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Australian media upset by PRC's success

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发表于 2009-9-11 21:26 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
The Peoples Republic of China has been able to ride through the global economic storm by bringing into play the advantages of the socialistic system. This has annoyed the Australian and other Western mainstream media which had hoped for the Chinese economy to also collapse. Here is an article from an Australian left-wing group that analyzes this development.

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Factories closing, recession, financial institutions collapsing. These realities which are engulfing capitalist countries (realities which hurt working class people the most) are making propagandists for the “free market” system rather uneasy. In fact, more than uneasy. The whole situation is likely to give advocates of capitalism a case of the runs that is even worse than that which afflicts their stock markets. After all, the main argument that they have been throwing at the masses for decades is that, despite everything, “capitalism develops the economy.” How are they going to bailout pro-capitalist ideology now!

If that were not bad enough, the capitalist rulers know that everyone is talking about “Communist China’s” economic successes. They would know that people would’ve watched the Beijing Olympic Games and would have noted the efficiency with which the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) organised the events. They know that Olympic viewers could not but be impressed by the marvelous stadiums that the PRC built and would have been wowed by the beauty of the Olympics opening ceremony that the People’s China conducted. And those who thought more deeply about it all may be struck by how this was all happening in a country that in its pre-1949 capitalist times was hopelessly subjugated by Western colonial powers.

For a long time, pro-capitalist intellectuals said to working class people: although socialism seems a lot fairer to you, it is economically “impractical.” But for many years now, socialistic China has been pulling hundreds of millions of its people out of the terrible poverty that they had inherited from the old capitalist days. Today, the PRC’s state-owned banking system remains solid while capitalist financial systems collapse around them.

So how are the capitalist rulers trying to deal with this nasty, this imploding headache of an issue, the issue of the PRC economic juggernaut? Well, they have set their propaganda machines to be able to run in two completely opposite directions when the China button is pushed. In one option, they make all sorts of slanders about the alleged effects of China’s “communist rule” on “human rights” and other issues. In Option 2, however,when having to mention China’s economic successes they claim that her development is due not to socialism but to a supposed growing “embrace of capitalism.”

Nevertheless, attempts to hide the socialistic bedrock of China’s development are belied by the nature of China’s core economic sectors. These sectors remain controlled by public enterprises. The enterprises involved include the giants – like Boasteel, Chinalco and CNOOC - that have been holding up the Australian economy through their imports of Australian iron ore, aluminium and gas. Every single one of the PRC’s biggest 22 firms remain majority state-owned (The Australian, 18 August 2008.) And of China’s top 500 tax-paying companies, 89.8% of the taxes are paid by state-owned enterprises (2007 figures.)

To be sure, since 1978 the Beijing government has embarked on a “reform” and “opening” policy that has allowed the market to play a greater role in the economy and enabled capitalists to penetrate chunks of the economy. This led to much greater inequality and allowed capitalists to gain ownership or part-ownership of big parts of China’s light manufacturing for export industries. Alongside these economic concessions to the right came a dangerous rightward ideological drift in Beijing’s politics. The PRC government still proclaimed that it was building socialism but this was mixed with ambiguities about its commitment to oppose capitalism.

Nevertheless, the PRC remains a socialistic state, a workers state. This state has serious bureaucratic deformations and lots of problems. Yet it remains the state that was created by the overthrow of capitalist rule in 1949, it remains the state that was created by the Chinese Revolution, by the heroic victory in struggle of hundreds of millions of poor people, tenants and workers. It is this character of the PRC that has enabled China to ensure that its core economic sectors – steel, oil/gas, banking, communications, shipping, automotive, shipbuilding, rail manufacturing, power etc – are owned collectively by all the people. And it is this pro-socialist character of the PRC state that is the barrier to capitalist restoration in China.

It is now more difficult for anti-communist mouthpieces to simply say that China has “gone capitalist” because under President Hu Jintao PRC politics have shifted somewhat to the left in recent years. This movement to the left is rather tenuous and contradictory and the program of the Communist Party of China (CPC) leadership still falls way short of the approach that a revolutionary communist party would take. Nevertheless, the shift to the left is evidenced in both Hu’s moves to redistribute income to the poor and in the Beijing leadership’s more emphatic statements about the need to maintain a socialist path. Faced with this reality, Western media and politicians are resorting more and more to old-fashioned anti-communist propaganda against China – propaganda of the type that they used in their earlier Cold War against the Soviet Union. This includes the well-worn refrain that “socialism does not work.”

Now, how do people, that claim that “socialism does not work,” try to sound credible when everyone can see that it is capitalism that is in the midst of an economic crisis? Well, what they are prone to shouting is that China too is having an economic meltdown. And that is what many media accounts in Australia and the U.S. have been blaring out in the last few months: that China’s economy is “dramatically” slowing and is having a “huge downturn.” These reports are indeed connected to reality but are also deliberately exaggerated. The truth is that last year China’s economy grew overall by over 9% which is not only a long way from a recession but also over twice the growth rate that most capitalist economies have achieved at the best of times in the last few years. This did not stop The Sydney Morning Herald (23 January 2009) from triumphantly headlining “The great stall of China” after it was announced that China’s economic growth rate had slowed to 6.8% in the fourth quarter of 2008.

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There is not enough room here to post the whole article so to read the entire article go to:

http://web.aanet.com.au/tplatform/China.html
发表于 2009-9-11 21:32 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 渔音谦谦 于 2009-9-11 21:33 编辑

OMG。。
the whole article is quite long~~
but thanks for sharing~~

is it write by yourself?
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 楼主| 发表于 2009-9-11 21:57 | 显示全部楼层
Thanks. I hope you take the time to read the whole article even though it is long.

The article was written collectively by the group I belong to.

We are a group that opposes capitalism in Australia and the racism that it brings. We also oppose Australian imperialist plunder and bullying of so-called "Third World" countries.

We are very sympathetic to the Peoples Republic of China, because we believe that the Chinese Revolution and socialistic construction is not only a great victory for the Chinese masses but for all the exploited and oppressed people of the world.

Therefore even though I am not Chinese, I consider the Peoples Republic of China as my country because it is a workers state. In contrast the Australian state is not mine because it only belongs to a handful of rich exploiters. Of course we want to change that and make Australia a much fairer country!
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发表于 2009-9-11 22:09 | 显示全部楼层
The Peoples Republic of China has been able to ride through the global economic storm by bringing into play the advantages of the socialistic system. This has annoyed the Australian and other Western  ...
*****************************************************

There is not enough room here to post the whole article so to read the entire article go to:

http://web.aanet.com.au/tplatform/China.html
trotskyistplatf 发表于 2009-9-11 21:26

Welcome to AC and thanks for sharing~
感谢楼主,另外是不是可以考虑把链接里的文章放到原文库?
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发表于 2009-9-11 22:15 | 显示全部楼层
Welcome to AC and thanks for sharing~
感谢楼主,另外是不是可以考虑把链接里的文章放到原文库?
rhapsody 发表于 2009-9-11 22:09


PM吧主。应该可以转去原文库吧。
还有。。这篇文超级长。。。
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发表于 2009-9-11 22:27 | 显示全部楼层
Thanks. I hope you take the time to read the whole article even though it is long.

The article was written collectively by the group I belong to.

We are a group that opposes capitalism in Australia  ...
trotskyistplatf 发表于 2009-9-11 21:57


thanks ~~
I  really admire your spirit..
but i think we need to translate the article into Chinese so that more people can understand your opinion~~

Do you mind if we move the article to another part od AC ?
that part was  specifically set up for articles in foreign language..
this is the address~
http://bbs.m4.cn/forum-163-1.html
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发表于 2009-9-11 23:28 | 显示全部楼层
qi dai fan yi ;

xie xie.
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发表于 2009-9-12 00:01 | 显示全部楼层
有意向翻译此篇超级长的文章的请移步原文库认领。
不过要翻译全文估计要团队了。
http://bbs.m4.cn/thread-195707-1-1.html
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 楼主| 发表于 2009-9-12 09:58 | 显示全部楼层
thanks ~~
I  really admire your spirit..
but i think we need to translate the article into Chinese so that more people can understand your opinion~~

Do you mind if we move the article to another part od AC ?
that part was  specifically set up for articles in foreign language..
this is the address~
http://bbs.m4.cn/forum-163-1.html


Thanks Yue Yin Kwok for letting me know of this part of AC. I did not know about it before. I will use it in the future.

I use to post in the English part of anti-cnn but people do not look at that part anymore. I think now the English forum is accessed in a different way via the Chinese site so people who know only English have trouble accessing it.

What does it mean to "claim the venue of the original library"? Sorry I am not aware of this term.
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发表于 2009-9-12 11:40 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 curiouspuppy 于 2009-9-12 15:58 编辑

9# trotskyistplatf

OK. It's fine to post your articles directly here, the economic section of the AC forum, so that we can notice them in time:) And obviously many people here (ACers) can understand them. Welcome and thank you and Yue Yin Kwok for your appreciation! And I believe some people here will be interested in visiting your site, too.

Any articles you want to post or for those not related to economy, you can post them into http://bbs.m4.cn/forum-163-1.html, the library for articles originally written in non-Chinese languages, so that some ACers interested might choose from them for translating into Chinese. We may also help copy/move your works into that library when necessary :)
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发表于 2009-9-12 11:46 | 显示全部楼层
这是英文版块吗?我还以为走错地方了
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 楼主| 发表于 2009-9-12 21:27 | 显示全部楼层
[quote] 9 # trotskyistplatf

OK. It's fine to post your articles directly here, the economic section of the AC forum, so that we can notice them in time:) And obviously many people here (ACers) can understand ...
curiouspuppy published in 2009-9-12 11:40 [/ quote]

Thanks Curiouspuppy.
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发表于 2009-9-13 14:43 | 显示全部楼层
啊哈,我们什么时候开始翻译?我加入一个
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发表于 2009-9-13 14:44 | 显示全部楼层
我帮你把全文转到原文库吧
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发表于 2009-9-13 14:46 | 显示全部楼层
我帮你把全文转到原文库吧
連長 发表于 2009-9-13 14:44


已经转了
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发表于 2009-9-13 14:55 | 显示全部楼层
已经转了
渔音谦谦 发表于 2009-9-13 14:46


你们转的很少的一部分
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