Quote from heech:
Not sure why you want to make this a personal fight. If you have a point, make it. If you don't have one, shut up.
I'll just throw a few points out there... even though, again, not my intention to make this discussion about ME.
First of all, I own a home in China, and I'm frequently there for work + pleasure. I am Chinese + born in China.
Second of all, I (currently) make much more in the US than I could for a comparable job in China. So, my permanent residence is (currently) in the US. I don't think this will change over the course of my career (the next 10-20 years.)
Finally, very likely my wife and I will have our kids do at least some of their early schooling in China, because I think it's very possible, over the course of THEIR career, that they'd make more in China than in the US.
Quote from bone:
Speaking as an engineer myself by training, when was that ? Certainly not in the 20th Century.
Not sure about water supply... I mean, intuitively it makes sense as an issue, but I'd have to see the math on it. (It's a lot like the discussion about "peak oil"; it "makes sense" as a theory, but I suspect a lot depends on how you calculate compounding over time... I really don't know the truth.)Quote from Debaser82:
Heech, a perma China bull like Jim Rogers claims polution (why he doesnt goes and lives there) and water suply are the 2 biggest obstacles China faces today.
Would you agree and how is China doing handling them?
Cheers.
Quote from Ghost of Cutten:
Globalization is capitalism - if you restrict international trade, you are restricting capitalism.
no kidding, feudalism is a polite term, why not just call it government slavery. Work here or die really isn't much of a choice. Even the slaves were provided food clothing and shelter.Quote from Random.Capital:
Not according to Adam Smith.
The current form of globalization is not capitalism, it is neo-feudalism. Give people (ie, labor) the right to cross borders, and then we might be on to something more like "capitalism".
move that mason-dixon line to the Texas border, find a modern day Tubman and form a new underground railroad and when they finally make it to Cairo they'll finally be free.Quote from oldtime:
no kidding, feudalism is a polite term, why not just call it government slavery. Work here or die really isn't much of a choice. Even the slaves were provided food clothing and shelter.