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293 points doener | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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room271 ◴[] No.23831071[source]
This kind of thing is going to play out a lot over the next few years. It's a tough question: how to marry globalisation with the political realities. When China was very poor, it didn't really matter, or perhaps the assumption was that China would liberalise more quickly than it has. But China, while increasingly mature economically, has not developed proper civil society, human rights, freedom of expression, democracy, and so on. Let us hope they do so as quickly as possible, not least for the sake of the Chinese people themselves. And let us work to improve our example and unity too in countries where we do have these things, however imperfectly.
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bzb3 ◴[] No.23831600[source]
It's not like the UK is a paragon of freedom of expression.
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1. ogogmad ◴[] No.23831638[source]
This reminds me of a joke:

During Soviet times, a Russian man was arguing with a British man over whether their respective countries had freedom of speech. The British man said "I can go to the Houses of Parliament and call Margaret Thatcher an idiot". To which the Soviet man said "It's the same for us. I can go to Red Square and call Margaret Thatcher an idiot".

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2. ◴[] No.23831864[source]
3. chosenbreed37 ◴[] No.23831945[source]
:-)