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Chinese Billionaire Jack Ma Says the US Wasted Trillions on Warfare Instead of Investing in Infrastructure (cnbc.com) 594

Alibaba founder Jack Ma fired a shot at the United States in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. An anonymous reader shares a report: Ma was asked by CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin about the U.S. economy in relation to China, since President-elect Donald Trump has been talking about imposing new tariffs on Chinese imports. Ma says blaming China for any economic issues in the U.S. is misguided. If America is looking to blame anyone, Ma said, it should blame itself. "It's not that other countries steal jobs from you guys," Ma said. "It's your strategy. Distribute the money and things in a proper way." He said the U.S. has wasted over $14 trillion in fighting wars over the past 30 years rather than investing in infrastructure at home.

To be sure, Ma is not the only critic of the costly U.S. policies of waging war against terrorism and other enemies outside the homeland. Still, Ma said this was the reason America's economic growth had weakened, not China's supposed theft of jobs. In fact, Ma called outsourcing a "wonderful" and "perfect" strategy. "The American multinational companies made millions and millions of dollars from globalization," Ma said. "The past 30 years, IBM, Cisco, Microsoft, they've made tens of millions -- the profits they've made are much more than the four Chinese banks put together. ... But where did the money go?"

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Chinese Billionaire Jack Ma Says the US Wasted Trillions on Warfare Instead of Investing in Infrastructure

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  • He not wrong (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:36PM (#57831648)

    The US could cut its defense budget in half and nothing would change. The Russians would still have invaded and kept Crimea. The Chinese would still not have invaded Taiwan. Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq would be pretty much in the same state.

    • Re:He not wrong (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:53PM (#57831764)

      The US could cut its defense budget in half and nothing would change. The Russians would still have invaded and kept Crimea. The Chinese would still not have invaded Taiwan. Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq would be pretty much in the same state.

      Indeed. US spends an insane amount on the military- and as you say, even at half the current spending it would still dominate. The trick is spending smartly too. Invest in technology and the tools to be able to rapidly build up if needed; do we really need so many active service men in a time of peace?

      Jack Ma, is also right, we're losing against China economically because we're not growing our infrastructure. Keep investing for the future and stop spending everything now. Roads, stations, ports and harbours, electrical grids and technology... that's what makes you stronger tomorrow. Not having a base in the middle of nowhere filled with soldiers.

      • Re:He not wrong (Score:4, Insightful)

        by DarkRookie2 ( 5551422 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:58PM (#57831798)
        Like any one in power would do this. They will let everything go to shit and blame it on the Millenials and Gen Z. Which they are already doing.
      • Re:He not wrong (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:21PM (#57831996)
        U.S. military spending is huge simply because the U.S. economy is huge. If you look at military spending as percent of GDP [worldbank.org], the U.S. doesn't even make the top 20. It's slightly above the world average (3.1% vs 2.2%). And if you factor in that the U.S. is bound by the peace treaties ending WWII to provide for Japan's national defense, it's pretty much at the world average.

        Comparing based on raw dollars is like comparing food budget of an apartment complex in first world vs the food budget of a single family in a developing nation. You're ignoring differences in population and economic productivity.
        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          U.S. military spending is huge because the military budget is where most government science funding comes from. That and everything added from Iraq 2 on can be cut.

          Somehow I doubt the US is going to cut its military budget at the suggestion of our biggest threat though.

          • Re:He not wrong (Score:4, Insightful)

            by desdinova 216 ( 2000908 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @04:10PM (#57832374)
            do you really think China wants to get into a war with the US? all of the money they generate making stuff will go away. that would be cutting their hands off to spite their face
            • Re:He not wrong (Score:5, Insightful)

              by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @05:51PM (#57832960)

              do you really think China wants to get into a war with the US? all of the money they generate making stuff will go away. that would be cutting their hands off to spite their face

              What makes you think that all the players on the Chinese are rational actors who make rational decisions and that there are no war hawks on the Chinese side? Or as Eisenhower pointed out: "Wars are stupid and they can start stupidly," ... and that stupidity is usually born of nationalism and patriotic fever.

      • Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)

        by sycodon ( 149926 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:37PM (#57832120)

        We re losing jobs because China and other countries tolerate working conditions, environmental transgressions, and things that would never fly in the US.

        You CANNOT pick up a Chinese steel plant, drop it in Ohio, and operate it at the same level of profit as you can in China, even taking into account the wages and cost of materials. THAT is why US manufacturers go there.

        Some people say we have outsourced jobs. What we really outsourced was the pollution and working conditions that would never be tolerated in the U.S.

        Which begs the question: If it's not OK to manufacture things in the US under these conditions, then why is it OK to do so in China? If we import these items, are we not even a little bit morally responsible for the misery and pollution inflicted while creating these things?

        • Re:Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @04:51PM (#57832610)

          Wrong, we are losing jobs because they are gone. Today it takes 20 hours of human labor to build a car, in 1980 it was over 100. So most of the auto workers are gone. Not coming back. Ever.

        • Re:Wrong (Score:5, Interesting)

          by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @05:05PM (#57832662) Homepage Journal

          Maybe you should have gone all-in with the Paris Agreement then. Push hard for countries like China to clean up.

          In fact China is doing a hell of a lot. Peak coal for China was passed years ago. Massive investment in electric vehicles, especially for public transport. A lot of the polluting factories were shut down years ago too, back before the Olympics even.

          You could also just do what the EU does and require companies that outsource manufacturing to China to account for emissions over there in their environmental tax burden.

    • Re:He not wrong (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Comrade Ogilvy ( 1719488 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:03PM (#57831870)

      Pretty much. The US has spent 4-5% of its GDP on military for decades. Are our US citizens safer for all these pricey foreign entanglements? No. We still lost Vietnam. We are more targeted by terrorists and murderers than ever before. We still handed over Iraq to Iran. We still let Russia waltz into Crimea. We are still side players in the fate of Syria.

      The warmongers like to talk of the threat of China. But China is doing nothing more than all modern powers do: spends ballpark 2% or less. Because spending more is throwing money away.

      • All of which were the result of political decisions, not doctrine or equipment.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Major Blud ( 789630 )

        Are our US citizens safer for all these pricey foreign entanglements? No.

        But it's not just us....most European countries are safer. Japan is safer. Taiwan is safer. Australia, New Zealand, the list goes on. These are all countries that have defense treaties with the United States.
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        • by rnws ( 554280 )
          I'd just like to point out that the USA does not always honour those treaties - the ANZUS treaty is technically in abeyance with New Zealand as the USA refuses to politely abide by New Zealand's non-nuclear laws. (The USA military machine is welcome but it may not be nuclear-powered or nuclear-armed). Also a proportion of population, Nations like Oz and NZ make a greater contribution in terms of either peace-keeping or war-making manpower than the USA.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by guruevi ( 827432 )

      I think the Chinese would be halfway down the South China sea and entering both Korea and perhaps even Japan. India would be left to fend for itself on various fronts.

      Same goes for the Middle East, it would probably be either a pane of glass or Israel would be burning, the Suez and Panama canals, perhaps even the Bering Strait, the Chinese sea and various other shipping passage ways would either be closed or very expensive to cross.

      If the US didn't intervene at all in various geopolitical issues across the

      • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

        The specific issue was the active wars the US entered in the past 3 decades. They weren't necessary and simply worsened geopolitical stability that necessitated more military spending.

        Having the US as the global police (or rather, having a global police) itself isn't a bad thing.

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          It is a bad thing. There is no reason the US should innately hinder China, Russia, or anyone else. If they aren't a threat to the US it isn't a problem and if we aren't trying to hinder them I think you'd find they'd stop giving many fucks about us.

    • The US could cut its defense budget in half and nothing would change.

      Because halving 1/8 of spending is not much savings. Cutting the defense budget to zero would still leave an annual deficit.

      • Re:He not wrong (Score:5, Interesting)

        by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:15PM (#57831950) Journal
        Defense spending is 15% of all federal spending [pgpf.org] and the largest category of discretionary spending. It accounts for $610 billion (as of the time of the graphic) of all federal spending.

        You are correct in that there would still be an annual deficit. Current projections for 2018 show a deficit of $810 billion. That would be mean cutting defense spending in half would account for a 38% reduction in our yearly deficit.

        I don't know about you, but if I could reduce my deficit by one third, that seems like a pretty good idea.
    • Re:He not wrong (Score:5, Informative)

      by The Snazster ( 5236943 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:07PM (#57831894)
      China loves free trade . . . for everyone else. For themselves they much prefer mercantilism (fostering their economy with subsidies, tariffs, investment controls, currency controls, technology theft, government sponsored corporate spying, and any other trade barriers they can raise to their advantage). It's past time the playing field was leveled. If they want to keep playing with the big kids they need to start playing by the rules.

      Too many chump western politicians have let this go for far too long, rather than make the necessary waves.
    • Re:He not wrong (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:09PM (#57831916)

      The US could cut its defense budget in half and nothing would change. The Russians would still have invaded and kept Crimea. The Chinese would still not have invaded Taiwan. Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq would be pretty much in the same state.

      How absolutely wrong can you be?

      Is there no understanding of the deterrent effect of having a strong and world wide capable military presence? Isolationist policy doesn't work and hasn't worked for generations. "Speak Softly and carry a big stick" actually works, assuming the stick is big enough. So where you claim nothing would be different, you are obviously not considering what *could* have happened in a different environment with less deterrent from our military because it was weaker.

      It seems to be that we are largely ignoring the lessons of history. Why did Japan attack us? Because they believed they had a chance to win the conflict because of our weakened military was incapable of fighting in Europe AND the Pacific at the same time. The USA was trying to navigate a isolationist policy, not get into the war, yet our weakened stance is what tempted Japan into risking a war. Had we already built up, they very likely would have not considered the risk of going head to head with the US and contented themselves with what they had.

      Further, "provide for the common defense" is one of the primary purposes of the Federal Government established by the US Constitution. We need to take this purpose seriously for the benefit of our country in the future.

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )
        We could have continued production of the F-22 and updated/upgraded the designs of the A-10 and F-16/F-15 platforms for a fraction of the cost of the F-35 program and maintained both operational and deterrent capability. The F-22 program cost $66 billion. The F-35 program is estimated to cost $1.5 trillion through 2070 and is a piece of overengineered crap that asphyxiates it's pilots and repeated has fleet-wide groundings. And then there's the LCS debacle. We waste a crapload of money on the military o
        • So.. To sum up your arguments, because the F35 program was sooo expensive and other options *might* have been cheaper we should just not spend anything?

          Look, I'm not here to defend the F35 program, but the promise of the program was (and still is) a common platform that will be the mass produced airborne weapons delivery truck for decades. They will be stamping out thousands of these for decades. The promise here is that instead of having a hundred platforms to support with parts, tooling, software, logi

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Shaitan ( 22585 )

        You realize we have nuclear subs positioned strategically around the globe that can hit any country on earth at any time. Every other plane, soldier, tank, etc outside the US is unnecessary (except maybe embassy and special assignments).

        Not that we won't keep a strong military and continue to be the arms dealer of the world. Just having that honor means half the world would fight to protect our interests meaning we'd need even fewer actual troops of our own.

        "The USA was trying to navigate a isolationist pol

    • That was exactly his point - all those trillions could have slashed taxes to the AVERAGE person, developed a complete renewable energy infrastructure, created a completely fair no cost heath care system...but no - it was more important to kill non-white people while making a very few, very rich. Because, lets face it, nobody get's rich off "fair", and that's down right UnAmerican.
  • by AnonyMouseCowWard ( 2542464 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:39PM (#57831664)
    Well, he's right... We've been complaining here about inequality and how trickle-down economics don't work, and that's exactly what he's saying. It's not news though. The billionaires took control of politics and have been accumulating both money and power, and have been lying and getting votes from the exact people that would benefit most from redistribution. But that's okay... we prefer to believe we all have a chance at the American Dream, rather than have anything that resembles socialism.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      “A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the majority discovers it can vote itself largess out of the public treasury. After that, the majority always votes for the candidate promising the most benefits with the result the democracy collapses because of the loose fiscal policy ensuing, always to be followed by a dictatorship, then a monarchy." -- Alexander Fraser Tytler (aka Fake Ben Franklin)

      "Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they w

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 )

      But that's okay... we prefer to believe we all have a chance at the American Dream, rather than have anything that resembles socialism.

      We have all of these in the U.S.:

      Medicare
      Medicade
      Progressive Income Tax
      Social Security
      Social Security Disability
      Unemployment Insurance
      SNAP (Food Stamps)
      WIC

      What world do you live in where this doesn't resemble socialism?

      • by Archtech ( 159117 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:13PM (#57831936)

        We have all of these in the U.S.:

        Medicare
        Medicade
        Progressive Income Tax
        Social Security
        Social Security Disability
        Unemployment Insurance
        SNAP (Food Stamps)
        WIC

        What world do you live in where this doesn't resemble socialism?

        You forgot bank bailouts. ("Socialism for the rich"). Which cost far more than all the other stuff put together.

        Incidentally, state pensions and unemployment insurance were introduced by Bismarck in Germany, 1881-9. Bismarck was not a socialist.

        • by Orgasmatron ( 8103 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:37PM (#57832124)

          Bismark introduced those measures because he was hoping to stave off the impending full-blown socialism that he saw coming. He was correct, and his measures were somewhat successful - it would be ~30 years before the final collapse of the German right, and it would be another 10 years after that before the emerging leader of the German left was able to step into the resulting vacuum and implement the rest of the plan that Bismark had tried to suppress.

          But more to the point, there is no such thing as a pure socialist country or economy, nor is there anywhere to be found a pure free-market economy. Any example that can be found is actually a hybrid. In the west, we have modestly-free to mostly-free markets with some socialist-like features, such as the programs mentioned in the post you quoted. In places like China, they allow some free enterprise in small operations while everything large and/or important is operated by party operatives.

        • by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:39PM (#57832140) Journal

          You forgot bank bailouts. ("Socialism for the rich").

          Don't stop there. There's also auto bailouts, green energy subsidies, farm subsidies, economic grants for women and minorities, etc. You seem to be under the mistaken impression that just because someone is against social welfare that they can't be against corporate welfare as well.

        • You forgot bank bailouts. ("Socialism for the rich"). Which cost far more than all the other stuff put together.

          This is patently false, and you know it.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
          https://www.nationalpriorities... [nationalpriorities.org]

      • It is, however, the world's shittiest socialism. Brits be looking at this and going, why you got two Medi- things?

      • America (Score:5, Insightful)

        by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @04:12PM (#57832394)
        Medicaid pretty much requires you to be destitute. If you make $8/hr for 30/week you're not getting it. Source: Have friends & family that depended on it to survive major illnesses.

        SNAP has been cut back for decades. WIC too.

        The top brackets of our Progressive Income tax have been slashed non-stop for 40 years. Laws were put in place to make it hard to raise them again but easy to cut them, resulting in a "ratcheted" effect where they go down but never up. Government are then forced to implement regressive taxes like the "Netflix" and "Soda" taxes or just plain more sales tax because those aren't covered by the laws.

        Good luck getting on SSI Disability. I've got a buddy who's been in a wheel chair his entire life and has massive hearing loss (no call center work for him) and he fights tooth and to get what little he can. Only reason he's not homeless is friends and family keep pitching in.

        I could go on. We started slashing the safety net with Reagan. Nobody noticed because there were two massive economic bubbles in a row (Internet and Housing). Those bubbles are over and there's nothing on the horizon, folks are feeling it now. That's how we got a guy like Trump, the lower working class is looking for answers (well, their parents mostly, based on the polls of who voted for him and why). Thing is, we've danced this Charleston before: bad economy, demagogue, desperate working class.... It doesn't end well.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by bobbied ( 2522392 )

      Well, he's right... We've been complaining here about inequality and how trickle-down economics don't work, and that's exactly what he's saying. It's not news though. The billionaires took control of politics and have been accumulating both money and power, and have been lying and getting votes from the exact people that would benefit most from redistribution. But that's okay... we prefer to believe we all have a chance at the American Dream, rather than have anything that resembles socialism.

      I've never see such disparity between the rich (ruling class) and the poor (working class) than observed in Socialist countries of history.

      Why do we even care about the disparity? Why do we measure this? Should it not be about how well the poor live and how many poor you have? I think so.

      So, the measure of success in my view should be how wealthy are the poor in your country and how few of them you have. So even if there are uber filthy rich among us and a large disparity between the lower class and t

  • The tariffs aren't to try and fix any economic problems for the US. They are to punish China for their unfair practices such as impeding imports in various ways, government subsidizing production of goods at a loss, and manipulating their currency. Reducing the US defense spending would correct those imbalances with China exactly how?

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      The tariffs aren't to try and fix any economic problems for the US. They are to punish China for their unfair practices such as impeding imports in various ways, government subsidizing production of goods at a loss, and manipulating their currency.

      Read that again, slowly.

      I think you meant "The tariffs there to try to fix economic problems for the US, for example ...".

  • He isn't wrong. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:45PM (#57831692)

    While I expect his statement is meant as a Pro-China anti-US rant probably to rial up the Chinese citizens to help them deal with the economic hardships from the opposed restriction to their trade. Also would want the US to lower its military presence so China would have greater influence.

    However he isn't wrong, the US has been complacent in investing into itself. Defecate spending isn't a bad thing, if the money is being put into US services that that will pay for it self later on. However our taxes go mostly to the Military first, and what is left will get the crumbs. This creates a lot of holes in our safety net. This will prevent people from trying to take a risk and start a new business, get up and move to a different state or city to get a new job, being afraid to switch jobs even ones you hate, because you need the medical insurance.

    The conservative faction of the US calls such services as un-american, because that is what the Communist do. However a Democratic Republic with a Capitalist economy can have these support services as well too. The Communist also drink Vodka, so do Capitalist.

    • Re:He isn't wrong. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Guybrush_T ( 980074 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:55PM (#57831770)

      I agree. When I moved to the US, I was stuck by two things :

      • How much taxes I paid. Not that different from Europe, and it's not due to the state ; the Federal taxes are most of it.
      • How crappy public service is. Really. IRS (which is supposed to be the best service, with lots of money) is the worst administration I've had to deal with.

      So I was wondering .. where does all the money go ? Then I realized the obvious. Military.

      • So I was wondering .. where does all the money go ? Then I realized the obvious. Military.

        Oh, look! You were wrong about that too!

        Yeah, the US Military budget is only a small part of total Federal spending, never mind total government spending....

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          It's one of the major differences between European and American spending though. Every western country has most of the big ticket items: social security and health care, infrastructure, etc. The US has less of some of those, and a *lot* more military spending.

    • However our taxes go mostly to the Military first, and what is left will get the crumbs.

      Interesting theory you have there.

      Let's see...Federal Budget 2018: $4.094 trillion.

      Military budget 2018: $574 billion.

      Oh, look! The military budget (all of it), is less than 1/6 the Federal budget....

      • I mean, I know 1/6 is less than 5/6. But, dude(tte), you're spending 1/6 of your money on the Military when in reality you haven't really accomplished much with it. Any responsible country would take a long hard look at the number and turn that 1/6 into 1/116 pretty quickly.
    • by diodeus ( 96408 )

      "Defecate spending". I'm sure you meant "deficit", but poop is even funnier.

    • It's probably a little of column A, a little of column B. Calling Americans dumb plays well in China, but... yeah, he ain't wrong.

      However our taxes go mostly to the Military first

      eeeeeh, not really. Nothing gets "most". It really depends on how you group it. The biggest chunk is social security, which is really just forced retirement savings (plus a bit of welfare on the side). That's taxes that we're paying to ourselves later. That's a bit over a trillion this year. Hi baby-boomers. I'm not sure that system is going to survive another 30 years. Then co

  • Yes and no (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ChromeAeonuim ( 1026946 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:51PM (#57831740)

    blaming China for any economic issues in the U.S. is misguided

    You mean besides state sponsored IP theft, currency manipulation, dumping practices, and disregarding human & environmental welfare to compete on price?

    He's not wrong about the war part. Bush, Cheney, and their cronies emptied the country's coffers to enrich a handful of millionaire and billionaires in the military industrial complex with their bullshit wars. What they did is inexcusable, especially when you consider the opportunity cost of not investing that vast sum of money elsewhere (ex infrastructure, education, healthcare, research, alternative energy, ect.). Think of what we could have if that money was spent productively, like finding cures for diseases (much more likely to hurt you than a terrorist) or aerospace, or any number of other things, and the US needs to get it's shit together when it comes to planning for the future. But China isn't playing entirely fair either.

    he American multinational companies made millions and millions of dollars from globalization,

    When Joe Schmoe's job disappeared, he didn't see a gain, it was so a millionaire could have even more. It's not hard to understand why some people are unhappy.

    • He's not wrong about the war part. Bush, Cheney, and their cronies emptied the country's coffers to enrich a handful of millionaire and billionaires in the military industrial complex with their bullshit wars. What they did is inexcusable, especially when you consider the opportunity cost of not investing that vast sum of money elsewhere (ex infrastructure, education, healthcare, research, alternative energy, ect.). Think of what we could have if that money was spent productively, like finding cures for diseases (much more likely to hurt you than a terrorist) or aerospace, or any number of other things, and the US needs to get it's shit together when it comes to planning for the future.

      Bush and Cheney should definitely get blame for opening the can of worms however it's worth noting that little changed during Obama or Trump. We've yet to have a president that is serious about cutting military spending post 9/11.

    • Think of what we could have if that money was spent productively, like finding cures for diseases (much more likely to hurt you than a terrorist)

      That always strikes me as oddly static thinking.

      Behavior isn't static; terrorism is "rare" (when and where it is) because it is strongly opposed and rarely achieves its goal.

      If we slack off of opposing it, it becomes more effective, and there is much more incentive to engage in it.

      It's a bit like saying that we should save money by never buying antibiotics. After all, death from infectious bacterial diseases is rare in developed countries! What a waste!

    • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

      You mean besides state sponsored IP theft, currency manipulation, dumping practices, and disregarding human & environmental welfare to compete on price?

      I mean, it's not like the US doesn't subsidize a shitload of its own industries (which is why Canada and the EU had agricultural tariffs to begin with). Put up trade barriers (25% on pickup trucks) and mess with its currency value via huge Fed purchases of treasury bonds. But when we do it, it's "for the good of the country".

      But China isn't playing entirely fair either.

      The US didn't get to where it is by expecting everyone else to "play fair" or even by playing fair itself. It got to where it is by allowing its private market to do its thing while als

  • Jack Ma is Chinese for Ric Romero.
  • Chicom bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)

    by whodunit ( 2851793 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @02:58PM (#57831810)

    That's pretty fucking rich coming from a country that's pouring billions of dollars into building artificial islands in the South China Sea, a brand-new war fleet and expensive ballistic missiles, all of which are designed for the sole and explicit purpose of ejecting the United States from SE Asia by force of arms. To say nothing of blowing tens of billions on the "Belt and Road" initiative, which was intended to spread Chinese influence and control across the region, but has ended up being a colossal waste of money, just like skeptics warned. [bloomberg.com] And this shithead's going to sass us for "wasting money?" Fuck him.

    Besides, he knows damn well where the money from globalization went - straight into the pockets of the huge multinational corporations that directly benefited from labor outsourcing, who've either sat on it or re-invested it in expanding factories overseas to employ more foreign workers and create more cheap product - everything and anything butb injecting it into the US economy. We know why our economy stagnated - worker wages flatlining (considering inflation, actual falling) while the globalizing corporations profits skyrocketed. And some of that money went into the pockets of Reps and Senators on both sides of the aisle to keep them lecturing those silly rube voters on why globalism "works."

    Fuck Jack Ma, and fuck the Chicoms that brung'im.

  • He'll revive the clean coal industry and crush the rest of the industrialized world!

    .

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    .

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    .

    .

    .

    (please don't make me explain sarcasm)

  • by Spy Handler ( 822350 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:04PM (#57831886) Homepage Journal

    "The American multinational companies made millions and millions of dollars from globalization"

    Billions, not millions.

    "Where did it go?

    To officers and shareholders of the corporations, i.e. the "elites".

    Some of it dribbled down to the workers in China and Vietnam in the form of slave wages, but not all that much. None of it went to American workers, because they're not using American workers. But hey no problem, just get 'em on food stamps and tell them to live in section 8 housing. Who needs a middle class lifestyle?

    But it's gonna backfire on them sooner or later. I foresee a socialist revolution in the making, led by the likes of Ocasio-Cortez. Well not by her specifically, I don't think she has the ruthlessness or the balls to become the next Lenin. But someone in her orbit who does have what it takes to be a good dictator and who isn't afraid of executing a few thousand members of the opposition.

    Do I want to see such a thing happen? No, not really. Soviet Union, Cuba, Venezuela etc. weren't exactly pleasant places to live. BUT ON THE OTHER HAND, the current rulers of USA (a.k.a. the Deep State) are such despicable characters, it would feel really good to see their billions wiped out and the high and mighty former CEOs and directors and senators become penniless, and then summarily executed 1918 style.

    • I foresee a socialist revolution in the making, led by the likes of Ocasio-Cortez.

      That makes little sense ... there is, you may have noticed, a somewhat sizeable movement recently to oppose all this globalization, but it certainly isn't being led by whatsherface or her party.

    • >"To officers and shareholders of the corporations, i.e. the "elites"."

      Elites? Shareholders are not the "elites." For the most part, they are ALL OF US. All our retirement savings, all the day traders, anyone can buy and own stock- there is no artificial barrier to entry there.

      Now, if you want to make a case about the officers, perhaps we could discuss that. But keep in mind the shareholders elect and control the board of directors who hire the officers. And the shareholders want (and rightfully exp

  • That must be a typo.
  • by BLToday ( 1777712 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:19PM (#57831980)

    China doesn’t need any carriers, military airplanes, or build artificial islands in South China Sea. They totally could use that money to build more bridges, skyscrapers and maybe fix the roads between Tianjin and Beijing. Or maybe a few more nuclear plants.

  • 50% have no wealth now! [savages.com] Using data from Congressional Budget Office study [cbo.gov] and doing a polynomial regression shows who got rich and who did not.
  • "instead of feeding graft and cronies." FTFY.
  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:31PM (#57832068) Journal

    Let's face it: our military is conservative welfare. If you live in a small town or rural area, the only job opportunity for many young men is the military.

  • by imperious_rex ( 845595 ) on Wednesday December 19, 2018 @03:58PM (#57832270)
    Jack Ma isn't the first person to point this out and certainly won't be the last. For example, Thomas Friedman has been saying this for years. Friedman questioned the wisdom of pouring money into countries that will NEVER amount to anything. Afghanistan will always be a backwards, tribal s**thole country riven by warlords and violence. Iraq has a tiny sliver of potential to be more than just another oil barrel nation, but it's too rife with corruption and sectarian grudges to ever realize that potential. Friedman pointed out that the amount of money pissed away on our adventures in the middle-east and central Asia could buy every American a 4-year college degree and still have money left over for infrastructure development and other societal ills. What really saddens me is that we're 17 years into this "Forever War," and every year the memory of living in a nation at peace fades just a little bit more.
  • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

    Calling Captain Obvious.

The truth of a proposition has nothing to do with its credibility. And vice versa.

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