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5 mo. ago

  • I think nuclear energy is arguably the clearest example of how the US model fails. Nuclear reactors take over a decade to plan and build, from research to blueprints to approval and finally construction. Corporate strategy and startup culture completely falls apart at these timescales, while Chinese planning enables continuous and sustainable buildouts, leveraging economies of scale and experience to make each reactor less expensive than the last.

  • Excellent. I’m guessing they still need to import the cells and/or wafers before assembling the panels, but it’s a step in the right direction for building up domestic industry and reducing exposure to oil.

  • Some administration officials are, in fact, discussing ways to limit Chinese investment in the U.S. on national-security grounds, according to people familiar with the matter.

    This is absolutely comical. They hate China so much they want to stop getting money from them.

  • Automating and decarbonising mining should definitely a high priority. It is nearly impossible to eliminate health and safety risks for miners, so any progress in keeping people away from the mines is pretty nice.

  • Hmm, I actually really like Kang Jian's design except for the colour palette. Fits very well for the industrial powerhouse that the PRC is today. I think swaping out green for dark blue and white for yellow might look better.

  • Despite concerns about resource allocation, experts note that international medical services are often run separately as "special needs" departments, accounting for less than 10 percent of hospital services and charging higher fees, thus operating as a revenue generator rather than a drain on public resources.

    Well, if the article’s right, it seems like a good thing overall.

  • It’s a stunning visual, but it doesn’t even begin to capture the staggering amount of solar power being produced by the People’s Republic.

    The People’s Republic

    Honestly, sounds like a cool name for a fully unified global communist nation. No need to put 'of X', just call it The People's Republic.

  • Is there a term for an inverse Treatler? Because this fits too well.

  • Here's the ODI survey paper in question: https://media.odi.org/documents/SIDS_perceptions_survey_v3.pdf

    Which was found here: https://odi.org/en/publications/how-small-island-developing-states-view-their-development-partners/

    China’s development assistance to SIDS from 2020–2023 was $6.02 billion, outstripping Official Development Finance (ODA plus other official flows) from Australia ($4.78bn), the United States ($3.17bn), Japan ($2.03bn) and UK ($0.42 bn).

    This is probably a big reason why. Pretty surprising how high the UK is though, from this perspective.

  • europe @hexbear.net

    German firms' China investments driven to four-year high by US trade wars

    www.reuters.com /world/china/german-firms-investments-china-boomed-2025-us-trade-war-worries-2026-01-27/
  • news @hexbear.net

    German firms' China investments driven to four-year high by US trade wars

    www.reuters.com /world/china/german-firms-investments-china-boomed-2025-us-trade-war-worries-2026-01-27/
  • World News @lemmygrad.ml

    German firms' China investments driven to four-year high by US trade wars

    www.reuters.com /world/china/german-firms-investments-china-boomed-2025-us-trade-war-worries-2026-01-27/
  • It’s mildly amusing how these people speak about Chinese EVs as some kind of unstoppable force running on alien technology, when most are just good cars that are inexpensive and reliable.

  • The more I look into this space, the more I think the main limiting factor is the context window. Test-time compute is key to squeezing extra performing out of smaller models, but context rot is still a problem, especially with techniques like GQA or MQA sacrificing quality for memory usage. Of course, you can just use MHA instead, but the high memory usage defeats the point of a small local model, and it still suffers from context rot to a lesser degree. I'm not sure if this problem can be fixed while staying with transformers.

  • There’re still a lot of countries that haven’t responded to the invitation yet, so hopefully this discourages others from joining. Quite frustrating to see how many have already accepted though.

  • Geopolitics @lemmygrad.ml

    The Tag Team Fails in Iran – John Mearsheimer

    mearsheimer.substack.com /p/the-tag-team-fails-in-iran
  • The key thing is that Trump’s tariffs and threats have disproportionally weakened the comprador class’ political capital in countries like Canada, to the point where the national bourgeoisie are now arguably more dominant on the federal level.

    Carney is now pivoting away from the US and reducing economic dependence, while simultaneously pushing his citizens to ‘buy Canadian’, all of which benefits the national bourgeoisie while putting the comprador class in a difficult spot. This means that for the first time in close to a century, Canada’s ruling class are not entirely aligned with American imperialism.

    This is possibly one of the biggest signs of imperialism in crisis in recent times, when a country so deeply integrated in the US’ system feels that its constraints outweigh the benefits. So far, this pivot is more symbolic than systemic, but I do think structural change is coming, and it will mean that the material interests of Canada’s capitalists will increasingly diverge from that of the US’.

  • The flawed belief that common liberal values would maintain American fidelity in perpetuity gravely distorted Europe’s strategic thinking. Moral posturing became valued more highly than hard power. Burning the bridges with the East without securing a foundation in the West left Europe at the mercy of a predatory power, its fate a cautionary tale in realpolitik.

    Very salient point. I was thinking about the difference between people like Carney, who understands that modern liberalism is primarily a tool for the US and capitalists to maintain a world order friendly to their interests and their profits, and these European leaders who have bought into their own propaganda about universal values and democratic interventionism, unable to recognise their own hypocrisy.

    Carney can see when fully embracing liberalism no longer suits his capitalist backers, and so pivots to Qatar and China to insulate Canadian businesses regardless of the lack of ‘shared values’ or ‘freedom’. The Europeans meanwhile continue to cement their economic, industrial, and technological dependence on the US, and are consistently surprised when they get ripped off doing so.

  • Except the Europeans for some reason. I’m honestly kind of baffled by their decisions sometimes.

  • I think the takeaway here is that Carney is both class conscious and understands imperialism, and that his interests lie with the Canadian bourgeoisie.

    He is perfectly willing to go along with the Empire’s narrative when his interests align with US foreign policy, but he is also willing to carefully use anti-imperialist rhetoric when the Canadian ruling class is being threatened by the American imperialism.

    Obviously, he cannot be counted on to reliably resist imperialism or to defend the oppressed peoples, but he can diverge from the American line, and even liberalism to some degree, if it suits the interests of Canada’s capitalists.

  • Shouldn't this be titled Education rather than Supply and Demand? Anyway, this is very relevant with all the cuts to public education in certain countries these days.

  • Chinese system: Future-oriented planning, reducing uneven development

    Trump system: no planning, deliberately exacerbates inequality

    Western observers: Hmm, yes. These are the same

  • I don’t know what Trump himself expected, but I do think the neocons in his cabinet legitimately bought into their own propaganda about Maduro’s unpopularity and infighting with the Chavistas, and were genuinely surprised at the smooth power transition.

    To be fair, it seems like the corporate side of Trump’s base doesn’t really care either way as long as they can get the deals they want, so it isn’t a huge blunder or anything of that sort, but it does mean all the anti-Maduro propaganda is wasted because he’s no longer in charge.

  • Can’t wait for sodium-ion batteries to mature. Those could drive prices down even further.

  • news @hexbear.net

    Turkey in 'advanced talks' to join Saudi Arabia and Pakistan defence pact: Report

    www.middleeasteye.net /news/turkey-advanced-talks-join-saudi-arabia-and-pakistan-defence-pact-report
  • World News @lemmy.ml

    Turkey in 'advanced talks' to join Saudi Arabia and Pakistan defence pact: Report

    www.middleeasteye.net /news/turkey-advanced-talks-join-saudi-arabia-and-pakistan-defence-pact-report
  • World News @lemmygrad.ml

    Turkey in 'advanced talks' to join Saudi Arabia and Pakistan defence pact: Report

    www.middleeasteye.net /news/turkey-advanced-talks-join-saudi-arabia-and-pakistan-defence-pact-report
  • World News @lemmygrad.ml

    The EV leapfrog – how emerging markets are driving a global EV boom

  • news @hexbear.net

    The EV leapfrog – how emerging markets are driving a global EV boom

  • China @lemmygrad.ml

    U.S. Investors Are Going Big on China AI Despite Concerns in Congress

  • news @hexbear.net

    U.S. Investors Are Going Big on China AI Despite Concerns in Congress

  • China @lemmygrad.ml

    China draws in Europe’s businesses despite alarm over competition

  • news @hexbear.net

    China draws in Europe’s businesses despite alarm over competition

  • Geopolitics @lemmygrad.ml

    2025 National Security Strategy Released

  • US News @lemmygrad.ml

    2025 National Security Strategy Released

  • news @hexbear.net

    2025 National Security Strategy Released

  • US News @lemmygrad.ml

    Trump readies US troops for ground invasion in Mexico to go after cartels: report

    www.the-independent.com /news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-drug-cartels-mexico-plans-military-b2857527.html
  • China @lemmygrad.ml

    China aims to raise average life expectancy to around 80 years in 5 years