to-1.

      Or are you going to question our average education and and prospects now? (And I don't believe the Foxconn PhD's were the ones committing suicide...)

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    24. Re:Slavery by hinesbrad · · Score: 0

      Thank you.

    25. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is quite probable that a Chinese working in Shenzhen perceives his/her prospects in China in a much more optimistic manner than the average US citizen. The prospects for significant income growth and significant improvement of quality of life for the former are much higher than for the latter.

    26. Re:Slavery by iserlohn · · Score: 1

      Um.. shenzhen has officially 3.3 million people.. closer to 4.0 if you include illegals.

    27. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does that change the fact that it isn't a representative sample of the Chinese society?

    28. Re:Slavery by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      I also wish people were so critical of their own government as well and its human rights abuses, like Guantanamo Bay.

      Do you read the same slashdot that I do?

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    29. Re:Slavery by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      Well, if I had to choose being an average guy in China or an average guy in Russia, I would choose Russia. At least Russia has the institutions of a democracy, however corrupted.

    30. Re:Slavery by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      Actual slaves don't earn -any- income.

      Many traditions of slavery involve periodic payments from the master to the slave that the slave can spend as he wish or even save to buy his freedom one day. While the slave is ostensibly at the mercy of his master, in order to maintain face among his society, the master has to provide something to those under him. This is how it worked in ancient Rome, for instance.

    31. Re:Slavery by flappinbooger · · Score: 2

      Actual slaves don't earn -any- income.

      Many traditions of slavery involve periodic payments from the master to the slave that the slave can spend as he wish or even save to buy his freedom one day. While the slave is ostensibly at the mercy of his master, in order to maintain face among his society, the master has to provide something to those under him. This is how it worked in ancient Rome, for instance.

      Huh. Sorta like a .... job.

      --
      Flappinbooger isn't my real name
    32. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      9 our of 9 Chinese top officials promote blatant economic slavery....

      As opposed to sneaky economic slavery? How much debt have you acquired in the past decade?

    33. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tax equalization (I've been through this before when on assignment in Mexico): I owe 50% to the host country, and (say) 26% to my home country (only over about 90,000 when not in the USA). But because my company pays my foreign taxes, the USA regards that as income to me. So the company pays that back, which both China and the USA recognize as income to me. So that tax that, too. So the company pays that back, too, which is taxed by both countries.

      A little bit of calculus would make this problem go away.

      Also 50% tax is pretty standard in most countries outside the US. If not, it's because they have high sales tax to compensate.

    34. Re:Slavery by Kamiza+Ikioi · · Score: 1

      What's so bad about 50%? Imagine if the income ratio were reversed, and you came here to work. They make what, like an average of $0.50/hr? You make what, $43/hr (you said $90k per year, averaging 52 weeks at 40 hours). So, you make 100x an hour more than them. So, imagine if someone came here, and made $4326 an hour. Should someone making $4326/hr be taxed at 50%? HELL YES THEY SHOULD!

      The ultra wealthy used to pay 90% taxes in the good ole USA. So stop your bitching, cause you are ultra-wealthy to the average Chinese. Hell, you're more than double the average US income as well, so your bitching here about another 26% doesn't really bother me either, especially since it is your company footing the bill and you get the free ride.

      Exploitative? Puh-lease!

      --
      I8-D
    35. Re:Slavery by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Why can't you compare them? One becomes the other, and in doing so, improves their life. You also fail to note that the factory improved working conditions based on the bad press, meaning things got better without government interference.

      Or do you think that industrialization happens overnight, and people can just go from being totally unskilled to super high paid without any capital overnight? You think a government can just step in and say "pay your workers more" when they aren't productive enough to support that level of pay?

      This is what an industrial revolution looks like. Things look bad, but the truth is that they are doing nothing but improving their lives. In a generation, they will a GDP per capital like that of the US.

    36. Re:Slavery by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Hey, don't blame me if you don't know the definition of slavery.

      Those people are perfectly free to leave their jobs. Slaves are not. The fact is that they are taxed less than us by half. Indeed, our tax rate is so high, we turn over just 5% less of our total economic production to our masters than black slaves in the US did in the 1800's. Sure, we have a lot more capital to work with, so we are fairly comfortable, but is living as a slave in a cage of gold really better than being temporarily poor and free?

    37. Re:Slavery by tmosley · · Score: 1

      If someone came here and was making that much, it would be because he is providing that much or more value. You guys sure are a bunch of jealous assholes. Hard work and savings seem to mean nothing to you. You just want something for nothing.

      No wonder America is falling apart at the seams.

    38. Re:Slavery by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Funny, because conservatives all call me a commie douchebag. Such is the life of a libertarian--ie someone who just wants to be left alone and to be allowed to keep what they earn.

      And you are totally ignorant of slavery. Slaves have ALWAYS spent a certain amount of time working for their masters, and a certain amount of time working for themselves. Whether it was in trade, as in the Northern colonies/states prior to abolition there, or time spent in their own fields in the South.

      For comparison purposes, Medieval serfs paid 20% of their income to their "noble" masters. But they were tied to the land. The Chinese aren't.

      The only freedom we have is to choose not to work for pay, ie subsistence farming. Pretty shitty, honestly.

    39. Re:Slavery by Balthisar · · Score: 1

      If you were a careful reader, you'd see that I wrote that the USA taxes my income over $90,000 when I'm not living in the USA, *not* that I make $90,000. But you're not a careful reader, because you already have a notion that theft is okay because it's better for everyone to be economically dirt poor rather than let some people succeed.

      --
      --Jim (me)
    40. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right, the Libertarian dream! Living under a government that can do whatever it wants, whenever it wants, and chooses not to regulate your company because it's not in its best interest to do so.

      Get it through your thick fucking skulls people - the government in China owns everything, they just divvy out control. There is no difference between the Chinese 'market' and the Chinese government. They are the same entity at different heirarchical levels of control. The government does not 'regulate' the companies, they tell them what to do or they ignore them because they're doing what the government wants them to do, or close enough that it is not worth the trouble. Everyone in China works for the state, and as such, the lack of 'regulation' is really just a lack of respect for human rights by the government of China.

    41. Re:Slavery by Koftu · · Score: 1

      But they were tied to the land. The Chinese aren't.

      False. There is no freedom of movement. Who do you think the "illegals" referenced above in Shenzhen are? [Mostly] People from the countryside who did not get government authorization to move.

    42. Re:Slavery by dbIII · · Score: 2

      You don't get it do you? A strong government where might makes right instead of any sort of justice is a very big part of the libertarian dream. They want their country to be able to kick the ass of somebody else just so long as it leaves them alone to do what they want with the slaves they can have (because might makes right remember). Franklin, Washington, Jefferson, Paine and even Benedict Arnold would have seen them as despicable traitors.

    43. Re:Slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps Chinese top officials should be as stupid as USA top officials!!!

    44. Re:Slavery by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      That's interesting, but "slave" still implies "forced work without pay" even if that type of pure slavery is rare in history. And it has nothing to do with income taxes. Suggesting that chinese workers are less enslaved than us because they pay a lower tax percentage is nuts.

    45. Re:Slavery by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of the old joke. Capitalism is the exploitation of man by man. Communism is the opposite thereof.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    46. Re:Slavery by Thoguth · · Score: 2

      I'm guessing what GP intended to say is 400,000 is the population Foxconn employs in Shenzen... that is, 10 out of 400k Foxconn employees have committed suicide in the past year, vs 45 out of 400,000 Americans.

      There are other factors, like age, that come into play here, but if the facts are fairly even, this is a non-story. I've worked at an American company with 3,000 employees, and one of them committed suicide in 4 years I worked there... If I'm doing the math right, that is the equivalent of 33 suicides per 400,000 employees per year. Napkin-math says it's a non-story.

      --
      The requested URL /iframe/sig.html was not found on this server.
    47. Re:Slavery by tmosley · · Score: 1

      You keep thinking that, like a GOOD slave.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjgE8Lw5YaQ&feature=related

    48. Re:Slavery by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Not being allowed to enter an area is different from not being able to leave. Or do you think you are a slave because you aren't allowed to camp out on the White House lawn?

    49. Re:Slavery by Koftu · · Score: 1

      A more apt comparison would be to somebody looking to move from Savannah, GA to Charlotte, NC or even Atlanta, GA. If the US gov't had the policies of the Chinese gov't, this hypothetical somebody would need to apply for permission to move and face the prospect of not being allowed to do so because of bureaucratic whim.

      In actuality, rather than base one's freedom of movement on government permission, the US and many other countries utilize a somewhat less discriminatory set of criteria called "affordability."

      I am not trying to engage the debate about use of the term "slave"; only the factual representation of the Chinese system.

    50. Re:Slavery by Grishnakh · · Score: 0

      The USA did the same thing back in the 1800s and early 1900s. It was pretty much a necessity to transition from an agrarian society to an industrialized one.

      30 years ago, China was a backwater, with no real economy, and poverty everywhere. There was no middle class, only tons of dirt-poor people and a few government officials that weren't. Now, they have the fastest-growing middle class in the world (not that this is always good: everyone's trading in their pollution-free bicycles for cars and traffic).

      People who work in sweatshops aren't being forced to work there. They work there willingly, because the alternative is worse: going back home and working 12-16 hour days on a farm. Apparently, working 12+ hours on a farm doing back-breaking work is less fun than sitting in an air-conditioned factory for 12 hours a day building electronics, so people line up outside these factories, waiting for jobs there. Moreover, the wages, while puny by our standards, are still quite high compared to what they make on the farm (which is basically nothing except enough food to survive). So Chinese peasants willingly go to work at these sweatshop factories and live in dormitories so they can save up their money and send it back home to their families.

      Does it suck? Sure, it's definitely not as good as Americans have it, where they can be lazy losers and live with their parents indefinitely. But it's a big step up from the way things were over there in decades past. If you have a better proposal for reducing or eliminating poverty among over a billion people, let's hear it.

    51. Re:Slavery by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      I'm not talking about Slashdot, but the general population, who seemed to have turned off their thinking caps.

    52. Re:Slavery by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Of course, the article you quote is written by a liberal arts major like yourself, and, like you, lacks basic understanding of statistics. You can't really compare the average Chinese (who still lives in extreme poverty, is lacking education and prospects for the future) to the person, who is allowed to live in Shenzhen (where Foxconn's main facility is located). Shenzhen's population is very far from a representative sample of the Chinese population. People there are much, much better educated (1/5 of China's PhDs work there), paid substantially more than elsewhere and, generally, have much better lives than the norm in China. But don't let your ignorance stop you from spewing the cliches that you hear on the conservative radio broadcasts while you drive to your cleaning job.

      That's the longest-winded rendition of "Sorry, you're right -- my bad" I've ever seen. Are you sure you're not a liberal arts major?

    53. Re:Slavery by ewok85 · · Score: 1

      I've said it so many time before - its not how much $/hr, its how much buying power you have.

      I worked this out just the other day with colleagues from HK, Singapore, Hangzhou and myself (Tokyo). For the ever-present bottle of CocaCola the price worked out to roughly 6minutes of pay for someone who is in their early-20's, working part-time in McDonalds - in all 4 countries. It would probably work even in Australia off the top of my head (~$20/hr pay, 500/600ml bottle of coke was around $2 when I was back home last).

      You get interesting results when talking about things like rent, general food prices and transport however. But in any case no matter how you look at it the wages at Foxconn are rather crap - the new 21yr-old hire who will be an assistant/secretary/customer service rep in our China office will get 4000 RMB (~US$600) after tax/insurance as well as subsidised housing (up to about 1500 RMB - US$230). While she was still studying she used to work like a dog 7 days a week doing all sorts of odd jobs like translation, tour guide, legal documentation checks, general paperwork stuff for 3000~4000/mth.

      I felt like crap when I realised I made more in 3 days that she does in a month :(

    54. Re:Slavery by ewok85 · · Score: 1

      The fact is, when there are a billion people waiting in line for a job, wages will be low.

      The fact is, you can't just throw people at problems. You still need people with training, education and experience to be able to do things, and those people will be able to demand higher wages.

    55. Re:Slavery by hinesbrad · · Score: 1

      I think the reason America is falling apart at the seams is that those whom have access to capital aren't willing to spend it in the USA hiring American workers when they can go to China and use the power of the state to enslave hundreds of millions of people on the cheap. It's eroding our tax base at a time that the genuine need for those services is at an all time high. This is the irony of today: Libertarian ideas of exploitation only work in China because of the massive power of the state. Further, hard work means nothing to the people at the top. Otherwise they'd actually give the workers in China a vested interest in seeing the enterprises succeed. But why bother when you can hire people at 50 cents a day, murder anyone that asks for better working conditions and use the power of the state to mask your corruption?

    56. Re:Slavery by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      You two are both right. The thing is that people live in the cracks. You want libertarian ideals and a government that tramples them sometimes. You want powerful forces played off each other to create cracks where life can take hold.

      A system that works perfectly like a machine IS a machine, and as sterile, whether based on logical libertarian or logical authoritarian principles.

      --
      ...
  3. Flamewar anyone? Scientist must be smart, right? by p43751 · · Score: 0, Troll

    And still the Chinese go after the Norwegian Government for having a country where The Nobel Committee give out the Peace Price to a person fighting for human rights. We, Im Norwegian, try to tell them that a committee is free to do what ever they want, but they still send formal complaints, boycott trade agreements and generally behave like the biggest bully in kindergarten.

    *troll, me?*

  4. Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by sethstorm · · Score: 0

    Given the amount of imitation and bad research there, those are near-worthless credentials outside of China.

    Then again, unlike China, education is not reserved for the few who manage to luck out on the tests. It's more or less open to all in comparison.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    1. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Yeah, God forbid the best and brightest get in, rather than EVERYONE.

      Wait, that's what it was like in the US during our golden age? WTF!? Didn't they know that we can fix any problem by just throwing tuition money at it to the point that colleges feel the need to build waterparks with lazy rivers an every campus?

    2. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by marcushnk · · Score: 3, Informative

      I do hope you all don't think this way.
      Don't be fooled by the Faux News view of China.
      One day you'll wake up and it'll be too late to do anything about their world markets domination.

      --
      "Consider how lucky you are that life has been good to you so far. Alternatively, if life hasn't been good to you so far
    3. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by belthize · · Score: 5, Insightful

      From the article:

      Thirty-four countries were assessed in all by the PISA test, considered to be the most comprehensive of its type. Out of those 34 the U.S. ranked 14th in reading, 17th in science and 25th in math.

      China’s 15-year olds also took the test. They ranked 1st, 1st, and 1st.

      Is your point that the PISA test is either a useless measure or intentionally slanted to favor China ?

      Your signature seems to imply a view that anything that casts the US in an unfavorable light in comparison with the rest of the world, including self introspection as to how we could be better, is suspect.

    4. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by bluemonq · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Then you'd have to include Japan in that. And England. And most other nations that realize that there's nothing wrong with vocational schools, and that some people are better off going to one of them instead of college.

    5. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Your signature seems to imply a view that anything that casts the US in an unfavorable light in comparison with the rest of the world, including self introspection as to how we could be better, is suspect.

      Given how faddish and unthinking this sort of thing tends to be, yes, it should be questioned. Given that China's 15 year olds supposedly beat not just the US (which frankly is an easy target) but everyone else including Japan and the whole of Europe, then I wonder how, not if, they gamed the test.

    6. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's a good one. Yes, let's forget all the people in that "golden age" that only made it into colleges due to their parent's wealth.

    7. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's spelled Fox. If you are going to (justifiably) rant on them, don't bother stooping to their level. I really get tired of all the people who "punify" a name to make a point.

    8. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Had you read just a little further into the article:

      Actually, the test in China was performed by city and the top placings were earned by Shanghai, not China as a whole

      So it's specifically using the city in China that got the best results, not the national average.

    9. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      This test was administered to only students living in Shanghai, and as such was not representative.

      http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/07/education/07education.html

      The fact is that away from the coastal cities China is still very backward.

    10. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      Because America exported all their manufacturing to China.

    11. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by belthize · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Part of the problem though is this is viewed as a China vs US issue and creates arguments (see other posts here) about China's political flaws or the test's flaws. The US scored below the average of all countries, whether China was 1st, 4th or dead last is somewhat immaterial.

      We can't improve as long as our gut reaction is to take any criticism, either internally or externally generated, as a personal affront.

    12. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rise of the red dragon.

    13. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not like it wouldn't be standard Chinese practice to salt the test, like they are known to do in virtually every other aspect of their culture...now would it? Yeah, they wouldn't do anything like that, since it certainly would not be politically profitable to embarrass western cultures. Nope. No way.

    14. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by poity · · Score: 1

      I volunteer as a Chinese ESL teacher at a US university (Vanderbilt), and all of my students are post-docs in their 30s and 40s. Those who have the willingness to immigrate (i.e no strong family or career attachments back in China) have done so and have brought their children here, and the common consensus among these scientists in preferring to educate their bright children here rather than in China (beyond the fact that there is less competition) is that while the US education system may not be as rigorous as that in China, it provides for a greater depth of learning with opportunities to add to one's edification beyond mere career preparation. Which means that if you believe we grind out drones in the US, then you haven't seen what the Chinese system does. That isn't to say the status quo in our system is good, but I think it gives perspective (and reliable counterpoint) to the common assumption that the Chinese system is "better".

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    15. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Ihmhi · · Score: 2

      I have a point to make, but first I'll give you sweet, sweet data. Here's the relevant Wikipedia page, you can backtrack the direct sources from there. These are the 2009 PISA results:

      Math: China (#1), Finland (#6), United States (#30)

      Reading: China (#1), Finland (#3), United States (#17)

      Sciences: China #1), Finland (#2), United States (#23)

      = = = = = =

      And now, the average cost to teach a child (Primary/Grammar/Elementary School Source, Secondary/High School Source) For Primary School and High School:

      Primary/Grammar/Elementary School: Switzerland (#2, $6,470.00 per student), U.S. (#4, $6,043.00 per student), China (No data)

      Secondary/High School: Switzerland (#1, $9,348.00 per student), U.S. (#3, $7,764.00 per student), China (No data)

      = = = = = =

      Next, the average salary per teacher for Elementary and High School (U.S. source, Finland source, China source). All are converted to dollars using XE.com.

      Elementary School: Finland (~$46,000), United States (~$40,000, China (~$18,000)

      High School: Finland (~$46,000 - ~$71,000), United States (~$42,000.00 - ~$44,000), China ($24,000 - ~$28,000)

      = = = = = =

      On this last bit, I've done some digging but haven't been able to find concrete data on all three countries from one source, so I'm going with estimates. Peek into sources if you want.

      The average U.S. School day is 9-3, or about 6 hours. Finland is about 5 hours. China is about 8 hours (roughly 9-5, with a two hour lunch, so still around 7 hours).

      = = = = = =

      Okay, so. China pays their teachers way less than the U.S. but get far better results. Finland pays their teachers about the same and gets way better results, but not as good as China. The U.S. pays the same amount of money (roughly) that Finland does for much, much worse results.

      So what the hell are we doing wrong?

      China is all drill, drill, drill. A lot of the East Asian countries (South Korea, China, Japan, Indonesia, etc.) have long school days which are often supplemented by private schooling (a.k.a. "Cram courses") after the fact. Most kids are home anywhere between 8:00-10:00 PM, 2-4 hours of homework, and then wake up at 6:00 or 7:00AM the next day.

      Americans, we're 9-3, plus maybe an hour or two of homework (at most). Often there's an after school program, but these are more glorified daycare and less practical education.

      Finland actually ends up using *less* hours per day than us, but they use innovative teaching methods that the U.S. is sorely lacking.

      I see Finland and China as two extremes. China is like grinding in an MMO. If you simply just do something a lot, you're going to get better by rote and practice. That's the general Asian method, I've found. Drill, test, drill, test, drill, test. Finland seems to be the opposite extreme - less drilling, more trying to find methods that work without having an insanely look school day. The U.S. has the worst parts of both and the benefits of neither.

      If we lengthened the school days in America and really put the kids asses to work, we could edge up closer to China - maybe eve beat it out. They do way better than us for 1/3 - 1/2 the cost on teacher salary. However, if we maintained the same salary but looked at where our methodology is wrong and tried new things, we could achieve similar resu

    16. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by mdragan · · Score: 2

      I come from a country that has been under totalitarian rule for over 45 years until 1989. Our president and his wife had multiple Doctor and Doctor Honoris Causa titles from different universities, including for example the one in Nice, despite being renown for their stupidity and lack of education (I am not talking about manners, but years spent in school). The president's wife, Elena Ceausescu, was called by the newspapers and TV savant de renume mondial” (internationally renowned high scientist). She was supposed to be a chemist. Everybody was laughing at her speeches that were touching on the subject. Although they were probably written by real scientists and PR, she was not able to even read them out (they never spoke freely, always read the speeches). So, in a totalitarian regime, the top leaders can be anything they fancy. But it doesn't mean much. At most, it means they appreciate science as something worthy. And about the top positions in PISA tests, try to imagine the life of a child growing in a totalitarian regime, if you can. There is not much to do for a smart child, no other "distractions", no real childhood. They are treated more like sport athletes. In our country performance in international science contests has declined since 1989, but that is only a sign that we are returning to normality, giving children a chance at a real childhood, and a bit more happiness maybe, not torturing them so maybe they will have a good position in society that will make it easier for them to get FOOD (I'm not exaggerating, my guess is that in parts of China there is a greater food problem than what we had in Roumania, and we had a fair share).

    17. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      And England.

      So you mean there's currently no massive shitstorm about university funding because something like 50% of the available youth were trying to go to university because there weren't much by the way of proper vocational courses left?

      Sweet.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    18. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 4, Informative

      One day you'll wake up and it'll be too late to do anything about their world markets domination.

      China's got a buttload of problems coming up fast, like:

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    19. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by sensei+moreh · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm wrong, but given the changes China's undergone in the past two decades or so, I really do expect enough of the drones to break out of their narrow shells in the coming decades to make China more innovative.

      --
      Geology - it's not rocket science; it's rock science
    20. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Given the amount of imitation and bad research there, those are near-worthless credentials outside of China.

      Then again, unlike China, education is not reserved for the few who manage to luck out on the tests. It's more or less open to all in comparison.

      Exactly.

      I don't mean to sound racist (and I'm not); but I can tell you from reading many, many résumés from Chinese applicants for EE positions, that not only does every one of them list education out the ying-yang (see what I did there?); but Every. Single. One. of those applicants lists about 30 years of "job experience", even though they ALSO list that they have only graduated from University of ("You'll Never Be Able To Prove I Went There") 5 years prior. I guess they figure no one can put two-and-two together, or something. But it really is Every. Single. One.

      I know it isn't uncommon to gild the lilly a bit on a résumé, and I know I'm painting with a firehose; but it just seems that Chinese "engineering" job candidates list themselves as being the Chief Engineer (or nearly so) on every single large-scale project they even walked by on the way to their factory job.

      And the worst part is, it is so endemic to their culture, (I guess) they don't even see how patently ridiculous their résumés look in comparison with applicants from other countries.

    21. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by macs4all · · Score: 1

      That's a good one. Yes, let's forget all the people in that "golden age" that only made it into colleges due to their parent's wealth.

      Which is why the next generation is doomed.

      Not only does college cost a ridiculous amount of money in the U.S., but consumer debt and other economic factors (economics isn't my strong suit) keeps the average parent so cash-strapped that they find it nearly impossible to "pay for the kids' college" like our grandparents did for our parents (and to a somewhat lesser extent, our parents did for us).

    22. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by macs4all · · Score: 1

      o Massive Gender Imbalance - 55% male to 45% female birth ratio [bbc.co.uk] - that means crime, revolution or possibly war is coming, because when young men can't get laid, they take their frustration out in violence

      Um, just because there are less women than men, doesn't mean that men can't get laid. Wyoming has nearly a 2:1 ratio of men to women. Have they started any wars?

      Stop thinking like a raging heterosexual.

      However, the rest of your post is quite insightful!

    23. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Massive Gender Imbalance - 55% male to 45% female birth ratio [bbc.co.uk] - that means crime, revolution or possibly war is coming, because when young men can't get laid, they take their frustration out in violence

      Let's just say I wouldn't want to be in Russia 15-20 years from now.

    24. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      Or it could be that cultural differences matter much more than whatever is being done in the school.

      Iowans score on par with asians on those test results. So do children of Scandinavian decent living in the US in general.

      Immigrant families in sweden score much lower.

      But it couldn't be that only the rich and successful parts of China take part in that test, or that Finland (or for that matter, most of the US) has a culture that is much more functional than the lower-income inner-city culture dragging our test scores down.

      We make a big mistake when we act as though education policy is the only, or even the largest, controlling variable here.

      http://super-economy.blogspot.com/2010/12/amazing-truth-about-pisa-scores-usa.html

    25. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Actually, IIRC, to study in China you have to be smart. Which is, if you ask me, the better criterion when it comes to whether or not you should go on a university than, say, money.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    26. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by bluemonq · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're right about England. For some reason it still stuck in my head as vocational-friendly.

    27. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Um, just because there are less women than men, doesn't mean that men can't get laid. Wyoming has nearly a 2:1 ratio of men to women.

      Dude, get a clue. How could you even post something that so badly fails the laugh test?
      Seems clear to me that you have zero critical thinking ability.

      Wyoming's sex ratio is 50.2% male to 49.8% female.

      Stop thinking like a raging heterosexual.

      Blow me.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    28. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      I think that is a clearly silly hypothesis. Reactions to politically manipulated test results non-withstanding,
      the realization that the educational level of American students is not what it should be is and has been essentially universal in the US for some years, and efforts to try to improve it are rampant.

      The problem is that the results of these efforts has not been what one would hope.

    29. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by ewok85 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the one child policy has already been changed - couples who are themselves both without siblings can have two children.

    30. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by bouldin · · Score: 1

      The PISA compares the most affluent, best-educated cities in China (Shanghai, Hong Kong) to the whole population of the US.

      Criticism of PISA

      Try adding in all the Chinese hillbillies, or removing all the American hillbillies, and you might have a meaningful comparison.

    31. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by benhattman · · Score: 1

      Is your point that the PISA test is either a useless measure or intentionally slanted to favor China ?

      Generally speaking, yes standardized tests are nearly useless. A nation's total economic package will always be improved if its youth are better at reading, science, and math. But doing well on such tests does not prove the citizenry actually are informed in a useful way in those subjects, nor does it inform you about what trade-offs were made to make those scores.

      Here's a dumb example. Let's say every child from age 3-18 spends 15 hours a day sitting at a desk studying. They score great on those tests, in fact not only do they test well in science, they are exemplar in their scientific knowledge. However, their health suffers greatly for it. Most are obese, all have cardiac problems (even thin people who are sedentary have increased cardiac risk), and none of them have the stamina for simple tasks like an afternoon of gardening. Also, they never developed the social skills required to collaborate effectively or the creativity that is trained during play time.

      So, do you want those guys as your nations future, even if they get perfect scores on all the tests? They'd all die in their thirties or forties, and contribute little of use during their brief stint as working adults. I know that's not what's actually happening in China, but my point is just that a test score tells you very little about anything that matters.

      We don't even really know that being better at math is always better. Much of our "rational thought" is actually carried out by emotions. Perhaps, if too many people were too good at math, they would spend the time calculating rates of return and interest rates and comparing various factors that might be important in each decision they make. If you do none of that, you get ripped off, but if you do it too much you waste your time in the minutia.

    32. Re:Worthless degrees by equally worthless schools. by belthize · · Score: 1

      See my post further down. I actually read the criticism section and other articles on PISA before I posted. Treating the report as some sort of commendation of China is obviously problematic, ignoring what it has to say about the US based on China's results is even more problematic.

      We should strive to be the best, if we don't make it so be it, other countries are trying to be as well, but we should at least try. Currently we're playing political and social ping pong with education, the goal seems 'get elected' not 'fix education'. If the non-politicians (us) react to reports like this defensively and break into chants of USA USA USA we're not really helping.
       

  5. Sounds about right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China historically put a lot of weight on scholarly pursuits, including having candidates for government positions sit exams to qualify. They culturally revere learning while we typically mock it.

    1. Re:Sounds about right by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

      Cultural Revolution what?

  6. In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers. by wulfmans · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ever think that the US might have gown down the WRONG road ?

  7. So? by atari2600a · · Score: 1

    This is more or less how most of the world is; the US is one of the few places where being a scientist isn't synonymous with being respected.

    1. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > the US is one of the few places where being a scientist isn't synonymous with being respected. That's never been my experience. Are you a scientist that routinely gets disrespected in the U.S.? Your unsubstantiated comment appears to be more of a troll than anything else.

  8. and from this i conclude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That all engineers must be corrupt....

  9. Interesting. by mirix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Surely China is lacking in a lot of areas, but I do find this interesting.

    I grow really weary of western leaders being almost completely lawyers, polsci majors, bankers, economists, and the like.

    It would be nice to have some ministers that actually come from the field they are in charge of more often than now, at least. Lawyers and bankers make laws for bankers and lawyers, go figure.

    --
    Sent from my PDP-11
    1. Re:Interesting. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Well my congressman is a physicist, neener neener.

      I'll take that over somebody who believes that some big invisible guy in the sky is controlling everything.

    2. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Chu

    3. Re:Interesting. by CupBeEmpty · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I said it a few comments down... but I will take lawyers, polisci majors, bankers, and economists who support liberal democracy in a heartbeat over scientific leaders who endorse prison camps, massive censorship, brutal suppression of political dissent, for some reason want to crush the most non-threatening people on the face of the planet, and who (at the very minimum tolerate) endorse forced sterilization!

    4. Re:Interesting. by mirix · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because, obviously, all engineers and scientists will do this - given power - right?

      I'm not saying the west needs a government like China, far from it. In fact my comment really has nothing to do with China, other than the fact that they coincidentally have some non-lawyers in charge. A stopped clock reads correct twice a day and all that.

      I'd merely like to see a little more heterogeneous group in power here, with some scientific minded types involved.

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    5. Re:Interesting. by bug1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      An ex work mate of mine was a Chinese nationalist, he expressed his opinions on these matters.

      He said china considers the Tibetan leaders to be exploiting its people, the tibetan people didnt have much, and they should have to give it to their leaders. China was trying to 'liberate' the people of tibet. Its the same excuse the US used to to invade iraq.

      Falung-Gong is considered to be a font for the pro-democracy movement. Remember how the US persecuted communists and anyone associated with them, well, same thing.

      Of course two wrongs dont make a right, and these reasons probably justify such actions in the eyes of most westerners, but its wise to at least consider the opinion of the other side rather than just listen to the biased media of one side.

    6. Re:Interesting. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      The "Iron Lady" was a chemist from Oxford, 'nuff said.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    7. Re:Interesting. by bug1 · · Score: 1

      woops, meant to say
      "and these reasons probably DONT justify such actions in the eyes of most westerners"

    8. Re:Interesting. by Vegemeister · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with forced sterilization?

    9. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but I do find this interesting

      Still? This is old news, long since past interesting.

      The US is where American captains of industry keep their wives. They and the Chinese know better than to try to do business here. If the NRLB or EPA or NAACP or OSHA don't get you the EEOC will. In the US anyone not a government or a pressure group is a target; a cow to be milked roughly and berated if it complains.

    10. Re:Interesting. by sChatwin · · Score: 1

      Careful what you wish for. Margaret Thatcher was a Chemist. Her preparation for the miners strike, the routing of the unions and the subsequent efforts to privatization made for major changes; recovering the economy, yes, but the social issues contiue to this day.

    11. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      endorse prison camps, massive censorship, brutal suppression of political dissent

      We used to have the moral high ground but not anymore. Guantanamo bay. Constitution free zones. Protest zones. We're catching up to China!

    12. Re:Interesting. by Sky+Cry · · Score: 2

      It seems to me that people, who make laws affecting the economy of the country, should understand the implications of these laws. Hence they should be versed in law and, more importantly, macro economics.

      The alternative is worse: laws that have good intention, but end up having good economic reaction only in short term. While in the long term the reaction would be completely reversed, making the consequences the opposite of what was intended. This is quite common in economics.

    13. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mao Zedong wasn't an engineer, nor an scientist ... The criminal ideology called marxism, came from the humanities field

    14. Re:Interesting. by damburger · · Score: 1

      This is a myth, and for a very good reason that most people aren't aware of.

      Thatcher was elected in 1979. The UK government started collecting (a lot of) revenue from North Sea oil in 1979. So you need to distinguish between the economy recovering *because* of Thatcher and it recovering *in spite of* Thatcher. Its well documented her early monetarist experiments did not have the outcomes intended. Lowering the money supply did not stop inflation.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    15. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct me if I am wrong, but your lawyers, popsci majors, bankers and economists DO endorse torture camps, massive censorship and assassination of political enemy state leaders.
      It is simply amazing that morons continue to think that the US is some shining light of freedom and it's government is honest and good. WAKE UP. Your government is among the most corrupt of the world. Certainly the most corrupt of the western world.
      Hell, you have that chick from the FTC ruling that the NBC / Comcast merger is A-OK and good for the American people and then the next month taking a high level job to lobby for said mega company.
      What does your POS government say about? Meh. Nothing to see here, go about your business.
      At least China does not pretend to be something it is not. At least its leaders are doing everything to put CHINA on top. Your F-Tard ruling party does everything to but themselves on top, and fuck the health of the country.

    16. Re:Interesting. by bye · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with forced sterilization?

      Ask any female ...

    17. Re:Interesting. by drolli · · Score: 4, Informative

      I dont believe that democracy in China would work better if it would be managed by the Chinese banker and lawyers and political majors.

      Having lived in Germany i can say that the last professions where the culture was strongly influenced by Nazi ideology are the lawyers(/courts) and the philosophical sciences. The law system in Germany took 40 years to begin to reflect on its own role during this time. And some of the banks never reflected where their money came from.

      This is because *by definition* being part of the legal system requires you to "be on the side of the state" in sense of your ideology. If at a single time this field adheres to the Idea of a "strong state" in the negative sense, that is a state consisting of the people in power (chosen by god, by money, or as some kind of elite), not of the people in general, then its very unlikely that the legal system will give up this view very quickly - the people in power will understand how to use this legal system.

      This usually involves that people who oppose in some sense are declared to be "enemies of the state" and therefor have less rights. You can observe this idea nearly everywhere, and i would think that the western world, where the US are discussing if torture is ok again for suspected terrorists, and the European union not sending help to refugees on the Mediterranean sea and letting them drown, where its only 25years ago that the French secret service sunk the Rainbow warrier as enemies of the state, should be a little more humble when claiming ideals.

      If you look closely to china you see that many, if not most of the human rights violations are *not* a centrally controlled act from Bejing (I exclude the question of Tibet, which is purely driven by the fact that the West wants a stick to poke China from time to time and China need to prove itself exactly because of that reason). Many things happen because locally (on the province-and city-level) the local officials actually dont want to have the central government and laws invading into their personal business, and the police and courts etc. also are - effectively - controlled by them.

      If i look at China i am actually amazed that they managed to progress so well, despite that a large class of people in their system would profit from the situation staying constant. Looking at other parts of the world with a similar starting point, i can say that the human rights situation in China seems to be slowly improving, with bumps, and sometimes not in the direction like the West expects it, but the police and law system seems to get more and more stable.

      The Chinese which i know (most of them are scientists) are usually well-informed, capable of critical thinking and confirm this view, and they overall feel that the things develop to the better.

      My personal opinion is that there are dangerous paths down the road for China, and the west should try to help China to master these problem as much as we can - the best way to do this IMHO is to invite as many Chinese as we can into the West to work and stay for some time or longer, so they can look at it and hopefully the best (not the worst) of what they see and what can work there back with them.

      This does not mean we should not mention where we think something is going wrong, actually we should, but i think it would be more productive to keep political interests out of it.

    18. Re:Interesting. by rastilin · · Score: 1

      You mean because it's such a wonderful place to live thanks to the actions of those aforementioned organizations? Considering the chinese have recently had problems with their watermelons exploding thanks to their use of untested "growth agents", I'm thankful for our oversight.

      --
      How do you kill that which has no life?
    19. Re:Interesting. by erdraug · · Score: 1

      Just a thought : if "polsci majors" are not interested in or qualitifed at being politicians then who is?

    20. Re:Interesting. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I said it a few comments down... but I will take lawyers, polisci majors, bankers, and economists who support liberal democracy in a heartbeat over scientific leaders who endorse prison camps, massive censorship, brutal suppression of political dissent

      It's not like the West (and even the US specifically) didn't have any of those in the past 100 years.

      You can't have truly working democracy without a sufficiently wealthy population. It will either degenerate into "mob rule", where ultimately the voters elect an authoritarian government for their populist promises; or it will become an oligarchic corrupt sham democracy. Western countries didn't become democratic overnight - first they had to go through the hardships of early capitalism, where wealth was accumulated (though not yet spread) and industry built. Once the foundations for democracy were laid, it eventually came.

      If China doesn't yet have democracy, it's because they don't have a powerful popular movement in support of democracy. Those imprisoned political dissenters make the minority of the population. It doesn't make it right, but how the hell do you democratize a country where most people genuinely think it's a bad idea?

      Give them (and I mean China as a whole, not its present rulers) time.

    21. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although I think America was much "less wrong" than China in those two situations, I still totally disagree with America for it. Seeing the other side's opinion doesn't mean that their opinion is correct or just.

      That's one of the major problems with the media right now, giving every opinion "fair and balanced" treatment. If I say "all blacks should be sent to forced labor camps immediately to improve the economy", is that an opinion worth spending time considering?

    22. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh, brainwash much? From your own link it is obvious that the top officials banned forced sterilization, there is nothing in your wikipedia ref about wanting to crush Tibetan Buddhism, and you could make a good argument that falun gong was causing unrest. As others noted, its rather similar how communist or even people with more social ideas were treated in good old USA.

      I am not saying things are perfect here. But I would chose the China top 9 every day above some of the ridiculous presidents that have governed the US for the last 20 years or so. The rampart corruption on the lower levels is a severe problem here however.

    23. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does have an impressive of resume but he does "believes that some big invisible guy in the sky is controlling everything." He is a Quaker.

    24. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...but its wise to at least consider the opinion of the other side rather than just listen to the biased media* of one side.

      I lol'd.... Because the state run, approved news of China is a much better frame of reference.

      * emphasis mine

    25. Re:Interesting. by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      Prison camps? The United States incarcerates a higher percentage of their population than any other country.

      Freedom isn't black and white.

      I would argue that in a first world country education is a positive right that most Americans are deprived of. Too many Americans come from the same perspective as you: "our shit may stink but your shit stinks worse."

      Furthermore, taking aim at China's population problem is a cheap shot. How does a country limit population growth without imposing someone's supposed rights? If America was presented with the same problem our leaders wouldn't have the resolve or fortitude to do ANYTHING about it because every solution would offend someone -- that's why we can't seem to solve other problems like healthcare and education. Why we can't get major engineering projects off the ground like high speed rail. In China, I have the freedom to take high-speed rail from one city to another. In America, those who are FORTUNATE enough to have money to own a car may have the PRIVILEGE of driving on a road from one city to the next. I've met people who have never left this county, let alone the state, and it's not for lack of want. In the mid-west, without a car, you're a second-class citizen. Keep fully associating freedom with negative rights and that's what you get: America, where everyone thinks they're free but only the rich actually are.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    26. Re:Interesting. by CosaNostra+Pizza+Inc · · Score: 1

      I said it a few comments down... but I will take lawyers, polisci majors, bankers, and economists who support liberal democracy in a heartbeat over scientific leaders who endorse prison camps, massive censorship, brutal suppression of political dissent, for some reason want to crush the most non-threatening people on the face of the planet, and who (at the very minimum tolerate) endorse forced sterilization!

      Regarding forced sterilisation...Uh, why would that ever be considered by a leader of any professional background in countries other than India or China? The U.S. and China are of similar geographical size yet the U.S. population is roughly 300M but China's population is 1.3 BILLION. What other options are there besides watching people starve to death or bankrupting the economy with social services that feed an oversized population? Also, those generalisations you made about "scientific leaders" is unfounded. Judging by your tone and criticisms, I'm guessing you're a pro-lifer, a conservative and a bible-thumper who despises what your type refers to as the "intellectual elite".

    27. Re:Interesting. by CosaNostra+Pizza+Inc · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that people, who make laws affecting the economy of the country, should understand the implications of these laws. Hence they should be versed in law and, more importantly, macro economics. The alternative is worse: laws that have good intention, but end up having good economic reaction only in short term. While in the long term the reaction would be completely reversed, making the consequences the opposite of what was intended. This is quite common in economics.

      George "Dubya" Bush had an MBA so I assume that would mean he understood macro-economics. Yet, his two terms as president helped lead the U.S. into the worst recession since the Great Depression of the early 20th century.

    28. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sum 10 Wong here..

    29. Re:Interesting. by guanxi · · Score: 2

      He said china considers the Tibetan leaders to be exploiting its people, the tibetan people didnt have much, and they should have to give it to their leaders. China was trying to 'liberate' the people of tibet. Its the same excuse the US used to to invade iraq.

      Falung-Gong is considered to be a font for the pro-democracy movement. Remember how the US persecuted communists and anyone associated with them, well, same thing.

      Of course two wrongs dont make a right, and these reasons probably justify such actions in the eyes of most westerners, but its wise to at least consider the opinion of the other side rather than just listen to the biased media of one side.

      To say these things are comparable because similar words were used to describe them is absurd:

        * The US invaded Iraq in 2003, deposed a brutal dictator, handed the government to the Iraqi people who select their own leaders (who often oppose US policy), and now is leaving within 10 years. China conquered Tibet in 1951, imposed a Communist dictatorship ruled from Beijing in which the Tibetans have no power or representation, even took over their religion, and claims Tibet will be eternally part of China. I don't think we were right to invade Iraq, but it's not the same thing as Tibet at all. We also liberated the South Koreans, the French, the slaves in the Confederacy and many others; are those all the same because we used the word 'liberation'?

        * Americans did unfairly persecute Communists, but that's not remotely the same as the brutal repression, imprisonment, and re-education camps that the Chinese government use to oppress the Falun Gong. Communism has remained legal in the United States, in fact. Was the persecution of Tutsis in Rwanda the same as the Communists in the US, simply because the same words were used?

    30. Re:Interesting. by mcmonkey · · Score: 1

      Aren't most suicide bombers engineers?

      I'd say the differences are interesting--to see one system develop to be led by engineers and another develop to be led by lawyers--but I don't think you can draw any conclusions about one system or society being better than the other. Not from just those facts.

      Engineers are not super-human. They don't posses Sherlock Holmes-like powers of deduction or C3PO powers of odds calculation.

      Yes, they supposedly can work through problems in a logical manner based on available information. But they're no better than anyone else in determining when the available information is the necessary information. There's no reason to think in a political context engineers are more effective than lawyers in prioritizing concerns.

      So this is an interesting fact to note. Nothing more.

    31. Re:Interesting. by bug1 · · Score: 1

      Yea, good points, and there are perhaps counters to those, but im not arguing.

      The most interesting thing from my point of view was that when i did raise issue with my Chinese friend, he came back with a reply i hadnt anticipated. (and i consider myself very politically aware)

      Another example, he considered China to be a type of democracy. Anyone can join the communist party, anyone in the communist party can vote for the local leader, their local leader can vote for the regional leader etc. Its not very direct, but in theory population can influence leadership.

      It think there is still a big difference between the way the west sees China, and the way it is.

    32. Re:Interesting. by bug1 · · Score: 1

      Im sure every countries media is biased to favour their own country, in that way they all biased.

      But we dont need mass-media to have a conversation for us, we can do it ourselves directly.

      If you know or come across a "Chinese Nationalist", i encourage you to discuss such issues with directly, with an open mind. Same with people from other countries/cultures you dont have first hand experience with.

    33. Re:Interesting. by sjames · · Score: 1

      So why do they believe they should make decisions about engineering and technology?

      Of course, we already have laws and policies that were only beneficial in the short term and that had a lot of unintended consequences, so perhaps we'd be better off with mathematicians and engineers.

    34. Re:Interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the fact that Fundamentalist Christians, right wingers, libertarians etc etc in the US go after all religions and people who don't share their views and they're more than tolerated by the US. So let's not starting saying democracy produces one type of person and the Chinese system produces another.

    35. Re:Interesting. by guanxi · · Score: 1

      The most interesting thing from my point of view was that when i did raise issue with my Chinese friend, he came back with a reply i hadnt anticipated. (and i consider myself very politically aware)

      Don't be surprised; they're just repeating the typical talking points of the gov't propaganda. The Chinese Communist Party still needs to sell itself to maintain control (as does any authoritarian dictatorship), and they have a propaganda operation that spreads these carefully-crafted, plausible-sounding talking points (which are complete BS, of course). They even have a hired army to post the propaganda to online forums, referred to jokingly as the Fifty Cent Party (paid 50 cents per post).

      It's not at all unusual. Every sophisticated dictatorship in history seems to do the same.

      If you're interested in Chinese politics, here are a few relatively credible sources that provide a much more nuanced, sophisticated perspective:
        * The Diplomat: Foreign policy publication from Japan, has some very well-respected writers, and you'll learn much about China you had no idea of. If you read one, I'd read this.
        * Asia Sentinal: AFAIK founded by writers of the defunct but excellent Far East Economic Review, and based in Hong Kong.
        * Caijing: Based in Beijing, so subject to gov't influence, but seems relatively independent, has a good reputation, and provides sophisticated points of view on China.

    36. Re:Interesting. by rtaylor · · Score: 1

      Indeed. They have just as much influence over their leader as Canadians or British do. Join the party, vote for the guy you want. They vote for the leader of the party. Election voters really get a to choose 1 of 2 people; who both reached for the centre and have pretty darn similar policies.

      Americans may (or may not) have more choice. I've found the system of primaries somewhat difficult to decipher but the final election is very straight 1 out of 2 choice. Very few who voted for Obama probably would have chosen Obama given a choice of ~200Million other potential candidates.

      --
      Rod Taylor
  10. the lawyers are coming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a new generation will be taking over next year, they are mostly lawyers,

  11. Re:Flamewar anyone? Scientist must be smart, right by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 0, Troll

    Yes, the noble prize people must be indeed very noble.

    They gave the peace prize to Hussein Obama, didn't they?

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  12. And most western politicians by mywhitewolf · · Score: 1, Interesting

    are active religious members.

    Chinas economy is growing without having to steal oil
    Americas economy is falling even after stealing oil.

    i see a pattern.

    1. Re:And most western politicians by interkin3tic · · Score: 2

      Chinas economy is growing without having to steal oil Americas economy is falling even after stealing oil.

      To be fair, we didn't steal it nearly as cost-effectively as we could have, and the economic failings weren't directly related to religion, a lack of scientists in government, OR the stealing of oil.

    2. Re:And most western politicians by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      america is not alone in that pasttime..

    3. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean America steals oil? There is a thing called OPEC, or oil might be only 1/20 as expensive. We pay for it dearly. Minimum wage workers can sometimes be paying 20% or more of their salary to gasoline alone.

      China however bought Darfur oil when America embargoed it for human rights reasons. China is all about sacrificing human rights for extra money.

    4. Re:And most western politicians by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      Chinas economy is growing without having to steal oil

      lol yeah, they arrest people to push down the price of iron ore. Then they steal technology for high speed trains. Then they sell poisoned baby food. But those are minor issues, you missed the most important points.

      The main difference between China and the US, economically speaking, is that Chinese officials are trying a managed economy. They reward companies they like, and punish companies they don't like. They try to steer economic growth. Whereas the US has a more traditional approach of not interfering and letting the economy do its thing. In fact, the less they interfere, the better off the economy is (probably in part because they don't know what they are doing).

      So, what China did worked quite well for the last decade, but will it work for the next decade? Who knows? They need to keep making the right decisions over and over. It's not easy, Stalin started out well but then the Russian economy went into snail mode. And even in China there have been some huge problems (Mao) in the not-very-distant past. So it will be interesting to watch and see how the Chinese leadership manages, or what kind of changes they have to make.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:And most western politicians by poity · · Score: 1

      to that I'd reply that Chinese Confucianism is just as dogmatic and anti-liberal as any religion in the West, and the acuteness to which Chinese citizens acquiesce to nepotism just as damning to their future.

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    6. Re:And most western politicians by astar · · Score: 1

      On stealing high speed train tech... I figure I read that story some time ago. My recollection is the chinese had a unifed negotiation team whipsawing the different western vendors against each other. No stealing, just real clever hard ball. We are not even talkng MPAA pirating here. So what exactly is the criticism that generates "stealing".

    7. Re:And most western politicians by Barrinmw · · Score: 1

      I dunno, not interfering in the housing market might have been a boom for a little bit, but no regulation of mortgage banks did cause a global recession that wiped away all that economic growth and then some.

    8. Re:And most western politicians by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I dunno, not interfering in the housing market might have been a boom for a little bit, but no regulation of mortgage banks did cause a global recession that wiped away all that economic growth and then some.

      ok, I'm going to pick on you a bit because this is a kind of misconception that really bugs me.

      Do you REALLY think there was no regulation in the banking industry? Really? No, there was tons. Do you know how much paperwork you have to fill out to buy a house?

      It isn't about 'more' regulation or 'less' regulation. Sometimes 'more' regulation can completely destroy an industry, and lives of people as well. It is bad. Sometimes 'less' regulation is bad. It can also destroy an industry, and lives of people as well.

      The key is figuring out what is the 'correct' regulation. You have to investigate each individual proposed regulation, and understand the details before knowing if it is good to have more or not. So, if I ever hear you saying, "more regulation" or "less regulation" is good, I will shake my head, knowing that you are an idiot.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    9. Re:And most western politicians by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      What you say is possibly true....it doesn't really matter to me.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    10. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which brings up an interesting side note.

      For decades, nearly everyone in Russia was an "engineer". You weren't anyone unless you were one. That doesn't mean you were a qualified, capable professional that could compete in the West, but you were an engineer on paper.

      Many of those people now cut hair over here, because "certified hydraulic engineer" didn't exactly mean the same thing there as it does here.

    11. Re:And most western politicians by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      There is a huge difference between what China is doing, and what USSR did.

      There were no companies in USSR - not independent, not even semi-independent. It was truly a planned economy, where all movement of money and of goods was fully planned ahead from up above to form one grandiose scheme. This broke down because the complexity was beyond anything manageable, and because the incentive become corrupt in such a system is very high.

      Chinese tried that and it worked no better for them. Now, they've transitioned to a pet capitalist economy. The companies run themselves, and they actually compete (even more so as you go down to medium & small business levels). The state collects the cash in form of high taxes, and steers the companies whenever they do something that threatens either that revenue stream, or some other state interests (military production, long-term development plans etc). This isn't planned economy, really; it's harnessing the benefits of market economy while keeping the potentially harmful (to the state) effects at bay. And that is much easier than full-scale planned economy like the USSR - there, there had to actively make the right decisions on what things to do, but the Chinese only need to make the right decisions on where to not intervene too much.

    12. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When did the USA "steal oil?"

      Your statement is complete FUD.
      I'm an engineer and have always respected the way that China tries different solutions in different provinces, then selects the best result for national implementation.

      The things that I do not like about China are lack of freedom of speak, unbelievable amounts of political corruption, and the ways that laws do not seem to apply to everyone equally. I don't know that consumer protection laws in the USA are the best answer, but Chinese consumer protection appears to only have teeth when the political party is forced to take a stance. Otherwise, companies do whatever they please and local politicians do nothing to help the people. OTOH, a small problem in China would be 2x worse than the largest problems in the USA.

      China and India have HUGE issues that aren't going away. Both of those countries need to be scared. The whole world needs to be scared **for** each other and work together on solutions. The USA needs to realize that we do not know everything. I think it would be cool if Chinese law didn't ignore (and encourage) stealing of processes and techniques for the first 15 yrs of anything they purchase from foreign companies. High speed rail comes to mind. My company will probably never do business in China because they will steal our technology in the first 3 yrs, then become our competitor in the world. We aren't going to help a new competitor rise up.

    13. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /---/
      The main difference between China and the US, economically speaking, is that Chinese officials are trying a managed economy. They reward companies they like, and punish companies they don't like. They try to steer economic growth. Whereas the US has a more traditional approach of not interfering and letting the economy do its thing. In fact, the less they interfere, the better off the economy is (probably in part because they don't know what they are doing).
      /---/

      The approach Chinas government use have been in practice since before Jesus was born, even in the Western world. The approach US government use is not even 300 years old, originating with Adam Smith (he came up with the idea of the "invisible hand" and market capitalism in the 1750's), his ideas didn't become government practise in a few selected countries until the late 17th century, it would another hundred years for most of the rest of the world.

      How on earth have US a more "traditional approach" then China. Even early US government tried their hands on a more micro-managed economy.

      And how can you claim the US economy isn't "managed". Most of the Democratic and Developed World practice a very government managed public economy, including USA. The main difference between USA and most other developed countries, is that other government practise watering at the root (creating opportunities to earn money and giving money and services to the masses (a.k.a. the average consumers), in the hope that they will buy more stuff and services from companies and not hoard what they are given), while the US government practise watering at the foliage (giving big companies and rich people money and more opportunities to earn money, in the hope that they will not hoard what they get, but it will eventually trickle down to consumers, who will in turn buy more stuff and services et c.). The US do have one of the most regulated economies in the world, as regulated as China’s, the US government just regulate other stuff then most other governments.

    14. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They try to steer economic growth. Whereas the US has a more traditional approach of not interfering and letting the economy do its thing. In fact, the less they interfere, the better off the economy is (probably in part because they don't know what they are doing).

      True enoug, but I could think of a few good things that interfering with the US economy could bring: punishment of moving jobs overseas, avoiding "build it as cheap as you can until you tank because no one wants your junk" mentality (e.g. pontiac), research and development of "low-profit-margin" pharmaceuticals, punishing "spent billions on a dud pharmaceutical but now we have to push it," etc.

    15. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That must be why there were no bailouts of banks or automotive companies in the USA. Oh wait...

    16. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China has no blond politicians.
      China's economy is growing.

      Isn't pretending correlation implies causation fun?

    17. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not easy, Stalin started out well but then the Russian economy went into snail mode.

      Would you care to elaborate?

    18. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China's economy is growing because there are 1 billion people crapping in holes who need to be sold toilets. America's economy is shrinking because it's citizens are being told to accept less...

    19. Re:And most western politicians by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

      Instead of stealing oil from other countries, they're stealing from their own carbon resource: super cheap human labor.

    20. Re:And most western politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you mean that Stalin started "well" by employing forced/slave labour (i.e. gulags), then you are right. Luckily for millions he didn't do "well" beyond the 50s.

    21. Re:And most western politicians by Barrinmw · · Score: 1

      To stop the subprime mortgage crisis would have just took the federal government saying, no, you can't do that. You can't give out mortgages to people who have little hope of making payments beyond 2 years. In this instance, the government regulating the market just a little bit would have prevented a lot of damage.

  13. That explains everything by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hey fellow geeks, tell me what you think about population control.. are you fundamentally opposed to involuntary sterilization or do you think it might sometimes be the right solution?

    Some of the scariest social policies that I've ever heard have come out of the mouths of engineers. We're inherently heartless bastards who consider ourselves intellectually superior and so should have the right to sweep aside individual rights for what we consider to be the greater good.

    For many of us, it has taken years of deprogramming to free ourselves from the "our kind know better" mindset.
     

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:That explains everything by mehrotra.akash · · Score: 2

      so, engineers are like Borg?

    2. Re:That explains everything by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      I'm ok with population control. if we don't do something, we WILL have to implement involuntary sterilization in order to survive. I'd start with tax incentives... first two kids get an education on the state..after that, you pay.. how about reforming the welfare system so that it doesn't reward people with no money from getting married and pumping out the kids. just for starters..

    3. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Population Control is, without a doubt, necessary in some form. Involuntary Sterilization is one of many forms of Population Control - one of the most extreme. Few true scientists or engineers advocate that on a scientific basis, because we've seen no good evidence for it. Milder forms, like contraception and DNA testing, are far more cost-effective, and do not cause any ethical problems except for some religions. Population Control does not imply government control, or even social control. It could be completely individual control. And it is quite important to decouple sex and reproduction for maximum quality-of-life.

      Cold and heartless doesn't imply thinking you know better. Thinking you know better comes from seeing the same result over, and over, and over, again and again, exactly the same. Or being sufficiently egotistical. I'm the truest breed of cold and heartless, but I still don't necessarily think I know better about everything, or even most things.

      True scientists and engineers question everything until they've got the exact same answer about a million times in a row; that's when they stop questioning that particular thing. But we go back and revisit anything that we might have gotten wrong, if there is any new evidence that suggests that we might have gotten it wrong. As long as that's not government policy, it doesn't matter what government officials used to do as their day-job.

      And remember; in China, the government is not at the top. The Party controls the Government, 100%. So it doesn't really matter which government officials are scientists or engineers.

    4. Re:That explains everything by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Thanks for proving my point guys!

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    5. Re:That explains everything by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I tend to agree (x 3) with the idea that people should not be rewarded for having children they cannot afford on their own. DEFINITELY beyond 2.

    6. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agree (I'm a PE).

      Also noticed how many senior terrorists are engineers? My theory is that engineers tend to be "doers", so if they perceive that there is a problem that needs to to fixed (such as oppression), they will go ahead and fix it, with scant regard to social norms. Also, technical people tend to have the knowledge to DIY, including destroying things, when they get mad.

    7. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think population control is bad? Earth's ressources are finite. Either we control earth's population, or nature will: famine, wars for food killing people thus controlling population, wars for energy, places running out of energy thus people dying and controlling population...

      So I rather choose that some generations are allowed to have one child (and some to have three) than letting people starve or starting wars for water and food. Call me evil.

    8. Re:That explains everything by QuantumG · · Score: 2

      So I rather choose that some generations are allowed to have one child (and some to have three) than letting people starve or starting wars for water and food. Call me evil.

      For even thinking that it is or should be your choice, I do call you evil. Did no-one ever explain to you the concept of convincing others through argument? Even if your intentions are good, immediately reaching for the stick to force others into your view of the world is what makes you evil. Thinking that you're entitled to that power is what makes you evil. The assumption that you know better is what makes you evil. I really wish I knew why so many of my fellow geeks suffer from this hubris. It should be obvious to any good engineer that they are fallible, so why is it that when it comes to social engineering they're suddenly all knowing?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    9. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes, because lawyers on the other hand just want to cuddle.

    10. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For many of us, it has taken years of deprogramming to free ourselves from the "our kind know better" mindset.

      But our kind do know better!

    11. Re:That explains everything by Have+Brain+Will+Rent · · Score: 1

      Yes but fortunately we scientists can take over for you engineers now that you've seen the light. And for those of you that haven't... well we have our ways.. prideful engineers line up on the left, repentant engineers on the right... Now prideful engineers, please line up according to your self-perceived level of superiority...

      Oh yeah... ;)

      --
      The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny - Aesop
    12. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Population control is the one and only green policy which actually matters in any way shape or form. Attempting to reduce environmental impact in any other way (as long as your population is growing) is just incredibly stupid. Other policies are only useful as long as you do not have an increasing population.

      Next time you speak to an environmentalist ask them about their views on population control.

    13. Re:That explains everything by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      I don't think I personally know better. But that is an altogether different argument.

      As an atheist, I recognize that all morality is the product of our own society. It cannot be applied to situations where the society itself crumbles. I can easily imagine several possible scenarios where forced population control would be necessary for survival of the group. In such a situation, if I were in a position where it would be up to me to decide to implement population control by force, or not do and risk the demise of my entire people with a high probability - yes, I would do the first. I don't see how you can claim any moral ground by picking the second and, in effect, dooming everyone through your choices. Not to mention the fact that someone would have to choose either way, anyway - and if everyone keeps saying "oh God, not me, I'm not worthy to decide the fates of other people", then nothing gets done, and everyone suffers for it.

      Making tough choices is a job like any other. It's got to be done sometimes. You don't help by refusing to do it in the circumstances where it falls to you.

      And there isn't always a "good" choice, sometimes you have to choose the lesser among evils. And refusing to choose at all when confronted to such a choice is itself a choice for whatever evil that comes out of inaction, and is the responsibility of the person refusing to choose.

    14. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're inherently heartless bastards who consider ourselves intellectually superior

      Arrogance and the need to project are signs of insecurity. Please don't project your personality defects and feelings of inferiority onto everyone else here.

    15. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think population control is better than the involuntary and massive super late abortions that amerikkkans tend to practice around the planet. 3 million in iraq, unknown numbers in afghanistan, now Libya and Syria, etc. Just feed them radioactive GM corn to make them sterile and pre-empt the problems and make a killing for the US pharma sector while you're at it.

    16. Re:That explains everything by maxume · · Score: 1

      Of course, the idea is more to make sure that the kids have food and clothing.

      The easiest way to keep it from being a reward is probably to have a stronger social support system in general (and it would be a fine experiment to see if reducing need made a dent in crime).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    17. Re:That explains everything by QuantumG · · Score: 0

      Hey! My crazy stalker is back! I missed you so much! :)

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    18. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm all for it. There are already about 4 billion more people on Earth than it can sustain, without fossil fuel. That is a situation we will come to know VERY soon.

    19. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cold hearted in the short term, or cold hearted in the long term?

      If a person in charge makes a ruling that takes rights and comfort away from a few individuals so that thousands or perhaps millions will live longer, healthier lives, I consider that cold-hearted in the short-term, but incredibly warm hearted in the long term.

      Try viewing through that filter the decisions that drive our policies; you might reconsider what you believe is cold hearted.

      It might be that while our civilization is warm-hearted in the near term, we are very cold-hearted in the long term.

      Naturally, this conversation can lead to another conversation about leaders not living under the same rules as the commoners, as well as a conversation about how those drunken with power might be making ill considered decisions that are excessively oppressive and/or will not lead to the good outcome dreamed of.

    20. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For many of us, it has taken years of deprogramming to free ourselves from the "our kind know better" mindset.

      I've decided to live with it rather than try to change that. I still think it's true, I just don't push it as often as before.

    21. Re:That explains everything by CosaNostra+Pizza+Inc · · Score: 1

      Unless you make social policies for India or China, why would you even have to consider population control? China has roughly a similar geographical size to the U.S. yet China's population is 1.3 Billion and the U.S. is barely 300 million. Given a choice between forced sterilisation, standing by idly as millions starve, OR bankrupting the economy with social services that feed an over-sized population...which would you choose. I bet any leader (except a deeply religious one) from any professional background would at least consider sterilisation. As for engineers being heartless bastards prone to making "the scariest social policies" and considering themselves intellectually superior, speak for yourself...Your generalisations about engineers and scientists is unfounded.

    22. Re:That explains everything by demonbug · · Score: 1

      so, engineers are like Borg?

      Except without the individuality.

    23. Re:That explains everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, some of us did not:
      Yassar Arafat graduated with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yassar_Arafat#Education_and_1948_Arab.E2.80.93Israeli_War)
      Osama bin Laden earned a degree in civil engineering in 1979 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bin_Laden#Childhood.2C_education_and_personal_life)

    24. Re:That explains everything by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      The problem being, of course, that sometimes we actually *do* know better. It is a mindset that is not much appreciated in a sociological context - and with good reason - but that is well-known on the smaller scale of medicine. Given the choice to chop off a gangrenous hand or die from the infection, what would you choose?

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    25. Re:That explains everything by sjames · · Score: 1

      The U.S. with it's lawyers in charge has carried out involuntary sterilization programs for the "feeble minded" and even ran a concentration camp in WWII.

      The best answer might be a more heterogeneous mix, but I wouldn't count on that to weed out the heartlessness.

    26. Re:That explains everything by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      If you have read Freakonomics or seen the movie, then you will know that researchers have hunted for a statistical link between just about anything and the steady drop in crime we have experienced in recent decades. (You would not know it from watching the news, but it's true... crime, and especially violent crime, is a LOT lower in the U.S. than it was 20 or even 30 years ago.)

      It isn't gun control laws. Researchers have not been able to show any positive correlation between the number of guns owned and levels of crime. In fact some researchers claim there is a negative correlation. (Fact: during this continued fall in the crime rate, the number of guns owned per capita has continued to increase.)

      It isn't education, that doesn't correlate either. Or almost anything else they measured. The search for a correlation has been going on for... well... decades.

      There is only one societal measure so far discovered, and that only recently, that has positively and significantly correlated with the drop in crime: the availability of birth control. Period. That's it.

      The strong message for society is: fewer unwanted babies means fewer robberies, rapes, assaults, and murders. It doesn't get much simpler than that.

      (One of the reasons it was so difficult to find a correlation was that it was hidden by the delay from birth to "criminal" age...)

    27. Re:That explains everything by maxume · · Score: 1

      Ok, but our murder rates are still ~5 time that of Europe. Even our non-gun murder rates are higher than the overall rates of many European countries. And I'm not saying raising welfare benefits will solve crime, I'm just looking at the prison population and the difference between the U.S. and other countries and wondering if maybe it isn't worth trying.

      (And really if you think that people having less kids is a good thing, you should want to increase their economic security, there is a clear correlation there)

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    28. Re:That explains everything by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Ok, but our murder rates are still ~5 time that of Europe."

      Not true. Or almost certainly not true, anyway. It's frankly impossible to compare different countries in a very meaningful way, simply because the ways they report crimes are so different. Take the UK for instance. If somebody is killed, it isn't recorded as a "murder" unless and until the case is solved. So all those dead people whose murders were never caught were not, by UK statistics, "murdered" at all.

      But you can see how that skews things in comparison to, say, the U.S., where it is recorded as a murder whether they catch the culprit or not.

      Scotland is actually among the world's worst countries for violent crime.

      And while it is at least possible to compare violent crimes among most countries, trying to compare "crimes rates" in general has virtually no validity, because something that is a crime in one of the countries is legal in the other, and vice versa.

      And it isn't a matter of what "I think" about unwanted children and crime. Those are the statistics. I didn't make them up, nor am I judging them. But they are pretty clear. It is the only thing found so far that does, in fact, strongly correlate with the reduction in crime.

  14. Minor quibble... by SnapShot · · Score: 4, Informative

    > Did you know that the president of China is a scientist? President Hu Jintao was trained as a hydraulic engineer.

    So, he's not a scientist, he's an engineer. That's not a slam against engineers (or scientists) but I believe that the two outlooks are very different.

    --
    Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    1. Re:Minor quibble... by CupBeEmpty · · Score: 2

      >Did you know that China doesn't have a "President" in any meaningful sense of the word? President Hu Jintao is an "organ of the state" who is a figurehead for the National People's Congress, a largely powerless body selected by the Chinese Communist Party.

      So, he's a figurehead not a president. That's not a slam against presidents (or figureheads of repressive oligarchies) but I believe that the two outlooks are very different.

    2. Re:Minor quibble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On top of that, a quick check of his history: he's been purely in politics since at least 1982. His degree is from 1965. He did actually work as an engineer for a while, but it was a long time ago, and may not be all that relevant to how he leads today and what the current state of education and engineering is in China.

    3. Re:Minor quibble... by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Completely agree. Also annoyed with how the headline disagrees with the summary about "engineers" vs. "scientists or engineers". It's like watching the facts getting scraped out of the content and thrown aside. Goddamn, journalism is just the worst thing ever. It makes me want to go watch old Edward R. Murrow broadcasts to remind myself that there was a point in time where communication was valued, and journalistic integrity wasn't just something for quaint academics.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    4. Re:Minor quibble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like how John Boehner is a figurehead for the United States Congress, a largely powerless body selected by the Chamber of Commerce?

    5. Re:Minor quibble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like your point but nothing you said implied a slight on engineers. Please stop guessing what your readers will extrapolate. This is political correctness gone mad.

    6. Re:Minor quibble... by Cochonou · · Score: 1

      He is probably both, as many engineers or scientists. These fields are often mixed nowadays - there are a lot of people primarily working as engineers that are using scientific method to perform research, and a lot of people primarily working as scientists that are using engineering knowledge to develop practical solutions.
      Now, that does not mean he is a good leader, which is probably a bigger problem.

    7. Re:Minor quibble... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Many scientists and engineers may have the same basic skillset, but they apply them differently.

      Very roughly, the difference between a scientist and an engineer is the difference between science and technology. Very closely intertwined, but not the same things.

    8. Re:Minor quibble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know that you're mocking the poster above, but I'd like to point out that while the position of President in China is pretty much powerless, Hu Jintao is also General Secretary of the Communist Party and Chairman of the Central Military Commission. The latter title is the one with the real power.

    9. Re:Minor quibble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kl2SxWldcUo

      Exactly! As seen on the documentary, The Big Bang Theory, engineers are just skilled enough to execute vision of scientists. Cheers :)

    10. Re:Minor quibble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since 1989, the President (merely a figurehead) and the General Secretary of the CCCP (decidedly NOT merely a figurehead) have been the same person. Hu Jintao is not just the President-- he is also the General Secretary, thus he is not just a figurehead.

  15. 8 out of 9 ... or not...? by bcrowell · · Score: 2

    The slashdot headline says "8 of China's Top 9 Govt. Officials Are Engineers." The slashdot summary says, "8 out of China's top 9 government officials are scientists or engineers," in a link to singularityhub.com. Singularityhub says "In fact, 8 out of China's top 9 government officials are scientists," in a link to forbes.com. Forbes.com doesn't say anything about 8 out of 9 anything.

    So we have some possibilities: (a) 8/9 are engineers (slashdot headline); (b) 8/9 are scientists (singularityhub); (c) 8/9 are scientists or engineers (slashdot summary); (d) none of the above (original source, forbes.com).

    This stuff about comparing the US's science and engineering to China's is just plain dumb, and not only is it dumb, it's getting really, really old. Didn't we have enough of this in the Sputnik era?

    Some reality checks: (1) Science is not a zero-sum game. If someone in China publishes a really good scientific paper, it makes the US better off, not worse off. (2) The US is a capitalist country, where labor is a market, and the value of a particular skill is set by supply and demand. If employers are having trouble hiring enough scientists, they'll offer higher pay for scientists. Ditto for engineers. (3) Chinese higher education sucks to high heaven. US higher education is the envy of the world. (How many US college graduates do you know who go to China for grad school?) (4) Science and engineering are two different things.

    1. Re:8 out of 9 ... or not...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am AC and have no online sources to back this up, but Chinese higher education is excellent. You need to realize that the Chinese students coming to the US to study were either (a) not smart enough to get into the top Chinese universities, or (b) are sent to the US to "spy" on the Western way of life - as in their parents will have a relationship with the Communist party and it will be decided that it's a good idea for their kids to get government-sponsored exposure to the US / UK / Canada / Australia etc. Obviously there is also (c) a small minority of people who loathe the CCP and actually want to get out. Note that (a) and (b) tend to move back to China eventually.

      How many US engineering / science graduates do you know who can speak a word of Chinese? Americans are mostly monolingual. For most of Asia (former Soviet republics, Japan, Korea, Vietnam), English is more foreign than Chinese. A LOT of these people and a lot of Africans and Indians also go to China to study. These people will never ever go near to North America so you will have no idea of their existence. Not to mention that they probably won't be able to get a US visa.

      China may not apply its scientific and engineering skills in a way that promotes liberty, but that has nothing to do with the quality of those skills.

    2. Re:8 out of 9 ... or not...? by Nolaan · · Score: 1

      You're wrong : "In China, eight of the top nine political posts are held by engineers." [ http://blogs.forbes.com/ciocentral/2011/01/20/danger-america-is-losing-its-edge-in-innovation/comment-page-2/ ]

    3. Re:8 out of 9 ... or not...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the original source

      "In China, eight of the top nine political posts are held by engineers." [http://blogs.forbes.com/ciocentral/2011/01/20/danger-america-is-losing-its-edge-in-innovation/comment-page-2/]

      So, possibility (d) is not backed by the original source.

    4. Re:8 out of 9 ... or not...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is almost painful to read all the post hoc affirmations and denials littering the comments after reading this post and confirming that referenced source article has nothing to do with the 8 out of 9 claim.

      For a presumably tech savvy crowd there seem to be a surprising number who think that real science and engineering are typified by Aperture Sciences.
      Real scientists and engineers think about ethics and the "big picture", they don't just go around pulling lasers on sharks head without good reason.

      Also, I see comments comparing disasters to Fukushima that seem to imply it caused more than some economic damage. If you want to make something scary compare it to a heart attack, also conspicuously missing from the list of top causes of death are many other political bogeymen.
      ttp:wwwcdcgovnchsfastatslcodhtm

    5. Re:8 out of 9 ... or not...? by stonekyx · · Score: 1

      The point (3) in your last paragraph would be really amusing to us Chinese students. Yeah, that's the truth that "Chinese higher edu sucks to high heaven". Some said that if we don't go to US for grad school, we won't ever get a real higher education. However, the college stories of these presidents date back to several decades ago, China at that time was... different.

  16. That's also why they are not great leaders by hackingbear · · Score: 1

    While we here in this forum respect engineers and scientists (because we are one of them,) they don't necessary make great leaders by any mean. So far, these 8 Chinese top officials, like the 8 preceding them, are just following the game plan set up by the early true leaders Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping, neither of whom are engineers but career generals and politicians. You can even claim the current leaders are "better" because they have not committed massive wrongdoings such as Great Leap Forward or Cultural Revolution or June 4 as their predecessor. But the current leadship's impact on Chinese history is much much less comparing to the still current political/economic impacts by Mao or Deng.

    1. Re:That's also why they are not great leaders by purpledinoz · · Score: 3, Informative

      This was definitely not Mao's game plan. China transitioned from communism to capitalism after Mao's death because Mao's plans weren't working.

    2. Re:That's also why they are not great leaders by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Ask somebody from China about Mao and little they had to eat back then to get a clue. An indication that they are not following Mao's plan is that China can feed it's people and export food instead of starving. Mao hurt China far more than the Japanese invasion.

    3. Re:That's also why they are not great leaders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it took a long time for capitalism to devolve into a destructive force in the West, though that train's going downhill and picking up speed at an impressive rate now. Let's see how long it takes for the Chinese.

    4. Re:That's also why they are not great leaders by stonekyx · · Score: 1

      Well in fact, China didn't transition to capitalism. If it had done that, people in China would be able to trade their houses freely now, but they can't. However, the officials are not good at managing a country indeed.

  17. Please! We got you beat easily by ddd0004 · · Score: 4, Informative

    100 out of 100 are laywers in the US and not the attractive altruistic 22 year old laywers that you see on TV.

    1. Re:Please! We got you beat easily by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

      Yes look at Obama

    2. Re:Please! We got you beat easily by A.+Bosch · · Score: 2
      While I realize you were not serious; I was curious what the real numbers were among Congresspersons. I expected 99 Lawyers and a paralegal. ;-)

      There are a lot of lawyers to be sure, but fewer than I expected.

      For the record, there are 435 Representatives and 100 Senators in Congress.

      From Wikipedia:

      The Congressional Research Service notes that the vast majority of Members (95 percent) had an academic degree:

      168 Representatives and 57 Senators have a law degree. Of these, five (Representative and two Senators) also hold a Master of Laws (LL.M.) degree.

      83 Representatives and 16 Senators earned a master's degree -- often a Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) - as their highest educational degree

      27 Representatives and one Senator (Mark Begich) have no educational degree beyond a high school diploma.

      23 Representatives (but no Senators) have a Ph.D

      17 Representatives and three Senators have a medical degree (this number includes one Senator with a veterinary medicine degree and one Representative with a dental degree).

      Five Representatives (but no Senators) have an associate's degree as their highest degree. One House Member has a licensed practical nurse (L.P.N.) degree

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members_of_the_111th_United_States_Congress

      --
      Where there is the necessary technical skill to move mountains, there is no need for the faith that moves mountains.
  18. That's nothing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...our president is a community activist.

    We're so screwed.

  19. Engineers as leaders is great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Until they decide to engineer society.

    1. Re:Engineers as leaders is great... by purpledinoz · · Score: 2

      Lawyers and bankers as leaders is great! ... until they deregulate the banking industry to allow them to cripple the financial system, then bail them out so that the richest of the rich can still get multi-million dollar bonuses.

  20. Margaret Thatcher majored in chemistry at Oxford by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And worked as a research chemist for a short while. Then she became a lawyer!

  21. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by CupBeEmpty · · Score: 0

    I will take liberal democracy by lawyer any day of the week when the alternative is communist oligarchy by scientist.

  22. Out of thouse 8... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..how many should be engineers? If it is anything like soviet union the one that should be engineer is not going to be around for much longer.

  23. Also, nine out of nine by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

    Scoff at the concept of democracy or freedom of information.

    1. Re:Also, nine out of nine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if china runs well, who cares about these western craps. The fact is China runs very well, much better than US.

    2. Re:Also, nine out of nine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Based on what? China's economy is definitely growing faster than the US economy right now. However, based on every other metric, I'd rather live in the United States. 30 years from now, it will still most likely be the case that I'd rather live in the United States. 200 years from now, well that's too far to predict. There are several directions the world could go. In some of them, both places would be a nice place to live. In some, the US would be better & in some China would be better. In some, both would be shit-holes. To the people alive then, it will probably be "obvious" why things turned out the way they did. To us, we don't know if China's system will actually work. It may all fall apart. We also don't know if the US is just going through a hick-up right now, or if the current economic situation is the sign of a decline.

      Here's what I think is happening: Due to something (the industrial revolution, colonialism, the age of reason, who knows) western countries got this huge advantage on the rest of the world in terms of economic development. Right now, we are going through a phase where those countries that got left behind are now catching up. Western countries are having issues due to higher labor prices caused by a higher cost of living as well as a higher expected standard of living coupled with neo-liberal economic policies implemented by their leaders which will have the long term effect of creating a global economy that is better for everyone, but is forcing their own labor market to complete with much cheaper labor markets which is causing higher than desired unemployment, and strain on people as they move around in the labor market as they try to make a living. In the long run, this global economy will be fantastic for all of humanity, however, for the next 40 years or so western countries will likely have employment issues.

      As for China, I think they're going to need to continue to open up their economy and stop trying to fiddle with it so much, or they're probably going to hit a wall.

    3. Re:Also, nine out of nine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All US politicians scoff at the idea of Democracy. Thank fucking god. Could you imagine your neighbors having *direct* power to enact laws?

      Representative Republic, FUCK YES.

      As for freedom of information, yeah, 99/100 politicians here in the US scoff at that as well. Wikileaks, bitch. Oh, sorry - hiding 'certain' information for the ever-nebulous 'lolnationalsecurity' is NOT freedom of information.

  24. Re:Flamewar anyone? Scientist must be smart, right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well aren't you cute.

  25. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by countertrolling · · Score: 1

    And 10 out of 9 grad-ge-ated the sixth grade

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  26. Not a surprise by atomicbutterfly · · Score: 1

    The Chinese consider science and technology extremely important for the development of their state. There are many, many universities in China which focus SOLELY on producing Engineers. Not a surprise they'd prefer those sorts in people positions of power than the Western world, who for some reason prefers lawyers.

  27. And this is why China is kicking our a** by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who are OUR legislators? A bunch of lawyers who can only find new ways of $crewing the rest of us.

    Engineers are MUCH better problem solvers than lawyers.

    We are doomed.

  28. When did these leaders study? by readin · · Score: 1

    In the US most of our leaders are trained as lawyers. How many people in China were graduating with law degrees 40 to 50 years ago (anyone remember the cultural revolution?) Rule of law hasn't been practiced in China for a very long time, so being trained as a lawyer hasn't been as useful there and I suspect it has been quite risky. Suppose you had been trained as a lawyer before the communists took over. As a lawyer you would have been involved in government - making you a target when the cultural revolution came along. So if you were a talented young person 40 to 50 years ago I suspect a law degree just wasn't that attractive.

    --
    I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
  29. People daily propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Firstly these are not scientists, they are politicians with engineering degrees.

    Secondly, they are also all second and third generation Communist Party Members, their parents were all big CCP players, what makes you think they had to do any work to get their qualifications? Every one of them was virtually guaranteed to get a degree no matter what their ability.

    Third, even if they did their work, have you even been to any Chinese universities? All but the very top two are shockingly terrible, and I teach at a Chinese university, the standard here is.....shocking, cheating is so rife that it makes nearly all tests worthless it doesnt even compare to the crappest community college back home.

    Fourth, have any of these people actually worked as engineers or have they been politicians all their life?

    Fifth, what makes you think an engineer would be better at running a country than anyone else?

    This smells like something put out by the people daily.

    1. Re:People daily propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This smells like something put out by the people daily.

      Also smells like you're full of shit - though if not I hope you can run, because the execution van is probably already on it's way to you.

    2. Re:People daily propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Secondly, they are also all second and third generation Communist Party Members, their parents were all big CCP players, what makes you think they had to do any work to get their qualifications? Every one of them was virtually guaranteed to get a degree no matter what their ability."

      - you are very wrong here. Living in communist country, you would know that it still takes an effort to get a degree. Especially an engineering degree, where aside from talking, you actually have to build projects. You can't simply buy it as in capitalist world.

  30. Useless statistic by countertrolling · · Score: 1

    I want to know how many Chinese prefer Folgers Coffee Crystals to their regular coffee. I mean, if I'm going to open a factory there, I need some numbers I can use.

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  31. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like it when gowns are down.

  32. 8 of China's Top 9 Govt. Officials Are Engineers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So? Now days, anyone doing computer-related work in the US is an "engineer". Hell, at the company that I work at, the sales people are "engineers".

    I had one of our newly-hired "Sales Engineers" call me yesterday to ask me how to change his Windows password. And, he's supposedly a "Windows expert".

  33. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by bmo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    >liberal democracy

    But that's not what we have.

    We have capitalist oligarchy neo-fascism instead.

    Liberalism is a dirty word, don'tchaknow. It's been that way since 1980. Doing /anything/ that advances society overall and gets everyone a better standard of living instead of increasing the power of the ruling class is "bad." The oil companies /need/ that 20 billion dollar subsidy on top of their windfall profits. Because without it, the oil companies will stop delivering oil. Or something. Because the ruling class of the corporations knows better, for all of us.

    We've even got an entire tv network spewing this garbage 24/7.

    Fuck this country, for it is fucked.

    The assholes at PNAC that got us into two wars should be swinging from nooses like the traitors they are.

    --
    BMO

  34. Your point? by poity · · Score: 1

    How many constitutional law professors, human rights lawyers, or social scientists do they have in top government places?
    Engineers serve valuable roles and are certainly well qualified in many respects, but running a country that's both successful and treats its people well requires wisdom that no college degree can ever confer. I take it that kkleiner meant to imply that China has set the standard in some way, and that other nations do themselves a disservice by not having as many engineers in top decision-making positions. If so, then it still begs the question what makes one believe an engineer would do a better job than someone of another profession when shaping public policy?

    --
    your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    1. Re:Your point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering that it takes wisdom that no college degree can confer... ...that means that the lawyers and social scientists don't have any more claim to it than the scientists and engineers.

    2. Re:Your point? by cusco · · Score: 1

      A lawyer thinks, "If we make a law saying such-and-such then our desired outcome will auto-magically occur." Economists are much the same. Engineers realize that in order to have the desired Outcome E you first need Conditions A, B, C, and D, and that Condition A has Prerequisites X, Y and Z.

      Peru has had a series of generals and lawyers running the country, and one engineer. The country progressed more under the Fujimori government than the previous three decades, and most of the last decade has been spent running on the inertia he left behind.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    3. Re:Your point? by poity · · Score: 1

      Considering that it takes wisdom that no college degree can confer... ...that means that the lawyers and social scientists don't have any more claim to it than the scientists and engineers.

      ... thus, the submission has no point and is irrelevant. My point exactly.

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
  35. China is emulating Singapore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Singapore started of this trend of having highly educated politicians. A lot of Singaporean politicians are from Ivy Leagues and they are mostly science, engineering and math types and get paid in millions of $

  36. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

    Democracy is an illusion, when the two only parties have the same policies.

  37. I wish we (USA) were more like China. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With that said, I still love my United States, and hope we can wake up. I just wish my elected leaders loved my country equally, but they are out buying property in Dubai. 8-(.

    -Obligatory Link


    Clicking here could get you arrested if you are in China

  38. So is AQs. So what is the point? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    That gov. efficiency starts with intelligent scientists and engineers? Perhaps it is time that we simply hire decent ppl, rather than ppl like reagan and W.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  39. Yes, population control makes sense by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Has it ever once occurred to you that there is a hard, cold reality outside of whatever "politically correct" bullshit you like to think about. Sure, millions of Americans think that population control is wrong. Mostly for religious reasons.

    But even if every human being on the planet were opposed to it, there is a REALITY we live in. And in that reality, there is finite living space, farmland, and resources available for a given level of technology. (granted, technology gradually lifts the limits but populations grow EXPONENTIALLY if unconstrained)

    What other solution is available to China? By stopping their population from growing too fast, they don't exceed their living space which WOULD eventually result in deaths from starvation and wars as the starving populations fight it out for the remaining food.

    Go look at Africa to see what happens when there's no control.

    1. Re:Yes, population control makes sense by aekafan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Go look at Africa to see what happens when there's no control.

      Funny thing is, the problems in Africa have absolutely nothing to with the population. Hell, they have a low population for the amount of arable land on that continent. Their problems stem from the thugs and olgiarchs and kleptos running the various governments in Africa, If you could get good leadership, the population on that continent could greatly expand with out harming the land.

      Try again with a better arguement

    2. Re:Yes, population control makes sense by bye · · Score: 2

      Go look at Africa to see what happens when there's no control.

      Funny thing is, the problems in Africa have absolutely nothing to with the population. Hell, they have a low population for the amount of arable land on that continent. Their problems stem from the thugs and olgiarchs and kleptos running the various governments in Africa, If you could get good leadership, the population on that continent could greatly expand with out harming the land.

      Try again with a better arguement

      In other words the problems in Africa have everything to do with too weak governments or with no government at all (think Somalia).

      A thug running a diamond business, monopolizing a country's institutions is not 'government', it's a thug running a diamond business who managed to kill or control all other thugs and thus managed to monopolize. Dictatorship is the ultimate end game of free-for-all archeo-capitalism: the big fish has eaten all the small fish.

      Is that the model of society you envision for America as well?

    3. Re:Yes, population control makes sense by xnpu · · Score: 1

      The REALITY is that zones in China where population control was not used (for reference purposes) did not produce more children than zones where it was used and enforced strictly. The REALITY is you can control population without force, simply by providing other essentials (work, education, etc.). The REALITY is we just need to be smart about this and engineer a society, not a population.

    4. Re:Yes, population control makes sense by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      The problem with Africa is extremely low framing productivity coupled with increasing urbanization.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    5. Re:Yes, population control makes sense by bye · · Score: 1

      Just replace 'government' with 'democratic government' and you get the distinction you are looking for.

  40. We are doomed by pesho · · Score: 1

    Are you telling me that China is run by people who have been trained to make informed decisions based on hard facts? We stand no chance, unless we luck out and rapture comes on may 21st.

  41. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by CupBeEmpty · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Uhhh ok fair enough. There is always emigration to China when it gets intolerably oppressive in the US.

  42. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by epyT-R · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Doing /anything/ that advances society overall

    bias.. the argument being that not everything progressives push for is any good for anyone but their social and economic (yes economic) lobbies. Same as the right. There are some differences on those lobby lists, but as you go up in donations, you start to see the same corporate interests funding both sides...funny eh? I wonder why that is?

    The oil companies /need/ that 20 billion dollar subsidy on top of their windfall profits. Because without it, the oil companies will stop delivering oil. Or something. Because the ruling class of the corporations knows better, for all of us.

    as opposed to an all-'knowing' government knows better? a government that routinely flouts the rules it expects everyone else to follow (unless they have lots of cash to buy them off).. sound familiar? it doesn't matter which party you support, you're supporting the same thing. the differences are becoming less and less relevant as time goes on..at least as far as solving today's issues goes..

    Anyway, since neither party is doing me any favors, I'd like my freedoms back please. I don't need a bogeyman to keep me in line, nor do i want billions spent to fight it.

  43. Future help for the U.S. Congress by Greg_J7 · · Score: 1

    Soon the U.S. Congress will finally have something to look to help them understand (the much needed) modern IP legislation.

  44. Re:Flamewar anyone? Scientist must be smart, right by epyT-R · · Score: 0

    Not that I give a damn for the implication of his name, but the fact they gave him a prize just for being obama tells me everything i need to know about that 'esteemed' committee..

  45. I'm an engineer, not a scientist. by Balthisar · · Score: 1

    I'm an engineer. There's no way in hell that I ever pretend that I'm a scientist. We're practical. We execute science, not discover it (generally speaking).

    --
    --Jim (me)
  46. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Wow, do you panic much? After that rant, the first thing you blame is......oil companies? I mean, I don't like subsidies for oil anymore than anyone else, but come on, $20billion isn't enough to cause the US real problems. In fact, $400 billion a year (for the wars) isn't enough to make a huge dent in a $14 trillion economy. If the country is truly fucked, it's because of something more fundamental.

    But you're not going to find it if you are panicked or outraged. Panic and outrage is how people manipulate you, and right now, you sound like perfect manipulation material. Calm down and think rationally.

    I'd still rather be here than in China. I've been to both.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  47. does china even have lawyers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why would a society without fair trials or the ability to challenge laws have lawyers in the first place?

  48. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by timeOday · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I will take liberal democracy by lawyer any day of the week when the alternative is communist oligarchy by scientist.

    It's not immediately clear why those things should have to go together. Maybe because analytical, honest people tell us things we don't want to hear? Carter was drummed out of office for telling us energy was finite, and that we needed to buckle down and tighten our belts a bit for a while. He got railroaded by an actor who told everybody whatever they wanted to hear and put us firmly on the path of financial irresponsibility.

  49. This Woman is also an Engineer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    She's an engineer as well - or at least an engineering student - same mindset
    http://www.breitbart.tv/saudi-woman-arrested-for-spitting-on-walmart-customers-because-americans-are-pushing-us-around/

  50. The top Nazis where Engineers and they did stuff by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 0

    The top Nazis where Engineers and they did stuff like what china does to it's own people.

  51. Different expectations by Ghostworks · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've seen this story before, and my response is the same now as then: this is because of different expectations of the nations' leaders.

    The Chinese government has full control over everything in its borders: laws, people, economic output. It's leaders can direct the entire nation however they see fit. That means the best leaders have to be able to cope with the things they can't control: the immutable limits of physics and economics. The job of any engineer (which, I might add, is not the same as scientist) is to solve problems in the best way possible with available tools under the available constraints. The Chinese toolbox is wide open, so the constraints are all physical, and an engineer's knowledge is directly applicable.

    In the U.S., the people have chosen a different route: the government does what we specifically tell them they can. The constraints are primarily legal, because the government (relatively speaking) is allowed to do very little. A lawyer's ability to navigate the mine field of who is likely to be affected, who is likely to sue, and what is likely to be shot down in court is more useful to the high-level bureaucrat. Actual problems of a sort an engineer or other knowledge worker would face are the responsibility of others. There jobs are derived from a very small part of the very small leeway we give the government. (This abundance of lawyers in government is also why the American people put a premium on military experience, since it's the government department most steeped in harsh, broad-focus, real-world logistics.)

    Both of these can be compared to, say, France, where the government is the nexus of the economic, legal, and even social circles. It controls industry more directly at times than the U.S. government, so businessman represent a larger share of leadership (about a third). The legal issues are similar to the U.S., but with the government fundamentally allowed more direct intervention. Hence lawyers and former lower-level bureaucrats each take about another third of the leadership roles.

    1. Re:Different expectations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US government is allowed to do very little? Do you know anything at all about the last 100 years or so of American history?

  52. Explanation by poity · · Score: 2

    I wrote my previous post in haste, so I didn't get to explain why China's government has so many engineers.
    Today's top leaders are in their mid to late 60s, some even in their 70s, which means they began their higher education in the 1960s and 1970s. That was a time before the Economic Reform era, and China was still a planned society with a planned economy, which meant that post-secondary education and later career were assigned centrally. You took your national college entrance exam in high school, and your score determined which university you went to and what piece of the workforce quota you would later fill. Engineering was a tough field then as it is now, and what do you know the higher you scored the more likely you were assigned to an engineering school. These bright kids joined the party, went into politics, and carried their degrees along with them. One should not make the mistake of assuming it was because of those degrees that they have succeeded in China's political environment, nor to assume that they are better leaders due to that engineering degree above some other had they had the freedom to choose.

    --
    your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    1. Re:Explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been informed that in China, the top ranking college grads from Chinese universities are often offered a membership position into the CCP. Whatever they've been offered in the private sector, the CCP will pay them more with tax payer funded Yuan. Basically, the CCP is setup to be re-enforcing of power/control through the assimilation of the best and brightest minds the local Chinese have to offer.

      It should be noted, that America is headed along a similar path that involves University academia and the Government public sector jobs. It's been work in progress since the 1960s, but the hammer is about to strike now that irons have been in the fire and ready to be struck.

    2. Re:Explanation by readin · · Score: 1

      That sounds right.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    3. Re:Explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. These engineering students were most likely the brightest of their generation. They probably are the type of people that everyone hates... the ones that excel at whatever they put their minds to. Not like in the US, where Universities just toss out slips of paper to kids that have retaken Calc 3 times and Thermo twice... and will be paying off their loans when they are still working at burger king when they are in their 60's.

  53. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, in a country where 70% of the people did not support the TARP bailout, but our representative form of government made sure that banks and auto manufacturer's investors would get their money back.
    Thank God we have the best form of government that money can buy!

  54. Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's because there is no such thing as a liberal arts degree in China. You are either an engineer or you get your ass kicked by your parents until you become an engineer.

  55. And they got those degrees from by gearloos · · Score: 0

    And they got those degrees from clicking "you have no degree! Click here for dgree from super good univerzitee"

    --
    "Computers are a lot like Air Conditioners" "They both work great until you start opening Windows"
  56. Chinese engineers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so what, chinese engineered stuff falls apart and generally sucks. no surprise their government sucks too

  57. Engineering Efficiency by shuz · · Score: 1

    Engineers are taught and generally have an interest in solving tough problems and finding efficiency once the simple problems are solved. To me it makes sense that Chinese Gov. officials would be engineers. The culture as a whole generally is interested in both dedication to family and efficiency. Lawyers and poly sci theorists generally are interested in determining the best way to obfuscate rules in order to achieve goals. Those may be for the greater good or selfish goals. I think programmers could make good officials, however they generally are not interested in dealing with large numbers of people. Each society works itself out depending on their culture. Learn the culture and you'll learn why people are who they are and why the masses do what they do. I have to agree with those that say that cabinet members past career experience and education should reflect their role in US government. Many times they do. But sometimes leaders also just want someone in the position that they can trust. You probably won't find a theologian as secretary of state or interior.

    --
    There is or can be built a machine that can simulate any physical object. -Church-Turing principle
  58. Makes perfect sense. by webbiedave · · Score: 1

    Explains why they excel at election engineering.

  59. PFFFT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what, 9/9 top American government officials are candyasses...Beat that.

  60. PISA is quite flawed as a test by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    A few questions:

    How many of those people took that test in each of those countries?
    What is their admissions criteria for access to education?
    What determined the sets of people who were able to access the test?
    How voluntary was participation in taking the test of individuals?

    With that, PISA can easily be fooled by presenting only the set of people who are good at taking that kind of test. Second, the admissions criteria for PISA-level education is less rigid in the US than many other countries. It favors places with rigid admissions policies that deny education to most of a nation's population.

    In short, you can goose the PISA numbers by providing a known-good set of people, without regards to actual academic performance of the nation as a whole.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  61. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by poity · · Score: 2

    I think you missed your parent's point. The US doesn't need to be the world's paragon of liberal democracy in order for his point to be valid. The US is categorically more liberal and more democratic than China, and that makes the choice of under whom one would wish to be ruled a very clear one indeed.

    --
    your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
  62. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by superwiz · · Score: 1

    Bull Shit. If you want to see a neo-fascism, go to Russsia. One company, Gazprom, in Russia controls all monopolies. It uses the state to intimidate any up-and-coming companies into selling majority stake to Gazprom. The state officials hold positions in Gazprom while holding public offices (not after under big secret like its done in the US). The only equivalent in the US would be if Haliburton owned all of S&P 500 companies. Oh, and the current President of Russia is an ex-CEO of Gazprom.

    Don't confuse actual fascism with what we have -- a republic corrupted by populist demagoguery into giving state enough power to consolidate power into fewer hands. And don't even start with "we have a democracy." The authority of the government derives from the Constitution. So it derives from the rule of law -- not from the votes (voting determines who gets to occupy positions authorized to exist by the law).

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  63. Engineers Managing Their Engineered Society by virb67 · · Score: 2

    In authoritarian societies people are just cogs in the machine, serving those in power. It takes engineers keep the machine running.

  64. chill folks, there is no need to panic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Chinese are just not as versatile as us here in the west.
    They graduate nothing but scientists and engineers.
    While we in the west have the pick from the brightest of journalism, political science, and theater arts graduates for our leaders.

  65. 9 EVIL by luguanzi · · Score: 1

    All those 9 guys r EVIL!!! They r destroying China and Chinese culture!!! So do CCP!!!

  66. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by phantomfive · · Score: 2

    Carter was drummed out of office for being sad. He was so depressing.

    Reagan was happy. If you find people who really like Reagan, and get to the core of why they like him, it is usually something like this. They didn't like all his policies, but he was inspiring.

    Surprisingly, similar in many ways to Obama.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  67. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Carter was drummed out of office for telling us energy was finite

    Yeah, that's it. It wasn't bat shit insane inflation. It wasn't 8% unemployment. It wasn't farcically high interest rates. It wasn't foreign policy humiliation. It wasn't incessant strikes by Carter's greedy union constituents.

    It was your energy agenda.

    Carter is such a disgrace the current state department won't even talk to him because he saying and doing stupid, destructive things in North Korea, the nation that made its enriched uranium in reactors Carter gave them.

  68. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So laws are written by those who studied law. Is that really the wrong road?

  69. Re:Flamewar anyone? Scientist must be smart, right by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

    I take my hat off and bow deeply to you sir! Reality always trumps irony.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
  70. Re:Yeah, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are absolutely correct! Those people knew they would be in power before deciding which degree to pick. They chose science and engineering because in China it is a very common degree, and it's perception equates to liberal arts or something similar in US.
    Well, they probably did not "buy" those degrees in the direct sense but yes, they never planned to use them to make a living.

  71. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you are not alone. In India, most of our top goverment ministers are lawyers. In fact, most of those with political aspirations in India take up law during their study years, as it is almost cutomary to take this path.

  72. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    You weren't alive during the Carter administration, I see. He was a hick from the sticks with a hick accent, and nobody but rednecks enjoyed seeing him in the White House (Billy). Carter: Malaise Forever. Reagan: "My vision for the cold war? We win, they lose." Obama: "I'm always worried about using the word 'victory,' because, you know, it invokes this notion of Emperor Hirohito coming down and signing a surrender to MacArthur."

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  73. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's an alternate hypothesis. In the US, scientists and engineers are busy being scientists and engineers.

    Further, I would argue running a government well is a different skill set than a good scientist or engineer.

    Finally, I'd argue that of anything to emulate of the Chinese, their government is not it.

  74. And? by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

    This surprises anyone?

    My close friend from college and I were discussing our plans after graduation at the bar a few days before we all left for good.

    I had just finished up a degree in human development and family studies. I had completed a non-paid internship developing and executing a reading comprehension improvement program for at-risk adolescents at a local low income housing complex. I had no job lined up after graduation, I was hoping to get into grad school.

    My buddy had just finished up a degree in electromechanical engineering technology. He had completed a paid internship developing weapons of mass destruction, specifically, missile guidance systems. He had a $55,000+ a year job lined up after graduation, he was hoping to buy a house and a new truck.

    Bottom line: Society values death. Society does not value its fellow man or society.

    1. Re:And? by damburger · · Score: 1

      Because its hard to measure social capital, but its comparatively easy to keep a body count. Society doesn't necessarily value death, but it does value only things than can be reduced to a single number.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    2. Re:And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps your vocation should need a little rethinking and redefining, or just good ol' marketing. You have been taught to appeal on human sense of empathy and compassion, but society is ruled by cynical and ruthless clerks who are deliberately desensitized and conditioned to obey commands and set objectives, not their own senses. I know you wish for change in their attitudes and you wish for restoration of their humanity. That is not going to happen. You need to play the machine using its own vocabulary. You need to understand what course of machine's action would have the best unintended consequences for humans you care for, then serve it ideas and data which will lure it towards it. If military-industrial Leviathan has insatiable appetite, then throw to it anything, just scratch "food " onto it! After all, *everything* does have to do with national defense, one way or another.

      E.g. taxpayers will lose over $55,000 next year instead of paying ... say, $25,000, because they aren't up to their necks in electromechanical engineering technology majors. If someone could provide influx of candidates for now expensive job positions from ... e.g. a local low income housing complex, they could get their deadly weapons developed faster, or more kinds of them. Perhaps future cannon fodder (the poor) will have to have more education on entry? There's good motivation for giving you important government job and grants for your work.

      Perhaps someone should present that nicely and convincingly to brass and suits?

    3. Re:And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every large nation has a military (sometimes the best defense is a good offense). It's required. People are dicks. Fact of life. And yes, if the US didn't have a military, we would be under the political and military thumb of Europe, Japan (they wouldn't have been defeated), China, and lord knows who else. Our acquired territories from the American Indians (poor bastards, they make my point perfectly) would have been sold, repurchased from foreigners, and re-sold again and again.

      You cannot have an advanced nation without social/economic stability. Having a military ensures that. So enjoy your higher education and white-collar job while you denigrate the very organization that helps secure it.

      I don't mean to make you feel like a hypocrite, but really you are one without knowing it.

  75. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China's government has been this way fro generations. But if you look at China's economic status you can see that they are in a Economic growth period while everyone else is fighting recession. Having educated people at the top of a system does not mean that the systems is going to be communist or unethical. What it does mean is that the system is going to work as well as it can with its problems mitigated where possible. I personally believe the only hope for the American government is to add a civilian check to the system. Either make politicians highly accountable (possibility of death penalty if they mess up our lives too much), or just to add a system where a civilian sector of the government can veto any government decision past or present if it does not benefit us the people. The current system just follows the money, after all if your a politician are you going to do the right thing and loose all that corporate support for your campaign or just do as they say and keep yourself in office. Everyone agrees that something needs to be done, but who's going to force their way through the door of the current corporate driven system so that they can fix it. (i see a revolution brewing on the horizon if something does not change and change fast, and if that happens i can see China taking control as soon as the us shows weakness with internal fighting.)

  76. Mao by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Chinese learned a hard lesson with Mao.

  77. Re:The top Nazis where Engineers and they did stuf by Zedrick · · Score: 0

    Exactly which top Nazis were engineers? Not Hitler, GÃring, GÃbbels, Himmler, Bormann, Hess or even DÃnitz.

    Instead of trying to find simplistic explanations, you might want to read Modernity and the Holocaust.

    Footnote: I see slashdot still can't handle UTF8. DO SOMETHING ABOUT THAT, SLASHDOT! Rent some indian to fix it in 15 minutes if you don't have any inhouse coders.

  78. Others of interest by TheSync · · Score: 1

    Angela Merkel (Chancellor of Germany): Studied physics, got doctorate for work in quantum chemistry.

    Herman Cain (GOP presidential candidate): Master of Arts degree in computer science from Purdue University in 1971.

  79. engineers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    most common profession of terrorist? : engineer (look it up)

  80. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is a false dichotomy, sir.

  81. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Xeranar · · Score: 1

    I ask you to cite your claims on who is funding who. You'll find most large corporations give far more to right-wing candidates because they are and have always been the pro-business party, left-wing politics tend to favor populism or people-centric ideology. The US has always had this divide between being pro-business vs pro-economic gains. One favors businesses as a person the other society in general. Course you're a false dichotomy troll, so any argument I have with you will always sound half-hollow because humanity has been taught a tit-for-tat argument is better when in reality it usually means people are not perfect and that one is FAR worse than the other.

    That being said, yes most of China's leaders are engineers because the first generation leaders were educated in politics and that worked well, the second generation leaders are all engineers and scientists steeped in the politics of China. Just because you're a very good engineer or scientist it doesn't make you a very good ruler. This is why Political scientists tend to become policy wonks and leave lawyers to being the leaders in our society. The "Know Nothing" attitude of right-wing politics pushes the argument against lawyers while most of them are lawyers. Just really not very good ones, largely who fought in corporate law. The very good lawyers tend to stay in their respective practice and rise to Judgeship. China right now though is suffering from too much of a good thing, they're overbuilt for capacity and need an export partner to take their goods. Currently wildcat strikes are occurring inside their country as the standard of living barely increases. China is looking at a crushing blow to their economy if they can't find an exporter soon as their use of Keynesian economics has worked really well except they never based their manufacturing around it. Which is the exact opposite of the US, economists on the right-wing have been pushing Randian theory the last 30 years or so and no our infrastructure has suffered dramatically because of it. We need to switch back to Keynesian and build our way out of this mess.

  82. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US and all the western nations have taken the wrong road.

    As Akio Morita, co-founder of Sony, said about the US and Japan: “While the US has been busy creating lawyers, we have been busier creating engineers.”

    China, Japan and Korea are going to be the powers of the future.

  83. The explanation for the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    (Note: I currently live in China).

    While the article just throws this (albeit true) fact "8 of 9 Chinese political leaders are engineers" out there, it doesn't seem to explain why this is the case, so let me share it with our fellow readers.

    The current generation of leaders in Chinese are mostly men in their 60's who were thus born in the mid- to late- 1940's. Now, given that fact, think about when these men would have been in the stage of life where they went to university and entered the workforce. It would have been the late 1960's. Now, that what during the Cultural Revolution, where Mao famous initiated his personality cult and all that to reinforce his political control. However, another thing he did during that time was call for the abolition and discarding of anything related to traditional culture or foreign influence. The question is, what does that leave? Well, it really only left two things: one, political work, and two, manual work. Thus, engineering was considered to be non-intellectual enough to avoid a lot of the persecution that musicians and artists encountered, so a great deal of the engineers of that era became political leaders and gradually worked their way up the ladder to where they are today.

    I wouldn't be surprised to see it broaden more in the near future.

  84. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do you think I live in Shanghai since nearly 9 years ?

  85. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Maybe, but in Syria they have an Ophthalmologist who studied in London as their leader, and look how that turned out. Better to not give too much power to anyone at the top, because it all goes to their head, no matter who they are. Really, do you want someone who is like a BOFH as President?

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  86. Open Your Eyes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you approve of having the highest percentage of incarcerated people in the world? Where torture is just a-OK? And where the government is run by ex- and future Monsanto, GE, BearStearns, etc.,, Big Name College Economics Professors who receive huge pay from Corporations, etc? Where one or both parties want to de-regulate the very things they're supposed to regulate? Where the most-watched information source is also the most misleading? Where civil-liberties were greatly eroded as a result of a small attack that took place 10 years ago? Where Big Food is so strong that they made food the cheapest in the world resulting in a huge percentage overweight/obese, diabetic population? Where banks and mortgage companies can run the economy into the ground for massive quick profits? Where schools have a no-tolerance/no-learning policy - preferring to focus on scoring well on tests rather than on life?Where the ultra-rich get richer and the other 95% get poorer and poorer. (,,,and there are many more like this.)

    Oh yes, you have it better than China!

  87. Foreign-Earned Income Exclusion by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    Aren't you eligible to file form 2555 and exclude your foreign-earned income? I was very happy about that when living and working in Tokyo. Or did Congress remove that exclusion? There was talk about that in 2006 or so, but I thought they decided to leave it be...

    Cheers,

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
    1. Re:Foreign-Earned Income Exclusion by vipw · · Score: 1

      That only excludes ~$90k of foreign income. The rest is double taxed. I think it only applies to US citizens and not green card holders.

    2. Re:Foreign-Earned Income Exclusion by macs4all · · Score: 1

      That only excludes ~$90k of foreign income. The rest is double taxed. I think it only applies to US citizens and not green card holders.

      I'm sorry. If your income is so far over $90k that form 2555 is down under the noise floor, I have absolutely no sympathy for you.

    3. Re:Foreign-Earned Income Exclusion by Balthisar · · Score: 1

      But what you don't get is that that income is imaginary. Let's assume that you make $100,000 (which is a lot in some places, and is very little in other places, jeesh, don't hate because your prices are low). Now your host company charges you 50% tax, which your company pays. Now the IRS sees that you've made $150,000. Except, maybe your host company sees it that way, too, and now wants $75,000 instead of $50,000, which the company pays, and the IRS sees as more income, ad infinitum until on paper you look like you've made $250,000.

      --
      --Jim (me)
  88. Eight out of nine are also massively corrupt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While the ninth is actually just a scarecrow.
    As a Chinese in China, I'd say the Chinese government is something to be studied as an example of what NOT to do.
    The Chinese government does not serve the people. Having a science background doesn't make it excusable to treat people as expendable tools for personal advancement.
    Really, what does this statistic tell anyone?

  89. Scientists, or MAD SCIENTISTS? by John+Pfeiffer · · Score: 1

    And yet half the things the country produces (At least for the domestic market) are either constructed of compressed trash, made from sewage, or explode more readily than most I.E.D.s... ;)

    --

    Friend: "The NIC is misconfigured..." Me: "No prob, I'll just telnet in and fix it." *Silence*
  90. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. 10 graduate the sixth grade.
    2. 1 student dies.
    3. 10(total) out of 9(now living) graduated the sixth grade.

  91. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Political parties should be state funded once they reach a certain size. A proposal to do this was introduced in the UK, the idea being that once a party gets a certain proportion of the vote they become eligible for state funding, and from then on can't accept private donations towards their campaign funds. This had the added benefit of levelling the playing field in terms of the amount of money each party can spend on campaigning because they all get the same amount.

    Additionally elected officials should not be allowed to have second jobs or other major sources of income.

    It wouldn't stop corporate influence competely but would go a long way to reducing it. It would also discourage people who are simply interested in getting rich from standing.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  92. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Bull Shit. If you want to see a neo-fascism, go to Russsia. One company, Gazprom, in Russia controls all monopolies.

    Not really, no. There are many other monopolies.

    And Russia isn't neo-fascist. It's very much a shining example of oligarchic state capitalism. It even has some (badly broken) democracy. So, as an image of what US might yet become if it keeps going down the same path, it's actually surprisingly representative.

    The authority of the government derives from the Constitution. So it derives from the rule of law -- not from the votes

    And where does the authority of the Constitution derive from?

  93. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The difference is this, with democratic governments, you can have your freedom as long as you don't draw attention, then nobody will bother you, police, feds, CIA etc. Oppressive governments like the Chinese one, you can follow their rules to the letter, you can hide in the mountains and do nothing, just live in a cave, but when they feel like it, they'll pick you up, find something you've done wrong(everyone does something, if not, some poor SOB "witnessed" it), confess to some crimes(with them helping refresh your memory), and about some that you witnessed(they'll tell you the who, what and where). And then if you're lucky you have to go back in society and give back monthly reports on your friends and family, if not, a jail sentence to be carried out, but there is hope you see, because even in jail you can serve the greater good and will be "allowed" to work on some spectacular projects.
    I've lived the first half of my life in a communist regime, the second in a democratic one, I've seen both sides, and I'll take democracy with all it's warts and pustules and be glad of it.

  94. Engineers are not scientists by Vlijmen+Fileer · · Score: 1

    When will people stop calling engineers scientists. Engineering is not science, but craft, not unlike woodworking or cooking.
    I might agree with calling typical engineering a "craft+" or so, but again, engineering has nothing to do with science.

    1. Re:Engineers are not scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see what you are trying to say, and you make a valid point that Engineering is a "craft". But as an engineer myself, I think it is more accurate to describe engineering as applied science and not pure science. We may not necessarily discover new technologies, materials, etc. , but we will take those discoveries that others have found, and try to apply it to create something of use in a cost effective manner.

  95. Re:Population control means genetic diversity. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Biological reality seems to differ from your racist rant, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterozygote_advantage.

  96. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by yeshuawatso · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can't speak for what it was like during the Carter or reagan admins, as I Wasn't born for the former and was too young for the latter; however, I am interested enough to ask those whom were around during that time why Carter was such a bad president and why Reagan is idolized. To sum it up, Carter was too scientific while Reagan was a charismatic leader. But there are only a few people in the world who can be both a scientist and a great leader.

    Americans in general tend to ignore science because only a few understand the concepts. While those that do understand it outshine the rest of the world, the rest of the country are too confused by scientific discussion and, unfortunately, fall prey to skepticism of scientific results. What is really daunting is that scientific understanding is lacking at all levels of society. /. Frequenters are in a minority and a lot of our discussions are often logical and methodical. Slip an average American in these forums and their heads will start hurting in about thirty minutes, slip several /.'s in an American Idol discussion and we would probably have the same headaches. Carter simply fell in the wrong time to be a president. Methodical thinking takes too long to be effective in a political environment that wants instant gratification. Reagan seemed more of a shoot from the hip and ask questions later kind of person, and average Americans could cling more easily to someone they think is like them. It's one of the reasons Clinton, Bush, and even Obama are adored by the American public.

    Having an expectation that one day we will have scientist at the highest level of authority is wishful thinking. Science isn't the American way. Profit is the American way, science is just a means to obtain it. Once you realize that people don't care that your scientific discoveries have saved lives, time, and made their lives more bearable, then you'll understand that the only thing people care about is the amount of money in your pocket at the end of the day. It's a sad but unfortunate truth.

  97. Also for your concern... by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    Isn't it also telling that American journalists can't see the contradiction in this statement: "Did you know that the president of China is a scientist? President Hu Jintao was trained as a hydraulic engineer"?

    Scientist != engineer.

    --
    -Styopa
  98. How the United States differs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and 10 out of 8 Government officials in the United States are lawyers. Budget deficit! What budget deficit? I was never good in math in school anyway.

  99. Careful what you wish for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From personal experience, a goodly chunk of my fellow engineers are conservative - some to the point of being hide-bound and trogloditic. They of course would couch it in terms of practicality and reason, as in: it's perfectly reasonable to sacrifice hundreds of people for the benefit of millions as it's just math.

    So whatever smarts you gain about tech and science seems to come at cost of compassion and empathy.

  100. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by sensei+moreh · · Score: 1

    Here's my idea of accountability for politicians: Instead of the death penalty, 10 years in prison without parole for breaking campaign promises.

    --
    Geology - it's not rocket science; it's rock science
  101. Re:Yeah, but by macs4all · · Score: 1

    I bet you can buy those degrees in China, whereas in the U.S. you can only buy a liberal arts degree or a variety of lesser graduate degrees. Like, oh, I don't know... I'll have to think of an example...

    Actually, I think that College is free (or nearly so) in China.

    I wonder how that number would change if it cost the equivalent of a damned Rolls Royce (guessing) to get, like it does in the U.S.?

  102. saudi arabia is also full of engineers by decora · · Score: 1

    then again, some of the most famous human rights activists / writers in history are engineers

    alexander solzhenytsin

    andrei sakharov

    yvgeny zamyatin

    albert einstein

  103. chemistry isn't a science either by decora · · Score: 2

    you go into the lab, you follow the instructions in the book. if it doesn't work like it's supposed to, you do it over again until you get it "right".

  104. Zhao Lianhai by decora · · Score: 2

    google it.

    that kind of thing doesn't happen in any 'free' country.

    1. Re:Zhao Lianhai by Forty+Two+Tenfold · · Score: 1
      • Bradley Manning.
      • Guantanamo Bay.
      • Incarceration rate.
      • Domestic spying.
      • ...
      --
      Upward mobility is a slippery slope - the higher you climb the more you show your ass.
  105. man.. smells like.. blatant ignorance in here.. by decora · · Score: 1

    seems like 90% of these threads do not know Mao from Deng, Enlai from Muy Tai, or Chiang Kai from a Butterfly

  106. True Engineers like manipulating THINGS not people by redelm · · Score: 1

    To the extent people can determine their own careers (and not from peer/family/societal pressure/tradition), people choose careers that match their personal interests and predelections.

    Engineers (and scientists, a very different thing) are people who like manipulating and controlling wood, metal, concrete, chemicals, electrons, photons and many other _things_.

    Quite different from others who are bored by these things, and instead are interested in personalities and other people. They seek positions of govt/corp leadership via acceptable avenues like law, marketing and sometimes even eng/sci. Beware the wolf in sheeps clothing.

  107. Engineers + Liberty = WIN by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Herman Cain (GOP presidential candidate): Master of Arts degree in computer science from Purdue University in 1971.

    The trouble with engineers who don't get Liberty is that they come up with very clever solutions. I used to be one of them. I loved the FairTax, for instance. What an excellent engineering solution to an economic problem - if you don't mind putting the entire country on welfare and Constitutionally getting the Feds involved in intrastate commerce.

    Herman Cain is an example of this - he's a former head of a Federal Reserve Bank, the system which has caused so much of America's current problems, and he advocates for the system despite its obvious problems.

    That said, many of my very best liberty friends here in New Hampshire are engineers. The Free State Project is teeming with them, and several of the most brilliant minds I work with in the New Hampshire Liberty Alliance are engineers. We're lucky to have several pro-Liberty engineers currently serving in our House of Representatives. They know how to attack problems, work a process, and create solutions.

    Interested engineers might want to start here.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  108. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by khallow · · Score: 1

    Doing /anything/ that advances society overall and gets everyone a better standard of living instead of increasing the power of the ruling class is "bad."

    Give some examples. My take is that you can't separate the two unless the "giving" above isn't backed by government force. For example, back in the 30s, Social Security was presented as a way to keep all the grannies from eating catfood. In practice, it turned out to be a long running pyramid scheme with new enrollees getting less than the people who came before them. The practical result was a way for the US government to spend more each year than they otherwise could and increasing the power of the ruling class.

    Similarly, the power to regulate an industry is the power to block new entrants, creating a system of "capitalist oligarchy neo-fascism," (to use your words) and selectively enforce regulation, again increasing the power of the ruling class.

    More recently, health care "reform" has turned out to be a way to control the finances of "red" states, to create vast populations of dependent voters, and otherwise increase the power of the ruling class.

    The two wars were merely another impulse of this nature. Unless you think the terrorists winning somehow improves the standard of living.

    My impression is that you have a poor understanding of cause and effect. The naive desire to improve the well-being of our fellow man is easily steered into other territory. I think it particularly sad that the symptoms such as so-called "capitalist oligarchy neo-fascism" are blamed as the cause of the disease when the real problem is that the gullible have given too much power to the corrupt, once again.

  109. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by khallow · · Score: 1

    I personally believe the only hope for the American government is to add a civilian check to the system. Either make politicians highly accountable (possibility of death penalty if they mess up our lives too much), or just to add a system where a civilian sector of the government can veto any government decision past or present if it does not benefit us the people.

    They're called elections.

  110. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by khallow · · Score: 1

    I just realized there's an even simpler rebuttal. First, when you complain about "doing anything that advances society," you are complaining about people resisting the use of public funds for the things you seek. Else, you and like minded people would have just funded the thing via private donations and the problem wouldn't exist. Public funding requires consensus, private funding requires nothing but some initiative.

    So whining about "better standards of living" rather than doing something indicate your choice of funding source.

    So who manages this "anything." Why the ruling class, of course. The same people who created the "capitalist oligarchy neo-fascism" and got us recently into two wars. There aren't two governments, one to do all the good things that benefit society and one to screw up. There's only one government and you want to hand it more power.

  111. Re:So was Herbert Hoover... by paiute · · Score: 1

    ClaudeVMS is correct. Hoover was a crackerjack engineer, but those skills apparently availed him not.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  112. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by SCHecklerX · · Score: 1

    And politicians. God, I hate career polititians. We need leaders, not politicians.

  113. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by khallow · · Score: 1

    Political parties should be state funded once they reach a certain size. A proposal to do this was introduced in the UK, the idea being that once a party gets a certain proportion of the vote they become eligible for state funding, and from then on can't accept private donations towards their campaign funds. This had the added benefit of levelling the playing field in terms of the amount of money each party can spend on campaigning because they all get the same amount.

    I have an alternate suggestion here. Any person who receives funding (either directly or through a publicly funded group) from the state is ineligible to run for office for a period of say, four years after the last incident of receiving public funding.

    As you might guess, I see private donations as far less of an issue than public funding. After all, all those greedy corporations have to bribe somebody. I think it reasonable to force them to use their own money for the bribe rather than my money. .

  114. goldman/bear stearns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "They reward companies they like, and punish companies they don't like"

    pot meet kettle

  115. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

    as opposed to an all-'knowing' government knows better?

    Yes. I'll say it right here: I would rather the government to have that $20 billion in their treasury to spend on roads / police / social security etc. etc. than a company that would spend every last cent on themselves.

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
  116. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by superwiz · · Score: 1

    And where does the authority of the Constitution derive from?

    It claims its authority from the people. But, as anyone who studied logic for more than 10 minutes knows, any system of logical deductions relies on base assumptions. In the same way, any authority derives from a root authority. In a Republic the root authority is the law. The authority of the law derives from the Constitution. So all government power derives from The Constitution (as a legal document -- not a living document). Don't even go down the road of "you haven't answered my question" type of reasoning. I have. The root authority is the assumed and accepted authority establishing all other authority.

    Despite your "no not really" none-arguments, Russia is most definitely a most perfect example of Mussolini's Fascism. Russia implements his theory pretty much by the book. And having a democracy doesn't preempt being a fascism. Votes only determine who gets to occupy the seats of power. They don't determine what type of government system a country has. Fascism is state capitalism, at least Mussolini's fascism (as opposed to Hitler's National Socialism). It's precisely what Mussolini wanted. He saw it as state merged with business through a regulatory apparatus (with state being the dominant partner in that marriage). Which is exactly what Russia has. I wouldn't recommend admiring it. When Gazprom can show up on your door and in the best of mobs' ways tell you that "we are now partners", the rule of law is gone. And in Russia, this is precisely how business is done. This is what happens when people are supreme to the law and not the other way around.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  117. Fake titles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Its pretty common for dictators/communist leaders and high positioned officials to acquire multiple fake titles/qualifications/studies.
    E.g.: from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elena_Ceau%C5%9Fescu:

    Despite never finishing an elementary education (her records show that she left school with only a good mark in needlework), Ceauescu graduated from the University of Bucharest with a PhD in polymer chemistry and top in a class of 100 women with the honor of summa cum laude.

  118. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Engineers are probably worse. Engineers don't understand people. People are not rational and logical, and that's what engineers are trained in and tend to think in terms of: rationality and logic. Ruling people properly requires that you understand people.

  119. Re:Yeah, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because as we know, racism is fucking hilarious.

  120. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    I can't speak for what it was like during the Carter or reagan admins, as I Wasn't born for the former and was too young for the latter; however, I am interested enough to ask those whom were around during that time why Carter was such a bad president and why Reagan is idolized.

    I'll bite. I was too young to pay much attention, but Carter was widely associated with peanuts. His unpopularity was mostly due to the stagnant economy with high inflation (stagflation) of the time. Reagan had been a popular actor who voters all recognized. Then there was the Libyan hostage "crisis" where they were holding a bunch of Americans - they waited until just after Reagan took office to release them, so he gets credit where Carter did not (even thought the decision had to be made while Carter was still in). I've also heard that Carter (or the Fed during his tenure?) made some very tough (unpopular) choices on monetary policy that should have helped the economy, but that wouldn't yield results until the Reagan years. And lastly, Reagan popularized the cold war fighting those terrible Russians...

    On another note, since you're young. Take notes (literally) of what's really happening 'cause this shit blows by in the blink of an eye. 30 years seems like a long time looking forward, but once you're there it seems like yesterday - except the details are all gone and all that remains is the collective "impression" and anything that stood out specifically in your mind. The Obama administration will be remembered for 3 or 4 sound bites. Truth and details (good or bad) will be forgotten. I suppose "bad economy", Killing Bin Laden, something about health care, and maybe debt will be the topics of the sound bites. I can't tell you how history will regard those things, but I bet they'll be the highlights.

  121. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by bmo · · Score: 1

    > Fascism is state capitalism, at least Mussolini's fascism (as opposed to Hitler's National Socialism). It's precisely what Mussolini wanted. He saw it as state merged with business through a regulatory apparatus (with state being the dominant partner in that marriage). Which is exactly what Russia has.

    As if we don't have this here in the States.

    You just proved that the US /is/, in fact, Fascist.

    It's been that way for a while. It's only in the last 30 years that the fascists have declared war on the middle and lower classes.

    --
    BMO

  122. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Dog-Cow · · Score: 0

    Elections have been rigged at least since the modern Democratic and Republican parties decided to share power. Or since the political party settled on its two present-day faces, if you prefer.

    The fact that there is no viable third-party on the national scene, or even on any State's scene, for that matter, is ample proof.

  123. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Dog-Cow · · Score: 0

    All those are examples of what's wrong with the economy -- the Government spends needlessly and wastefully. We don't need the wars and the oil companies don't need the incentives. That there is a difference of scale in the two examples is beside the point entirely.

  124. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    They don't determine what type of government system a country has. Fascism is state capitalism, at least Mussolini's fascism (as opposed to Hitler's National Socialism). It's precisely what Mussolini wanted. He saw it as state merged with business through a regulatory apparatus (with state being the dominant partner in that marriage). Which is exactly what Russia has.

    There is one important difference. Mussolini wanted the merger so that the capital would serve the interests of the state - hence why regulatory apparatus. State objectives would then override the desire of businesses to make money.

    In Russia, what happened instead was that the state was subsumed by capital to serve the interests of that capital. The regulatory apparatus of the state is used for the sole goal of crushing competition to maximize the profits of state capitalists in power, with no consideration whatsoever of the well-being of common citizens (even from Mussolini's perspective of "cogs in the machine" - but he still wanted them to be good cogs which don't break; whereas Russian oligarchs just bleed the country dry).

    The distinction is critically important. The core tenet of fascist ideology is not state capitalism - it's just a tool - but the notion of supremacy of state. "Everything for the state, nothing outside the state". So, no, Russia is not fascist. If you want a good example of a modern textbook fascist state, China would, in fact, be it.

    By the way, I'm not admiring Russia. I'm a Russian now living and working in US for a reason. But you flatter the present rulers by calling them "fascists" - that requires a degree of long-term thinking and goal-setting that they simply do not possess.

  125. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by timeOday · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that's it. It wasn't bat shit insane inflation. It wasn't 8% unemployment. It wasn't farcically high interest rates.

    Yes, it was those things. Fundamentally they're cyclical, but Carter could have alleviated them - by taking on debt. As Reagan did. Those debts, such as the failure to fully fund Social Security for the boomers' retirement, and paying civil servants with unfunded pension liabilities, still have not been repaid.

    And that is why Obama is taking on so much debt now. Lessons from US political history taken to heart. As much as people complain about the debt, whatever hurts their wallet right now is a voting issue.

    It wasn't foreign policy humiliation.

    Whereas Reagan came in and "solved" Iran? It is still a problem today. How do 52 hostages, eventually released, compare to thousands of dead soldiers and hundreds of thousands of dead civilians? In the eyes of some, Bush II somehow wins that contest. How? By making value judgments with the ego, which is irrational.

  126. Scientist Engineer by lythander · · Score: 1

    At least not explicitly. They both live on the same side of a road that most of us here chose never to cross, but they aren't the same thing.

    Also important in this discussion though is the fact that engineers have been implicated as a group as being especially good violent extremists. (Viz. one , two , three , and of course, four.)

    Probably also suited to running authoritarian, quasi-market-based state. Just a thought.

  127. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Slugster · · Score: 1

    It is true that the US needs to drastically downsize its military. Would be much better from a financial standpoint (since defense spending is just taxation upon every other business) and possibly philosophically as well.

    ...I kinda smile though, whenever someone complains that the US is not 'socialized' enough.
    Well over half of the country is probably drawing a paycheck from the government: either as direct employees at the federal, state or local level, postal workers, military personnel, military contractors or sub-contractors and all those receiving Social Security, disability, unemployment or welfare benefits.

  128. William F. Buckley Jr said it best by Prune · · Score: 1

    "I am obliged to confess I should sooner live in a society governed by the first two thousand names in the Boston telephone directory than in a society governed by the two thousand faculty members of Harvard University."

    --
    "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
  129. its a long time by kubitus · · Score: 1
    since Benjamin Franklin worked for the US givernment.

    He even was not elected as President! although hes shows up on a banknote.

  130. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by colinnwn · · Score: 1

    I've also heard that Carter (or the Fed during his tenure?) made some very tough (unpopular) choices on monetary policy that should have helped the economy, but that wouldn't yield results until the Reagan years.

    He appointed Volker to Fed Chairman, who employed tight monetary policy and high interest rates to end the high inflation that had been a problem for the last 3 presidential administrations. This is perhaps one of Carter's big achievements. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidency_of_Jimmy_Carter#Economy:_stagflation_and_the_appointment_of_Volcker

  131. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No. You're welcome to hit the other road, though.

  132. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by superwiz · · Score: 1

    You are equating the rule of oligarchs with fascism. It's not. The current system that Russia has -- the one which broke the rule of the oligarchs -- is the fascism. What Russia lacked was the rule of law to moderate the rule of oligarchs and the effects of complete lawlessness. What it got instead of the rule of law is the rule of the fascist elite. They DO hold the state as the supreme. I've heard Putin's speeches. He is generally populist (just as Mussolini was). But he uses the apparatus of the state not to distribute the power held by oligarchs, but rather to concentrate that power in the hands of the state. Putin's Russia is a post-oligarch society. To pretend otherwise would be shortsighted. It is fascist through and through. The only reason they don't call themselves such is because of the negative connotations of the word. But they have, in practice, adapted every single mechanism of statehood practiced by Mussolini. If you think they don't have a long-term view, you are impressed by the immediate details of the runnings of the state as described by the popular media. Take a step back. You can't see if there is a long-term plan unless you take a long-term view. China is getting there, but it's not there yet. It's still closer to a Communist society than it is to a fascist one. But Mussolini envisioned fascism as a compromise between capitalism and communism with mild militarism in order ensure élan. Russians get their élan from the mythology of "slavic soul" and such pretend that all their military overtures are defensive. Defensive posture doesn't at all explain their continued support for Iran, Venezuela or NK. I suspect that while you don't admire Russia, you still circle the mental wagons when it gets called "fascist". Despite all the negative connotations, the word does have a meaning. No reason to conflate it with Nazi'ism. But, to get back to the original point, the most perfect example of the fascism in the modern world is Russia. If the left to right scale had Communism somewhere at 0 and laissez faire at 100, Russia (as a fascist state) would be at 50; China at 25 and US at 75.

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  133. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by superwiz · · Score: 1

    No, quite. We've taken steps in that direction. But we aren't there. For every victory that the statist regulator apparatus makes, it suffers one defeat. In a fascist state, the regulatory apparatus would rule supreme.

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    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  134. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by superwiz · · Score: 1

    We unquestionably do NOT have an oligarchy. The mobility between classes is very rapid. If you take the bottom 20% and observe them in 30 years, only 5% of them will remain in the bottom 20%. 29% of them will have moved to the top 20%. In an oligarchy, movement between levels is near impossible without an all-out war (with bullets flying and all).

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    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  135. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    You are equating the rule of oligarchs with fascism. It's not.

    I am not; indeed, I said exactly the opposite thing!

    I already gave you the definition of fascism, courtesy of Mussolini himself: "everything for the state, nothing outside the state". It's really just hyper-etatism, everything else is subservient to that.

    The current system that Russia has -- the one which broke the rule of the oligarchs

    It didn't; it's just that some oligarchs took power directly. Who is Putin but not an oligarch? He was put into his position by oligarchs, and while he fooled many of those same people who got him there, he's not any different himself. His goal in power is to ensure money for himself and his circle, not power for power's sake (see also: Baikalfinansgroup), and definitely not power for the sake of the state.

    Fascism is not just about the methods. It's about the goals.

    If you think they don't have a long-term view, you are impressed by the immediate details of the runnings of the state as described by the popular media. Take a step back. You can't see if there is a long-term plan unless you take a long-term view.

    Well, and what is that long-term plan? So far all I see is aggressive exploitation of natural resources, so as to maximize short-term profit. In some cases they do so even while directly hurting long-term viability. For example, some of the drilling techniques used are such that they maximize current production rate, but would lead to earlier abandonment of the oil well.

    Note also that I'm not talking about long-term plans those people have for themselves ("line pockets with cash" can be very long-term...), but rather long-term plans for the country. So far, most announced major reforms have been largely smoke and mirrors.

    Russians get their élan from the mythology of "slavic soul" and such pretend that all their military overtures are defensive. Defensive posture doesn't at all explain their continued support for Iran, Venezuela or NK.

    You mistake official Russian propaganda for the dismal state of Russian military in reality. Posturing in Venezuela, Iran etc is just another populist measure - the majority of people distrust and dislike US and West in general, and therefore any way of flipping a middle finger to them, such as supplying arms to Iran, is appeasing that public. It is also a necessary component of establishing an "us vs them" mentality, where "them" (= US, NATO etc) are portrayed as strong and aggressive bullies, and therefore "we all need to set aside our differences and stand together" against any such purported bullying - which is used to suppress dissent.

    I suspect that while you don't admire Russia, you still circle the mental wagons when it gets called "fascist".

    No, not really. I'm not afraid to call things fascist when they are that. My point is that the existing arrangement is worse than fascist, because it has all authoritarianism with absolutely no benefits (you know, "trains run on time" and all that). I despise all forms of authoritarianism, but between the two I'd pick the one that at least aims to establish a stable society.

    the most perfect example of the fascism in the modern world is Russia. If the left to right scale had Communism somewhere at 0 and laissez faire at 100, Russia (as a fascist state) would be at 50; China at 25 and US at 75.

    Such a linear scale doesn't make much sense to me, since fascism is not really "between communism and laissez-faire". They are two ideologies which are, for the most part, completely different, with the only common point being authoritarianism.

    By the way, China is definitely more authoritarian than Russia socially, and probably about the same economically.

  136. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    8 out of 9 government officials give the rest a bad name?

  137. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  138. Re:Yeah, but by Legal.Troll · · Score: 0

    I thought it was kind of funny. I mean, can't you get like every counterfeit good in the world in China? And, didn't you notice how the comment included a reciprocal dig on the American university system? I honestly think you need to lighten up. Was it really that offensive?

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  139. Re:Yeah, but by Legal.Troll · · Score: 0

    It would be less easy to buy, obviously. See why?

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  140. confusion between an engineer and a scientist by brian642 · · Score: 1

    Why is Hu Jintao referred to as a scientist when in the next sentence it's clearly stated that he was trained as an engineer? I see the general public often being confused by the two terms, but I expect better from a slashdot posting. Scientists study the world as it is, engineers create the world that never has been. - Theodore Von Karman http://www.todayinsci.com/K/Karman_Theodore/KarmanTheodore-Quotations.htm

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    ----- The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. -- Benjamin Franklin
  141. engineering solutions by drinsilence · · Score: 1

    kind of explains their solutions http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/05/29/health/main2860989.shtml ... DuckDuckGo.com

  142. Man that was stupid of me by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    It was of course the Iranian hostage crisis. Libya cause some other trouble in the 80s and got a couple air strikes from the US that a lot of people don't remember.

  143. You mean like print money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the U.S., the people have chosen a different route: the government does what we specifically tell them they can. by Ghostworks (991012) on Thursday May 19, @12:34AM (#36174906)

    Oh, you mean like the Federal Reserve Act, where the rest of the House and Senate were away on Christmas break, and only a "select few" alongside Woodrow Wilson "ratified and passed" a bill creating the Federal Reserve (which is not federal at all, but rather a consortium of central banks, who instead of freeing up money and lowering interest rates during the start of the great depression of 1929 did the opposite making it worse and more to artificially create it).

    Bill of Rights amendment 16 on income tax being another: http://www.mcwdn.org/dof/amend16.html

    Not even legal! Income Tax was never a vision of the founding fathers. You are not required by law to pay it.

    The constraints are primarily legal, because the government (relatively speaking) is allowed to do very little. by Ghostworks (991012) on Thursday May 19, @12:34AM (#36174906)

    Bullshit: See above.

    A lawyer's ability to navigate the mine field of who is likely to be affected, who is likely to sue, and what is likely to be shot down in court is more useful to the high-level bureaucrat. by Ghostworks (991012) on Thursday May 19, @12:34AM (#36174906)

    Let's look at our lawyer president's results then: I don't have to cite anything here, we're all living the hell of THAT today and we all see it.

  144. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by bmo · · Score: 1

    This is late, but if you look at what actual economists say, upward mobility in the US is the lowest it's been in a very long time.

    The upward mobility myth is what keeps the teabaggers in line supporting the GOP. Yes, you too can be a billionaire overnight if you just let us cut taxes for the richest 5 percent and de-fund education and increase taxes on the bottom 60!

    It's really cynical what's going on. The part of the public that eats up Fox News is being played like a fiddle in the hands on Itzak Perlman..

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    BMO

  145. Not if you don't want slavery. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    So you want to keep people un-educated, so that they're only worth factory slave-work?

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    1. Re:Not if you don't want slavery. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      No, I want to get the bright people educated instead of throwing a degree at anyone who can throw enough money at an university.

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  146. Not Surprised by dcollins · · Score: 1

    Engineers seem to have a talent for (a) running totalitarian regimes, (b) participating in terrorist activities, and (c) becoming heads of end-of-days cults.

    As another example, the May-21 Rapture prediction comes from Harold Camping, who has a B.S. in Civil Engineering.

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  147. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by superwiz · · Score: 1

    Who is Putin but not an oligarch?

    Putin is not an oligarch. Oligarch in the modern parlance are the economic elite which leverages its economic power to become inseparable from the power of the state. The key has to be the rise to power through economic means. You seem to be using the word for all elites. But there are also political elites and bureaucratic elites. Putin clearly falls into the classification of political elites. He core power always derived from the power of the state -- never from the ability to corrupt with money (as so-called Oligarch's power did). Medvedev, by the way, is not an oligarch either. His core power was derived from bureaucracy (as is the case for most lawyers ascending to power). The Oligarchs, ie the people who made their fortunes by selling (or building and selling) that which people bought out of their own volition, have all been disenfranchised by now.

    So far all I see is aggressive exploitation of natural resources, so as to maximize short-term profit. In some cases they do so even while directly hurting long-term viability. For example, some of the drilling techniques used are such that they maximize current production rate, but would lead to earlier abandonment of the oil well.

    You are talking about specific economic endeavors. I am talking about something else. I am talking about the whole chess game they are playing rather any one specific move they make. They are crafting certain state apparatus that is meant to take roots and achieve a semi-permanent status. The long-term game is not economic -- it's political. As for your comment about oil-well, it is my understanding that until fairly recently, most oil wells were tapped until 50% of oil was removed. After that, the excess pressure of the well wasn't enough to bring the oil up. In other words, they are behind on technology, but that's a rational economic decision. Many of the old wells (in the US) are now retrofitted to pump in the lesser-pressure environment.

    It is also a necessary component of establishing an "us vs them" mentality, where "them" (= US, NATO etc) are portrayed as strong and aggressive bullies, and therefore "we all need to set aside our differences and stand together" against any such purported bullying - which is used to suppress dissent.

    This is the traditional definition of "nationalism". I don't disagree with you on this. But I hope agree that one of the mechanisms of making the state supreme to all other institutions is creating an environment of fear so as to prioritize safety over other concerns.

    My point is that the existing arrangement is worse than fascist, because it has all authoritarianism with absolutely no benefits (you know, "trains run on time" and all that).

    I strongly doubt that Mussolini was the one who made trains run on time. I strongly suspect it was the fact that he was able to dispense with the leftist labor policies (by being more leftist than the alternative -- the capitalists) combined with increased competition that the railroads had from the newly-build public highways. But more generally, I am talking about the balance of power between political and economic classes (the old merchants vs aristocracy conflict). Fascism makes them one and the same but with ultimate authority in the hands of the state. Oligarchy makes them one and the same but with ultimate authority in the hands of a few merchants.

    The scale of the balance of power that I suggested has all the political power on the left and all the economic power on the right. While one may argue that "power is power", that is a faulty argument. The power through volition is not the same as power through coercion. It's the old carrot and stick. Power through being useful is the power of carrot while the power through coercion is the power of the stick. Fascism is literally the power of the stick (the word derives fr

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    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  148. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by superwiz · · Score: 1

    Most of the statics that are cited today are actually full of bs. You should listen to Thomas Sowell debunking them. They talk about "earning power" of the bottom 20%. But what they don't mention is that most people don't stay in those bottom 20% and move between those categories. Upward and downward mobility is not a myth. And your pathological comments about Fox News are a prime example of Al Gore's triangle: fear stops reason, faith stops fear, reason stops faith. You are not and I mean, not at all, being reasonable. This pathology you exhibit about Fox News makes you sound exactly like any other bigot I've heard. Try making any argument to an antisemite and you'll get "oh, that's just Jewish propaganda" in response. You are doing an exactly same thing. But, of course, my appeal won't convince you (cause remember fear stops reason). Go on, you heard the cue... time to knee jerk with "oh, like there is no fear peddling on Fox News." Now you want to knee jerk with "well, if the shoe fits..." But you know what? This is not a reasonable response. There is both upward and downward mobility to a greater degree than it ever existed. By the way, the argument from authority (eg, "most economists agree") falls on deaf ears when you are talking to an educated person (which you are). It's an argument which states conclusions that other "experts" made based on facts which the presents of the argument from authority usually does not understand. State the facts and if you hear someone state conclusions and avoiding facts, it doesn't mean they are wrong, but it does mean you take their conclusions with a grain of salt.

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    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  149. Re:In the US 8 out of 9 top government are lawyers by bmo · · Score: 1

    It's not "argument from authority" that's a fallacy.

    The actual fallacy is "argument from improper authority"

    Do you really want to say to your doctor "you're using argument from authority to tell me I should get screened for cancer so I won't"?

    Really?

    The fallacy "argument from improper authority" is "I'm not a doctor but I play one on TV." Which is used time and again on Fox. Demagogues like those found on fox (Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, et alia) all depend on this for their livelihoods.

    Logical fallacies, you failed the test.

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    BMO
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    BMO

  150. Chinese Value Science/Engineering by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

    If Chinese culture values science/engineering more than Western culture does coming up though school, then maybe the 'winner' types end up persuing what Chinese society ( which includes the government ) values - i.e. science and engineering.

    Where then would the Chinese equivalents of the 'losers and nerds' end up? Maybe other pursuits, possibly the liberal arts.

    Of course the 'winners' grow up to be powerful in China as they do elsewhere, it just seems that 'winners' in China do science and engineering more than they do elsewhere probably because they offer relatively more rewards than elsewhere because they are more highly valued by the powers that be, and so everyone else because of the rewards that being valued by the powers that be confers.

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  151. win-lose by jawahar · · Score: 1

    India is developing since you can exploit their people via caste system.
    http://www.rediff.com/news/2007/may/03touch.htm

    China is developing since you can exploit their people by abusing human rights.
    http://www.rediff.com/business/slide-show/slide-show-1-tech-apple-workers-forced-to-sign-no-suicide-pledge/20110504.htm

    And Americans are suffering since US regime is letting Chindia exploit their people via outsourcing.