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576 points empressplay | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.436s | source
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epolanski ◴[] No.42072079[source]
Not going to lie, I find it amusing the double standard where we all know through multiple whistleblowers and courts that the US government spies on virtually every person on this planet (including world leaders like Angela Merkel) yet it's such a concern that the Chinese government allegedly spies on random Joes dancing in their bedroom.

As an European those double standards and American exceptionalism (the idea that common laws and rules do not apply to US) will never cease to bother and annoy me.

replies(1): >>42072170 #
dghlsakjg ◴[] No.42072170[source]
What does Canada booting a Chinese company have to do with US companies in Europe?

You do know that Canada is not the US, and most Canadians do not identify or want to be seen as American.

In any case, the solution here is glaringly obvious. If you think that American companies pose a national security threat, or that they serve as unofficial tools of an adversarial government remove them from the country using legal means, just like Canada did.

replies(1): >>42072305 #
epolanski ◴[] No.42072305[source]
The double standard is in calling China an enemy when China has never done jack shit to Canada for allegedly spying through tik tok, but scolding off the southern neighbor which we have multiple proofs has put all Canadians under mass surveillance (from communication to movement) for which we have proofs and leaks by whistleblowers like Snowden or the AT&T guy.

That's what worries me, the easiness with which we label one as enemy, and assume the other one being normal.

replies(2): >>42072796 #>>42073656 #
1. roncesvalles ◴[] No.42073656[source]
Canada and China are absolutely not on good terms diplomatically. There is a lot of recent history of disagreeable behavior by the Chinese involving Canada and Canadians.