I think that's a wise choice that history will look kindly on, as it does on skeptics of US-Russian cooperation pre-2022. Space technology is, before everything else, military technology.
Not disagreeing on the above, I agree quite strongly in fact. It’s important we are critical of our own tribes.
Your final question though is maybe worth a challenge. Why can’t both sides be in the wrong? I always find we are quick to make a problem quite polar without accepting the grey mush in between.
In this case, China has similarly also demonstrated its far reaching and abusive capabilities when given the opportunity (my thoughts around belt-and-road, Tibet, Uighurs and its own treatment of its people in its past). Your point on china not being in a war is also one that can be challenged, proxy wars have and continue to be a thing. China has played their part and continue contributing to active conflicts.
I would like to upvote simply because of this sentence. Yes.
And stepping away from right or wrong judgements for a moment, I think it is clear that banning space tech really didn't work out, and banning semiconductor tech probably wouldn't, either.
Hindsight is the wrong view here. They publicly stated they will take back Taiwan with force, and they’ve been preparing for it and running exercises to practice it. It’s going to happen in the next few years
It's not a bad idea to be slightly suspicious of a county that's quite willing to stave millions of its own people to death and call it a "great leap".
I'd like to remind folks why China has their own space station:
The USA banned China from the 'International' space station back in 2011 (Obama) cause of.... National Security.
https://time.com/3901419/space-station-no-chinese/
I think that's a wise choice that history will look kindly on, as it does on skeptics of US-Russian cooperation pre-2022. Space technology is, before everything else, military technology.
China hasn't been in any war since early 1980s.
My country (USA) decided to warmonger even more just last week. And we side with a genocidal country hell-bent on middle eastern occupation.
And China's the wrong one here? Not buying it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Vietnamese_conflicts_(197...
Not disagreeing on the above, I agree quite strongly in fact. It’s important we are critical of our own tribes.
Your final question though is maybe worth a challenge. Why can’t both sides be in the wrong? I always find we are quick to make a problem quite polar without accepting the grey mush in between.
In this case, China has similarly also demonstrated its far reaching and abusive capabilities when given the opportunity (my thoughts around belt-and-road, Tibet, Uighurs and its own treatment of its people in its past). Your point on china not being in a war is also one that can be challenged, proxy wars have and continue to be a thing. China has played their part and continue contributing to active conflicts.
"Why can’t both sides be in the wrong?"
I would like to upvote simply because of this sentence. Yes.
And stepping away from right or wrong judgements for a moment, I think it is clear that banning space tech really didn't work out, and banning semiconductor tech probably wouldn't, either.
Hindsight is the wrong view here. They publicly stated they will take back Taiwan with force, and they’ve been preparing for it and running exercises to practice it. It’s going to happen in the next few years
Meanwhile they will have their own genocides and human rights abuses https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/08/1125932
It's not a bad idea to be slightly suspicious of a county that's quite willing to stave millions of its own people to death and call it a "great leap".
It's an excellent idea to be suspicious of a country that starves 13% of their population because "capitalism".
https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/ag-and-food-statistic...
In what way is food insecurity comparable to death by starvation?
Why would a country allow food insecurity? How does it benefit the population?
I’d also be suspicious of a developed country without universal healthcare. Why would they subject their own population to avoidable disease?
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/articl...
Wow, 6.5 hours is a long time to do anything that requires focus, much less a spacewalk…!
There are CEOs who work 19 hours a day. /s