

They didn’t need to do that.
If the PRC didn’t do anything, then the PRC stood by.
In case you didn’t realize it, China is a country of 1.4 billion people, and there are plenty of companies available that can trade with Russia at any given time
Okay, so the PRC did not undertake any initiatives, and it was just trade as usual, it seems.
The video I linked, which you didn’t have time to finish, gives concrete examples of that
Can you provide at least one timestamp? I am busy, tired, and probably sick these days, and I don’t want to dedicate too much time that I could spend on my studies on a capitalist talking about how great private companies are at innovation for what, 40+ minutes?
He explains how China is intentionally turning a blind eye to military exports to Russia which they’re officially not doing. It’s incredible to me that people can be so naive to think that everything Russia and China are doing is done publicly
If the PRC actually supplied Russia with weapons, sure (even though that’s a very different thing from what you initially pointed to). What are those weapons, and why haven’t I heard about them? Or are we talking specifically about components and resources that are used in manufacturing weapons in Russia, in which case the PRC also supplies NATO with those.
Yeah, this counts, but this does come very late into the war, and is very different from what you pointed to previously.
My bad. I must have mixed up the PRC going back on its other restrictions during the recent deal with the genocidal hegemon.
https://www.csis.org/analysis/consequences-chinas-new-rare-earths-export-restrictions
The PRC has made an agreement with NATO to go back on restrictions on rare earths exports.
China cut off drone sales, critical supplies of explosives, and rare earth minerals that make it effectively impossible for NATO to produce modern weapons.
I’ll believe it when I see NATO stop being able to produce modern weapons instead of using them to enact genocides and colonial reconquest.
An interesting way to say massively increasing trade with Russia, while cutting the west off critical things they need to produce drones and artillery shells.
Given that the former comes naturally from Russia having to find another export destination while being in a weaker position to negotiate, and the PRC has already gone back on some of the latter, that’s not a way to say that, interesting or not.
Well I just did that above where I gave you links to the restrictions PRC putting on NATO that are directly impacting NATO military production.
And forgot the recent agreements to go back on some of that. And also only provided those links or pointed to those things after escalating for no good reason.
I’ve given you plenty of examples
Not until your latest comment. Up until then it was ‘the PRC has been doing business as usual with Russia, at a much lower volume than it has been doing with NATO, so it clearly took an action to support Russia’
Nobody suggested it was a charity, and it’s laughable to claim that it should be
I guess it is laughable that there should be cooperation between states outside the imperial core that would involve long-term solutions and be in any way comparable to what the USSR has done.
I love how you’re just making things up at this point
I love it how you can look at things like inflation (even just general, and not inflation of primary-needs goods) and think that it’s all made up. I would have loved to live in your fantasy world.
I also love how you seriously cited the ‘high-income country’ thing earlier. That was hilarious.
For starters, Russia never asked China to join the war or restart relevant industries
For starters, what the compradors in Russia asked or didn’t ask the PRC to do in this regard is irrelevant, as the PRC is in a position to coerce them.
Not clear what these are given that Russia is currently outproducing NATO by a large margin
So, you look at a semi-peripheral state the industries of which were destroyed in the 90s and which has been reliant on selling cheap resources and labour (while, admittedly, still having a periphery of its own and still having favourable unequal exchange with some of the countries outside of the imperial core, so Russia isn’t in the worst position out there) and on importing expensive finished goods, and can’t see a problem? Really?
But also, I would prefer to live in the fantasy world where Russia outproduces the entirety of NATO by a large margin in areas like electronics and industrial equipment.
Meanwhile, there are plenty of clear examples of China restricting trade with NATO
Which you only managed to point to after flipping out for no good reason and insisting that the PRC trading with Russia means that the PRC actively supports Russia in the war (even though there has been apparently neither a policy change nor any sort of action taken by the PRC in this regard), while the PRC trading with NATO is magically not counted as support for NATO. And forgot about the PRC also going back on some of those restrictions, and about some of those restrictions being very recent.
But sure, I do admit that I made a mistake with antimony. Let’s hope that restriction stays in place.
Sounds to me like you’re just upset that China didn’t start WW3, because taking the actions you suggest would certainly be a good way to go about doing it.
I can just as well accuse you of trying to invent a fantasy where your preconceived conclusions hold true, such as in the cases of the sanctions magically not hurting Russia and the PRC never being in the wrong (hopefully, you are still not creative enough to come up with claims like ‘the PRC siding with NATO against the USSR and helping plunge the world into the neo-colonial hell that we are witnessing today was good and awesome’), and that you want for nothing to be done about NATO’s colonialism.
There is absolutely no rational reason for PRC to enter the war directly
Except for ending the conflict more quickly and with lower cost in lives.
or to start provoking NATO further
NATO doesn’t exactly need a provocation to do things. It will come and destroy more of the world while the PRC stands by.
Who is everybody exactly? Do you even know anybody living in Russia?
Ой, прошу прощения, вы правы. Никого не знаю, никого на улицах и на работе не встречаю, никого со школ и с университетов - включая учителей - не знаю, живу в городе-призраке с нулевым населением. Даже меня там нет.
I followed the forum, do point out where they say recession is happening
The minister of economic development says that at around the 25:30 mark
https://youtu.be/Qtt9RFshDNc?t=1521
I’ve heard these predictions non stop for the past three years, and it’s incredible that people still keep regurgitating this nonsense
Are you saying that Reshetnikov or other people responsible for the Russian economy have been making these predictions for the past three years?
Here’s what things are looking like in the real world https://archive.ph/I8wrK
Oh, look. Russian compradors continuing to sell off cheap resources instead of finished goods.
LMFAO they are not talking about going to a recession
Well, you need to do something about your auditory comprehension now that you have been pointed to the minister of economic development talking about a recession.
That’s literally the argument you keep trying to make here
You also need to do something about your reading comprehension. I have already said that the actions of the PRC are not ‘dumb’. They are, however, neither altruistic, nor (in the case of the things that you were pointing out previously - I do admit a mistake regarding antimony, and the recent restriction on selling drones does count, even though it came very late) indicative of the PRC actively supporting Russia in the war.
because they would have to be complete imbeciles to allow Russia to fail against the west. Anybody with even a minimally functioning brain can understand that it would be a disaster for China
Well, one could have argued the same in the case of the PRC and the USSR, and yet, here we are.
But also, the PRC can afford Russia to go into crises that would weaken it and make trade with Russia even more advantageous to the PRC just fine, so long as it does not get couped by NATO.
If you understand that PRC is taking actions that are beneficial to them then you should also recognize that ensuring Russia is politically and economically stable is at the top of the list for PRC
Ensuring Russia’s economic stability is likely not something that the PRC is concerned about, as that could mean an even better, even more dependent source of cheap resources.
Ensuring long-term economic stability in Russia would mean stuff like restarting Russia’s industries and getting rid of the economic inequality (which can only be done temporarily under capitalism), which the PRC doesn’t really care about, either.
Keeping Russia politically stable? Sure.
Imagine equating a state and related movements that massively improved working-class people’s lives, including in terms of life expectancy, literacy rates, including by providing guaranteed housing, universal healthcare, fundamental women’s rights that are taken for granted today, and which not only fought off settler-colonialism in the form of the Lebensraum and the Holocaust, but also helped many other countries liberate themselves from European powers, with things like Germany under NSDAP, the US, Pissrael, and NATO in general.