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LancesArmorStriking
Inside China Business
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Comments by "LancesArmorStriking" (@LancesArmorStriking) on "Inside China Business" channel.
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@tonysu8860 Most of them, even from rural regions, are close to college-educated. Most European countries put heavy emphasis on primary education (high school) and students end up learning much more than American students. Americans usually close the gap once in university.
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@l3eatalphal3eatalpha It doesn't need the US to, it needs China to pass on the gains. If China truly wants to lessen American power, strengthening allies is the best way to do that. I also have to ask if China got it from the US, then surely the US must have a way to developing it without a bigger, richer country to learn the tech from— it has to have been invented somewhere.
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@TheGreatAmphibian Isekai are getting boring too, now anime is mostly about life. But there's still stuff in every category. It's an entire genre, it's not monolithic.
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I feel the relationship is still unequal— Russia needs assistance to re-industrialize and start entering high-tech manufacturing.
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@edukid1984 Backing in what sense? Most of Russia's foreign military supplies are coming from Iran, North Korea, and smuggled Western goods.
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To be fair, China started developing much later, so naturally all of the infrastructure will be (at the very oldest) 50-60 years old. The question is whether China will be able to maintain it into the future with the coming population drop. I do agree though, China's cities are much more developed than the US. Frankly almost every city in Earth has better conditions than the US because they lack public transit which "greases the wheels" of any normal city. They're stuck with cars instead.
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@ZweiZwolf In military sectors, not civilian. Even so, it doesn't match the output of China, by even a fraction. To truly challenge the G7, all BRICS countries must have these industries at least somewhat developed.
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@snowlee-ml7rr That's so petty lol, do they even have jurisdiction to command something like that?
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The only issue is the massive brain drain that happened in the 1990s. Yeltsin's economy left the best and brightest Russians with nothing to look forward to. And most in diaspora won't come back, bar some political upheaval in the West
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@mog404 No. Liar
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@mog404 No. China hasn't sent military assets to Russia beyond tires and dual-use goods. North Korea sent 1M+ shells. Iran sent thousands of drones. You're an idiot.
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@mog404 "Nuh uh!" How about you prove it instead of being a brainless prick?
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Russia does lead in small-fast reactors (also called micro reactors) and mobile reactors (built aboard ships). But China will eventually copy that technology and, once they have their hands on it, will build on it and mass produce it as a scale that no other country can. That is its secret. It may be slow to some technologies, but once you see them get into an industry, they will dominate it.
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