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8 votes
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Feminists facing resistance in China find the funny side of things
13 votes -
Any Tildeans who have lived in China or Russia and the West? What were the differences in the daily lives of average people?
edit: It's been a surprisingly active thread in a way I hadn't expected. Thank you everyone for the light debate, and I'm sorry if any of this was a source of discomfort. The internet has...
edit: It's been a surprisingly active thread in a way I hadn't expected. Thank you everyone for the light debate, and I'm sorry if any of this was a source of discomfort. The internet has historically been a safe place to find out things that would be difficult to ask in person even if you know who to ask, and I appreciate the fact-checking, reality-checking, what-have-you that comes with that.
Things like:
- What things felt free to do and not free to do? Was that a quality of law or society? (e.g., freedom of speech, gay relationships, zoning, running a business, jaywalking, etc.)
- Trust or reliability in government
- Educational quality
- Relationship to the media
- What luxuries people tended to have (e.g. modern imported gaming consoles, domestically produced products, number of cars, etc.)
Posting from America here. As the great power politics seems to have heated up these past 3-10 years, it feels like the environment has become more polarized as well. Eventually I started to ask myself what exactly I was supporting or opposing philosophically, in wanting my country to have the largest influence. The measures I came up with were not things that my own country did well on, and often felt like things I couldn't get the most accurate picture on without Russian or Chinese language acquisition. I happened upon a BBC article about new Chinese graduates I guess going through what millennials did in 2008, and found the general similarity of it interesting.
67 votes -
Recreating dog food from the last 2,000 years
7 votes -
China's unmarried 'leftover' women
18 votes -
Why Gen Z is quietly giving up
27 votes -
Chinese woman in Beijing goes on one hundred blind dates per year
29 votes -
How Chinese students experience America
23 votes -
What prevents and what drives gendered ideological polarisation?
11 votes -
Mushrooms, snails and plant roots: The surprising story of how your clothes got their color
13 votes -
See inside a ghost town of abandoned mansions in China
16 votes -
Naomi Wu and the silence that speaks volumes
32 votes -
Using Barbie as a litmus test on feminism and patriarchy
64 votes -
Desperate Chinese parents are joining dating apps to marry off their adult children
49 votes -
An anonymous critic played cat and mouse with Beijing for twelve years. Then he got caught.
12 votes -
Lady of the Gobi
4 votes -
Boxed in: Life inside the 'coffin cubicles' of Hong Kong – in pictures
11 votes -
Tin Chin and Mo Lin were inseparable at the Brooklyn homeless shelter. But one of the men wasn’t who he seemed to be.
11 votes -
For asylum seekers, Norway is a sanctuary but even in remote towns, Muslim refugees say they face surveillance and threats
2 votes -
Dan Wang's 2021 letter about China
14 votes -
What Taiwanese think of China
5 votes -
Map drawn from memory helps man reunite with family decades after abduction
4 votes -
China's media cracks down on 'effeminate' styles
8 votes -
The truth behind the Amazon mystery seeds
15 votes -
"And I think to myself, what a wonderful world" (2019 Hong Kong extradition protest footage)
4 votes -
Chinese dreams on Native American land: A tale of cannabis boom and bust
8 votes -
China's reckoning (Part 1/3): Chinese demography
8 votes -
How I survived a Chinese ‘reeducation’ camp for Uighurs
16 votes -
How the CCP does job promotions
6 votes -
The rat tribe: Meet the million migrant workers living beneath Beijing's streets
7 votes -
My mother and my motherland - Jiayang Fan on the struggles of growing up as a poor immigrant, and how her desperate attempt to protect her hospital-bound mother was repurposed as Chinese propaganda
5 votes -
Chabuduo! Close enough…
10 votes -
‘I can’t sleep, I can’t eat’: How Hong Kong’s extradition bill crisis is affecting the city’s refugees and asylum seekers
5 votes -
A week with no tear gas
10 votes -
A group of Chinese international students say they take little notice of politics or historical events, with one admitting to not having heard of the Tiananmen Square Massacre
12 votes -
When affordable housing in Shanghai is a bed in the kitchen
4 votes -
China Muslims: Xinjiang schools used to separate children from families
9 votes -
Explore the Pearl River Delta megalopolis
4 votes -
In China, a school trains boys to be ‘real men’
12 votes -
A non-sensationalized description of China's social credit system as explained by a Yale Senior Research Scholar in Law : Jeremy L. Daum
9 votes -
A week in Xinjiang's absolute surveillance state
14 votes -
'They ordered me to get an abortion': A Chinese woman's ordeal in Xinjiang
12 votes -
Ex-detainee describes torture in China's Xinjiang re-education camp
11 votes -
China's hidden camps. What's happened to the vanished Uighurs of Xinjiang?
9 votes -
China's demographic problem. The one child policy effect.
4 votes -
My career as an international blood smuggler
6 votes -
China is treating Islam like a mental illness
12 votes -
Inside Hong Kong's cage homes
12 votes -
How the “happiest Muslims in the world” are coping with their happiness
8 votes -
Inside the world's largest (5.5M m², 7km long) wholesale market in Yiwu, China
4 votes