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Generational Dynamics World View
** 13-Sep-2020 World View: Renouncing violence

(09-12-2020, 11:53 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: > This is the problem. Pbower promptly renounced the violence. So
> have I already. So has Biden already, has renounced all the
> violence.

This is a joke. Everyone "renounces violence," but you won't say that
antifa-blm thugs should be arrested and go to jail.

Many Democrat mayors won't arrest antifa-blm thugs at all. And
Democrats are pushing "no cash bail," which means that any antifa-blm
thug who gets arrested is out on the street immediately.

So saying that you or pbrower or the Democrats renounce violence is a
joke and a lie, and is typical of the sanctimonious crap that
characterizes everything you say, almost without exception.

The reason that you and other Democrats won't REALLY renounce violence
by antifa-blm thugs is that in your screwed up minds, you believe that
the more White Protestant - Tea Partier homes and businesses you
destroy, the more likely Biden will win. That is really screwed up
logic, but it's typical of the political party that fought a war to
preserve slavery, that formed an organization to lynch, torture, rape
and kill blacks for a century, and who totally destroyed the black
family, so that black women could be completely controlled financially
by their white massas. The Democratic Party as an institution depends
on slavery and violence, and if Democrats REALLY renounced violence by
antifa-blm thugs, doing so would be existential threat to the
existence of the entire party.

So if you think that antifa-blm thugs who commit crimes should be
arrested, tried and jailed, then say so. Or not. I don't give a shit
what you say, because you don't give a shit what you say.
Reply
** 13-Sep-2020 World View: Brutality in Iran - Democide

(09-12-2020, 11:25 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: > The sort of people who believe that brutality by law enforcement
> promotes compliance might include people such as the leadership of
> a rotten system such as the monstrous regime in Iran, which
> executes people on confessions achieved with torture. (Iran did so
> recently, hanging a professional wrestler involved in a
> protest. Iranian politics is nothing but fear.

I of course agree with this, except for singling out Iran. I've
developed a whole theory about when this happens -- in the decades
following an internal ethnic or religious generational crisis civil
war. The brutality towards political opponents carries on for decades
after the civil war ends, and that's exactly what's happening in Iran.

Besides Iran's Ali Hosseini Khamenei, country leaders following this
pattern today or recently include Paul Biya in Cameroon, Pierre
Nkurunziza in Burundi, Paul Kagame in Rwanda, Yoweri Museveni in
Uganda, Emmerson Mnangagwa / Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe, Joseph Kabila
in DRC, or, outside of Africa, Bashar al-Assad in Syria, Hun Sen in
Cambodia and Maithripala Sirisena in Sri Lanka.

What's happening in Iran is a very common pattern that occurs after a
generational crisis civil war. It's possible that the KKK is another
example of this, although I haven't yet done enough research to
support that, and it would be a variation of the pattern.

I've co-opted the word "democide" to describe this kind of behavior in
a country. Democide refers to mass slaughter of a country's citizens
by the leadership outside of war, and I've been surprised to learn
that more people are killed by democide than by war. I've co-opted
the word for Generational Dynamics to describe all the kinds of
abusive behavior such as you identified in Iran, and which occurs in
all countries after an internal generational crisis civil war.
Reply
(09-13-2020, 09:46 AM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: ** 13-Sep-2020 World View: Renouncing violence

(09-12-2020, 11:53 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: This is the problem.  Pbower promptly renounced the violence.  So have I already.  So has Biden already, has renounced all the violence.

This is a joke.  Everyone "renounces violence," but you won't say that antifa-blm thugs should be arrested and go to jail.

Any thugs should go to jail, but let's not pretend that the antifa/blm source of thuggery represents more than a few percent of the thugs. It's well established through arrests and prosecutions that the single largest source is the broadly defined white supremacist movement. Are you all in with sending RW thugs to jail?
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
Reply
(09-13-2020, 09:46 AM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: So if you think that antifa-blm thugs who commit crimes should be arrested, tried and jailed, then say so.  Or not.  I don't give a shit what you say, because you don't give a shit what you say.

Hmm. So Biden can renounce violence but it doesn’t count as a red ideologue with a habit of lying and slander says so?

And not everybody has renounced violence.

Trump has not. He is attempting to divide in part by violence and fear.

The military has not, at least publicly. I suspect they have quietly. They are not involved in violence against Americans anymore, but they properly don’t want it said that they have disobeyed the illegal orders from their Commander in Chief. Understandable.

If the secret police have renounced violence, they have done so secretly. They too have vanished, but I suspect the problem is that they have no police powers and the Democratic governors have quashed the violence for them. I am not giving the secret police a lot of credit.

The Trump supporters last I knew had not publicly renounced violence. Their pickup truck convoy of a few days back with paint ball guns and real guns was clearly a premeditated attempt at instigating and escalating violence. Getting one of their people killed doing this may have caused them to reconsider the wisdom of it, but they don’t exactly have a spokesman.

And the Boogaloo Bois will boogaloo.

But in short the general position of the blues is to renounce violence while there are several aspects of the red that are trying to induce and escalate it. It’s nice that you have come over to the blue perspective on this, but all reds haven’t.

And yes, everybody who commits crimes ought to be arrested, tried and jailed. The only possible exception is that the sitting president may consider himself above the law.

The border is not the people who will throw the first punch. These ought to be arrested, tried and jailed. The border is those that are eager to return the second punch, or those that will see a knife and shoot the wielder. In theory the founding fathers enabled vigilante justice. All men could carry arms and were enabled to enforce the law as they see it. I can sympathize with this in many ways, but those who go into harms way with intent not to start violence but instead finish it are a problem. I would rather they stay home, even if it means protestors exercising their right to protest are left undefended against red violent instigators.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
** 13-Sep-2020 World View: Thuggery

(09-13-2020, 11:43 AM)David Horn Wrote: > Any thugs should go to jail, but let's not pretend that the
> antifa/blm source of thuggery represents more than a few percent
> of the thugs. It's well established through arrests and
> prosecutions that the single largest source is the broadly defined
> white supremacist movement. Are you all in with sending RW thugs
> to jail?

I don't know why you guys keep asking me this question. Yes,
right-wing thugs should go to jail just like left-wing thugs.

I am not a left winger. I am not a right winger. I comment on
actions and events, not on posturing and politician bullshit.

To me, there's no difference between a left-wing thug and a right-wing
thug. There is no difference between a left-winger who burns down a
building or rapes a girl versus a right-winger who burns down a
business or rapes a girl. Left-wing or right-wing, thugs and
criminals should go to jail.

You know, I see violence every day in countries around the world. I
listed some countries -- Cameroon, Cambodia, etc. -- in a previous
message. And there is genocide going on today in China, Myanmar and
Syria. Today, Sunday, there's a large peaceful anti-government
protest going on in Minsk, and Belarus storm troopers are grabbing
protesters and beating the crap out of them. This is not
once-in-a-generation goings-on. This happens every day, in multiple
places in the world.

So any sort of thuggery in the United States is totally repulsive and
sickening to me, because to me it's no different from what's going on
in Syria, Belarus, Iran, and other countries, differing only in degree
but not in kind.

So yes, right-wing thugs should go to jail just like left-wing thugs.
There's no difference.

(09-13-2020, 12:09 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: > And not everybody has renounced violence. Trump has not.

I don't speak for Trump. But fine. Whatever you say. Now answer the
question:

Should antifa-blm thugs who commit crimes be arrested, tried and
jailed?
Reply
(09-13-2020, 01:19 PM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: I don't know why you guys keep asking me this question.  Yes, right-wing thugs should go to jail just like left-wing thugs.

Should antifa-blm thugs who commit crimes be arrested, tried and jailed?

We seem to agree that people repeat the question a lot.  The answer was in the last post.

(09-13-2020, 12:09 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: And yes, everybody who commits crimes ought to be arrested, tried and jailed.  The only possible exception is that the sitting president may consider himself above the law.

The border is not the people who will throw the first punch.  These ought to be arrested, tried and jailed.  The border is those that are eager to return the second punch, or those that will see a knife and shoot the wielder.  In theory the founding fathers enabled vigilante justice.  All men could carry arms and were enabled to enforce the law as they see it.  I can sympathize with this in many ways, but those who go into harms way with intent not to start violence but instead finish it are a problem.  I would rather they stay home, even if it means protestors exercising their right to protest are left undefended against red violent instigators.

The difference is that I think everyone should, not just a particular few.  The focus should be on those with an aggressive attitude towards defense.  Those that are performing the second violent act and the last violent act should bear extra scrutiny.

But there is also the difference between the red violent groups, Antifa, Black Lives Matter, the looters, etc...  You are one of many red commenters who muddles the various motivations together.  Black Lives Matter are one of the few groups that are not thugs.  Most of the other groups, including those who take orders from the president, are effectively thugs.  They are instigating or implementing violence.  By limiting the question you are cooking in a question of guilt.  I would rather answer in a non pejorative way.

I would also argue the crimes associated with thuggery are state crimes, the immunity given the Commander in Chief does not apply, and he should be arrested, tried and jailed too.  It seems easier to wait a few months.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
(09-13-2020, 09:48 AM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: ** 13-Sep-2020 World View: Brutality in Iran - Democide

(09-12-2020, 11:25 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: >   The sort of people who believe that brutality by law enforcement
>   promotes compliance might include people such as the leadership of
>   a rotten system such as the monstrous regime in Iran, which
>   executes people on confessions achieved with torture. (Iran did so
>   recently, hanging a professional wrestler involved in a
>   protest. Iranian politics is nothing but fear.

I of course agree with this, except for singling out Iran.  I've
developed a whole theory about when this happens -- in the decades
following an internal ethnic or religious generational crisis civil
war.  The brutality towards political opponents carries on for decades
after the civil war ends, and that's exactly what's happening in Iran.

It is still murder. It is no less murder than when a robber shoots a store clerk or a rapist strangles the victim to silence her. The Fifth Amendment of the United States (existing since 1789) makes clear that people are not compelled to testify against themselves, no matter how infamous the offense. In case anyone thinks that that created a climate of lawlessness, the legal system has found ways of getting testimony and evidence that refutes an offender who lies about his crime. Of course offenders know enough to not admit to their crime.  

The old saying was that dead people tell no tales, but in practice, a dead body typically leaves evidence of any wrongdoing that can be even stronger than a perpetrator's confession. To destroy or successfully conceal the body is about the only way for a murderer to hide his crime, and the attempt to destroy the corpus delicti leaves its own evidence. Fire is better at creating than destroying evidence. 

I'm not saying that Iran lacks a sordid history in legal process. The theocratic regime (which is paradoxically quite godless in its conduct) may simply be continuing the old norm under the Pahlavi dynasty. Beating a confession out of someone is itself barbarous, unnecessary, and unreliable. Some person who confesses to a horrific crime when threatened with a blowtorch facing his genitals or with the threat of loved ones being brutalized is simply choosing between being hanged and being crippled or being forced to acquiesce in even worse injustice.   


Quote:Besides Iran's Ali Hosseini Khamenei, country leaders following this
pattern today or recently include Paul Biya in Cameroon, Pierre
Nkurunziza in Burundi, Paul Kagame in Rwanda, Yoweri Museveni in
Uganda, Emmerson Mnangagwa / Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe, Joseph Kabila
in DRC, or, outside of Africa, Bashar al-Assad in Syria, Hun Sen in
Cambodia and Maithripala Sirisena in Sri Lanka.

In some jurisdictions, one killing is good for a hanging, and I am not going to argue against capital punishment here. We need recall that the judicial process is the dam against a flood of lynchings and purges. When it fails at this either the political system loses all effectiveness, or nobody is safe from a tyrant. Judges are the formal top of the legal process, which explains the respect that they get even if defense attorneys and litigation attorneys get paid more than judges. 

A judicial murder may not get the attention of a mass killing through a terrorist attack or the ignominy of either calculated genocide or a disgraceful genocide, but as a general pattern a judicial system that allows a fair and impartial trial of the most helpless person possible -- someone accused of a horrible crime -- has some chance. At that, Iran fails badly. 

It is telling that in the trial that determined that Saddam Hussein would be hanged (the Dujail trial) the "revolutionary judge" who issued 143 death sentence in retribution against a community in which someone attempted to assassinate Saddam Hussein would himself be judged. Needless to say, a statement that the legal process in Satan Hussein's Iraq was unreliable is an understatement. The obedient judge was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death.       


Quote:What's happening in Iran is a very common pattern that occurs after a
generational crisis civil war.  It's possible that the KKK is another
example of this, although I haven't yet done enough research to
support that, and it would be a variation of the pattern.

The alternative is to let bygones be bygones, determine that only the most egregious offenses be beyond mercy. So systems like postwar Germany, Italy, and Japan repudiate the previous regime that had done such horrors and restructure their political systems so that previous horrors cannot be repeated. That even includes reforming the educational system. (If you are wondering about eastern Germany, local communists dispossessed the aristocrats and plutocrats and ensured that some of the people who had backed Hitler would never have that ability again). Japan turned its monarchy into a near-republic in which the Emperor has practically no power. The secret police is abolished and not replaced (OK, the commies in East Germany developed a "socialist" version of the Gestapo), what remains of the military is reduced to a national self-defense force, the government repudiates territorial expansion, and the educational system repudiates dictatorship and racism.  


Quote:R. J. 
I've co-opted the word "democide" to describe this kind of behavior in
a country.  Democide refers to mass slaughter of a country's citizens
by the leadership outside of war, and I've been surprised to learn
that more people are killed by democide than by war.  I've co-opted
the word for Generational Dynamics to describe all the kinds of
abusive behavior such as you identified in Iran, and which occurs in
all countries after an internal generational crisis civil war.

Rudolph J. Rummel created the word democide to describe  a wide variety of horrors from the mass-killings of Mongol aggression,  the Atlantic slave trade, the Holodomor, and the Holocaust. 

Here is his site, probably unmodified from 2014 (when he died)

Rummel suggests democracy as the solution. Democracy compels people to contemplate the legitimacy of the Other Side on most issues (ethnic and religious divides, social class, and even sexuality). Democracy mandates that people try to cut deals instead of cutting throats. Undemocratic systems tend to cut throats when the opportunity arises. Dictatorial, despotic, and tyrannical regimes are (should this be surprising?) are more likely to solve their problems by going to war... and are likely (1) to treat their troops as cannon fodder and (2) treat conquered peoples badly. 

The worst war in which America ever participated (America got off lightly in contrast to most other countries) was World War II. The three main enemies of World War II (Germany, Italy, and Japan) are the least likely enemies of the United States in a Crisis.  That's not to say that two of those countries are in any way likely to do what they did last time. I am satisfied that Germany is not to be tangled with due in part to an intelligence service that somehow melds the dirty tricks of the old DDR as well as the Cold-War intelligence system that the US accepted as safe, effective, and troublesome... and that the Japanese Self-Defense Forces will maul any attacker severely. 

Rummel tells us in two words, "Power kills". Wealth does not kill. Cultural and religious differences do not kill. Traditional enmity does not kill. Even military prowess does not kill.  Power -- the ability of a State to kill, starve, and enslave pariahs -- kills.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


Reply
(09-13-2020, 01:19 PM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: I am not a left winger.  I am not a right winger.  I comment on actions and events, not on posturing and politician bullshit.

Not really.  Your lying and slandering is primarily targeted against the blue.   You are clearly a red ideologue, even if you step a little clear of Trump.

(09-13-2020, 01:19 PM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: So any sort of thuggery in the United States is totally repulsive and sickening to me, because to me it's no different from what's going on in Syria, Belarus, Iran, and other countries, differing only in degree but not in kind.

Agreed somewhat that thuggery in the US is repulsive and sickening.  If there is a route to fix the greatest problems in a culture without resorting to violence, one might well do so.  This is not the right time.  Still, those that wish not to listen to the people, those who wish past injustice to continue, have to know that the people are serious.  Even Martin Luther King listened occasionally to Malcom X and got mad.  Non violence becomes a little more effective if a few rash folk go to violence early.  It is also a way of gathering the attention of those wishing to be unjust, to continue the abuse.

But there is a difference with the level of what you called Democide between the US and the foreign practitioners.  The US government doesn’t drop barrels full of explosive on markets crowded with civilians.  The US mostly stop short of the extrajudicial murders, the use of violence on the law abiding citizens.  Oh, Trump ordered the US Marshalls to ‘get him’ and they proceeded to kill a man who was no threat.  That might be interpreted as an extrajudicial murder.  To get his Bible photo op, Trump cancelled the First Amendment rights of the protesters.  It’s rather close to Democide.  It is rather too close.

But in the cases of the military and the secret police, democracy rolled the Democide back.  The bad cops and mobile militia near Portland have not yet been pulled back.  Is that enough to make a qualitative difference?  Is it different in nature?  Possibly not.  Red democide remains a problem.

(09-13-2020, 01:19 PM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: So yes, right-wing thugs should go to jail just like left-wing thugs.  There's no difference.

Agreed.  Unfortunately, many conservatives disagree.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
** 14-Sep-2020

(09-14-2020, 05:51 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: > Not really. Your lying and slandering is primarily targeted
> against the blue. You are clearly a red ideologue, even if you
> step a little clear of Trump.

And you're a total moron. So let's just agree to disagree.
Reply
(09-14-2020, 08:58 PM)John J. Xenakis Wrote:
(09-14-2020, 05:51 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: Not really.  Your lying and slandering is primarily targeted against the blue.  You are clearly a red ideologue, even if you step a little clear of Trump.

And you're a total moron.  So let's just agree to disagree.

Why?  Your lying and slander against people whose values you do not share is far more your problem than theirs.  Your evaluations are way off, believable only to those already inside your bubble.  You call anyone with different values an idiot rather an admit that you are unable to perceive their actual motives.  Is there any reason to consider the lying and slander as anything but your problem?  So long as you continue to lie and slander, it seems proper to point it out.

There is a tendency to be proud of one's worldview, values and ideology.  Much of the conservative viewpoint you could be proud of.  The roundhead and cavalier cultures that have become the blue and red conflict have both contributed mightily to America.  The conservative point of view, much of it, has a place in the cycles which cause a good deal of give and take.

But it is hard to be proud of supporting elites and racists.  It is hard to promote a huge division of wealth.  It is hard to advocate a systematic use of violence against minorities.f  As much as I try to honor what is acceptable and proper in conservative thinking, I have to advocate that in the 4T the old values are cleaned up, the worst part of the culture is purged.

And that implies acknowledging the best parts of the culture.  Your lies and slander have to be pointed out for what they are.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
** 14-Sep-2020

(09-14-2020, 09:54 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: > But it is hard to be proud of supporting elites and racists.

Really, don't you ever get tired of posting total crap?
Reply
(09-14-2020, 10:34 PM)John J. Xenakis Wrote:
(09-14-2020, 09:54 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: But it is hard to be proud of supporting elites and racists.

Really, don't you ever get tired of posting total crap?

It is just that I value democracy, human rights, equality and justice.  You obviously don't, so you don't understand and barf garbage motivations rather than strain your brain trying to understand.  Like Trump, anyone who doesn't share your values is rated an idiot.  Again, no one but those in your own bubble would take your stuff seriously.  

But there are a few on this site who are still in your bubble.  It seems worth the effort.

Hmm.  It is easier to understand the values of someone whose values are similar to your own.  It is hard to understand someone whose values conflict.  Every man seems to be the hero of his own story, but it is hard to sell being the good guy if your values are such as elitism or racism.  It is easier to lie and slander the other guy's position.   It takes more effort to give honor as much as possible to the other guy.  If your default is to lie and slander, this will be obvious to any but those who are already convince.  It just doesn't work.

For the record, will you renounce the racist violent cops trying to continue use of unjustified violence against minorities?  Are you for the violent mobile 'militia' who moved into Portland with paint guns and real guns with the motive of starting violence?  The standard red position is sympathetic to both, but are you?
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
** 15-Sep-2020

(09-14-2020, 11:13 PM)Bob Butler 54 Wrote: > For the record, will you renounce the racist violent cops trying
> to continue use of unjustified violence against
> minorities?

I already have, moron.
Reply
(09-15-2020, 06:19 AM)John J. Xenakis Wrote: I already have, moron.

As you have already made that mistake, are you sure you want to rate people who make it as morons?
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
*** 16-Sep-20 World View -- Economic powerhouse Vietnam scrambles to recover from pandemic setbacks

This morning's key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com
  • Economic powerhouse Vietnam scrambles to recover from pandemic setbacks
  • Vietnam's successful fight against the Wuhan Coronavirus
  • Vietnam focuses on foreign investment and trade
  • Government heightened focus on high tech and artificial intelligence
  • Human Rights
  • Marxist Socialism before Marx -- Vietnam's Tay-Son rebellion
  • Aftermath of the Tay-Son rebellion
  • Vietnam's future

****
**** Economic powerhouse Vietnam scrambles to recover from pandemic setbacks
****


(I am currently writing a book on the history of Vietnam,
following my books on the histories of China and Iran. Vietnam has a
long, complex history, heavily influenced by both India and China.
This article provides some advance information from the new
book.)


[Image: g200915b.jpg]
Danang, Vietnam, on Aug 17. The city was on lockdown and thousands had been evacuated because of the pandemic. (VOA)

Up until the last two months, Vietnam was considered the undisputed
economic powerhouse of southeast Asia. In 1986, the hard-core
communist government saw that their Marxist Socialist policies were
causing economic disaster, and they instituted the "Doi Moi" reforms
that began to privatize government businesses, and reduced regulations
on foreign direct investment (FDI). These capitalistic reforms have
been extremely successful, and Vietnam's economy has shown spectacular
growth for over three decades. Vietnam also benefited greatly from
the US-China trade dispute, which caused may Chinese businesses to
relocate to Vietnam.

Another reason for Vietnam's economic success is that its population
is relatively young, a large percentage having been born since 1975,
the end of the "Vietnam-American war." This especially makes Vietnam
a large market for Japanese goods, with Japan's median age over 50.

Vietnam's economic success has depended on FDI and on global economic
growth, but both of those have fallen sharply with the Wuhan
coronavirus pandemic, with the result that Vietnam's economy has
recently fallen off a cliff.

Both Russia and China were forced to abandon their Marxist Socialist
policies in the past, in favor of capitalism and privatization
reforms. The Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) is trying to learn from
the Russian and Chinese experiences, and keep its economic growth
continuing, without making the same mistakes that Russia and China
made and are making.

Unfortunately, there's a dark side to the CPV's economic reforms. The
dark side is that they weren't accompanied by human rights reforms.
Implementing economic reforms without human rights reforms means that
CPV is no longer a Communist, Socialist or Marxist government, but
instead has become a Fascist dictatorship. In this sense, it is
following China's path, though not Russia's path.

Ironically, Vietnam has previously had a Marxist Socialist government
for three decades in the Tay-Son Rebellion of the late 1700s --
decades before Marx was even born. This previous experiment with
Marxist Socialism was a disaster, but unfortunately the CPV has not
learned any lessons from that disaster.

****
**** Vietnam's successful fight against the Wuhan Coronavirus
****


Those who are hoping for a quick economic recovery in Vietnam are
pointing to the country's successful response to the Wuhan Coronavirus
pandemic, which is already in a "second wave" in Vietnam.

Vietnam had very few cases for months, using what was described as
"cost-effectives" methods of virus control. These included health
checks at airports and borders, strategic testing, contact tracing
through mobile apps, effective public communication campaigns, and a
national lockdown in April. On May 4, millions of students went back
to school after three months at home, making Vietnam one of the first
in Southeast Asia to ease movement restrictions.

The Vietnamese thought that they had the virus all but defeated. By
July 25, Vietnam had remarkably been completely free of local
transmission of the virus for almost 100 days, and had quickly
isolated anyone entering the country with the virus.

But then a "second wave" began unexpectedly on July 25, with a new
local transmission outbreak began in the coastal city of Danang, a
popular tourist destination. By July 31, there were 82 new cases in a
single day, more than half in Danang. On the same day, Vietnam
reported its first death due to the illness.

So Vietnam quickly decided to evacuate 80,000 people from Danang, so
that large-scale sterilization procedures could be set up to control
the virus. From the Western point of view this is absolutely
incredible, and it shows the difference between fascist governments
like China and Vietnam, versus Western democracies, where those kinds
of drastic measures would be impossible. They may all have open or
partially open economies, but only a fascist CPV government could
evacuate 80,000 people quickly from a city by force.

It may be that this drastic technique was successful, as there have
been no new community transmissions in Vietnam for the last week.

There are concerns about whether Vietnam will successfully manage a
new surge in the fall, but the Vietnam government expects to do so.
According to a UN representative in Vietnam, "I am confident that the
country will be successful in its efforts to once again successfully
contain the virus, once more over the next few weeks."

****
**** Vietnam focuses on foreign investment and trade
****


It's been pretty clear for several months that Vietnam's economy is
contracting sharply this year, thanks to the pandemic. Vietnam's Doi
Moi reforms were designed to encourage foreign direct investment (FDI)
and trade, and so its economy today is extremely dependent on global
trade, with exports equivalent to over 70% of GDP.

The pandemic caused global trade to fall drastically, estimated at an
8% contraction in 2020. Thus, exports from Vietnam fell 12.1% in
March from a year ago. This was followed by a 14% drop in April, and
a 12.4% drop in May.

But the economy is coming back. According to research by Euromonitor,
Vietnam ranks second out of 50 economies in merger and acquisitions
attractiveness. Exports climbed 2.5% in August compared to a year ago,
with shipments to the U.S. rising 19% in the first eight months of
2020. However, this is not all good news. Exports from domestic
companies in August increased 18.3% year-on-year, while foreign
companies in Vietnam experienced a 4.6% decline. Figures like these
inevitably raise suspicions that the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV)
government is unfairly favoring domestic companies.

The CPV is taking numerous steps to restore economic growth,
especially trade, as quickly as possible.

In June, the CPV ratified a free trade agreement with the European
Union that will cut or eliminate 99% of tariffs on goods traded
between Vietnam and the EU. The deal was controversial in Europe
because of the CPV's human and labor rights record, although the
agreement supposedly addresses those abuses. It will open up
Vietnam’s services, including post, banking, shipping and public
procurement markets, align some standards and protect EU food and
drinks, such as French champagne or Greek feta cheese, from imitations
in Vietnam.

In the area of energy, Vietnam is currently working with ExxonMobil to
develop the Blue Whale gas field off the country’s central coast,
which has an estimated reserve of 150 billion cubic meters. Gas from
this field will be used to run three gas-fired power plants slated to
be built at the nearby Dung Quat Economic Zone.

In the area of manufacturing, Vietnam's primary industry of textile
and garment exports fell 22%. The decline in global textile demand
has led these businesses to manufacture PPE instead, producing nearly
three billion masks a month.

****
**** Government heightened focus on high tech and artificial intelligence
****


The CPV is seeking to support high tech firms with a number of
financial incentives.

High tech firms have not only seen their real estate fees reduced or
waived completely, but have also been able to take preferential loans
with half the general interest rate. SMEs with a revenue of 200
billion dong ($8.8 million) will also see a 30% reduction in corporate
income taxes.

In Vietnam, the Communist Party owns all the land, and grants various
individuals and businesses the right to use the land, in return for
payments to the CPV. The CPV has reduced or eliminated real estate
fees for high tech firms, and have granted them loans at low interest
rates.

The CPV itself has invested heavily in the tech sector. Hanoi-based
Viettel Group, the largest state-owned military telecommunications
company, is investing $30 million in 5G labs to manufacture 5G chips
en masse to create a national 5G infrastructure.

The investments have paid off. Dozens of AI tech firms were founded
in the last two years, and Vietnam has an increasingly sophisticated
workforce. Vietnam is also benefiting from the US-China trade
dispute. A number of foreign high-tech firms are relocating their
supply chains from China to Vietnam, due to cheaper production costs
and geopolitical stability. These include South Korea's consumer
electronics companies LG Group and Samsung Group. Dozens of Japanese
companies have made similar shifts, including Toyota Motor Corp.,
Honda Motor Co, Panasonic Corp., and Canon Inc.

Australia's government is heavily supporting AI development in
Vietnam. Through its Aus4Innovation program, Australia's Ministry of
Science and Technology has already provided millions of dollars in
funding for partnerships between Vietnamese and Austrailian
institutions for commercialization of science and technology across
Vietnam. New funding of almost half a million dollars is specifically
targeted to AI applications to assist Vietnam's economic recovery
after the coronavirus pandemic.

****
**** Human Rights
****


The economic future of Vietnam seems very bright, but there's also a
very dark side to Vietnam, and that's in the area of human rights.

The CPV adopted the "doi moi" economic reforms for purely monetary
reasons -- to encourage foreign investment that benefits the country
in general and the CPV in particular, by keeping it in power.
However, the CPV did not reform the harsh, abusive public policies.

Like the Communist Party in China, the CPV has a paranoid fear of
religion-based rebellions. The thugs in both Communist parties
consider themselves to be more important than their countries, or than
anything. These are vicious, greedy, abusive dictators, scared to
death that any sort of religious prayer would mean the destruction of
the Communist Party itself, and the loss of their jobs.

In Vietnam, Christians and Buddhists are particular targets of
CPV abuse -- arrest, torture, jailings or execution -- just for
praying to their gods rather than to the Communist Party thugs.

This abusive behavior is quite widespread, but a particularly
interesting example is the Christian Hmong ethnic group in Laos, just
across the North Vietnam border in Laos.

The Vietnamese brutally massacred the Hmong in the late 1970s, even
performing such atrocities as cutting off penises or widespread rape.
The Hmong in Vietnam continue to be persecuted by the CPV because of
their Christian religion.

There is a connection between the Hmong ethnic group and the death of
George Floyd early in 2020 in Minneapolis at the hands of a white
policemen, Derek Chauvin. Little has been reported about Chauvin's
past, except that he's married to Kellie Chauvin, a former
Mrs. Minnesota. She's an ethnic Hmong and a Hmong activist, born in
Laos, but fled to Thailand and became a refugee in the late 1970s,
when Vietnam was committing genocide. I haven't been able to find out
whether the Hmong connection was related in way to the death of George
Floyd.

****
**** Marxist Socialism before Marx -- Vietnam's Tay-Son rebellion
****


In one way or another, Vietnam has been around for millennia, and I
will make no attempt in this article to even summarize that history.
It is described in detail in my forthcoming book on the history of
Vietnam.

However, there's one snippet of Vietnam's history that's fascinating
now because of its relevance to today's world. It's about a three
decade period in the late 1700s, when Vietnam tried Marxist Socialism,
decades before Marx was born, with disastrous results as is always the
case with Marxist Socialism.

The story begins in 1400 with the Ho Dynasty, Vietnam's most hated
dynasty. In 1400, General Ho Quy Ly seized the throne and proclaimed
himself founder of the short-lived Ho dynasty (1400-1407). He
inflicted an enormous amount of suffering on the Vietnamese people, so
much so that the landowners appealed to China's Ming Dynasty to
intervene.

The Chinese took advantage of the situation. They invaded and
took control, and inflicted even worse human exploitation
than the Ho on the Vietnamese people, until they were ejected in 1428.

The Ho family came back with a vengeance in 1773, when three Ho
brothers from the Tay-Son district launched a rebellion. It's
apparently very easy to change your name in the Vietnam culture, and
so they changed from the hated Ho name to the popular Nguyen name,
although they were unconnected with the Nguyen family.

Their rebellion spread and gained strength quickly. Like all
Socialists, the Tay-Son bought popularity by spending other people's
money, starting by confiscating all the money of their own
constituents. The Tay-Son governing chief principle and main slogan
of the Tay Son was "seize the property of the rich and distribute it
to the poor." In each village the Tay Son controlled, oppressive
landlords and scholar-officials were punished and their property
redistributed. The Tay Son also abolished taxes, burned the tax and
land registers, freed prisoners from local jails, and distributed the
food from storehouses to the hungry. As the rebellion gathered
momentum, it gained the support of army deserters, merchants,
scholars, local officials, and bonzes. It was essentially a
modern-day Marxist Socialist government, though it existed long before
the birth of Karl Marx.

Like all Socialist regimes, they soon ran out of other people's money.
Modern day Socialist regimes turn to such things as drug dealing,
extortion or dictators to gain income. They also starve, torture,
jail and execute their political opponents still living in their
Socialist Paradise.

The Tay-Son rebels aligned themselves with Chinese pirates. The
targets of these Chinese pirates were Chinese commercial vessels.
Among other things, this gave the Tay-Son (Ho) brothers revenge for
the Chinese invasion in 1407 that removed the Ho Dynasty.

The benefits of the Tay-son - pirate relationship were mutual. The
pirates required bases and safe harbors on land where they could sell
booty, gain military and organization experience, careen and refit
ships, and carouse, and the rebels provided that to the pirates, along
with protection and legitimacy. In return, the rebels got the needed
manpower and revenues to fight against the entrenched bureaucracy.

By the 1780s, the Tay-Son brothers were so destitute from their
Socialist policies that they were completely dependent on the support
of Chinese pirates. According to one historian, pirates "became a
central feature of Tay Son naval strategy and indeed the regime’s
economy between 1786 and 1802."

In the 1790s, a prince from the real Nguyen family, Nguyen Phuc Ahn,
teamed up with French Christian missionaries and raised a mercenary
army in India and defeated the Tay-Son government on June 1, 1802.
The missionaries were willing to cooperate because the Tay-Son
brothers were persecuting Christians.

****
**** Aftermath of the Tay-Son rebellion
****


Nguyen Phuc Ahn began a new Nguyen Dynasty in 1802. He changed his
own name to Gina Long, and he changed the name of the country to Nam
Viet. The Chinese didn't like that name for historical reasons.
China recognized Gina Long as emperor of the new Nguyen Dynasty, but
insisted on naming the country Viet Nam, the first time that name was
used.

After a generational crisis civil war ends, the winning tribe or
ethnic group continues the conflict by harsh, abusive treatment of
ordinary people in the losing side after the war ends. Typically, the
winning side fears a renewed uprising by the losing side, and they
become paranoid and freely begin using harsh repression, torture and
jailings.

Gia Long was no exception. His regime harshly repressed any political
opposition that opposed the regime or the interests of the bureaucracy
and the landowners. Pre-Tay-Son taxes were reinstated. Pre-Tay-Son
prison punishments were reinstated, or were even more severe.

Gia Long followed strict "North Vietnam" Confucian style government
principles. Buddhism, Taoism, and indigenous religions were
forbidden, and these are characteristic of the "South Vietnam"
culture.

Initially, the new government was friendly to the French Christians,
since it was Christian missionaries that helped overthrow the
Tay-Sons. However, the growing number of converts to Christianity --
450,000 by 1841 -- with their disdain for Confucianism, were perceived
as a critical problem by the regime. By the 1830s, the regime issued
edicts that forbade the practice of Christianity, forcing the
Christian communities underground. An estimated ninety-five priests
and members of the laity were executed by the Vietnamese during the
following quarter of a century.

Tensions grew, and in early 1861, a French fleet of 70 ships and 3,500
men reinforced Saigon, and in June 1862, forced Vietnam's emperor to
cede Saigon and three provinces to the French.

France's navy continued traveling up the Mekong River, and by the end
of the century had colonized all of French Indochina, their new name
for Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. The French remained in control until
after World War II, and left completely after being defeated by human
wave assaults at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. Once again, Vietnam was
partitioned into North and South Vietnam.

****
**** Vietnam's future
****


The reason that I went into such detail about the Tay-Son rebellion is
because it's being replayed today. "History doesn't repeat itself,
but it rhymes."

North and South Vietnam were split in the 1760s. The Tay-Son (Ho)
brothers started a harsh Marxist revolution that began in 1773 and
lasted until 1802, with the result that North and South Vietnam were
reunited again. It was followed by decades of severe repression and
religious persecution. There would have been a new civil war around
1860 between North and South Vietnam, except that the French came and
colonized the region. North and South Vietnam remained united until
the French were ejected in 1954.

In 1954, after the defeat of the French colonizers, North and South
Vietnam were again split. Another Ho, the dictator Ho Chi Minh,
started a harsh Marxist revolution that began in 1954 and lasted until
the reforms in 1986. It was followed by decades of severe repression
and religious persecution, that are still going on today.

Vietnam may be united under control of the the CPV, but it is not
culturally united. For centuries, there have been many wars between
North and South Vietnam, and the core reasons haven't changed. This
is clear from many blog posts online today that the people of Saigon
(Ho Chi Minh city or HCMC) really do hate their CPV overlords and the
people of Hanoi, while the people of Hanoi consider the people of
Saigon to be sweet and nice, as if they were puppies.

The Vietnam-American war that ended in 1975 was just one more of a
long series of wars between the Sinicized-Confucian culture in North
Vietnam versus the Indianized-Buddhist culture in South Vietnam. From
the point of view of Generational Dynamics, the time frame for a new
civil war would be around 2035. However, just as the French invasion
and colonization of French Indochina derailed the timeline for the
civil war that would otherwise have begun in 1860, the current
timeline could be derailed by an invasion from China or by a new world
war.

In the meantime, "it is what it is," to use the trite phrase. You can
visit Vietnam, you can work in Vietnam, you can live in Vietnam,
provided you understand the rules. The rules are that the CPV is very
harsh and oppressive, and saying or doing the wrong thing can get you
arrested, tortured or deported. And even if you find a comfortable
niche, the tensions and hostility between North and South are going to
be worse every year.

Vietnam is an exciting, interesting place to live or visit, and it has
a young, enthusiastic work force eager to succeed. Take advantage of
those benefits as long as you can, and just follow the rules.

John Xenakis is author of: "World View: War Between China and Japan:
Why America Must Be Prepared" (Generational Theory Book Series, Book
2), June 2019, Paperback: 331 pages, with over 200 source references,
$13.99 https://www.amazon.com/World-View-Betwee...732738637/

John Xenakis is author of: "World View: Iran's Struggle for Supremacy
-- Tehran's Obsession to Redraw the Map of the Middle East"
(Generational Theory Book Series, Book 1), September 2018, Paperback:
153 pages, over 100 source references, $7.00, https://www.amazon.com/World-View-Suprem...732738610/

John Xenakis is author of: "Generational Dynamics Anniversary Edition
- Forecasting America's Destiny", (Generational Theory Book Series,
Book 3), January 2020, Paperback: 359 pages, $14.99, https://www.amazon.com/Generational-Dyna...732738629/

Sources:

Related Articles:



KEYS: Generational Dynamics, Vietnam, Vietnam-American war,
Doi Moi reforms, Danang, Hanoi, Saigon, Ho Chi Minh City, HCMC,
Communist Party of Vietnam, CPV, Viettel Group,
Wuhan Coronavirus, China, Australia, Aus4Innovation,
Laos, Hmong ethnic group, Kellie Chauvin, Derek Chauvin,
Tay-Son Rebellion, Marxism, Ho Quy Ly, Ho brothers, Ho Chi Minh,
Chinese pirates, Nguyen Phuc Ahn, Gina Long, French Indochina

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John J. Xenakis
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Reply
A minor detail: Ho Chi Minh originally went by the name Nguyễn Sinh Cung..
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


Reply
** 16-Sep-2020 World View: Ho Chi Minh's name

(09-15-2020, 10:47 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: > A minor detail: Ho Chi Minh originally went by the name Nguyen
> Sinh Cung.

Thanks for pointing that out. Apparently he changed his name
several times:

Quote:> "The year 1925 also marked the founding of the Viet
> Nam Thanh Nien Cach Menh Dong Chi Hoi (Revolutionary Youth League)
> in Guangzhou by Ho Chi Minh. Born Nguyen Sinh Cung in Kim Lien
> village, Nghe An Province in May 1890, Ho was the son of Nguyen
> Sinh Sac (or Huy), a scholar from a poor peasant family. Following
> a common custom, Ho's father renamed him Nguyen Tat Thanh at about
> age ten. Ho was trained in the classical Confucian tradition and
> was sent to secondary school in Hue. After working for a short
> time as a teacher, he went to Saigon where he took a course in
> navigation and in 1911 joined the crew of a French ship. Working
> as a kitchen hand, Ho traveled to North America, Africa, and
> Europe. While in Paris from 1919-23, he took the name Nguyen Ai
> Quoc (Nguyen the Patriot). In 1919 he attempted to meet with
> United States President Woodrow Wilson at the Versailles Peace
> Conference in order to present a proposal for Vietnam's
> independence, but he was turned away and the proposal was never
> officially acknowledged. During his stay in Paris, Ho was greatly
> influenced by Marxist-Leninist literature, particularly Lenin's
> Theses on the National and Colonial Questions (1920), and in 1920
> he became a founding member of the French Communist Party. He
> read, wrote, and spoke widely on Indochina's problems before
> moving to Moscow in 1923 and attending the Fifth Congress of the
> Communist International (see Glossary), also called the Comintern,
> in 1924. In late 1924, Ho arrived in Guangzhou, where he spent the
> next two years training more than 200 Vietnamese cadres in
> revolutionary techniques. His course of instruction included study
> of Marxism-Leninism, Vietnamese and Asian revolutionary history,
> Asian leaders such as Gandhi and Sun Yat-sen, and the problem of
> organizing the masses. As a training manual, Ho used his own
> publication Duong Cach Menh (The Revolutionary Path), written in
> 1926 and considered his primer on revolution. Going by the name Ly
> Thuy, he formed an inner communist group, Thanh Nien Cong San Doan
> (Communist Youth League), within the larger Thanh Nien (Youth)
> organization. The major activity of Thanh Nien was the production
> of a journal, Thanh Nien, distributed clandestinely in Vietnam,
> Siam, and Laos, which introduced communist theory into the
> Vietnamese independence movement. Following Chiang Kai-shek's
> April 1927 coup and the subsequent suppression of the communists
> in southern China, Ho fled to Moscow."

> http://memory.loc.gov/master/frd/frdcstd...cima_0.pdf

Perhaps in my book research I'll find out why he made the change from
"Nguyen" to "Ho", both of which are highly significant names in
Vietnam's history. His extensive study of history means that the
change was almost certainly related to the Ho Dynasty and Tay-Son
rebellion.
Reply
"Nguyen" is simply a very common surname in Vietnam, somewhat like "Smith" in America, "Huang" and spelling variants in China (Wong or Wang) in China or almost like "Kim" in Korea.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


Reply
The resources/assets of Southeast Asia have long been of interest to outside powers.

Awhile back I came across a web site that suggested that SE Asia will be contested by China and Japan.
Reply
(09-16-2020, 11:59 AM)Tim Randal Walker Wrote: The resources/assets of Southeast Asia have long been of interest to outside powers.  

Awhile back I came across a web site that suggested that SE Asia will be contested by China and Japan.

I’m not so sure it is cost effective to use violence to acquire resources and territory anymore.  A point I often make.  Nukes.  Insurgent proxy wars.  China may not have figured it out yet.  Most of their neighbors are nervous.  They are a potent force, but they have antagonized a lot of people.

Wars of aggression are problematic these days, though.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply


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