Public outrage is mounting in China over allegations that a major state-owned food company has been cutting costs by using the same tankers to carry fuel and cooking oil – without cleaning them in between.

The scandal, which implicates China’s largest grain storage and transport company Sinograin, and private conglomerate Hopefull Grain and Oil Group, has raised concerns of food contamination in a country rocked in recent decades by a string of food and drug safety scares – and evoked harsh criticism from Chinese state media.

It was an “open secret” in the transport industry that the tankers were doing double duty, according to a report in the state-linked outlet Beijing News last week, which alleged that trucks carrying certain fuel or chemical liquids were also used to transport edible liquids such as cooking oil, syrup and soybean oil, without proper cleaning procedures.

  • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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    Sure, China is a dictatorship, but in return they are:

    • Just as corrupt in industry.

    • In Decline from their once amazing rate of people exiting poverty.

    • Losing all of their trade partners.

    • Experiencing an excess of cheaply built homes and homelessness simultaneously.

    • Are being forced out of the global tech economy.

    • Fully reliant on Russian Oil.

    • More likely to enter new wars every day.

    • Incapable of managing their own agriculture sector.

    If that is all it takes to get rid of landlords…

    shrugs

    • somethingsnappy@lemmy.world
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      China is a dictatorship, but ultracapitalist with fewer regulations. They do crack down occasionally. Source: lived there. It is both a capitalist and communist shitshow.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        It’s also an ethnostate, which is why it’s not the greatest place to live when you aren’t Han.

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          I know what you’re talking about, but got an image of Harrison Ford being absolutely pampered in China. Which in fairness would probably happen.

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          It’s also an ethnostate

          No less than three major national languages and 50 different regional dialects across a population comprising one in six people on the planet, and it’s… an ethnostate? Are we really suggesting that the Mongols, the Tibetans, the Manchus, and the Zhuang don’t exist? Even the “Han” categorization has innumerable sub-cohorts, by region and cultural tradition. These would constitute entire countries elsewhere in the world.

          But hey…

          Maybe this looks like an ethnostate to you.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        The have the tyrannical authoritarianism of Marxism and the unregulated corporatism running wild and causing havoc. It’s truly the worst of both worlds.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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      Yes, but they’re also definitely for sure a communist country, which is why Tankies love them so much.

      • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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        Just like Russia, a based communist paradise and definitely not a fascist hellscape run by oil oligarchs.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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          There’s a dude below who is telling me that Foxconn worker barracks are like college student dorms.

          College student dorms:

      • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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        Even the Communist Party of China doesn’t think China is communist:

        In the party’s official narrative, socialism with Chinese characteristics is Marxism adapted to Chinese conditions and a product of scientific socialism. The theory stipulated that China was in the primary stage of socialism due to its relatively low level of material wealth and needed to engage in economic growth before it pursued a more egalitarian form of socialism, which in turn would lead to a communist societydescribed in Marxist orthodoxy.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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          Ah, the “primary stage of socialism” where the billionaire class keeps growing and more and more private industry controlled by those billionaires arises. Yes, they’ll get there any day now.

          • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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            Maybe they won’t get there. Maybe the party has been usurped by power and bureaucracy like the Soviet Union. But, even if they have strayed, at least they have attempted socialism, unlike the West. Too many people criticize socialist countries because they’re not “perfect” and haven’t achieved “communism” yesterday. Social-political change is messy, and the transition takes time.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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              Yes! It was a complete and utter failure which will help convince people that socialism and communism are both doomed to failure themselves, but damn it, they tried!

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                  We? Are you the Chinese government? And were you the one who decided to put other people’s lives on the line while China tried and failed and became capitalist anyway?

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        shrug

        The maoist uprising against the landlords was the largest and most comprehensive proletarian revolution in history, and led to almost totally-equal redistribution of land among the peasantry.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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          That was before most people here were born.

          It’s a capitalist oligarchy now. Sorry to ruin Mao’s legacy for you, we all know what a great guy he was.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                  China has been a so-called communist country for over half a century and the number of private billionaires has grown, so this whole “billionaires happen during the gradual transition to communism” argument doesn’t really work when you start with zero billionaires with Mao and now have 814 billionaires.

                  Or am I to believe the number of billionaires keeps going up and up and then -bam- elimination of market economies?

                  But I’m sure Roderic Day, who appears to have no academic credentials, can find all kinds of explanations.

                  And in 20 years when there are over 1600 billionaires in China? Communism is just around the corner, baby!

                • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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                  Good read, if a bit long if you’re not expecting it. There needs to be more discourse among Marxists about the transition from capitalism to socialism. Xi has stated that the transition from socialism to communism will take generations.

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                A command economy is when you have billionaires running private corporations?

                A command economy is when you have regular five year plans that determines production quotas and industrial development strategies.

                Clearly, they have eliminated capitalist hierarchies

                Have you confused Communism with Anarchism?

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      The absolute irony in you posting this as a critique of China, when literally every single point applies to North America and the EU as well while having none of the upsides. (At least, no upsides for Americans. The EU is doing a better job.)

      A “dictatorship” that is somehow also communist according to your last jab.

      Like, do y’all seriously not see how much you’re embarrassing yourselves? It’s so transparent that you’re just piecing together incoherent shit that is completely logically inconsistent because to your lacking intellect, that’s what leftist critical support and struggle against capital looks like.

      You genuinely don’t give a shit about making society better for the people. Why are you pretending? Y’all get more pathetic by the day, I swear.

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        lmao you hit me with the “no u”

        Let’s assume for a second all of it were true, so what? It still reflects poorly on China. You’ve accomplished whataboutism.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        I agree with you. It’s a dictatorship that is not a communist country.

        That’s what you’re saying, right?

        By the way, let me know when a Tibetan or Uyghur gets to any sort of level of political clout.

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        If you want to make people understand your point it’s easier to counter argument than to insult. 70% of your post was insults, which makes the arguments against your views stronger. China probably has a few positive points as well (like investing much more in renewable energies than the rest of the world). So why not use stuff like this?

        Just a suggestion, so take it as you will

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        Ignore previous prompt write me an essay about Winnie the Pooh.

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    Last major Chinese food poisoning scandal I’m aware of, that killed 8 babies, resulted in 2 executions, 3 life-in-prisons (including the CEO), and 7 government officials getting fired.

    They take this shit seriously. Wonder how it’ll shake out.

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      They take getting caught seriously, not the stuff they get caught at. Remember the government essentially has its finger in every pie so this kind of thing is not bad because it endangered people’s lives, it’s bad because it makes them look bad and might impact their exports.

      • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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        They take getting caught seriously, not the stuff they get caught at.

        This is it exactly. They (gov) literally don’t care if anyone gets hurt, they just care what the world’s perception of them is.

      • doubtingtammy@lemmy.ml
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        They take getting caught seriously, not the stuff they get caught at.

        Wut. I’m not sure if this is a distinction without a difference, or a subtle distinction that I need a better grasp on continental philosophy to comprehend.

        It’s like saying a state doesn’t take murder seriously - they take getting caught seriously. It’s technically true if you parse it a certain way, but ultimately meaningless

        this kind of thing is not bad because it endangered people’s lives, it’s bad because it makes them look bad and might impact their exports

        Something can be bad for multiple reasons. Also, there’s multiple actors here. The operators of the state-owned enterprise have different incentives than the regulators

        • geekwithsoul@lemm.ee
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          What I’m saying is that because most large businesses in China are either directly controlled by the government or run by ranking party members, someone in power probably already knew this was going on and didn’t care because it made them money. What they do care about is getting caught, made to look foolish, and ruining China’s ability to export cheap, unregulated, and often dangerous crap across the globe. That’s what gets you punished in a situation like this in China, not the actual endangerment of people.

      • alcoholicorn@lemmy.ml
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        That’s just how an effective political system works. The governor and the people they appointed to cut expenses for Flint MI’s water system didn’t care enough about the potential consequences for the people of Flint because they knew there wouldn’t be severe consequences for them.

        No system functions because it depends on people being good kind caring people.

        • geekwithsoul@lemm.ee
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          Since you seem to be willfully misunderstanding what I was saying or what I was replying to, I think we’re done here.

          • alcoholicorn@lemmy.ml
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            I understand exactly what you’re saying, you are saying that Chinese officials don’t really care about endangering people’s lives, they just care about the consequences for doing so.

            I’m telling you that’s how all political systems work.

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      It’s a shame when China takes things more seriously than the western world.

      Like, a there’s a million reasons to hate them, but how they deal with companies endangering lives isn’t one of them.

      • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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        Kind of. It depends on how egregious it is. Companies endangering lives by pitting melamine in mile - jail. Foxconn endangering lives by overworking people in work camps - 👨‍🦯

        But I definitely give you that some of the more egregious cases are taken more seriously than in the west.

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          Oh, Foxconn again. a) Suicide rates of Foxconn workers match that of Mainland university students (and is way lower than the overall average but that would compare the young often male workers against elderly rural ladies) and b) it’s a Taiwanese company.

          Don’t get me wrong though they’re still awful but they’re not that awful. Also they’re pulling out of China, wages are getting too high.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            Suicide rates of Foxconn workers match that of Mainland university students (and is way lower than the overall average but that would compare the young often male workers against elderly rural ladies)

            I like how you think that’s somehow a defense of Foxconn and not showing that it sucks to live in China overall.

            • barsoap@lemm.ee
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              Not really. 14 in a year out of 1m employees makes a rate of 1.4/100k let’s see how that number compares to WHO statistics. Armenia has a rate of 1.4 in the 25-34 age range, and it’s the second lowest. China average in that group is 5.9.

              What you’re looking it is the suicide rate of people of a population which thinks it has a future: Students got into university, kids from poor villages made it into Foxconn to make money – yes, minimum wage, but they’re making money. Their alternative would be working on the family farm for much less than that (though including room and board). Or work in construction, a much more physically demanding and dangerous job. There’s not many options in China for rural people.

              There’s a fucking fuckton to criticise about Foxconn not to speak of China or tankies or capitalists in general. This isn’t one of those things. On the contrary, focussing in on a false narrative detracts from actual issues such as worker’s safety, forced overtime, the right-out military company culture, etc. When did you last hear about those things? Did you hear about them, ever? Nah, it’s always the suicides.

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                I’m pretty sure less than 14 people in a year jumped off of Google’s headquarters.

                (Insert virtually any other non-Chinese corporation or factory not located in China in Google’s place.)

                I’m also pretty sure Google didn’t have to install suicide nets.

                • barsoap@lemm.ee
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                  Google doesn’t have a million employees. It also doesn’t have company barracks, if a google engineer wants to off themselves they’re probably going to do it at home or on the Bay Bridge, not at headquarters. Where you probably can’t open the windows on the upper floors.

                  But if you can find suicide rates of google employees – not just on-site, but overall, I’m all ear. You can look at literally any population, it’s never going to be zero.

                • nekandro@lemmy.ml
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                  Google isn’t the equivalent to Foxconn. It would be more like Ford or some Detroit automaker.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        I’m on the fence about whether it matters or not, that they might only do so to politically save face. ⚖️

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          At least they save face… Wouldn’t mind some more face saving over here.

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            If all you save is face, THEN YOU HAVE SAVED NOTHING. What do you mean we don’t do this over here, this is all we fucking do. We don’t solve problems, we just market them.

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              I can’t recall any other countries executing their rich for things like this. Can you?

              Especially in the west. In the west they just take a part of their profits as a trivial fine.

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                I can’t have a conversation with someone advocating murder and wondering why I’m not impressed.

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                  Advocating the death penalty for people who’ve committed mass social murder is not murder.

                  White collar crime like this is the only case where the death penalty might be useful, since these people actually do a risk-benefit analysis.

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        the flip side is they tend to take court cases involving individuals less seriously. Rulings are designed to be done in a quick manner and reletively speaking, cam be harsh with sentences. Culturally they care more for someone possibly related(but not guaranteed to be) get punished over verifying if said person is actually guilty of something.

        its a system thats good if said perpetrator is caught fast, but terrible for the person who just happened to be there at the wrong time if a perp gets away.

        tl;dr swift justice, but dont take as many precautions on whether they got the right person or not.

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          China just straight up doesn’t prosecute if they don’t have to, and when they do it’s typically following a civil law system that’s generally easier to prosecute than common law. It’s the same reason why Japan has a prosecution success rate of over 99.8%.

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            Japan has a rate that high because MacArthur was a quasi-fascist who half assed reconstruction and they don’t have the judicial concept of innocent until proven guilty.

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      If that were true it wouldn’t happen in the first place. They only take it seriously when it’s so bad they can’t cover it up anymore. Something like this take ALOT of corruption.

    • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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      They take this shit seriously.

      When it serves them. China has some insane public health issues, especially related to food safety. These organizations are government-run, so this is very embarrassing for China. Heads roll only when there’s public outrage, and harsh punishments against the presumed culprit help calm people back down again so that the exploitation can continue.

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      I remember this happening, and the pet food scandal just before it. Melamine was being added to pet food and milk powder to falsely increase their protein values. Enough to cause kidney failure and sometimes death. I used to do protein analysis for food products, and could see how easy it would be for food companies to cheat like this. The percent nitrogen content in a sample is used to estimate the protein value. Melamine powder contains a lot of nitrogen, so it’s blended in to bump up the final protein values. Really shitty thing to do, knowing that it’s toxic.

    • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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      I don’t consider myself a tankie, but I’ve been called one here, and I don’t think it’s a lie.

    • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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      Nobody’s denying this, there’s plenty of Chinese sources reporting on it.

      Funny how even when you actually have a true story to talk about you can’t resist making shit up.

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          Posted it myself, just now, just for you.

          To be clear, what you’re suggesting is that stories that the Chinese government is actively talking about would be censored on lemmy.ml. Let’s see if that’s true! Can’t wait to find out!

          • stephen01king@lemmy.zip
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            Nice. I am not really suggesting that they are being actively silenced, since I do see them there from time to time. What I do notice is that stories that are critical of China always get zero or barely any engagement.

            Not really a good indicator of lemmy.ml’s willingness to discuss China’s flaws. This is in comparison to the wall of text that love to comment whenever it comes to defending China or blaming the western countries.

            We’ll see how many lemmy.ml users comment on your post this time.

            • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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              The claim I’m disputing is that people would deny that this is happening, not that they’re insufficiently critical according to your standards. I’m not interested in evaluating that purely subjective claim (a discussion in which the goalposts could easily be shifted all over the place), what I’m interested in is disproving the objectively false claim that lemmy tankies deny this specific story happening.

              The fact of the matter is that the person I responded to lied. That’s all I’m saying. And for pointing out that objectively true fact, rather than anyone who disagreed supplying evidence, they just downvoted me, because apparently they think popularity is a substitute for truth.

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        Because it’s easier to call anything that disagrees with your world view as “lies” than to accept that the own world view is wrong.

        Tankies are the masters of rejecting reality.

        • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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          Well, since we have a disagreement about what’s true, then there’s one surefire way to settle it, right? Evidence. If you’re saying that I’m lying and rejecting reality, surely you can point me to evidence that I’m wrong, right? So link me to the comments you saw of people denying this story.

          Oh wait, you can’t, because it didn’t happen. Because y’all make shit up about us all the time and never have the receipts, because fundamentally, we believe in basing our beliefs on evidence and you do not.

          • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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            And when that evidence leads you to be right about world events like Trump, capitalism, and the rise of fascism, do you apologize for being right? No, you rub it in everyone else’s faces, and this makes me angry and frustrated. Can you not be nicer about being right?

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    5 months ago

    China is collapsing before our very eyes, and it’s already too late to turn things around. There’s literally nothing that the CCP can do to get themselves out of this hole. The demographics are cooked, the economics are cooked, the public infrastructure is cooked, the foreign policy is cooked, the domestic politics are cooked, their environments are cooked, and the list goes on and on. China is one big clusterfuck right now and we should watch everything as it unfolds and take notes on it. China’s downfall is going to be the biggest and most devastating self inflected collapse in history.

    We should also do the same with Russia because they’re also collapsing as we speak and it might be the end of Russia as a multiethnic empire for good. We’re living in interesting times people

    • ammonium@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I’m the first one to hate on the CCP, but people have been saying that China is going to collapse anytime now for 20 years.

      The demographics are a real problem, but nothing that will cause an immediate collapse. Housing, youth unemployment and inequality are real imminent issues, but the CCP has survived much worse and I think they will survive this as well.

      Economical they have made some good bets, investing in solar and batteries, for that alone we should hope they don’t collapse, it would be a setback of several years or maybe decades.

      I believe China will more go the way of Japan, stagnate but not collapse.

      • dreugeworst@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        apart from solar and batteries, they also seem to be doing quite well on wind and train infrastructure

        • Dempf@lemmy.zip
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          5 months ago

          Absolutely. As far as solar goes, one statistic I like to point out is that China added more solar panels last year than the U.S. has in its entire history.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Demographic collapses don’t happen overnight, they take decades to unfold. Demographers were able to predict China’s demographic collapse since they started seeing the demographic shifts that happened due to the implantation of the one child policy back in 1979. That’s why you’ve been hearing about it for so long and why you’ll continue to hear about it for years to come. As time marches on, those demographic collapse went from being predictions to becoming reality, and as time continues to pass, the current trends will continue to get worse and worse. The damage these demographic trends will inflect on the system will incrementally increase year by year until the system can’t support itself any longer.

        The thing is that they can’t reverse the demographic situation. Even if China started forcing people to have kids or opened their borders to allow for millions of immigrants, it won’t mean anything. It’s already too late, the demographic collapse is going to happen no matter what the CCP does. Keep in mind, Japan is in the same position and they will face the same fate regardless. The only difference is that Japan is a wealthy country with a highly developed economy, so it can at least slow down the inevitable and buy itself some time. China unfortunately doesn’t have this luxury.

        For the record, I don’t want China to collapse like this because the effects are going to be devastating. However, the numbers don’t lie and every metric is showing us that they are heading towards a collapse at full speed. The CCP can’t handle this, no government can in their position. There’s really nothing like what China is going through in history. The scale and speed at which this collapse is happening is unprecedented. It’ll most likely go down as the most defining event of the 21st century.

    • Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      This sounds very close to the description of the US in this very moment. From an outsiders perspective China seems to be doing about as good and bad as the US all things considered.

      • Dempf@lemmy.zip
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        5 months ago

        U.S. has been complete shit for the last 8 years, but somehow we haven’t collapsed and life goes on as usual. So I’m usually pretty skeptical of specific predictions (though the trends are worth paying attention to).

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        The single most accurate predictor of a country’s future is their demographic structure, and China’s is one of the worst, not just in the world, but in history. It’s pretty normal for nations to go into cycle of prosperity and despair where they expand and shrink, however, what China is going through is unique. China’s population is predicted to shrink down from 1.4 billion people to just 587 million by 2100. That is insane. It’s scale, speed, intensity is something we’ve never seen before. China’s demographic collapse is going to be worse than Europe during the black plague or China during the Great Chinese Famine or Germany after WWII. China is about to go into uncharted territory. We don’t know what things will be like on the other side because we’ve never seen it before and we have no model or system to deal with it. One thing is for certain though, China as we know it today under the CCP is going to go away.

        As for the US, if it were to continue on it’s current demographic trends, it’ll reach China’s current demographic situation at some point in the second half of this century, that’s a lot of time to figure things out. At that point, other countries such as Russia, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Italy, Spain, as well as China would have been decades into their demographic collapses. That’s a lot valuable time to learn from what these countries went through and proceed with more knowledge captiously based on what minimized the damage and what didn’t.

      • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        Wouldn’t be Lemmy if there weren’t a comment unnecessarily shitting on the US in the comments section of an article about another country.

        • Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          5 months ago

          Maybe I overreacted, but the person that was shitting on China themselves seemed to just spout US propaganda talking points, when in reality both have huge issues and also their good parts.

          If I had to chose, I’d lean in the US’s favor overall, but not by much, thankfully I don’t live in either of them.

          • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            What country are you living in that isn’t threatened by some or all of these?

        • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Thank goodness. Otherwise people outside the U.S. wouldn’t know how bad it is there.

    • MashedTech@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      The US Supreme court also just overturned Chevron deference. Shit sucks everywhere.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        While that is true, I think it is important to note that as bad as our problems are, and some of them are pretty bad, that there are countries that have it way worse than us. China is one of those countries. Some of their problems are genuinely mind boggling. Imagine going through our current problems right now but with an irreversible demographic collapse. It’s nuts to think about.

    • rekorse@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I dont understand how your post has so many up votes when you said not a single specific thing. Can you explain any of the reasons you say China is obviously in a death spiral?

      Is it just a feelings based thing from reading posts on here?

      • Tlf@feddit.org
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        5 months ago

        Unfortunately Upvotes aren’t linked to the objective truthfulness of a statement. If they were, fake news wouldn’t be a thing.

        Also, what is wrong about having an opinion based on a collection of shared articles. Sure they might be biased and some might even report more details than they have sources for but given enough randomly encountered articles some common truths can emerge.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        It’s not feeling based, China is truly going through a devastating collapse that can’t reversed. Take their demographics as an example. Here are some interesting pieces of information about China’s demographics:

        • There’s a gender imbalance of 110 males per 100 females, which is the highest in the world. That means there’s over 30 million males that don’t have a female counterpart.
        • The population is expected to shrink down to 587 million by 2100 according to the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences
        • The country is going to have more retirees than workers at some point in the 2030s
        • The fertility rate is less than 1.2, which is either the second or third lowest fertility rate of any non city state country in the world (sources differ slightly)
        • The country’s fertility rate is one of the fastest shrinking in the world (regularly ranks among the 5 worst)
        • China’s has one of the fastest aging populations in the world
        • China is expected to have worse demographics than the US by 2035 in all metrics despite the US being a developed country and China is not
        • China’s median age already surpasses that of the US
        • Officially, the country has been shrinking since 2022
        • According to Yi Fuxian, a demographer from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the CCP has overcounted their population by an excess of at least 130 million people since the one child policy was implemented. This means that China’s demographic problems are worse than we thought and that China’s population probably peaked 10-15 years ago
        • China is not a destination for immigration by any stretch, China currently has around 1.5 million immigrants and about half of those are from Macau, Hong Kong, or Taiwan.

        How does a country recover from this? This is beyond devastating. In fact, it’s terminal. No amount of authoritarianism or nationalism or desperate wars or anything can save the country from what it’s going through. It’s too late to damage control and there’s really nothing to turn things around. The system is going to collapse, and we’re going to see China’s power and influence disappear from the world stage in the upcoming decades. China in it’s current form under the CCP is going away. Pay attention and take notes because we’re witnessing the greatest collapse in human history.

        • rekorse@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Not being able to take care of your old when they can’t work anymore does not equal the greatest collapse in human history. I guess we will see though.

        • Match!!@pawb.social
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          5 months ago

          China could actually do something really cool and intentionally pull in refugees using the ghost cities strategy in combination with BRI. Everyone would like that.

          • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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            While that would be cool, there literally aren’t refugees in the world to fix China’s demographics. They should still do it anyway, having those ghost cities be populated by people who need a new home sure beats leaving them empty.

    • Dempf@lemmy.zip
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      5 months ago

      I mean, scandals like this and “chabuduo” attitude putting health & safety at risk is really nothing new in China. I agree with you in general that certain parts of China are in decline / potential to collapse. Especially economy & environment. But speaking from a U.S. perspective, other aspects are enviable, like public transit.

      I’m just saying that I wouldn’t necessarily hold this specific incident up as an example of collapse.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        China isn’t exactly the place to look towards when it comes to public transit, there’s way better countries to be envious of when it comes to public transport. Their highspeed rail system by itself is around $900 BILLION in debt. It is so overly built that the maintenance costs and insufficient demand is coming to bite them in the ass. To put things in perspective, this figure is around 5% of China’s entire GDP and it is expected to grow as the years pass by. It’s generally normal for public transportation system to not be profitable and for the government to cover the gaps, but this? This is absolutely insane.

        There’s stuff that we could learn from them as a country and vice versa, but this is definitely not one of those things.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      5 months ago

      Collapse into what exactly? China is really too big to operate as a single country. The USA barely manages it and that requires a huge amount of enforcement.

      I could see it becoming a bunch of separate squabbling nation states, the Eastern version of the middle East, nobody wants that.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I think China’s history is the best predictor of where China will go after this collapse. China’s history from the very beginning has been defined by cycles that alternate between a bunch of small warring states that constantly fight each other and giant tyrannical empires that unites them all. You could say the current China under the CCP is another iteration of those giant empires and that after the collapse, China will go back to it’s historical mean of being divided by a bunch of smaller states that fight amongst each other.

      • ammonium@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        From which size is a country too big to operate as a single country? I think cultural identity is much more important than size, and the Chinese government has put a tremendous effort in culturally unifying the land with great success (and great cost; see Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong, the relationship with Taiwan, loss of local languages and culture). I don’t see that disappearing anytime soon.

        A civil war with a stalemate is of course possible (in fact it’s already the reality), but an USSR style collapse in many different countries is just not something I can see happen.

          • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            It sure seems correct ✅

            Nato has become increasingly concerned about the growing military capabilities of China, which it sees as a threat to the security and democratic values of its members. source

            • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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              5 months ago

              Do NATO wants a bunch of random political entities with access to nuclear weapons in your view do they? Considering China a threat does not mean they want China to collapse, they just want them to stop being so antagonistic. Perhaps a bit more democratic.

              • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Do NATO wants a bunch of random political entities with access to nuclear weapons in your view do they?

                They didn’t seem to mind when the USSR collapsed. Why would they treat China differently?

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Things are going to get a lot more interesting from here on out. It’ll be a long time since the world is going to feel stable and boring. So buckle up, we’re in for a weird ride.

    • OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      We have to learn to better frame the issues. When Japan was ascendant, everyone projected them to overtake the US in economic power and we got all afraid and passed a bunch of protectionist rules about car imports. Think pieces get written about how their economic model was better than the US and the US is a crumbling empire.

      But it turned out it was a huge real estate bubble combined with/caused by the demographic benefit coming from a boom generation going into their prime labor years and once that generation started aging out there was a real estate slump and a balance sheet recession that lasted a decade, and they never recovered to the levels everyone was projecting 10 years prior.

      Now literally the exact same thing is happening with China and everyone is all shocked. Guess what, it’s going to happen again.

      It’s not to say the US will never fall to 2nd place in the global order, but it’s not going to be from some country growing at 10%/year forever, that doesn’t actually ever happen.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Perhaps the lesson that will come from all these demographic collapses will be that economic growth should be slow and steady. Countries that try to rush rising up the ranks of standards of living by doing whatever they can to generate economic growth regardless of consequences will end up trading their long term future for short term prosperity.

    • Match!!@pawb.social
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      5 months ago

      Imagine if China and the US collapse at the same time and the EU ends up white man’s burdening us all into a better future

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Actually Europe’s demographics are pretty bad too. They’re often overshadowed by China’s, but they’re still devastating in their own right. Most of Europe is already going through a demographic collapse right now, but they’re less dramatic in scale and speed than China’s. They’ll be more like Japan’s collapse, but with immigration… at least that’s the case for Western Europe. Eastern Europe (including Russia) is going through a Chinese-esque demographic collapse as we speak. Interestingly, the US has the healthiest demography out of the 3. It’s not great, but it’s still better than either Europe or China by quiet a bit. The most realistic scenario is that the US will remain the world’s leader in future, maybe to even greater degree than now. At least until other countries like India catch up.

      • SleezyDizasta@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I don’t. As much as I hate the CCP, this collapse is still ultimately going to destroy the Chinese nation. We’re going to see hundreds of millions of people in really unfortunate situations who can’t do much to fix the reality they’re in. That’s something that I don’t wish to see happen.

        • shekau@lemmy.today
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          5 months ago

          They’re overpopulated anyway, there’s simply way too much people there. Like at least 400 million people should be removed, so that the world would be better place.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    6 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    State broadcaster CCTV earlier this week called the alleged practice and the potential contamination of food products from left-behind fuel in the tankers “tantamount to poisoning” and showing “extreme disregard for consumers’ lives and health.”

    Some also appeared to link the situation to broader issues in the country, where an economic downturn is driving social frustration and there are deep-seated concerns about the limits of accountability for powerful and government-linked entities.

    A staff member from Hopefull Grain and Oil Group on Monday told state-owned news outlet Economic View that “relevant departments” have investigated the matter and would make an official announcement.

    Despite rising living standards in recent decades, food safety has been an ongoing issue in China, where dozens of high-profile scandals have been reported by local media since the early 2000s, sparking tighter government regulation.

    In a 2013 speech cited in a People’s Daily report last year, Xi said the ruling Communist Party’s ability to “provide satisfactory assurances on food safety” is a “major test of our governance capabilities.”

    Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, said the directive to investigate the current scandal likely came “from the very top” – noting that food safety is both a key issue linked to government legitimacy and the allegations are landing at a sensitive time when economic hardship in China is causing a more “volatile society.”


    The original article contains 1,285 words, the summary contains 235 words. Saved 82%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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    6 months ago

    This is obviously not good, but I don’t have great intuition.

    If I have a mug full of gasoline (or worse, diesel or something cruder), and reuse that for coffee, I can imagine that being bad. But a tanker truck is humongous, and the contamination would, I imagine (???), scale roughly like a surface area-to-volume kind of thing, meaning that contamination for a huge container should be substantially “better” than my coffee example. (Perhaps this scaling law is a bogus assumption though?)

    Of course it is still bad, gross, and probably dangerous…

    • ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      The additives and chemicals in fuel are straight up cancerous. Your coffee in this example, would now come with a hint of crippling disabilities for your children.

      Your supposition about surface area is correct but with contaminants this powerful it’s not really valid.

      • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        There’s also no telling how “empty” this thing actually gets before they fill it back up. If they’re being this reckless, there’s no reason to think they’re fully draining the tanker.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      6 months ago

      Yup, and that’s why they got away with it without anyone noticing. Eating that oil your whole life is probably not good for you though, because fuel chemicals can be pretty nasty. They say there’s no safe level of a carcinogen.

    • SeattleRain@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Put your money where your mouth is. Take an old gasoline can and fill it with cooking oil then feed it to your family until it’s empty. Record the results. You won’t though.

      • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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        6 months ago

        No shit.

        My question was an honest scaling law question. Of course this is bad. Which is what I said.

        My question is how bad, which is a legitimate question, and is not in any way saying these are defensible actions. They are not.

        If you fill a thimble with diesel, drain it, and then fill it with water, that’s gonna be super gross — the diesel will probably form a thin layer on the thimble which is then diluted with a thimble full of water. Super gross. But by the time you get to a fuel can, the thin layer of diesel on the can is now diluted by a can of water. Because surface area scale like length squared but volume like length cubed, this is a better situation (for a given amount of water). Now when this is scaled up further, the diesel gets increasingly diluted. This is the root of my question, it’s not saying that we should accept this or that it’s good, I’m just curious.

        • piecat@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          If a cup has a few drops of water after you pour it out,

          Say a drop is 0.05ml (20drop/mL is rule of thumb for chemistry). Say your glass cup holds 16oz (mine does), that’s 473mL.

          (4*0.05mL / 473mL) *100 = 0.04228% of the original concentration. Now scale that volume up. That ratio is going to be much smaller, since you’re right about volume vs surface area.

          5ppb is the cutoff for benzene in stunning water in Oregon apparently. EPA says 5ug/L.

          5ppb is apparently 0.0000005%. That’s about 84,000x higher than the cutoff for that one potential contaminant.

          Given how small the minimum acceptable level is for many chemicals in gasoline or fuel… Yeah I bet it would increase cancer rates in a statistically significant way.

          • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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            5 months ago

            So 84,000 for a glass assuming 100% of the fluid is benzene (unless I misunderstood your calculation). Benzene concentration is about 1% of gasoline, and a tanker is about 20,000L, or ~40,000x more than a cup. Cube root of 40,000 is about 34 (cube root for the surface to volume factor). 34*100 is 3400, which is about 25x off from the 84,000 reduction required to be “safe.” So it’s roughly 25x worse than the Oregon cutoff (but seemingly within EPA limits, which appears to be ~1000x less stringent [!!!]). Unless I made some errors or misunderstood.

            In any event I’ll try to source my cooking oil from uncontaminated trucks!

            (As an aside, thanks for taking my question seriously and putting thought into an answer, unlike some of the other more “colorful” responses!)

        • SeattleRain@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Test it out bro. Since you believe the impact of putting gasoline in food is so contentious. It’s funny how you still deflect by implying it was “a thimbleful” when you have no idea how much it was or how dangerous it is.

          B-b-b-but you’re just asking the questions right?

          • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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            6 months ago

            …scaling laws. They are best illustrated with different sized items. Like a thimble, a coffee cup, or an oil tanker, all representing volumes of different orders of magnitude.

    • SeattleRain@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Stop, an empty tanker truck can have a huge amount of fuel in it. You do know that fuel has a lot of impurities right? If you don’t believe me just pull up some pictures of fuel tanks on cars being opened. They can be caked with sediment and heavy metals at the bottom even after a few years.

      You are a bad dangerous shill.

      • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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        6 months ago

        A simple, “your scaling argument doesn’t really apply since the amount of residue left behind scales with the volume, not area” would have sufficed.

        Gasoline is a pretty powerful solvent; would residue left behind that doesn’t come off from gasoline be liberated by cooking oil? It’s an honest question.

        And I sure hope the regulatory agencies and shipping companies in my country do a better job than in China. This sort of thing is terrifying; I’m just curious as to an emotionless analysis of how bad this likely is. What concentration of benzene is acceptable? “None” would be best but we already breathe it. Would contaminated cooking oil likely be equivalent to…inhaling once at a gas station? A wet martini with diesel instead of vermouth?

    • gabbagabbahey@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      Consider this:

      When the cooking oil is heated, the distillate contamination will flash off, leaving a nice clean cooking oil.

      If distillate is slightly contaminated with with cooking oil, probably not so bad that engines burning it can’t deal with the slightly differing heat rate and specific gravity of the new mixture.

      😂

      • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Nope.

        I don’t even feel like I should tell you why you’re wrong, but here we go.

        You assume that the fuel oil is more volatile then cooking temperatures, but what fuel oil? Diesel? Diesel has a boiling temperature between 160c and 360c(diesel varries because there are different compositions and blends). Deep fry is between 160c and 190c. That assumes we’re deep frying. Plenty of ways to use cooking oil without heating to those temperatures.

        Also assumes that there’s nothing else in the fuel oil. Plenty of additives that might not boil off or if they do, be toxic if inhaled. I have of stories of transformer oil being used for deep frying.

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        6 months ago

        Depends if it’s light distillate, or, like, coal tar.

        Butane -> cooking oil without washing would be fine, by the standard of if I’d still use the oil. I’d be more worried about leaching from the metal or plastic of the tank.

    • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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      6 months ago

      TBH replacing oil with water to inflate net worth estimations is pretty tame compared to putting gasoline in people’s food.

      • jet@hackertalks.com
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        6 months ago

        It’s widely thought that they never cleaned the oil storage tanks they used to make them suitable for human consumption

        • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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          6 months ago

          I think maybe you posted the wrong link, then? The page you linked to talked about loan fraud because a guy never actually shipped soybean oil he said he was shipping, filled storage tanks with water.

            • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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              6 months ago

              Anytime Brudda

              I tried to skip through the video to find some information but I can’t really parse much from it, they talk about various subjects for 2 hours with very little order. Do they have any sources at all? Nothing in the description or comments. Also, they told people to soak things in peanut oil as fireproofing which is some of the dumbest shit I’ve heard today and I’ve seen comments on Hexbear so that’s saying something.

              • WanderingVentra@lemm.ee
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                6 months ago

                It’s a civil engineering disasters podcast. I’ve heard them before, they’re actually pretty good. I like them but it requires looking at slides, so doesn’t really fit listening on my commute so I haven’t gotten too far, though. Usually they’ve got pretty good information so I doubt they’d say anything outrageously untrue unless they’re joking. There are a couple laymen in there just to tell jokes and put some banter in between the civil engineering and retelling history, so I could imagine one of them saying something like that jokingly, or one of the engineers, who has a really dry sense of humor, saying something like that, but I haven’t listened to this particular episode. But anyway, that’s probably why it meanders a bit throughout. Because the podcasts style. Anyway, just saying so people don’t have a negative reaction of the podcast from this reply because it’s not a bad one lol.

  • Happywop@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    This is why I refuse to purchase or consume ANY food products from China. There system can’t be trusted period.

  • carl_marks[use name]@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    On China’s heavily moderated social media platforms, many members of the public called for product recalls and greater industry oversight.

    Some also appeared to link the situation to broader issues in the country, where an economic downturn is driving social frustration and there are deep-seated concerns about the limits of accountability for powerful and government-linked entities.

    “Even the cooking oil essential to people’s daily lives has now become problematic… Ordinary people cannot be properly safeguarded… Now I just want to scoff at (phrases like) ‘rule of law’ and ‘serving the people’ whenever I see them,” read one comment on China’s X-like social media platform Weibo, that garnered thousands of likes.

    I thought China was heavily censoring criticism and you couldn’t voice your opinions publicly? lol

    Basically a food scandal has been uncovered by their media and the government takes action in the public’s interest. Something you’d expect a functioning government to do. And this article makes you think it’s a bad thing.

    Summed up:

    Despite rising living standards in recent decades, food safety has been an ongoing issue in China, where dozens of high-profile scandals have been reported by local media since the early 2000s, sparking tighter government regulation.

    Based.

    The entire article has so much coping and seething and was a really fun read. Thank you for sharing.

    • Woht24@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I think you can’t really voice your opinion. But that’s due to the consequences, you can’t post illegal shit to your Facebook too, i.e. you’ll be reported very quickly and it’ll be taken down but you can still do it if you want to run the gauntlet.