Why China cannot abandon communism

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  • čas přidán 18. 10. 2021
  • Sign up to Morning Brew for free today at bit.ly/mbcaspianreport2
    President Xi Jinping pledged to redistribute wealth while turning up the heat on China's upscale citizens and businesses. So, what keeps Chinese communism going?
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Komentáře • 4,7K

  • @CaspianReport
    @CaspianReport  Před 2 lety +231

    Sign up to Morning Brew for free today at bit.ly/mbcaspianreport2

    • @shivanshverma2825
      @shivanshverma2825 Před 2 lety +7

      First

    • @Icenri
      @Icenri Před 2 lety +4

      Hi, Mr. Shivan, could you do a video on the basic rules of geopolitics? One that would explain terms like heartland and underbelly or how the elites are usually in the coast and are liberal while the people from the interior tend to be more conservative.

    • @112deeps
      @112deeps Před 2 lety +1

      Problem with Communism is when you have not much you can only share not much ; & when you have nothing you can only share nothing....!

    • @angamaitesangahyando685
      @angamaitesangahyando685 Před 2 lety +1

      @@112deeps The problem with Communism is that it is a European meme. The word is translated in Korea and China and means something else. A similar case is with "nationalism" - where Korean and Chinese "nationalists" sold their own women to American occupiers.
      - Adûnâi

    • @kashmirha
      @kashmirha Před 2 lety

      Russia has the same problem, just as a mirror image...

  • @gxlorp
    @gxlorp Před 2 lety +3805

    It's kind of crazy the entire earth is like a centuries long real time strategy game where we are alive for a few turns.

    • @infochase6656
      @infochase6656 Před 2 lety +58

      Lol.

    • @perspective500
      @perspective500 Před 2 lety +322

      Its almost as if it's the other way round and rts was inspired by civilizational narratives 😁

    • @Random13Guy
      @Random13Guy Před 2 lety +95

      And it's kind of shocking that we'll be able to create a human-like centuries long real time strategy simulations (games) in just a few years from now.

    • @xHomu
      @xHomu Před 2 lety +163

      Just one more turn...

    • @danielwatson7713
      @danielwatson7713 Před 2 lety +8

      @@xHomu lol

  • @kimsoon6927
    @kimsoon6927 Před 2 lety +3837

    The most stressful part of writing a caspian episode must be figuring out the smart one liner in the end..

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves Před 2 lety +125

      It's the thing that makes his videos gold.
      Also memes. Many of them.

    • @balkanmontero
      @balkanmontero Před 2 lety +76

      He keeps delivering great one liners too

    • @ahkee369
      @ahkee369 Před 2 lety +4

      This episode should be easy. Just take from the Commie Chinese Party propaganda.

    • @anneeq008
      @anneeq008 Před 2 lety +34

      Yh he failed with this one though

    • @johnnzboy
      @johnnzboy Před 2 lety +61

      @@anneeq008 You think? "It's always darkest before it's totally black."? I thought that was a nice subversion of expectation and it made me chuckle. Not a classic, perhaps, but not a failure.

  • @CKBmay10
    @CKBmay10 Před 2 lety +411

    I like your analysis of why the coastal provinces need the interior. Another one: controlling Tibet is controlling water, where Yangtze and Yellow rivers starts, and Indus, Mekong, etc… that’s also crucial and power

    • @WALKUREX
      @WALKUREX Před 2 lety +7

      His analysis is dumb since China isn't a communist state, its an authoritarian state

    • @k.umquat8604
      @k.umquat8604 Před 2 lety +16

      @@WALKUREX It's more complicated than that. China is still, de jure, a communist state, and so it has a number of "obligations"

    • @roguegenesis7020
      @roguegenesis7020 Před 2 lety +2

      @@WALKUREX his analysis is batshut but the basics are true, China does present itself as a communist state everywhere, to its citizens, it's organisations are function similar to communist ones as hypocritical as it sounds
      A top pro government intellectual in China calls this the secular mandate of heaven, it gives a certain legitimacy to china in not just homeland but to also leftists in other countries that it's strategically advantageous

    • @Devilishlybenevolent
      @Devilishlybenevolent Před 2 lety +13

      @@roguegenesis7020 Yeah and we in America call ourselves a democratic country, but in reality we're an oligarchy where both rep/dems work for the corporations.

    • @twally87
      @twally87 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Devilishlybenevolent 100% completely unrelated to CKBmay10's comment...

  • @ezhar4690
    @ezhar4690 Před 2 lety +71

    You have forgot to mention how the inner areas are helping the economy of coastal areas by providing them with much needed raw materials to develop their economies in the first place

    • @oh753
      @oh753 Před 2 lety +10

      I'm surprised he did not mention that and instead chose to say they are "buffers".

    • @chrismcaulay7805
      @chrismcaulay7805 Před 2 lety +2

      Thank God there is another person with a brain in the comments... China's real powers comes from its raw materials, if not for the raw materials there would be no reason to keep these "buffers" because war is very different now than when the Mongols where marauding around...

  • @brownbricks6017
    @brownbricks6017 Před 2 lety +2650

    I think it's worth pointing out that, historically, the Chinese heartland is not the coast, but the North China Plain.

    • @indeterminate4794
      @indeterminate4794 Před 2 lety +394

      The CCPs heartland was in the north, but the economic heartland of China was in the coasts.

    • @majormononoke8958
      @majormononoke8958 Před 2 lety +220

      True, but i think he was taking more about the wealth and "heartland" of today, which would be around the coast like he pointed out.

    • @geoffreycharles6330
      @geoffreycharles6330 Před 2 lety +25

      Is the North Chinese plain the region we call Manchuria around Port Arthur or the one around Shanghai?

    • @dannyrussell7333
      @dannyrussell7333 Před 2 lety +216

      @@geoffreycharles6330 Neither, they're talking about the Yellow River basin.

    • @geoffreycharles6330
      @geoffreycharles6330 Před 2 lety +2

      @@dannyrussell7333 whichis that near to? Isn't it Shanghai?

  • @KishoreMathers
    @KishoreMathers Před 2 lety +1734

    "no political system can operate eternally"
    san marino: are you challenging me?

    • @cpt.honklerof3rdkekistania400
      @cpt.honklerof3rdkekistania400 Před 2 lety +55

      Thank you for this i never knew about it.

    • @jasonalex7640
      @jasonalex7640 Před 2 lety +39

      @@cpt.honklerof3rdkekistania400 is kekistan a right wing political country ?

    • @kimmogensen4888
      @kimmogensen4888 Před 2 lety +118

      61.2 km2 and Population 33,600. it must take 10 minutes to drive through the city or I mean the country. But very cool italy has not just annexed the city, and let them be themselves.

    • @user-mw6ec3wh2e
      @user-mw6ec3wh2e Před 2 lety +8

      Mixed system vs. U.S.

    • @the-quintessenz
      @the-quintessenz Před 2 lety +78

      Even Napoleon and Mussolini left it alone.

  • @LotharTheFellhanded
    @LotharTheFellhanded Před 2 lety +64

    I don’t know if this reflects the CCP thinking, but on he idea of the interior as the shield for China; the era of anyone launching a major land invasion through Western China is pretty much past. Especially against a nuclear power. Whether they worry about that, I don’t know, but it doesn’t seem a reasonable worry.
    The real reason China doesn’t abandon its pretense at communism (I do not consider them communist anymore) is because the communist revolutionary struggle is the founding myth of the CCP. To abandon it would lose their legitimacy and call into question why there is one party rule if that party has no real ideology to justify itself. China is purely authoritarian now. It is an empire again, just like Russia, just one that clothes itself in the tawdry red banners of communism instead of that of ancient feudal warlords like the imperial government did. Their ideology is wealth and power and a fervent nationalism, fueled by grudges from the century of humiliation. They have no utopian socialist ideals, their goal is only to hold onto power and wealth for themselves and do anything required to stamp out any ember of revolutionary ideas, be they socialist, ethnic, nationalist, religious, etc.
    America and Europe’s liberal democracies have curdled into neoliberal oligarchy, and China’s Maoist revolutionaries have given way to this naked authoritarianism and also oligarchy. It’s oligarchs the world over. The future is dominated by mega corporations that the west isn’t going to restrain. China is going to try but its probably not going to work. Striking down Jack Ma was a surprise but Chinese corporations are only going to grow and they can insert all the commissars they want onto every board, but in the end, those commissars will want the good life they see around them, so they’ll switch sides.

    • @ex0duzz
      @ex0duzz Před 2 lety +8

      China needs to worry about India from the west, terrorists from Afghanistan, and of course Russia from north and north west.
      Relations might be good now, but China thinks long term. In hundred or few hundred years, all that water in Tibet will pay off and will need to be defended from everyone. India has always tried to influence and claim Tibet and parts of western China.
      In case you forgot, 20 Indian and 4 Chinese soldiers just died not long ago in border clash, and there was invasion by India in 62 and in 70s, with periodic Clashes still. Himalayas is the moat defending china.. And china would be dumb to let India cross the moat uncontested and mass up on the other side to prepare for invasion of Tibet. India would get smoked either way, but using the natural moat is a no brainer.

    • @ziqianzijun228
      @ziqianzijun228 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bharathamempire6613 印度是历史上存在的国家吗?他只是英国殖民地聚合管理的产物,然后不尊重历史就成了你们的领土?搞笑

    • @acharya8959
      @acharya8959 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ziqianzijun228 Bots 🤷

    • @karlnord1429
      @karlnord1429 Před 2 lety +1

      @LotharTheFellhanded Amazing post dude Tyvm

    • @kevinguyclifton
      @kevinguyclifton Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly this is the first correct comment.

  • @nathanwinters1247
    @nathanwinters1247 Před 2 lety +4

    If the workers don't own the means of production, it's not communism.

  • @bangscutter
    @bangscutter Před 2 lety +656

    He who controls Tibet, controls the water source that feeds the two most populous nations on earth. Hence, Tibet is very important to both China and India.

    • @rozariomesiti2774
      @rozariomesiti2774 Před 2 lety +13

      Jade Empire flashback

    • @payalkakade
      @payalkakade Před 2 lety +9

      @white blue brown green neither was China's

    • @jingchengyang8957
      @jingchengyang8957 Před 2 lety +39

      @@payalkakade Since Qing Dynasty, India didn't even exist by then.

    • @CannibaLouiST
      @CannibaLouiST Před 2 lety +51

      @@YizhouRong Do not interpret medieval empires' way of ruling as the same as modern nation states. They ain't. And being a tributary state is not the same as being a Chinese territory.

    • @user-ct8tp7ok4b
      @user-ct8tp7ok4b Před 2 lety +24

      @@payalkakade learn history 💩if Tibet wasn’t part of China,north America isn’t belong to white!

  • @Mr.Nichan
    @Mr.Nichan Před 2 lety +1441

    The regional wealth disparity really helps me understand China.
    EDIT: The key word is "regional". Also, people seem to read things into this comment that aren't there.

    • @michael3032
      @michael3032 Před 2 lety +99

      Eh its natural that the areas nearer to the coast are richer than the much farther inland areas.
      But things have been improving all around, and the Chinese government have been putting in effort in poverty alleviation (absolute poverty has been eradicated in 2020)

    • @lk8300
      @lk8300 Před 2 lety +6

      Hunger games

    • @drscopeify
      @drscopeify Před 2 lety +82

      This is a bullshit argument because rural areas of the USA are much poorer than the coast or rich cities but the USA does not need communisim to run the country. All countries in the world have poor areas or rural areas so this argument is nonsense.

    • @DerPlusquamperfekt
      @DerPlusquamperfekt Před 2 lety +161

      @@drscopeify The USA doesn't have large native ethnicities. There is no threat of Iroquois secession.

    • @timmulder6362
      @timmulder6362 Před 2 lety +20

      I mean in the red area's live only around 10% of the Total population so it looks way worse than it actually is.

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 Před 2 lety +69

    I've been on a kick learning about Chinese history and government lately, and I very much appreciate this socioeconomic and geopolitical perspective on modern China.
    Stay well out there everybody, and God bless you friends! :)

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 2 lety

      You should, it won’t be long until a letter comes in the mail for your conscription to put the Chinese government in the dirt

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 2 lety

      @@AnglersUAE oh no another ‘the internet doesn’t count!’ Ok boomer

    • @skylarkesselring6075
      @skylarkesselring6075 Před 2 lety

      @@looinrims that letter is going straight in the trash

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 2 lety

      @@skylarkesselring6075 the us government isn’t asking

  • @chaosXP3RT
    @chaosXP3RT Před 2 lety +8

    I just wanna say that I really love this channel! Keep up the good work. I sit down and set aside time to watch every video! And they also seem well-researched and as near as non-bias as possible!

  • @prussiangreen6940
    @prussiangreen6940 Před 2 lety +470

    People should note that topographically speaking, China isn't one flat mass of land. Much like the US, coastal states are evidently richer (California, New York, etc.). Central China is topographically a basin and more prone to flooding. Western China is elevated, hence it is difficult to connect it to the coastal cities. North-Western China is surrounded by deserts and frequented by sandstorms.

    • @gxlorp
      @gxlorp Před 2 lety +17

      Aye, best keep away from tusken raiders

    • @YanPagh
      @YanPagh Před 2 lety +13

      China could be way better if they just let their people thrive by their own volition.

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast Před 2 lety +43

      Western China is ALWAYS going to be (and always has been) relatively poor. For topographic and climatic reasons, the population per square kilometre is very low.

    • @screwyourhandle
      @screwyourhandle Před 2 lety +16

      Geography shapes history, the environment shapes its inhabitants, just like a container shapes whatever liquid you pour into it.

    • @sleepyjoe4529
      @sleepyjoe4529 Před 2 lety +22

      @@YanPagh that's for them to decide, not you

  • @avishalom2000lm
    @avishalom2000lm Před 2 lety +562

    "It's always darkest before it's completely black." Not as cheery and upbeat as the usual saying goes, but it's much closer to reality.

    • @abberss
      @abberss Před 2 lety +24

      I think something got lost in translation with that one. It doesn't make any sense.

    • @juliantheapostate8295
      @juliantheapostate8295 Před 2 lety +25

      @@abberss It's a retort to the saying 'It's always darkest before the dawn'

    • @-Teca-
      @-Teca- Před 2 lety +5

      Makes no sense

    • @rajanikantsingh4429
      @rajanikantsingh4429 Před 2 lety +10

      It doesn't because it's really not what happens. A candle gives last high light before blackout. Saying this discount the reality, sometimes people say this to sound pessimistic poetic. But, really doesn't make sense.

    • @Exquisite_Poupon
      @Exquisite_Poupon Před 2 lety +1

      @「 Deadpoppin 」 Then explain it.

  • @Kongajinken
    @Kongajinken Před 2 lety +28

    Europe also has extensive social programs. Communism doesn't have a monopoly on social programs.

    • @user-yw5bz2ir1c
      @user-yw5bz2ir1c Před 2 lety +8

      But communism is based on social programs it is the main goal. Capitalisms main goal - to earn the money, not social programs. Moreover Capitalism stole these programs. if we hadnt have communists, we wouldnt have such wide social programs.

    • @durianjaykin3576
      @durianjaykin3576 Před 2 lety +11

      You gotta thank those socialists in europe for fighting for these socialists programs

    • @firstnamelastname7003
      @firstnamelastname7003 Před 2 lety +7

      @@durianjaykin3576 ^this. If it was up to the neoliberals there wouldn't be any programs and capitalist would eat itself.

    • @VigilantGuardian6750
      @VigilantGuardian6750 Před 2 lety +4

      @@durianjaykin3576 No, Otto von Bismarck pushed it into mainstream in europe some 140years ago, not socialists so root of those programs isnt socialism but a non socialist reformator, educate yourself.

    • @herbertherbertic6223
      @herbertherbertic6223 Před 2 lety

      Europe is a communist hellhole to an extent.

  • @StephenYuan
    @StephenYuan Před 2 lety +40

    You can view China's undeveloped interior as a problem (which it is) but also as an opportunity. It means that the Chinese economy as a whole is still nowhere close to full employment. The Prc can probably sustain high single digit GDP growth for the foreseeable future.
    All you need is to build the infrastructure to make the capital and resources of the coasts available to the interior and the regional disparities should equalize somewhat.

    • @wyattlines7228
      @wyattlines7228 Před 2 lety +7

      Which they do. They spend billions on rail, infrastructure. Say what you will about China, but they invest in their people, unlike the neo-liberal west who abandon the people to line the pockets of the rich.
      China is making the lives of its citizens better, while the youth of the west face a future of unstable employment, stagnant wages and never owning a home.

    • @SQ8MXT
      @SQ8MXT Před 2 lety

      @@wyattlines7228 At least it is possible to own a home. And move wherever you want. And being free to speak. Or protest....

    • @mm764
      @mm764 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SQ8MXT sounds like Africa? Better life quality if the goal

    • @chrismcaulay7805
      @chrismcaulay7805 Před 2 lety +2

      Not really. They are producing things as fast as they can get the natural resources together to do so. Many of those resources can be mined domestically, but China is a net importer of most materials already. China is near capped out in their current manufacturing based econ. The next 2-3 decades will decided if they crash due to higher pricing moving more and more manufacturing elsewhere before or after they can achieve a service based economy... My guess is they crash...

    • @josephruiz7233
      @josephruiz7233 Před 2 lety

      They don't have the natural resource quantities for what your thinking.

  • @wazzupdj98d61
    @wazzupdj98d61 Před 2 lety +748

    Very impressed by this episode. I've noticed that a lot of those studying geopolitics focus too much on geography, without examining the equally important political aspects. This episode not only manages to do both, but also demonstrates how the political and the geographic are very much complimentary in policymaking. Bravo.

    • @AB8511
      @AB8511 Před 2 lety +59

      On the contrary I am thoroughly disappointed by this one - because IMHO it is non-sense. In every regime (even in democratic one, perhaps even more so) richer regions are subsidizing the poorer one. You do not need communism for that. Answer is much simpler - Communist party cant not abandon communism, because they want to stay at power so they can not admit, that this ideology does not work in practice. And when you maintain your power by power, losing power can quite easily mean death or loss of personal freedom.

    • @kingenimatix7013
      @kingenimatix7013 Před 2 lety +10

      Should further specify that the political areas are not just external aspects like diplomacy and intl. relations, but also internal like demographics and socio-cultural aspects. Alot of people forget how actually ethnically diverse modern China is (Han, Hui, Zhuang, Manchu, Uyghur, Tibetan, Mongolian just to name a few). But anyways, otherwise you are right.

    • @visheshrao5629
      @visheshrao5629 Před 2 lety +6

      @@AB8511 I agree that you don't need commumism to help subsidise the poorer regions in your geography, even a centralised government with utmost power to make and implement policies, elected by the people themselves, can do it, until and unless you're a 3000 year old civilisation acting as a state. If you read Chinese history, you'll see the phases of contraction and expansion that Shirvan is talking about here. I'd suggest watching videos of Whatifalthist or Kraut, regarding this. As for the CCP is concerned, simpler answers often are a shell of better ones, it's not as simple as you think it is.

    • @enternalinferno
      @enternalinferno Před 2 lety +12

      Completely disagree, this is one of Shirvan's worst videos, for reasons others have said I noticed. So many unexplained baseless claims, maybe the worst ones is insinuating that there is an actually spread of wealth from the east to the west, and the second one that coastal China would be democratic and liberal. What? How?

    • @enternalinferno
      @enternalinferno Před 2 lety +3

      @@kingenimatix7013 Jupp, it's called imperialism by the Han

  • @silvermane5695
    @silvermane5695 Před 2 lety +570

    "Manufactured stability but stability nonetheless" - a statement that resonates loud these days among the rich nations.

    • @maddoo23
      @maddoo23 Před 2 lety +56

      "Manufactured stability but stability nonetheless", as opposed to what? "Natural Stability"?

    • @wulaboombeach5004
      @wulaboombeach5004 Před 2 lety +24

      So much arrogance and naivety in that sentence

    • @fmlutube
      @fmlutube Před 2 lety +49

      Catchy but I don't see what is deep about that sentence. Is stability supposed to be a natural, spontaneous event? Every economic and sociopolitical stability is manufactured, no exception. It is like saying wet liquid water. Anyway, excellent video otherwise. I think he should have gone with "autonomous prosperity" (for the poorer regions) or something like that.

    • @jirislavicek9954
      @jirislavicek9954 Před 2 lety +56

      @@maddoo23 Both Russia and China are vast countries comprised of many small nations and ethnic groups and both are highly centralized. Without a strong leadership and "manufactured stability" those countries would run a serious risk of quickly disintegrating or slipping into civil war . It's not the US with its democratic constitution and electoral college and national cohesion.
      China is getting better in this regard, there is a party in charge, but Russia is a one man show.

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Před 2 lety +32

      @@maddoo23 natural stability is very rare. Most governments have kept together because of a shared lie (ususally some sort of nationalism whether active or passive). And you cant argue with the results.

  • @Birdylockso
    @Birdylockso Před 2 lety +2

    One of the most insightful videos, not only by CaspianReport standard, but also in the vast CZcams Channels. Great job.

  • @handsomegodhrawala52
    @handsomegodhrawala52 Před rokem +13

    I love your style dude... The way you mix history, culture, facts and your opinion in a single sentence is remarkable. Keep up the good work!

  • @kevinwilliams3694
    @kevinwilliams3694 Před 2 lety +402

    It's always darkest before it's totally black. What a way to sign off. With the current power cuts it's pretty literal too.

    • @Bigdeathy
      @Bigdeathy Před 2 lety +12

      "The darkest time is just before the dawn."

    • @user-mw6ec3wh2e
      @user-mw6ec3wh2e Před 2 lety +9

      @@Bigdeathy, , or maybe the other way around?! The era of U.S. occupation of the world is coming to an end. The United States from the point of view of Russia is the Empire of True Evil

    • @user-rg5vm1du8e
      @user-rg5vm1du8e Před 2 lety +3

      As a poor English speaker, I find it difficult to understand this one, is anyone kind enough to explain that? Thanks a lot🙏 🙏

    • @_0______00__________0_______0
      @_0______00__________0_______0 Před 2 lety +14

      @@user-rg5vm1du8e To be honest it's a bit of a weird line. The original expression is "it's always darkest before the dawn", meaning that times often get harder before they get easier. Here, Shirvan changes it to imply things may be getting worse, and will continue in that direction. The changed line for many English speakers is awkward though, "things are darkest before they are totally black", since total blackness would be the darkest things could get. I think he's trying to say something like "things are at their worst before they get even worse"? I'm unsure myself.

    • @user-rg5vm1du8e
      @user-rg5vm1du8e Před 2 lety +3

      @@_0______00__________0_______0 My understanding is that as an ideology, Shirvan doesn't hold an optimistic attitude about China‘s communism future. But considering the history and geopolitical environment of China, there's no better way to stay unified and maintain the economic growth. So I think he means"things are bad, but at least they are not the worst case(total blackness)"? Just an idea

  • @DreamteamCarlo
    @DreamteamCarlo Před 2 lety +44

    Thank you Shirvan, another insightful report.
    Technically, I would use a term like '(regional) wealth distribution' over 'communism' to describe the processes mentioned in this video. But perhaps that makes a less exciting header.. :)
    Keep up the good work, I hope you reach a million subscribers soon!

  • @here_we_go_again2571
    @here_we_go_again2571 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you! This was a comprehensive report!
    Kudos for the pronunciation of China's provinces! :)

  • @benjaminrussellchen
    @benjaminrussellchen Před 2 lety +63

    May I simply comment that your pronunciation of foreign languages is excellent and so much better than other creators on CZcams. Thanks for your effort!

    • @niklas5948
      @niklas5948 Před 2 lety +8

      His pronounciation of Zhejiang and Guangdong impressed me

    • @mattygaga2013
      @mattygaga2013 Před 2 lety +3

      Except 서울 Seoul, he pronounced it as "See-owl" when it's "Soh-ool" lol but other than this, he did fantastic and it really impressed me too!

  • @r3dpowel796
    @r3dpowel796 Před 2 lety +47

    Sudan is GDP= 26 Billion$
    Xinjiang gdp = 116 billion $.

    • @kavenxiong5521
      @kavenxiong5521 Před 2 lety +7

      As you can see, they are equivalent

    • @theylaughatmynickname4860
      @theylaughatmynickname4860 Před 2 lety +12

      Means this caspian report made a mistake. Intentional or not, is up to him to explain

    • @suitingding8352
      @suitingding8352 Před 2 lety +8

      Well, actually Xinjiang‘s GDP is more than 200 billion dollars in 2020.

    • @backpackpepelon3867
      @backpackpepelon3867 Před 2 lety +14

      @@suitingding8352 that explain why last year, US try to start revolution in Xinjiang, but failed terribly because China already wiped those mosques used to train insurgents, and build good relationship with Taliban's to reduce the fractions between the Muslims in the north.

    • @dying_allthetime
      @dying_allthetime Před 2 lety +7

      @@backpackpepelon3867 so you admit China is committing cultural genocide

  • @veemeg
    @veemeg Před 2 lety +7

    Hi Shirvan, I'd like to thank you for coming up with this video. It's so revealing and well-developed. Since CZcams has disables community subtitles, I'd like to tell you that if you ever wished to have this video subtitled into Spanish, I'd gladly help you. Keep up the good work.

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Před 2 lety +2

    "The empire, long divided, must unite; long united, must divide. Thus it has ever been" - Romance of the Three kingdoms

  • @tonyv3758
    @tonyv3758 Před 2 lety +350

    Wish this video posted its sources. Would love to do some further reading on this topic

    • @benjaminchen8857
      @benjaminchen8857 Před 2 lety +74

      One of his patreon perks includes sources

    • @enternalinferno
      @enternalinferno Před 2 lety +60

      Me too, because these conclusions seem totally baseless for me. Where on earth does he get the idea that coastal China would be democratic and liberal from? Also, there is no dispersion of wealth towards the poorer provinces, that's why they're poor! They're being exploited and repressed, genocide isn't an unfitting word

    • @adonissherlock
      @adonissherlock Před 2 lety +1

      The source is the MIIT, probably

    • @ibnu9969
      @ibnu9969 Před 2 lety +31

      @@enternalinferno if you look into imperial Chinese history, the recurring theme is pretty much "protecting the heartland", that is, the most strategic area, which is currently the North China Plains and areas along the coast. That is where most of China's wealth and population are. That makes any income that they will spend naturally will be prioritized towards those areas first. So the disparity on the distribution of wealth between its provinces is mostly because there are simply too much to maintain in the eastern China compared to its western frontiers

    • @Joso997
      @Joso997 Před 2 lety +7

      @@enternalinferno well all of the surveillance equipment in Xinjiang costs money "wealth distribution"

  • @kieran8921
    @kieran8921 Před 2 lety +285

    I would not go that far into geographical determinism as many democratic states also redistribute wealth through heavy subsidies from their densely populated, often but not always, coastal regions to sparsely populated interior regions for a variety of reasons but the most notable is stability. This can happen through agricultural subsidies in the US, the UK has the Barnet formula and the EU has net contributors and net receivers.
    Changed it from mostly happens to can happen, in response to the reply below.

    • @wnxdafriz
      @wnxdafriz Před 2 lety +8

      >> i'll be honest most non large corporate farms do not see subsidies unless there is a drought... its more or less extra the government provides extra insurance... now subsidies for say highways etc... that makes more sense but the highway system also helps support trade

    • @kieran8921
      @kieran8921 Před 2 lety

      @@wnxdafriz I would agree most small independently owned farms are not doing too well right now but farming is just a part of a larger picture where at least in the US interior states receive more federal money than they put in compared to the coastal ones which is vice versa.

    • @firstnamelastname7003
      @firstnamelastname7003 Před 2 lety +25

      Regional wealth disparities in the US got Trump elected, in the EU they led to crippling and very unpopular austerity in places like Greece, and in the UK they may lead to the break up of the Union. So Caspian may have a point.

    • @kieran8921
      @kieran8921 Před 2 lety +11

      @@firstnamelastname7003I would point out that the UK has yet to break up, the US did not re-elect Trump and the EU has never been on the most stable of grounds. My main point was rather more along the line of even leaders of democratic nations, no matter which party they come from, recognise the need for redistributive measures to maintain national unity and that we should not use geography too much to predispose a certain area to a particular form of governance. I agree that it can serve as a probabilistic factor but certainly not the main one.

    • @obsidianstatue
      @obsidianstatue Před 2 lety +14

      Very poor comparison with EU or the US.
      1) The US has vast and sparsely populated farmland in the Midwest, they don't need much subsidy, their huge commercial farms are profitable enough, one of the many perks in exterminating the Natives Americans.
      2) The EU is less than HALF the size of China, with no where near as complex geography. the most landlocked country in the EU like the Czech republic is only 400km or so away from the coast.
      China on the other has terrains so inaccessible that it must have a centralized system to build basic infrastructure.
      A more apt comparison would be India, where large part of the Indian population lives away from the coast in the unnavigable Ganges river plains, making it effectively landlocked. And India is FAR poorer and far less developed in comparison, and guess what system does India have.

  • @Iseedeadmoney
    @Iseedeadmoney Před 2 lety +2

    Good video as always! I would recommend in investing in some audio equipment, right now you can really hear the echo in the room you're in

  • @alexcochell690
    @alexcochell690 Před 2 lety +3

    This was a fantastic look into China/East Asian geopolitics. As always, very much appreciated.

  • @redcorruption4561
    @redcorruption4561 Před 2 lety +336

    No one can just abandon and change everything in their policies

    • @roberthoward9500
      @roberthoward9500 Před 2 lety +7

      Mussolini did.

    • @LibertarianLeninistRants
      @LibertarianLeninistRants Před 2 lety +7

      @Red Corruption
      May I ask you what the color of your profile picture stand for?

    • @redcorruption4561
      @redcorruption4561 Před 2 lety +60

      @@LibertarianLeninistRants Don't get too excited commie lmao I just like the color red, same with purple.

    • @LibertarianLeninistRants
      @LibertarianLeninistRants Před 2 lety +9

      @@redcorruption4561 Ah ok. I was asking because the color combination red and purple are a proposed color change for my party (currently we are only red for socialism, but we have enshrined feminist values too so purple would be the perfect complementary).

    • @vontai4553
      @vontai4553 Před 2 lety +39

      @@redcorruption4561 😭😭😭

  • @alexvig2369
    @alexvig2369 Před 2 lety +44

    "It's always darkest, before it's totally black"
    I love those shocking yet so realistic quotes Shirvan makes.

    • @selohcin
      @selohcin Před 2 lety +8

      It's all style and no substance this time around. That perspective is what the Communist leaders in Beijing WANT you to think. It has no basis in reality.

    • @Phantom-bh5ru
      @Phantom-bh5ru Před 2 lety +3

      Totally dark is the darkest so you can’t be darkest before darkest. Understand?

    • @alexvig2369
      @alexvig2369 Před 2 lety

      @@selohcin Not true. If you'd ever read Chinese media outlets you would've known that they don't talk in terms like that about themselves at all.
      It is clear to everyone that China has peaked and it won't grow any bigger nor stronger from here.

    • @manofsan
      @manofsan Před 2 lety +1

      ​ @Alex Vig - you may be right - but it seems that China's leaders reached this conclusion only after first groping through various other options by trial and error. When Trump arrived, he put China on notice that its unconstrained trade imbalances were unsustainable and would not be allowed to continue. He immediately matched his rhetoric with efforts in shifting global supply chains away from China. Beijing in turn quickly announced its new Belt & Road Initiative, which involved copious investments in deadbeat countries with dubious creditworthiness that other lenders stayed away from. As the liabilities of this route likewise began exposing themselves, Beijing's leadership is now finally falling back on return to authoritarianism in the name of communism. Suddenly we see crackdowns on social media & tech companies, and now even looming bankruptcies of colossal scale. Even if Beijing leaders can ride out such titanic shockwaves, what of China's fawning admirers in the West who've invested their financial futures in the China bubble? Will they be jumping out of windows when their investments are swallowed up?

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 2 lety +4

      @@manofsan The Belt & Road Initiative precedes Trump, who achieved next to nothing apart from pissing off his own allies. He certainly didn't constrain China. 'Shifting global supply chains away from China' lol! What world are you living in?

  • @colinchen2638
    @colinchen2638 Před 2 lety +4

    *EXCUSE ME; YOUR MAP STARTING AT **0:15** INDICATES THAT TAIWAN IS PART OF CHINA WHICH IS INCORRECT.*

  • @scottroberts3158
    @scottroberts3158 Před 2 lety

    I've just stumbled onto your videos, and I'm very impressed with the detail you put into your research and how well presented your video's are, Subscribed.

  • @SeanSafford
    @SeanSafford Před 2 lety +350

    This disparity between rich coastal regions and relatively impoverished interiors isn’t exactly unique: the US and EU each have found ways to subsidize their poorer regions without authoritarian centralized states. Wealth transfer and development aren’t all that mysterious. The difference is that China hasn’t developed much of a welfare state. Why not?

    • @michael3032
      @michael3032 Před 2 lety +86

      Because its still a developing country.
      Even then it has cheaper medical care than say the US (although not a good beacon for welfare) and comparable to say Canada though.
      Also cheap living costs.

    • @Tsuchimursu
      @Tsuchimursu Před 2 lety +4

      I would say it might be possible, but highly challenging to start going for that from where they stand. The safest bet for them is to stick with what has been working well enough so far.

    • @MA-go7ee
      @MA-go7ee Před 2 lety +62

      Also it is not 'communism'. China has already abandoned that since the 70s.

    • @Tsuchimursu
      @Tsuchimursu Před 2 lety +46

      @@MA-go7ee if you want to go purist, communism has never been achieved in earth. People will always be people.

    • @jackyex
      @jackyex Před 2 lety +32

      I think the point is how large the wealth gap is, some provinces have the standard of the first world, others have an standard of Sub-Saharan African nations, not even the poorest American state get as close of a difference of wealth.

  • @user-pl7ed6ci6l
    @user-pl7ed6ci6l Před 2 lety +96

    Good video, but there are some disinformation in its conent, China has long been an empire before there was even communism, having a strong central government that distribute resources along the different provinces doesn't equal to communism, the Chinese empire had its ups and downs, through the dynasties, rulers came and gone, but they all tried to unify China under a strong centralized government, they have been ruling that way long before communism even existed. The other fact that I want to point out is that historically, it was not always the coastal region that were the wealthiest, coastal region around the world became wealthy with the rise of sea power, mostly because international trades started using sea lanes instead of land routes. China is a land power, in a long span of its history, it was cities along its silk road that were the wealthiest, China's one belt one road is trying to recreate the silk road.

    • @RobinNandi
      @RobinNandi Před 2 lety +8

      Excellent comment.

    • @hotcakesism
      @hotcakesism Před 2 lety +9

      Yeah the definition of communism given at the start of the video is pretty bad, sort of lost interest in the rest of it after that, sorry no offense to any fans here

    • @philv2529
      @philv2529 Před 2 lety +5

      Silk road was the mainform of trade until the fall of Constantinople

    • @raptorhacker599
      @raptorhacker599 Před 2 lety

      @@hotcakesism yeah man this video is stupid lmao. wealth distribution has been a thing long before the plague of communism surfaced.

    •  Před 2 lety

      Everybody knows China is not communist

  • @Thamian
    @Thamian Před 2 lety +2

    It is worth noting that when it comes to Tibet, the security aspect isn't just a buffer zone - it's also the water supply: A significant percentage (iirc, about 50%) of China's freshwaster comes from Himalayan glaciers - meltwater that collects across the tibetan plateau and flows off into the Yangtze and Yellow river - the mountain silts that come with it also play a significant part in keeping the Yellow river basin (one of the most fertile farming regions on earth) well fertilized.
    As such, maintaining control of Tibet is an immediate existential imperative for China, as the sheer scale of it's population makes feeding and watering it difficult enough, without the prospect of some hostile force cutting that supply off, or redirecting it elsewhere.

    • @Bournetolive
      @Bournetolive Před 2 lety

      Correct, although the Yellow and Yangtze originate in Qinghai province, not the Tibet Autonomous Region (aka the region that was under direct rule of Dalai Lama)

  • @mikhailv67tv
    @mikhailv67tv Před 2 lety +1

    Great essay this explains a lot . Thank you for the content

  • @yunchenwang4075
    @yunchenwang4075 Před 2 lety +349

    His pronunciation of Chinese province names is really good. Must be from a mandarin speaker.

    • @freemanol
      @freemanol Před 2 lety +95

      Can't agree more. A sign of a serious learner. Lots of respect

    • @Grityom
      @Grityom Před 2 lety +134

      I don't know if he is a mandarin speaker, but he genuinely put a lot of efforts pronouncing foreign names

    • @freemanol
      @freemanol Před 2 lety +33

      @@Grityom i think yunchen meant he learnt it from a mandarin speaker

    • @teemuvesala9575
      @teemuvesala9575 Před 2 lety +30

      He's not native mandarin speaker.

    • @Grityom
      @Grityom Před 2 lety +6

      @@freemanol Oh alright, I misunderstood that. That's very probable, pinyin is really not intuitive to non-Chinese

  • @mr.nugget1217
    @mr.nugget1217 Před 2 lety +28

    Fun fact : Sichuan used to be one of the most populated regions of china if not the most populated.

    • @12345krillin
      @12345krillin Před 2 lety

      It still is no?

    • @cassiopesysg5423
      @cassiopesysg5423 Před 2 lety

      it still is one of the most populated

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Před 2 lety +4

      It's because of Sichuan sauce, you should know about that, Mr.Nugget.

    • @xihangyang
      @xihangyang Před 2 lety +1

      chongching only split from sichuan in 1955

  • @spiraboy
    @spiraboy Před 2 lety +17

    I have lived in China for 4 years now, I somehow knew this. It's impossible to imagine China under a different political system. It seems to be going well for them.

    • @E4439Qv5
      @E4439Qv5 Před 2 lety +3

      Appearances can be deceiving.

    • @MrWill1729
      @MrWill1729 Před 2 lety

      @@E4439Qv5 if you so insist....

    • @leihtory7423
      @leihtory7423 Před 2 lety

      well china does have elections.

    • @TreeGod.
      @TreeGod. Před 2 lety

      That sounds like Stockholm syndrome
      If you said anything bad about China on the internet or in real life, you would be arrested. That’s not a good thing

    • @MrWill1729
      @MrWill1729 Před 2 lety

      @@TreeGod. "If you said anything bad about China on the internet or in real life, you would be arrested. That’s not a good thing"
      Spoken by someone who has not lived in China

  • @ryddlerking7646
    @ryddlerking7646 Před 2 lety +5

    The fact that you put the country of Tawain as just one more part of the CCP in the global map in the beginning of the video in 00:13 says enough about this for me. This cannot be a simple "mistake" or slip of mind in the production of this video.

  • @Low_commotion
    @Low_commotion Před 2 lety +115

    CIxin Liu (the author of the "Three-Body Problem" series), once made a comment to this effect in New Yorker profile on him, stating that the transition from communism to liberal democracy in China would be hell on Earth. Sounded extreme to me at the time, but after watching this I understand what he means now (regardless of what I think of "communism with Chinese characteristics").

    • @durianjaykin3576
      @durianjaykin3576 Před 2 lety +37

      Man, the interior states of China would demand leftist programs while the coastline states would demand more free market capitalism. Country will be in a deadlock

    • @lakeblackBLM
      @lakeblackBLM Před 2 lety +10

      @@durianjaykin3576 COMMUNISM WILL PREVAIL

    • @CannibaLouiST
      @CannibaLouiST Před 2 lety +1

      @@lakeblackBLM 紅毛夷

    • @user-rz1px7om7q
      @user-rz1px7om7q Před 2 lety +13

      The result of all-round democracy in China is that you don't know how many “Trump” will be elected and how ambitious they are.

    • @CannibaLouiST
      @CannibaLouiST Před 2 lety +13

      @@user-rz1px7om7q That's the consequence of nationalism. Democracy or not doesn't matter.

  • @Bronxguyanese
    @Bronxguyanese Před 2 lety +122

    China has similar issues just like Russia. Both China and Russia are very similar when it comes to geopolitics.

    • @archer_wsk1408
      @archer_wsk1408 Před 2 lety +6

      Algeria too

    • @gabbar51ngh
      @gabbar51ngh Před 2 lety +35

      USSR fell & disintegrated. CCP will too.

    • @jellybeanjuggler7474
      @jellybeanjuggler7474 Před 2 lety +32

      @Robert Valentin America has survived it's fair share of bad leaders...we always bounce back.

    • @ArchesBro
      @ArchesBro Před 2 lety +40

      @@jellybeanjuggler7474 Its not the leaders of the US political parties, its the media that encourages riots and gaslights the crazies as well as promoting drug culture. Many of the riots in 2020 were predicated on false premises, like George Floyd who was overdosing on fentanyl that was laced onto meth and triggered by the police interaction. Or in Kenosha where a guy suspected of raping his ex broke free from police trying to arrest him and attempted to grab a knife and was shot in the back 6 times. The George Floyd death was tragic and the officer still seems to be largely at fault for ruthlessly pinning him, but people were encouraged to riot, and that is not right

    • @soysauce4223
      @soysauce4223 Před 2 lety +7

      @@jellybeanjuggler7474 do you think so? US have no economic counterpart ever since. I don't think they can counter China this time

  • @atuz1534
    @atuz1534 Před 2 lety +1

    Im a fan. You provide good subject matter content and your presentations are clear. Bravo! Keep videos coming.

  • @philippedefechereux8740
    @philippedefechereux8740 Před rokem +1

    Powerful insight into China's need for Communism, and the consequential challenged facing the regime. Outstanding!

  • @blackpowderuser373
    @blackpowderuser373 Před 2 lety +118

    Chinese Communism = Hammers-and-SicklesTM item sale for 1,949 RMB

    • @54788654478087654345
      @54788654478087654345 Před 2 lety +9

      Speaking of truth in a joke, I wonder how much of the Chinese system is better characterized as authoritarian versus communist? In this argument, communism is the vehicle for authoritarianism and not authoritarianism the vehicle for communism.

    • @blackpowderuser373
      @blackpowderuser373 Před 2 lety +7

      @@54788654478087654345 We can say that Chinese Communism was born out of the unique circumstances China found itself. Since China wasn't fully industrialized, Mao Zedong had to revise communist ideals to a more agrarian socialist approach. This stands in contrast to the more orthodox, Soviet-style communism preferred by the likes of Wang Ming or the Left Wing of the Kuomintang.
      So yes, I think Mao did change China to a more communist society (with agrarian emphasis), but still carried on the authoritarian streak ever since. Even with Deng Xiaoping's market reforms.

    • @heinrichhimmler3781
      @heinrichhimmler3781 Před 2 lety +1

      @@blackpowderuser373 Mao Zedong Perspective Is Perfect But His Steps And Actions Are Worse In Chinese History .He Became a evil Himself.
      Deng xioping is an hero for chinese people.
      He is the father of modern china .

    • @blackpowderuser373
      @blackpowderuser373 Před 2 lety +5

      @@heinrichhimmler3781 Yes, I believe that too. Mao Zedong, while in his mind trying to make China more "conducive" for communism, ended up being much more tyrannical and evil. What was he expecting, the Chinese could catch up on steel production that quickly with makeshift steel from communes?
      Deng Xiaoping also had his skeletons in the closet (cough Tiananmen Square 1989 cough) but he was relatively more reasonable to deal with. I think of all Paramount Leaders, Hu Jintao seems to be the relatively tamest of them. But Xi Jinping seems hellbent on Chinese nationalism at all costs nowadays.

    • @blackpowderuser373
      @blackpowderuser373 Před 2 lety +1

      @@heinrichhimmler3781 I doubt he would leave however. He has consolidated enough since Mao Zedong.

  • @Ealsante
    @Ealsante Před 2 lety +30

    "The affairs of the world are this way - what is long united must divide; what is long divided must unite." -- Romance of the Three Kingdoms

    • @ibnu9969
      @ibnu9969 Před 2 lety +1

      I cannot imagine what chaos looms when time has come for China to be divides again..

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 Před 2 lety

      "What is being being created should be abandoned" Creative Arts - Total War: Three Kingdoms

    • @slslbbn4096
      @slslbbn4096 Před 2 lety

      @@jakobinobles3263 indeed, now we have a China with massive corporations, the ability to determine which American oligarch family prospers or dies from targeted assassinations.
      It is true: control the American Oligarchs and you can control the American regime. The much touted "democracy" is a sham that has no bearing on decisions made by the American government.

  • @WonderMagician
    @WonderMagician Před rokem +1

    Your reports are instructive and fact-based. Thank you.

  • @kevincuyler1707
    @kevincuyler1707 Před 2 lety +4

    Not my words but: Once you understand a nation's geography, you understand its foreign policy.

    • @gorbachevspizzahut2809
      @gorbachevspizzahut2809 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah but it doesn't explain everything. It's a good indicator but geography is not everything.

  • @leonardwei3914
    @leonardwei3914 Před 2 lety +164

    "Security trumps prosperity."
    Although I do agree with most of your analysis, I would also point out that most conflicts China faced in modern history came from the sea, starting with western and Japanese powers carving out trade posts and enclaves on the eastern seaboard with "unequal treaties" culminating in the invasion by Imperial Japan during WWII. Despite not being in power during those periods, the Communist government is not shy in stoking these historical grievances to solidify their one party control. Another interesting aspect is that every conflict Communist China has involved itself with (Soviet Border disputes, Indian Border disputes, Korean War, Sino-Vietnamese war) did not occur in the West. So while invasions from the west were historically a thing, modern efforts to build up the poorer west are based more on perception of legitimacy for the Communist party. And nations such as South Korea and Japan draw their protection more from current security agreements with the U.S., less so than their coastal geography.
    But ultimately, China cannot abandon Communism because a Communist party cannot survive competition when it has sole monopoly on everything economic, political and social.
    Note: Edited for grammar and spelling.

    • @TheReaper569
      @TheReaper569 Před 2 lety +5

      thats what the worlds biggest naval re armanent program was for.

    • @matthewmcdonald1301
      @matthewmcdonald1301 Před 2 lety +14

      This video is completely bullshit, and I have to wonder where this guy gets his funding. Russia's the only threat to them by land and they are already at their border. Inland china was relevant in the past, but nowadays the land argument is irrelevant. Any inland nation would be entirely submissive to China for Trade, much like the central asian stan countries.

    • @ailediablo79
      @ailediablo79 Před 2 lety +8

      @@matthewmcdonald1301 funding... it is from views lol. You right but also wrong. You just being naive. Also Russia is a friend, not a close friend but nither an enemy at least as long USA and Europe is there.

    • @oJoJo
      @oJoJo Před 2 lety +2

      @@ailediablo79 most early videos were about syria and turkey, i do believe this guy is from over there. i also believe that a peacefull place like tibet can exist without china being there, but appearantly it was always some sort of protectorate of china because buthan india and nepal kept invading the place

    • @cleverparmesan4793
      @cleverparmesan4793 Před 2 lety +2

      @@matthewmcdonald1301 Videos about China generate more views, so...

  • @tuams
    @tuams Před 2 lety +70

    Your videos always teach me a little bit more about how the world works (and is being ruled by psychopaths). Especially about the countries that I wouldn't have actively looked in to. You're doing really good work!

    • @RJT80
      @RJT80 Před 2 lety +5

      Confuse this. There is a reason why ancient Persia has no artistic historical depictions of torture on record unlike most other ancient powers that used those depictions and their reputations as a threat. The Persian tactic was to convince a leader or leaders that it wasn't worth going to war with them and better to just become a vassal. Of course Persia had some of the most diabolical torture methods ever invented but they believed in soft power first that often put their vassals into debt to the point they were eventually just weakend and swallowed up entirely.
      China is mostly playing the same game.

    • @TheTruthseeker1231
      @TheTruthseeker1231 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, psychopaths always gravitate to positions of power, because that is what they want - to control people. Really true everywhere.

  • @Birdylockso
    @Birdylockso Před 2 lety +4

    "It's always darkest, before it's totally black." What?

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 2 lety +1

      Caspian's closing lines are usually insightful and provocative. This one not so much, I think it's a lofty-sounding fail, but it seems like most of the commenters think it's duly impressive.

  • @Alejojojo6
    @Alejojojo6 Před 2 lety +2

    You truly undermined one thing which is crucial, the interior and north is where all the natural resources are. Resources most of the chinese need to keep up with their economy and even to survive and not be caught by having to import from other countries. China cannot loose the western regions because that makes them have resources. If they lose western and northern china, they loose all access to the valious and very much needed resources needed by the east of China.

  • @raplopez4258
    @raplopez4258 Před 2 lety +26

    Hi Shirvan. You need to offer better-looking shirts, personally they are pretty uncreative and unappealing but I got one because I like you. *Please like this so he sees it*

    • @dm9078
      @dm9078 Před 2 lety +3

      A polo with the logo embroidered on the left breast would be fly!

    • @gxlorp
      @gxlorp Před 2 lety +2

      I love Shirvan

  • @hughjass1044
    @hughjass1044 Před 2 lety +4

    It's always a great day when there's a Caspian Report video waiting for me in my notifications. Best channel on YT!

    • @user-wb7ez9ud4p
      @user-wb7ez9ud4p Před 2 lety

      Oh boy, you must be new to CZcams if you think this is the best it's got.

  • @000DAAN000
    @000DAAN000 Před 2 lety

    This is amazing content. Impressive writing! I subscribed

  • @bornin54
    @bornin54 Před 2 lety +3

    "It's always darkest before it's totally black." - I'm just writing that down, will come in handy!

  • @harrybuttery2447
    @harrybuttery2447 Před 2 lety +79

    A few things wrong with this. Nations can easily subsidize poor regions, it does not take a communist state to do so(look at the US, Russia, Australia, Canada etc). But also the Chinese face no threat from the interior, Tibet maybe as it borders India but the west borders nobody who is a threat at all and is so vast and inhospitable that an invasion through that area would be difficult. The only threat to the west would be Russia and Russia would find it much easier to go through Manchuria to Beijing than through the interior.

    • @freemanol
      @freemanol Před 2 lety +36

      I know 2 countries very well that are counter examples to this. I have russian friends from siberia, and their cities are in an absolutely horrendous state, compared to the soviet times. Because in the soviet union, these cities no matter how remote are given basic services, while in capitalist russia, cities that produce less tax than upkeep are simply left to rot.
      In the UK, i lived north and south, and the difference is massive. In the north crime is high, streets unclean, public services dysfunctional. These regions don't produce much in taxes and so get a lot less funding. Talk to any brit and find out for yourself

    • @harrybuttery2447
      @harrybuttery2447 Před 2 lety +16

      @@freemanol The difference between the two is still far less than in China which is my point. Yes sure, Britain does have bad areas, all nations do, but they still have access to welfare and can still live a life that while it may be mediocre to western standards, is still to western standards, they are not third world slaves completely lacking in infrastructure or any other modernity.

    • @freemanol
      @freemanol Před 2 lety +23

      @@harrybuttery2447 in russia i would say that it resembles africa in some places. Just try StreetView in the outskirts of Yakutsk, in or really anywhere in siberia.
      In the UK, there is still deep deep poverty. I'm talking about child poverty even, where kids rely on their school meals for food, and go hungry during the school holidays. But i think the US is still probably worse when it comes to poverty.
      And there's a lingering image of abject poverty in china, which has changed a lot in the last decade or so. No doubt there are still impoverished communities in the villages. But the fact is that living conditions and salary have improved so much that manufacturers are finding it hard to maintain their low cost labour, and they are now looking to africa to take it on instead.
      I don't think the ideology determines whether system can run effectively. Singapore is very authoritarian yet it functions. Japan is democratic and it functions too. Korea is democratic and it still has a struggling lower class. I don't think people should discredit China's progress solely down to their ideology

    • @harrybuttery2447
      @harrybuttery2447 Před 2 lety +8

      @@freemanol It can be pretty bad but it is still a functioning comparative to what they have in the east, it's run down and not a nice place to live but it still has everything that one would need, it has shops, electricity, running water, roads etc. The same goes for the UK and US but it's much better for them, no matter how bad it looks to us compared to our standards, they are still akin to these standards in the first place, they still have all the things we have in the better parts they are just run down and not as good. But they are there.
      It's true, China has lifted many out of poverty but it has been lopsided leaving many behind and those that have been lift behind have not been subsided to any meaningful degree by the government, efforts have been made but they are not great enough.
      It's true that the wage has gone up but again, it's lopsided. There are many that live in the interior that do work in the city but that has issues of it's own being that because of the way they run things there they are essentially immigrants in their own country with no rights to welfare or healthcare and being forced to have the worst and most poorly paying jobs. That will be changed one would assume, it has to be. China is going to have to tap all the labour they can get and that will mean relaxing the system so that these immigrant workers can get into the proper work force. Provided China does not collapse before then(I'm nowhere near as optimistic on China as his sponsor seems to be).
      I agree, it has nothing to do with the ideology, which was my point. It's simply a matter of where and how the government decides to spend it's money which is based on factors completely separate to ideology in 99% of cases.

    • @freemanol
      @freemanol Před 2 lety +8

      @@harrybuttery2447 i agree with the lack of redistribution in china so far, there are hundreds of millions of people left out of the prosperity growth. but i think the infrastructure projects in these impoverished and remote regions are significant investments, and infrastructure allows for economic growth for a sustainable improvement to living standards. it is harder to see similar investments being done at that pace in other democratic countries with a lot more scrutiny over the locations and budgets of such projects.
      and on the threat from the interior, i think it's mistaken to see no threat bar from russia. an independent tibet or xinjiang would allow a foreign rival to set up their military there and be able to strike china proper without encountering natural obstacles.

  • @aussieboy4090
    @aussieboy4090 Před 2 lety +21

    Global wealth inequality is an issue that must be tackled.

    • @412StepUp
      @412StepUp Před 2 lety

      There will always be a few rich, and a lot of poor. Always.

  • @samatha1994
    @samatha1994 Před 2 lety

    Your analysis is always well researched, well presented and thought provoking. Thank you.

  • @arhus12
    @arhus12 Před 2 lety

    So interesting! Thank you for all your amazing content!

  • @Huy-G-Le
    @Huy-G-Le Před 2 lety +16

    Channel like this really map me appreciate geography.
    If only I know this is my calling earlier.
    Before I picking coding.
    *Massive sigh with PTSD of fixing error message* .

  • @EternalHappElements
    @EternalHappElements Před 2 lety +24

    The Chinese came from the more interior region to begin with. It's not that the coast expanded to the interior but the interior expanded to the coast. The history culture root is still deep in the interior.

    • @firstnamelastnamecanada337
      @firstnamelastnamecanada337 Před 2 lety

      @Milosh Simonovski I'm sorry but I think your a little wrong because The EU didn't even exist until after the 1950s an it has 24 official languages not 1 and states are allowed to leave and join the EU as they please :)

    • @freemanol
      @freemanol Před 2 lety +2

      @@firstnamelastnamecanada337 the issue is people try to fit everything into the western perspective and precedent. China is completely different if one really understand its ancient history. From those times, the different parts of china might have fought one another, but all of them have always agreed that they are all chinese and china should be united eventually. This is totally different from Europe and its mosaic of identities. The Romance of the 3 Kingdoms and the Art of War are interesting sources, i highly recommend them.

    • @srbtlevse16
      @srbtlevse16 Před 2 lety

      @Milosh Simonovski nah, China is still a nation and has been for thousands of years. the EU isn't it's just a pre-state/bloc and even if it became a country it wouldn't be a nation

  • @neurokremmilan
    @neurokremmilan Před 2 lety

    I love this channel. Definitely subscribing!

  • @markofmuse
    @markofmuse Před 2 lety +18

    I've been watching this channel for a while, and this video really bring me something very interesting to think about. As a native Chinese, I was born and raised in Guizhou province, aka the heartland of China in this video. Back then, it was and still is amongst the poorest province in China. I remembered my mom and dad once told me that our ancestor came from the richer coastal area in Ming dynasty to "solidify" Guizhou province, when it was still a very remote region from the central government, and it was a frontier between Han Chinese and other ethnic minority back then. I guess this assimilation and integration happen all through chinse history. When a security reason ranks higher then development and prosperity, the central government, no matter which dynasty, would always choose to seek harsher control of its population, and always try to expand its secure zone. It is not because they like to, but they don't have other options.
    I used to believe that Chinese are more conservative, and are harder to understand liberty and equality. We seems to embrace authoritarian over democratic governance, appreciate collective mentality over individuality, and advocate strong homogeneity over diversity. It baffled me for quite a long time that WHY in all the nations and people on earth, we choose to go the opposite direction. However, this video really broaden my perspective, and also revealed other possible geopolitical reasons that the modern China is forged in such manner.

    • @zjeee
      @zjeee Před 2 lety +3

      Well obviously there is no one reason to cover all bases, it's hard to run an effective democracy without an economic base and educated population and China had a literacy rate of around 20% in the 1950s and it's not until the 1980s and forward where economic progress was made. I find it very hard to see China being able to have a democracy under such circumstances before the 1980s even if they actually wanted to. A great example is to observe democracies in the Middle east and Africa, democracies rarely work well without a strong economy and an educated population. These days the foundations are much stronger in China and I am sure it could work but obviously the communist party would never allow such a thing.
      But yeah you are right there is nothing specific about Chinese culture that makes them choose one way of governance over the other, the people of Hong Kong and Taiwan had no problem whatsoever adopting western culture and democratic elements. But just the mere size of China and the division among the minorities would probably shrink it's size very quickly should they try to adopt democracy. Xinjiang, Yunnan, Tibet and Inner Mongolia would break off as soon as they got the chance without an authoritarian state around.

    • @user-ct8tp7ok4b
      @user-ct8tp7ok4b Před 2 lety

      @@zjeee I’m Chinese !u are fucking real Chinese expert😂u know nothing about China history and culture!

    • @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13
      @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13 Před 2 lety +2

      @@user-ct8tp7ok4b
      I do know A LOT about modern Chinese history, the underlying Sino culture and their relative relationships to the current state of geopolitical affairs... Looks to me the person above has a pretty good understanding of it.
      It's the people who are living under the CCP who don't know anything about their own history... Because it was deliberately destroyed and replaced with the most catastrophic technocratic fascist dictatorship the world has ever seen... So far.

    • @Rudyjosephjr
      @Rudyjosephjr Před 2 lety +1

      Democracy? More like Democrazy.

    • @mettaworldpeace9836
      @mettaworldpeace9836 Před 2 lety

      Obviously you slept in your history class. it is not so hard to understand why China is China if you know its history.

  • @lesussie2237
    @lesussie2237 Před 2 lety +10

    if large states like the USSR and the PRC need a centralized authoritarian government to maintain unity, how did the US, another large state maintain it's unity for the last 200 or so years under liberalism & democracy?

    • @prashanttiwari5146
      @prashanttiwari5146 Před 2 lety +6

      I'm not an expert, but here is my view, US has 2 vast coast lines one connecting to Asia and other to Europe which creates wealth for vast swaths of population on both sides and the interior is made up of really fertile land which helps with farming and other agricultural activities keeping everything in balance. Moreover the singular American identity also helps.

    • @megalocoman
      @megalocoman Před 2 lety +4

      Cough cough American civil war cough cough.

    • @alvarolopes5602
      @alvarolopes5602 Před 2 lety +2

      They literally had the deadliest war in American history over it which ended with unprecedented centralization of federal power. The Roosevelt Presidency also helped do that.

    • @anshusahai3120
      @anshusahai3120 Před 2 lety +8

      USSR and PRC have difficult geographies. It is evident form the fact that when USSR tried to liberalise itself, it disintegrated. Russia would have disintegrated further had Putin not consolidated power. Geography for both these nations, makes it difficult for them to remain stable and integrated without authoritarian control. Also, without proper buffer, both the nations are vulnerable to outside threats. USA on the other hand has great geography that allows for integrity and stability. Also, US has great geographic buffers from outside threats. The geographical fortunes have greatly helped USA in maintaining a free and prosperous nation.

    • @georgearrivals
      @georgearrivals Před 2 lety +1

      Geography+Institutions

  • @Andy-em8xt
    @Andy-em8xt Před 2 lety +29

    I usually love your videos but I think there's a lot of flaws in your analysis.
    One, insuring the interior regions do not fall behind the coastal regions is not really communism.
    Two, the greater concern is actually inequality within a region or city. This type of inequality is much more destabilizing, as people can see the stark differences in wealth.
    Three, China's coast is not as rich as Japan or South Korea, most of the costal regions have GDP of around $15k per capita compared to $30k for SK or $40k for Japan.
    Lastly, the ruling elites, are mostly from the prosperous costal regions. I do not think the coast would automatically be a democratic free society. In fact an argument can be made that the wealthy have a vested interest in the status quo more so than the non elites.

    • @CB-bl8sp
      @CB-bl8sp Před 2 lety +1

      Andy, you don’t seem to consider the possibility of the impact of transferring large sum of money to the interiors on the development of the coastal regions. If Japan or South Korea had to transfer money to another nation do you believe it could maintain a 40k or 30k gdp per cap annually?

    • @teamjupeter9451
      @teamjupeter9451 Před 2 lety +2

      @@CB-bl8sp SK and Japan also transfer money to another regions in the nation. For example, the GDP per capita of Ulsan, where Hyundai Automobile works, and Gwacheon, where Samsung Semiconductor is, are quite above $60k, but they subsidize other interior farming regions.

    • @raptorhacker599
      @raptorhacker599 Před 2 lety +2

      @@CB-bl8sp dude every country on the planet has to redistribute wealth and they dont have to use communism for that.

    • @chrismcaulay7805
      @chrismcaulay7805 Před 2 lety

      @@CB-bl8sp You realize most of the materials that the coast uses to make money comes from the interior right? FFS man think critically.

  • @srbtlevse16
    @srbtlevse16 Před 2 lety +4

    8:01 why would it ever do that? not everyone's goal is to become a liberal democratic state, it is a cultural thing

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 2 lety

      One thing Asian cultures have always excelled at doing ... copying, emulating, and adapting the success of others.
      You can't argue with success. And the most successful countries in the world today are primarily democratic states.

    • @le_draffar5370
      @le_draffar5370 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pwnmeisterage
      Nope, middle east countries gulf tell you the opposite. Not all people on earth wish to have a liberal democratic system, each nation has its specificity. Most importantly, countries need economic stability, safe. The CCP proposes it in their own way, the majority of Chinese do not complain about it otherwise their situation would be similar to Afghanistan, or many African countries.

    • @tsunetasora
      @tsunetasora Před 2 lety

      yes. true also individually because no everyone is interested in politics, taking part in governing the country ("democratic" literally)

  • @schaudhurikol
    @schaudhurikol Před 2 lety +8

    The one liners at the end make these videos pure gold.

    • @Primetime94
      @Primetime94 Před 2 lety

      Yeah. Who cares if the video is accurate. The one liners are all that matters.

  • @rhaglen
    @rhaglen Před 2 lety +142

    "Beijing uses the wealth generated in the cost to subsidise generous social programs to stimulate GDP growth in the interior." This statement might have been convincing if you had provided some examples of these projects. It is important to provide examples if you make a claim likt this. There are China-watch channels that claim the opposite of what you are claiming here, namely that the CCP ony looks after itself, and that there are no social prorgrams whatsoever to redistribute wealth. On the contrary, some say that wealth distribution is not al all what the CCP want.

    • @gaganbhattacharya9890
      @gaganbhattacharya9890 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, at least the "common prosperity" narrative helps create short-term stability!

    • @danwelterweight4137
      @danwelterweight4137 Před 2 lety +48

      They just had a massive program to combat extreme poverty. They spent hundreds of Billions of dollars in that.
      They also have many subsides for the average Citizens.
      They have many programs for public housing. And the state owns many private companies that employ a lot of people as well.

    • @MAmet-bc3zz
      @MAmet-bc3zz Před 2 lety +12

      Yeah I think this guy got a China bonus or something prior to making this video, sad because I actually thought he did good research prior to his videos, guess not

    • @angamaitesangahyando685
      @angamaitesangahyando685 Před 2 lety +60

      @@MAmet-bc3zz Quick, every video on China must be full of hate on the Chinese government! Otherwise, cannot compute!
      - Adûnâi

    • @ahkee369
      @ahkee369 Před 2 lety +7

      Azerbaijian is close ally of Commie China. Both countries have very strong econ links. Caspian Report could have been brainwashed by many years of CCP propaganda.

  • @mettaworldpeace9836
    @mettaworldpeace9836 Před 2 lety +5

    Summary: external threat drives social equality. this also explains the lack of it in US.

  • @jsplit9716
    @jsplit9716 Před 2 lety +1

    the thing is: one of the reasons the coast is that rich is that in the beginning capitalism was only allowed there and that for years. Also, you really weren't allowed to move back then.

  • @Asfandyar_
    @Asfandyar_ Před 2 lety +111

    "Can the United States abandon imperialism/global policeman role' would be a good topic considering that its possible that it might be forced to in this century.

    • @captainalex157
      @captainalex157 Před 2 lety +23

      i think it already is, the US is gonna mainly focus on supporting allies in Europe and Asia in the coming decades. Especially in Asia against possible chinese aggression.

    • @peterdisabella2156
      @peterdisabella2156 Před 2 lety +21

      The US loses more than it gains on its foreign escapades so it shouldn't really be a problem.

    • @heinrichhimmler3781
      @heinrichhimmler3781 Před 2 lety +8

      @@captainalex157 Ya In Dream

    • @enternalinferno
      @enternalinferno Před 2 lety +19

      can china abandon imperialism would be a good topic

    • @captainalex157
      @captainalex157 Před 2 lety

      @@heinrichhimmler3781 ja Heinrich, das Kartell muss ausgelöscht werden!

  • @Etzellll
    @Etzellll Před 2 lety +85

    Communism, and Authoritarianism was used quite interchangeably in this video, even if they dont really mean the same thing. I think its safe to say, that China is a capitalist state, with an authoritarian government. Said government wants to control, or guide the economy, thats why the heavy handed measures. But calling a country with the most billionaires on Earth communist, is a bit strange.....

    • @barmybarmecide5390
      @barmybarmecide5390 Před 2 lety +9

      Communism doesn't have a static definition, not anymore than Christianity or Islam. The CCP, FARC and Glasgow Communist Youth are all incredibly different from each other, but they all call themselves communist and genuinely believe that

    • @stooge_mobile
      @stooge_mobile Před 2 lety +11

      That's because political power leads to economic power in China. Apart from the recent tech billionaires, the government controls who wins and loses in the economy. It's a hybrid communist and capitalist system. But politically, the economy is
      very much driven by the "Communist party of China"

    • @castor3020
      @castor3020 Před 2 lety +18

      The government still has the last say on anything relating to economics, it might not be actual communism, more of an evolution of it. "Communism with Chinese characteristics" if you will. In their eyes the "people" is in control of the means of production, just through proxies. No company stays alive in China without the party allowing it to be so, not to mention that they are subordinated to the party to do it's will if need be.
      Concepts evolve with time, and we should evolve the definitions (or invent new ones) with them.

    • @miliba
      @miliba Před 2 lety +26

      Its state capitalism, totalitarianism and communist symbology

    • @ganweidi1382
      @ganweidi1382 Před 2 lety +12

      When government controls the capitalist, adversaries would label the government as authoratarian. When the capitalist control the government, adversaries would label the government as corrupted.

  • @jerrysun44
    @jerrysun44 Před 2 lety +2

    The gdp per capital map is inaccurate, Inner Mongolia and 四川 is wealthier

  • @LeonardoFigueredo1984
    @LeonardoFigueredo1984 Před 2 lety

    This episode is excellent! Great Channel. Cheers from Brazil

  • @MalekEllouz00
    @MalekEllouz00 Před 2 lety +22

    Hey Shirvan,
    Would you please do a video on the Geopolitics/Geography of Tunisia 🇹🇳 (or even North Africa)? We have a very varied geography (Ain Draham, highest rainfall in North Africa, the Mejerda Valley) and have been the stopping point for countless empires in the world due to our geography. Even dubbed the Granary of the Roman Empire at one point! We are also going through a difficult transition to democracy with complete economic stagnation and issues. Would be interesting to cover them!
    Thanks!
    PS, I know I’ve commented this before on other videos, I am just trying to make sure it reaches you as you receive thousands of comments on most videos :)

    • @johnseppethe2nd2
      @johnseppethe2nd2 Před 2 lety

      I wasn't aware the country was so significant in that respect

    • @nuibui6667
      @nuibui6667 Před 2 lety

      That seems interesting

    • @sami3566
      @sami3566 Před 2 lety

      Nope, you are a Tunisian mind your business

  • @zsl1256
    @zsl1256 Před 2 lety +16

    Amazing video as always! Shirvan, how would all of this tie into the Evergrande collapse situation, as such an economic collapse of a behemoth in the Chinese stock market is already affecting other companies. Would the effect not disproportionately affect the richer coastal provinces who are more connected to the Chinese market and thus hit this scheme as a whole since they are the country's cash cow?

    • @lakeblackBLM
      @lakeblackBLM Před 2 lety

      COMMUNISM WILL PREVAIL

    • @caomilo1031
      @caomilo1031 Před 2 lety +1

      The real estate market is disproportionately developed. Price in 1st tier cities like Shanghai and Beijing are still rocket high while housing price in 3rd & 4th tier cities cannot sustain any more. The potential collapse of real estate companies will affect people in poorer regions first.

  • @LXHFIRENKING
    @LXHFIRENKING Před 2 lety +15

    "While South Korea has defensible geographies that bestow Seoul substantial securities" North Korean heavy artilleries literally 30 km away: am I joke to u...

    • @lakeblackBLM
      @lakeblackBLM Před 2 lety

      COMMUNISM WILL PREVAIL

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 2 lety

      Part of that "defensible geography" is a faraway ally with a really big stick. A war between N Korea and S Korea would actively drag America into the battlefield, but China's involvement might be more passive and uncertain.

  • @vampir4692
    @vampir4692 Před 2 lety +29

    Можно пожалуйста сделать похожий ролик про Россию? Стратегически,и Географические цели, важные для России.?)

    • @franknwogu4911
      @franknwogu4911 Před 2 lety +6

      Он сделал
      czcams.com/video/zwzliJF0-SI/video.html
      czcams.com/video/HE6rSljTwdU/video.html

  • @bobshen7425
    @bobshen7425 Před 2 lety +66

    Excuse me, Xinjiang in fact have a GDP nearly 10 times that of Sudan(200billion vs 25billion USD), with about half the population(25 vs 45 million). I understand you are emphasizing how poor it is, but this might be a bit misleading. In this rate China’s GDP per capita is comparable to Luxembourg lol.

    • @user-gc1hg9sp9k
      @user-gc1hg9sp9k Před 2 lety +3

      yeah, i think it will be more fair if he compare with GDP per capita rather than only GDP

    • @manayakakanataka5256
      @manayakakanataka5256 Před 2 lety +17

      you are wrong if you take GDP adjusted of cost of living in Sudan it the same as xinjiang (250billion) source world bank. Sudan has devalued his money by 2 third these recently so he is right.

    • @kingenimatix7013
      @kingenimatix7013 Před 2 lety +1

      GDP per capita?

    • @terencekwong3033
      @terencekwong3033 Před 2 lety +5

      Good point and it's also misleading not showing their GDP growth per province. Percentage wise, places like XJ, Tibet and Inner Mongolia show higher growth compared to the more established coastal regions. But if he included that, he wouldn't have a point to make.

    • @dallascopp4798
      @dallascopp4798 Před 2 lety +8

      China has been found to lie about their economic numbers and go through extra effort to make their interior territories look better than they actually are. In-fact recently it was discovered they lied about their data to the World Bank to make themselves look better. Any numbers about the GDP from Xinjiang or Tibet are most likely highly inflated so the costal elites can keep up their image for the sake of propaganda.

  • @claypeterson1880
    @claypeterson1880 Před 2 lety +6

    This is simply a great, informative channel. Love it.

  • @abp.dorime7943
    @abp.dorime7943 Před 2 lety

    I wasn't notified of this one.

  • @kimsong4659
    @kimsong4659 Před 2 lety

    Nice work! Very insightful and enlightening~

  • @KampGallery
    @KampGallery Před 2 lety +16

    best quote: "It's darkest before it's totally black". Thought provoking.

    • @gxlorp
      @gxlorp Před 2 lety

      Sounds like you've been smoking a little weed

  • @azj_
    @azj_ Před 2 lety +207

    Xi Jinping: Comrade you will receive a huge social credit

    • @alvarez6487
      @alvarez6487 Před 2 lety +37

      China’s social credit system is no different than our current system in the United States. If anything, we hold the largest prison population in the world and we keep track of criminal records of offenders. China’s social credit system is better because in the United States we have a credit system that forces us into debt while China has a credit system that rewards citizens for acting accordingly. Nothing strange at all.

    • @Kaybossboi
      @Kaybossboi Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/Sp9gzO1wZt0/video.html

    • @akil412
      @akil412 Před 2 lety +14

      Social credit system in china is a myth lol
      Typical american

    • @genghiskhan5701
      @genghiskhan5701 Před 2 lety +24

      @@alvarez6487
      Both are shit, pointing out one shit doesn't not make one smell better

    • @Arcklez
      @Arcklez Před 2 lety +6

      @@alvarez6487 +5 Social Credit

  • @onlyplaysveigar7241
    @onlyplaysveigar7241 Před 2 lety +6

    The notion of security from the eastern regions is overstated, historically, the source of Chinese instability has always been from it's western coasts or from it's interior. Ultimately, it's because of China's inept governance (Especially during times of irreversibly bad decision making, such as refusing to adopt breakthrough western technologies which would've given it a competitive edge in industrializing and maintaining a modern defense force).
    Overall, the necessity for enacting common prosperity is to derive it's legitimacy. I think Shirivan is an amazing commentator, but I think i disagree with his notion.

    • @yytyytg
      @yytyytg Před rokem

      Innovation is slow in China and all the emphasis and social attitude were moved to keep the system stable.

  • @zhixianduan2395
    @zhixianduan2395 Před 2 lety +1

    For those of you wondering why China does not want to let go of it interior buffer zones and focus on economic development in the heart land: China tried this in the Song dynasty (960-1279). The dynasty did not control much buffer zones, focused on economic development and distrusted the military. The results is it gradually lost its northern territory to competing states and eventually conquered by the Mongols. After Mongol occupation and the beginning of Ming dynasty, Chinese people learned their lesson and never repeated the same mistake again.

  • @AhmetwithaT
    @AhmetwithaT Před 2 lety +20

    How is China's hinterland being poor and devoid of development different than the United States's mid section being poor and devoid of development different?

    • @litmusing
      @litmusing Před 2 lety +5

      Ethnicities and geography.

    • @mahadismail9569
      @mahadismail9569 Před 2 lety +4

      I don't remember him making a comparison, this video is about China if you can't read the title

    • @AlecMuller
      @AlecMuller Před 2 lety +12

      It's about trade and infrastructure. Coastal regions world-wide have more efficient access to markets, because it costs far less to build & maintain a port than an interstate highway system, and the cost per ton moved is lower. The US was blessed with internal waterways that reduced the cost of market access early on, and we built railroads and interstates earlier than most countries.
      China's road and rail infrastructure is growing rapidly, but it's also hampered by corruption that puts other countries to shame. Also, from an authoritarian standpoint, the CCP doesn't have any incentive to help the interior catch up to the coast: preventing rebellion and sucking out raw materials & cheap labor is all that matters to them.

    • @crazyshorts4278
      @crazyshorts4278 Před 2 lety

      @@AlecMuller so accepted that US is evil but however CCP comes from nowhere and they become evil.

    • @civilengineer3349
      @civilengineer3349 Před 2 lety +3

      In China's case, their hinterland was always poor until recent developments.
      In the United States case, their middle lands were rich but then became poor...in part because of trade with China

  • @skeletonkeysproductionskp

    Brilliant video as always, I'm giving you credit and using the maps you have here in my upcoming video on "What if there was a Scramble for China?" Keep up the great work, really is an inspiration for us all!

    • @puccini4530
      @puccini4530 Před 2 lety +1

      What if there WERE a scramble for China. I hope that helps.

  • @DowntownPaco
    @DowntownPaco Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent assessment. This absolutely makes sense. Thank you!

  • @TheZzpop
    @TheZzpop Před 2 lety +5

    I feel like you are missing the point that Chinna may "subsidize" the poor interior with the wealth of the developed coast but it also keeps the interior poor in the first place and subsdizes the wealth of the coastal regions through the brutal repressive recource extaction and forced low skill labor exploitation of the interior!!!! Also all of the best funded social programs are only availbe to citezens of costal provinces and there is an internal passport system which makes it incredibly dificult for people from the interior to imigrate to costal citeis in order to take advantage of those social programs, receive an educaiton, and uplift their circumstances!!!!

    • @marlarki5280
      @marlarki5280 Před 2 lety

      Honestly a really stupid take, without the restriction on internal population movement you would get slums that puts manilla and Delhi to shame and ending it would be an impossible task.

  • @Klyce
    @Klyce Před 2 lety +10

    Very interesting. I'd like to see a video on how China would break up and how the government would try to respond to a breakup.

    • @elmohead
      @elmohead Před 2 lety +6

      It is already in 2 pieces: mainland and Taiwan. The civil war is still going on.

    • @dirckthedork-knight1201
      @dirckthedork-knight1201 Před 2 lety +1

      Me too

    • @gluebox
      @gluebox Před 2 lety +5

      It's people like you to why foreigners have less and less access to regions of China. Always starting shit. Let's see a break up of your country. How about that!

  • @Wargunsfan
    @Wargunsfan Před 2 lety +19

    One of the most erudite and insightful channels on this platform. I learn new things with each video. I now have a better understanding of the challenges facing China and its leaders. A big thank you to the Caspian Report!

    • @firstnamelastnamecanada337
      @firstnamelastnamecanada337 Před 2 lety +2

      This video was actually really bad. The rural areas are poor that the coastal ones. Yea it's like that in every country not just China and a lot of capitalist democracies give money to the poorer states. Also China isn't doing that much to help the poorer state except put Uyghurs into concentration camps. This video just seams to be an excuse full of buzz words to justify dictatorship in China

    • @kkcq8446
      @kkcq8446 Před 2 lety

      At least it provides evidence to support its arguments.

    • @firstnamelastnamecanada337
      @firstnamelastnamecanada337 Před 2 lety

      @@kkcq8446 Yea cause buzz words are great evidence

    • @firstnamelastnamecanada337
      @firstnamelastnamecanada337 Před 2 lety

      @@kkcq8446 No I thought that this video was pretty bad. Most democratic capitalist country have poor rural areas that the government subsidises nothing new there. Also China heavily discriminates against the minorities in these rural areas and the best and road jut exploits them. The video seems full of buzz words and the guy doesn't even realise that in a democratic country there would probably be more social programs for the poor

    • @kkcq8446
      @kkcq8446 Před 2 lety

      @@firstnamelastnamecanada337 Better than no words at all.

  • @WynnofThule
    @WynnofThule Před 2 lety +2

    7:51 you forgot Skyrim, which belongs to the Nords

  • @richardfraser7024
    @richardfraser7024 Před 2 lety

    This is an excellent account. Great job

  • @michaellukeman697
    @michaellukeman697 Před 2 lety +3

    Excellent work as always! Thanks for this insight.