Freschledditor
Freschledditor t1_j2lunih wrote
Reply to comment by Strange-Ad1209 in An analysis of data from 30 survey projects spanning 137 countries found that 75% of people in liberal democracies hold a negative view of China, and 87% hold a negative view of Russia. However, for the rest of the world, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% feel positively towards Russia. by glawgii
In reality, most of them do agree with the dictatorial government, or don't care. Otherwise, it would be like Iran.
Freschledditor t1_j2lukf4 wrote
Reply to comment by SexyOldHobo in An analysis of data from 30 survey projects spanning 137 countries found that 75% of people in liberal democracies hold a negative view of China, and 87% hold a negative view of Russia. However, for the rest of the world, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% feel positively towards Russia. by glawgii
Narrow??? "30 global survey projects that collectively span 137 countries which represent 97% of world population"???
Face it, you just don't like the truth, so you unconstructively dismiss it.
Freschledditor t1_j2lueb0 wrote
Reply to comment by paceminterris in An analysis of data from 30 survey projects spanning 137 countries found that 75% of people in liberal democracies hold a negative view of China, and 87% hold a negative view of Russia. However, for the rest of the world, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% feel positively towards Russia. by glawgii
Funny, I agree with your assessment of russians and chinese people, but not with your conclusion of blaming the West. The reality is, russians are broadly fascist imperialists, which is why they're fine with living in a dictatorship. Chinese people as well, but less so, since they're more interested in actual prosperity, while russians want to play war games and take lands.
Freschledditor t1_j2ltxid wrote
Reply to comment by Discount_gentleman in An analysis of data from 30 survey projects spanning 137 countries found that 75% of people in liberal democracies hold a negative view of China, and 87% hold a negative view of Russia. However, for the rest of the world, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% feel positively towards Russia. by glawgii
The difference is that you are much more likely to get the full picture in a democracy, not a dictatorship.
Freschledditor t1_j2ltqmt wrote
Reply to comment by MochiMochiMochi in An analysis of data from 30 survey projects spanning 137 countries found that 75% of people in liberal democracies hold a negative view of China, and 87% hold a negative view of Russia. However, for the rest of the world, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% feel positively towards Russia. by glawgii
Uh, what? Typical anti-Western propaganda nonsense... China remained generally uncolonized. They had their own internal wars for millennia, and it culminated in the current very oppressive regime, inspired by russia's very oppressive regime, with russia also never really being colonized. Hong Kong, meanwhile, despite actually being colonized, is much more democratic. At least it was, until China's recent meddling.
Freschledditor t1_j2lthh8 wrote
Reply to comment by SplitPerspective in An analysis of data from 30 survey projects spanning 137 countries found that 75% of people in liberal democracies hold a negative view of China, and 87% hold a negative view of Russia. However, for the rest of the world, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% feel positively towards Russia. by glawgii
Or maybe you're biased? If you have a problem with the data, then show it.
Freschledditor t1_j2nkpfp wrote
Reply to comment by Jaded-Protection-402 in An analysis of data from 30 survey projects spanning 137 countries found that 75% of people in liberal democracies hold a negative view of China, and 87% hold a negative view of Russia. However, for the rest of the world, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% feel positively towards Russia. by glawgii
The Opium wars didn't result in China being colonized... I literally brought up Hong Kong, which is all they lost to it