回复 107楼一个人玩儿的帖子 难怪王孟源博士说,即使在信息自由流通的社会里面,真正能独立思考的人也只占总人口的10%。 同样是用外媒资料。我就能看出习近平是不世出的领袖。人家是真反腐。美国是,贪腐合法化。可笑的是,PD1PDL1机制研究得这么清楚。但是整个美国政界就不知道该怎么纠正来杀这个癌细胞。 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVzlkrucRdw&t=1530s 中国的扶贫,桑德子是怎么称赞的?这是在整个美国敌视中国的氛围下,对他选举有好处么?如果不是实话,你怎么解释? Sanders: China has done more to address extreme poverty ‘than any country in the history of civilization’ https://thehill.com/hilltv/rising/458976-sanders-china-had-done-more-to-address-extreme-poverty-than-any-country-in-the/
许多中国人认为堕胎权是天经地义的,那是因为许多中国人认为孩子是自己拥有的,生杀打骂都是自家的事,别人管不着,他们没有把孩子当成一个独立个体。对孩子的尊重,犹如对女人的尊重一样,是文明进步的特征。 民主的决策过程是慢,因为它是“govern by the consensus”。有时候形成consensus 需要时间来反馈各方意见。中国那种雷厉风行的决策快是快,但最后发现很多是垃圾决策。“快的决策过程” 是许多人为专制辩护的标准套路。等哪天铁拳砸到你头上,你也许会明白我的意思。
你搁着装什么傻呢,overturning of Roe v. Wade的本质就是推翻堕胎受宪法保障,否认了女性的堕胎权力。 基本人权都不受宪法保障了还在这洗地? 如果在13个有trigger-laws的州意外怀孕,不能堕胎,怎么办,打电话给议员“表达诉求”? 别忘了去年发生的事,10岁女孩被强奸后怀孕,堕胎被拒绝,医生如果协助堕胎要被判刑。没有堕胎权,这种案例以后只会更多。
许多中国人认为堕胎权是天经地义的,那是因为许多中国人认为孩子是自己拥有的,生杀打骂都是自家的事,别人管不着,他们没有把孩子当成一个独立个体。对孩子的尊重,犹如对女人的尊重一样,是文明进步的特征。 民主的决策过程是慢,因为它是“govern by the consensus”。有时候形成consensus 需要时间来反馈各方意见。中国那种雷厉风行的决策快是快,但最后发现很多是垃圾决策。“快的决策过程” 是许多人为专制辩护的标准套路。等哪天铁拳砸到你头上,你也许会明白我的意思。 Diablo2019 发表于 2023-01-26 01:01
决策慢是有代价的。。 丘吉尔说美国You can always count on the Americans to do the right thing after they have tried everything else. 听起来貌似是在说美国制度的优越性。。 但如果你真的仔细想想。。。 也就美国,受两大洋保护,没有任何外敌,地大物博,才有那么大的容错空间,才可以一个个选项尝试过来,最终找到个适合自己的。。 如果换在强敌围绕的欧亚大陆,一个决定错误,直接就亡国无法翻身,谁来给你一个个试错的机会? 还是多学点历史
你自己的观点一定要推给给所有人吗?你的观点代表你自己就好了。 This Land Becomes Their Land. New U.S. Citizens Hit a 15-Year High Nearly one million immigrants became Americans in 2022 after the pandemic delayed the process and prevented hundreds of thousands of people from voting in the 2020 election. Jan. 2, 2023 Many immigrants said an anti-immigrant political climate motivated them to become citizens in order to vote.Todd Heisler/The New York Times On a windswept morning last spring, Mom Leveille slipped into a flowing red dress and high-heeled sandals and headed to a ballpark in Brooklyn, her nerves jangled. A Cambodian refugee, Ms. Leveille had applied for U.S. citizenship nearly two years earlier, and, finally, the moment was nigh when she would take a permanent oath of allegiance to the country where her family had found safe haven. In the stands of Maimonides Park, she joined 250 people from 65 countries who were sworn in by judges wearing their formal black robes. Like Ms. Leveille, 39, many of the new Americans had waited more than a year to be invited for the naturalization ceremony since first submitting their applications. She wiped away tears that day as she rose to deliver a speech about the security, the electoral voice and the responsibility that came with becoming a citizen. “It was a very, very long process, and it was very emotional,” she said. Across the country, naturalization ceremonies are making a comeback, in parks, sports arenas and courthouses, after a long hiatus caused by Covid-19 lockdowns that suspended public gatherings, shuttered immigration offices and put thousands of citizenship applications on hold. Nearly one million immigrants became citizens in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the most in almost 15 years and the third-highest number ever, according to a recent Pew Research analysis, demonstrating the increasing impact of immigration on who lives and works in the United States — and who votes. “People have incentives to become citizens,” said Jeffrey S. Passel, a senior demographer at Pew Research, who co-wrote the study based on government data. “The numbers have not only rebounded. They are reaching levels we have rarely seen in our history.” The total number of people seeking to become citizens is not reflected in the year-end data and is actually much higher because of the pileup of applications. Some 670,000 naturalizations are still pending. After first submitting her application, Mom Leveille waited about 20 months to be invited for a naturalization ceremony.Emil Lippe for The New York Times The Biden administration has taken several steps to streamline the process, such as simplifying forms and redirecting interviewees from cities whose immigration offices are stretched to those that have capacity. That has helped reduce the backlog of pending applications from more than a million in December 2020. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency that handles the applications, also announced recently that it would soon conduct a trial of a redesigned naturalization test intended to be more fair and consistent. For the oral assessment, candidates will be asked to describe three photographs of everyday activities, the weather or food. The goal is to test ordinary use of English, rather than to rely on complex questions whose answers may differ considerably based on immigrants’ personal histories and countries of origin. (Applicants will still be asked separately to respond in English to security questions as part of the review.) “It is good for the nation for people to join it in the fullest way that they can,” said Ur M. Jaddou, the director of U.S.C.I.S. “That has been a priority since the beginning of this administration.” The Biden administration initiatives are a reversal from those of the Trump administration, which increased scrutiny of applications and made the citizenship test more cumbersome and challenging as part of its agenda to curb legal immigration. But that administration’s immigration posture backfired, awakening many longtime legal residents to the fact that a green card does not shield them from deportation. And many felt compelled to seek citizenship in order to cast a ballot. “Deliberately depressing naturalization rates was one of the most shortsighted strategies pursued by the Trump administration,” said Wayne A. Cornelius, the founding director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at the University of California San Diego. “The uptick under Biden mainly reflects the insecurity caused by incessant demonization of immigrants by Republican politicians, as well as greater confidence that they can pass the revised test,” he said. (President Biden reinstated the previous test after he took office, in preparation for revamping it even further.) Ms. Leveille had lived in the United States for more than three decades, raising four American-born children, before deciding to become a citizen. “I had a green card and had never given it another thought until Trump became president,” she said. At that point, she said, “I realized that I needed citizenship to be safe.” Ana Maria Schwartz, an immigration lawyer, in her office in Houston.Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times Many immigrants were moved to naturalize after the assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, said Ana Maria Schwartz, an immigration lawyer in Texas. She said she was seeing an increase in the number of clients seeking assistance with citizenship applications. “They want to make sure the United States is the safe and stable place they came to,” Ms. Schwartz said. A green card had sufficed for Miguel Escobedo, 56, a Houston resident who was brought to Texas from Mexico as a toddler. His legal resident status enabled him to serve in the National Guard and the U.S. Army. But in early 2021, he said, he felt increasingly disturbed by the hateful rhetoric and violence engulfing the country. “What the hell was happening?” Mr. Escobedo said. “With the direction I was seeing my adoptive country heading, I wanted the right to vote.” He hired Ms. Schwartz to help expedite the citizenship process and took the oath in April. Immigrants who demonstrate continuous permanent lawful residence in the United States for at least five years, or three years if married to a U.S. citizen, are eligible to apply for citizenship. They must pass background checks, submit a bevy of supporting documents and pass civics and English tests during an interview. The 970,000 naturalizations in the 2022 fiscal year were the most since the 2008 fiscal year, when 1.05 million immigrants became citizens, an all-time high. (Numbers have been tallied since 1907.) A spike in naturalization applications occurred in 1997, after 2.7 million undocumented immigrants obtained legal status under a 1986 amnesty program, which made them eligible for citizenship years later. The number of applications also soared in the 2005 fiscal year, before a fee increase. The government fees now total $725, and hiring a lawyer can add several thousand dollars to the cost. The population of naturalized citizens in the United States tripled between 1995 and 2019, to 22.1 million from 7.6 million, according to Pew estimates. The share of all eligible immigrants who were naturalized has climbed steadily, to nearly two-thirds in 2019 from 38 percent in 1995. Newly minted voters could be crucial in states like Pennsylvania, Nevada, Michigan and Arizona, whose large naturalized-citizen electorates have been influential. Many more permanent residents in such battleground states are likely to naturalize in coming years. “With the direction I was seeing my adoptive country heading, I wanted the right to vote,” said Miguel Escobedo, a U.S. Army veteran and naturalized U.S. citizen from Mexico.Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times “These new voters are ripe for mobilization and will help determine which party comes to dominate in these states,” said Louis DeSipio, a professor of political science at the University of California, Irvine. “Needless to say, these states determine which party wins the presidency.” Some nine million immigrants in the United States are legal permanent residents eligible to obtain citizenship. Less than half of those from Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Japan are naturalized, compared with at least 80 percent from Cambodia, Iran, Laos, Poland and Vietnam. In addition to conferring the right to vote, citizenship allows people to serve on a jury and to sponsor other family members for U.S. residency. It also gives them access to certain federal benefits and government jobs. Yet, even with the Biden administration’s efforts to speed up the process, it will take a while to make a significant dent in the citizenship application backlog, experts said. “Things are going in a positive direction, but it’s hard to catch up,” said Xiao Wang, the chief executive of Boundless, a technology company that helps families navigate the U.S. immigration system. “They are getting more people naturalized,” he said, “but the wait time is still long, 15 to 18 months.” Boundless estimates that nearly 300,000 would-be citizens should have been eligible to vote in the 2020 elections but were unable to cast a ballot because of the suspension of naturalization services. With pandemic restrictions lifted, U.S.C.I.S. has begun holding naturalization ceremonies in large venues. On Dec. 7, nearly 2,000 immigrants from 120 countries were sworn in as U.S. citizens at Wintrust Arena in Chicago. Alex De Mola, an Italian immigrant, submitted his application in September 2020. More than a year went by, and he did not hear a peep from the government. “I think my files were buried in a cave during Covid,” he said. “I thought they were lost.” Finally, he was invited for an in-person interview in April, passed the test and attended a naturalization ceremony the next month. “I didn’t want to be a person caught between two worlds,” said Mr. De Mola, 39, who runs an online skin care retailer in Austin, Texas. “I want to spend my life here. I want to vote, have an impact on society and make choices as a citizen.”
水准比脚高
买买提过来的吗?这里大妈和其它门派都没这水平,这种极好的帖子这里欣赏的人也少,别upset,因为就像你说的民主党 共和党都已思维意识定型,大家只是各说一词,没人去听取思考。况且这里很多都是门派任务工作发帖。
脑子真是呆。
你们汉人对清朝皇帝的评价是什么?没有出过一个昏君。还不够说明问题么?
现在是共产党集体领导,想出昏君的概率太低了。
太同意您了,当今圣天子在位,海晏河清
很简单。因为历史总有方向,选错方向的失败者,最后的最凄惨下场都是失败族。
我在美国就嘲笑一些深蓝台湾人,中华民国田氏代齐亡国,中华民国人在台湾灭种。唯一的一根独苗民主制度,在美国国会山叛乱,英国脱欧后,几乎肯定也是失败下去了。马上就有英国亡国解体的好戏上演了。
一个亡国、灭种、亡天下的制度,你们还不愿认赌服输扫进历史的垃圾堆。
他要真觉得自己说的是实话,就该赶紧回去买中国股票和房子,刚好现在还是个低点
主席台上的都是歪瓜裂枣, 底层玩命干也没用啊, 很是无解。
集权不是极权。 集权的缺点是容易忽视基层、个人,优点是可以集中力量办大事,当然如果办错了,产生的破坏也重,但是的但是,集权是有很强的纠错性的,尤其对大问题的纠错性,如果没有这种特性,中国七十年已经崩溃好几次了,大跃进、文革、64、法论功、大下岗、全党贪腐……这放在任何一个国家,都是可以崩国的。
相反,多党制,对基层、民生更容易照顾到,但是对大问题就处理不了,美国的种族问题、枪支问题、铁锈带问题、医保问题……多少年了,不但没有得到缓和,反而愈演愈烈,甚至造成了全社会在向着深层分化发展。 这是多党制民主选举的天然缺陷,多党内耗,无法解决尖锐的社会矛盾。
嗯 美国空间站不让进,中国过了四十年搞出自己的空间站。以后还是落后四十年….
难怪王孟源博士说,即使在信息自由流通的社会里面,真正能独立思考的人也只占总人口的10%。
同样是用外媒资料。我就能看出习近平是不世出的领袖。人家是真反腐。美国是,贪腐合法化。可笑的是,PD1PDL1机制研究得这么清楚。但是整个美国政界就不知道该怎么纠正来杀这个癌细胞。 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVzlkrucRdw&t=1530s
中国的扶贫,桑德子是怎么称赞的?这是在整个美国敌视中国的氛围下,对他选举有好处么?如果不是实话,你怎么解释? Sanders: China has done more to address extreme poverty ‘than any country in the history of civilization’ https://thehill.com/hilltv/rising/458976-sanders-china-had-done-more-to-address-extreme-poverty-than-any-country-in-the/
别说马斯克了,这版上一堆说美崩中国崛起的,不照样没回国 不知道图啥,人格分裂很好玩吗
越来越多?你知道多少大学都要办不下去了吗
美国容许自由竞争 美国几千所大学 有新学校不断成立 也有学校办不下去 甚至偶尔还出一所野鸡大学 但这不影响美国top大学质量的高水平
哪里只是中美?欧洲日本俄罗斯在下坡路上跑得更快。这就是个摆烂的世界,比对手们稍微跑得慢一点就赢了。
美国2023年有海外留学生57万 2019年有近110万 随后因为新冠降到2021年92万 今年又升到95万
可能这些人本来就在国内,翻墙出来舆论战而已
犹太人死了700万,也就是说,有700万人是看不清形势的。
这一套套的,世界顶级富人没请你当顾问是不是亏了?
让人相信中国大使馆?这么幼稚。看看疫情这几年是怎么对待自己的公民和华侨的。
你就不把农村人当自己的国民啊 农村人都是你剥削的对象 看看那些在西藏自驾游的说 那里厕所都没有 要到野外地理解决
全篇意淫
清朝没有昏君,在一代又一代的明君带领下,落后西方一个世纪,这才是最可怕的。
不会如你愿。十年后中国赶不上美国,但中国,至少百姓生活质量会进一步提升。因为,中国现在有很多贫困地区,扶贫不能停。
国内的人都相信大使馆的,以为海外的中国人有事都可以找大使馆😄
没觉得国内一线城市多不得了,那些中下层的人矿过得一点不轻松吧
印尼排华的时候,大使馆关门不放中国公民避难,让他们死在街头,这是谁的锅,台湾?
你去过你所在城市的差区吗? 恐怕你连车都不敢下吧,还有旧金山西雅图等等许多downtown的homeless帐篷区
中国威胁论是要美国和盟友不要傻白甜把中国当盟友,和中国是不是向好没必要联系。同理,朝鲜伊朗都是美国威胁,不能说他们也崛起了吧
你智商的锅?
信湾湾得永生 得李靓蕾 得大S 话说98正好赶上大洪水 印尼故意的 后来中国击沉一艘印尼军舰 后来都没报道 印尼政府下台 200多名将军入狱
扶贫的钱哪儿来?共同富裕?那现在的中上层生活质量就下降了。
你这么说别人有意思吗?你自己做做饭追追剧自个香去不就行了?
统一江湖又如何? 秦二世而亡! 隋二世而亡! 元百年而毙! 乱搞的政权总是一开始觉得自己很牛逼,其实干不长久。
厉害,有水平。我学了那么多历史哲学还是写不出来。
没错,美国特别紧张,政策狂出,就为了打压中国。近期有效,长期谁知道呢。
你知道那时候发生了什么事?那时候正是第一次世界大战。那时候漂洋过海不容易。而且当时世界经济都不好。
这么多惊叹号干啥啊 秦之后是汉,隋之后是唐,元后是明 统了之后还是能稳200年吧 出生在稳定政局中的人大运就算好的
扶贫这事,中国政府是做得最好的,你也不要吹毛求疵了。你所谓的共同富裕是劫富济贫,对不起,不是这个思路。
清朝皇帝就康熙雍正两个合格,乾隆是个坐吃山空挥霍无度的二代,其他的更是一个比一个烂
纳粹屠杀灭族侵略但是科技进步都要搞出原子弹了,你又怎么说?
政治家只能在他出生的生产力环境中去协调和治理。政治家不是科学家工程师,不能拿这些要求。
只是说西方的这个文明缺乏内部的和谐,一直靠对外扩张和生产力扩张做大来维系体系内的团结。一旦停止了,立马会内乱丛生。
这点上远不如中国。
把蛋糕做大么,扶持底层自己造血,整个社会都有正向回馈 不要总是零和思维,好像土共抢了谁的饭碗似的
的确 美国就是不吸血上层 连税都不交 更不要说扶贫了 说什么对外侵略卖军火石油也是上层吃肉 下层吸毒 中国不输出战争 只能劫富济贫 有什么问题啊… 那不然钱从哪里来?你以为真靠发展科技啊 这个世界本来就是零和游戏 你有我没有 矿和人矿就那么多 市场就那么大 你让人矿一天变出来48小时工作消费玩游戏买装备也不能够
这些人不会回去的,富人都在往外跑呢。
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https://www.youtube.com/embed/8jMnYckz18c?showinfo=0
万一是在憋大招呢
是的,吃不了中国,回不了血。而这样下去,必有一战针对中国。
哎,深有同感。如果10年不够,20年也差不多了。主要是政府官员们没人正经想把国家管好,都是党争、个人利益
美国是乱,但是动态平衡。中国所谓的和谐是中央通过强权和暴力实现的,中国国民还是巨婴,根本不知道怎么通过民主选举达到地方自治,表达自己的诉求。你居然还在吹捧这种体制。
中国前进的障碍一个是目前当政的共产党,另一个障碍便是像你这种受了西方教育,还在为专制体制摇旗呐喊的人。不幸的是像你这样的人不是少数,有很大一批人,包括像胡锡进,金灿容之类的人。
看看南朝鲜是怎么走上民主道路的,因为南朝鲜有一批有学识的人有良知,而中国许多读书人没有良知,只有对权利的崇拜和敬畏,一天到晚幻想着强大中华。所以中国还有很长的启蒙路要走。
政客都是老百姓选出来的,老百姓都只想着不干活只拿好处,你以为选出来的是什么货色
凡是在美国生活过还鼓吹相信美国有真正的民主自由的人都是非蠢即坏 天天指责别国人权,堕胎权说废就废,一夜倒退回中世纪 还搁着说表达诉求呢,什么是诉求,政客嘴里说的话才叫诉求
最高法院的意见是“堕胎权”不是应该由联邦决定,而是由州决定。因此加州可以放宽堕胎权,以后只要州里同意,九个月也可以有堕胎权。即使在欧洲,堕胎权也是有限制的。
你对堕胎权的解读表明,你要么是无知,根本不了解最高法院的判决,要么是坏,故意曲解,以此来攻击美国体制,为专制体制吹捧。
只是概叹中国老百姓的悲惨命运啊。好容易统一了不打仗了,又尼玛遇上个昏君。遇上所谓明君也是剥削老百姓轻一点,遇上康熙乾隆又如何?败光了中国家底直接落后了西方300年。
意思就是你怀孕了能不能打胎要看你村里的人来决定是吧
你这货压根没在没在美国上过班吧
凡是让一群美国人开会 那不拖你个一年半载 然后乱七八糟做一些无用功 能让你安身而退就不叫灯塔国了
美帝落幕是很正常的事 中国变好也是全世界肉眼可以看到的
真不知道你在这着什么急。
只能祝您以后去美国第一大城市ny坐地铁安全 去第二大城市LA不被砸车 去第三大城市Houston不被川粉骂 去第四大城市Chicago不碰见天使
毕竟美国 “动态平衡” 呵呵
清朝直接消灭了民末的资本主义萌芽,属于落后民族统一中国的巨大失败。直接把中华民族带入深渊,落后西方三百年。和康熙同年代的英国人已经君主立宪奠定现代文明大局了,这边还在皇帝万岁万岁万万岁呢。要是康熙来个康熙维新还差不多。所谓的康乾盛世只不过是在歪的路上越走越歪。中华民族的伟大成就全被这帮满族蛮族败光了。
秦之后是汉,隋之后是唐,元之后是明 所以按照你自己的说法,乱搞的民国,短命亡了,现在的中国政权起码还有200年国运?? 呵呵。。
要不为啥说你们都是些缺乏基本逻辑的历史盲呢。。
许多中国人认为堕胎权是天经地义的,那是因为许多中国人认为孩子是自己拥有的,生杀打骂都是自家的事,别人管不着,他们没有把孩子当成一个独立个体。对孩子的尊重,犹如对女人的尊重一样,是文明进步的特征。
民主的决策过程是慢,因为它是“govern by the consensus”。有时候形成consensus 需要时间来反馈各方意见。中国那种雷厉风行的决策快是快,但最后发现很多是垃圾决策。“快的决策过程” 是许多人为专制辩护的标准套路。等哪天铁拳砸到你头上,你也许会明白我的意思。
你搁着装什么傻呢,overturning of Roe v. Wade的本质就是推翻堕胎受宪法保障,否认了女性的堕胎权力。 基本人权都不受宪法保障了还在这洗地? 如果在13个有trigger-laws的州意外怀孕,不能堕胎,怎么办,打电话给议员“表达诉求”? 别忘了去年发生的事,10岁女孩被强奸后怀孕,堕胎被拒绝,医生如果协助堕胎要被判刑。没有堕胎权,这种案例以后只会更多。
民主选举地方自治,谁告诉你这就是好事? 中国历史不止一次证明了,地方自治必然是地方山头主义,打造地方小王国,当地几家土豪完全把持权力,最后各种分裂内耗。。 国家的长治久安,靠的是流官。。本地人升官到一定程度,必须调走,异地为官。。
有一说一,中国前进最大的障碍,就是你们这种被西方洗脑的小白历史盲。。 不过好在最危险的时候已经过去了,河殇一代已经过气了,现在的年轻人远比过去有底气和自信。。
决策慢是有代价的。。
丘吉尔说美国You can always count on the Americans to do the right thing after they have tried everything else. 听起来貌似是在说美国制度的优越性。。 但如果你真的仔细想想。。。 也就美国,受两大洋保护,没有任何外敌,地大物博,才有那么大的容错空间,才可以一个个选项尝试过来,最终找到个适合自己的。。
如果换在强敌围绕的欧亚大陆,一个决定错误,直接就亡国无法翻身,谁来给你一个个试错的机会?
还是多学点历史
我的意思是按封建王朝的标准看康熙和雍正算合格 所谓康乾盛世就是个谎言,稍微有脑子的人思考一下都能明白 明朝如果再延续一百年,中国是有可能走上资本主义的道路 然而清朝一下让中国堕入深渊了,不仅是落后于现代文明的三四百年,更是中华文明断档的三四百年
废除堕胎权是对女人的尊重,文明的进步? 别扯了,都看出来了你既蠢又坏,屁股决定大脑,懒得跟你多废话
“有一说一,中国前进最大的障碍,就是你们这种被西方洗脑的小白历史盲。。 不过好在最危险的时候已经过去了,河殇一代已经过气了,现在的年轻人远比过去有底气和自信。。”
放心,我不会是障碍,因为我不打算回去了,我不认同专制体制,我认为中国的前景是暗淡的。我认为中国国民还需要启蒙,有很长的路要走,像你和张维为,金灿容之类的人,对专制制度的吹捧,将延长启蒙所需的时间。
我个人觉得你们这些给专制吹捧的人缺乏良知。如果你心安,那么各自安好。
用这个问题攻击美国制度,只能掩饰你的为专制制度辩护的无能为力。你并不能有效的解释为什么专制制度的好的。
其实明朝的资本主义一样大概率是没戏的。。
西方资本主义,靠的是庞大海外殖民地的疯狂掠夺,对殖民地民众的残酷压榨。。 西班牙在南美挖个银矿,都能活活虐死800万奴工。。 英国靠着对庞大印度人口的压榨/倾销,才制造出了足够的工业品需求,从而搞出了工业革命
明末的资本主义萌芽,其实也是因为西方殖民美洲过程中搜刮了大量金银,这些金银通过交易不断流入中国,等于是长期的财政刺激,靠这种外部需求拉动出来的。 但这种明显是不可持续的。。
一个是西方人手上也没有无穷无尽的金银来采购中国货物。。 欧洲爆发的30年战争,极大破坏了这种外部需求,白银流入中国的速度变缓,立马造成了明末的经济危机,也是明朝亡国的一个原因之一。。
另一个是西方强盗一般prefer强抢,而不是付钱买。。参考他们在印度在东南亚在非洲的强盗做法, 后来的鸦片战争,不就是因为英国人手上银子不够了,想办法靠卖鸦片来交换中国货物吗?
我觉得你这种人,需要历史扫盲。。 好好学习一下西方的发家史。。
笑死。就用你们最自豪的军工来讲,几倍全世界的军费总和一年下水的军舰还没中国的几分之一,谁的费用高?谁要被耗死?
就是这么计划的啊。That's exactly what they want. They are not stupid.
现在国内的也不愿干呀,很多人都想躺平
有些人就是PUA大师,为什么呢,因为党就是顶级PUA大师所以他们一脉相承,党PUA全中国人没有党就一定会怎样怎样,韩国,台湾当年也经历同样的过程,如你所说的有良知的知识分子没有屈服最后挣来了现在的民主体制。
这些PUA大师因为在美国言论自由没能力动用公权力只好憋着,只能言语PUA,比如说别人蠢啦弱智啦,或者恨中啦自恨啦,甚至污言秽语。不过这些伎俩有知识有良知心智强大的一眼就看穿。为专制制度吹捧的还要PUA的人确实缺乏良知简单说就是low。
我也觉得,简直要笑死,在美国待了5年以上正常生活学习过的成年人,特别是经历了最近几年后,都不会相信美国有真正的民主自由这种屁话。
其实就是国运不行了,作恶多端,现在各种烂摊子都要反噬了。 具体分析为啥垮其实意义不大。现在的美国就像是一个千疮百孔的房子,哪里都可能垮。更重要的是,连一个有能力,又愿意承担起责任来修复这个房子的人都没有了。。。
呵呵 你已经让大家无言了
这文章纯粹呆逼 .... 都不值得一驳
你自己的观点一定要推给给所有人吗?你的观点代表你自己就好了。
This Land Becomes Their Land. New U.S. Citizens Hit a 15-Year High Nearly one million immigrants became Americans in 2022 after the pandemic delayed the process and prevented hundreds of thousands of people from voting in the 2020 election. Jan. 2, 2023 Many immigrants said an anti-immigrant political climate motivated them to become citizens in order to vote.Todd Heisler/The New York Times On a windswept morning last spring, Mom Leveille slipped into a flowing red dress and high-heeled sandals and headed to a ballpark in Brooklyn, her nerves jangled. A Cambodian refugee, Ms. Leveille had applied for U.S. citizenship nearly two years earlier, and, finally, the moment was nigh when she would take a permanent oath of allegiance to the country where her family had found safe haven. In the stands of Maimonides Park, she joined 250 people from 65 countries who were sworn in by judges wearing their formal black robes. Like Ms. Leveille, 39, many of the new Americans had waited more than a year to be invited for the naturalization ceremony since first submitting their applications. She wiped away tears that day as she rose to deliver a speech about the security, the electoral voice and the responsibility that came with becoming a citizen. “It was a very, very long process, and it was very emotional,” she said. Across the country, naturalization ceremonies are making a comeback, in parks, sports arenas and courthouses, after a long hiatus caused by Covid-19 lockdowns that suspended public gatherings, shuttered immigration offices and put thousands of citizenship applications on hold. Nearly one million immigrants became citizens in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the most in almost 15 years and the third-highest number ever, according to a recent Pew Research analysis, demonstrating the increasing impact of immigration on who lives and works in the United States — and who votes. “People have incentives to become citizens,” said Jeffrey S. Passel, a senior demographer at Pew Research, who co-wrote the study based on government data. “The numbers have not only rebounded. They are reaching levels we have rarely seen in our history.” The total number of people seeking to become citizens is not reflected in the year-end data and is actually much higher because of the pileup of applications. Some 670,000 naturalizations are still pending. After first submitting her application, Mom Leveille waited about 20 months to be invited for a naturalization ceremony.Emil Lippe for The New York Times The Biden administration has taken several steps to streamline the process, such as simplifying forms and redirecting interviewees from cities whose immigration offices are stretched to those that have capacity. That has helped reduce the backlog of pending applications from more than a million in December 2020. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency that handles the applications, also announced recently that it would soon conduct a trial of a redesigned naturalization test intended to be more fair and consistent. For the oral assessment, candidates will be asked to describe three photographs of everyday activities, the weather or food. The goal is to test ordinary use of English, rather than to rely on complex questions whose answers may differ considerably based on immigrants’ personal histories and countries of origin. (Applicants will still be asked separately to respond in English to security questions as part of the review.) “It is good for the nation for people to join it in the fullest way that they can,” said Ur M. Jaddou, the director of U.S.C.I.S. “That has been a priority since the beginning of this administration.” The Biden administration initiatives are a reversal from those of the Trump administration, which increased scrutiny of applications and made the citizenship test more cumbersome and challenging as part of its agenda to curb legal immigration. But that administration’s immigration posture backfired, awakening many longtime legal residents to the fact that a green card does not shield them from deportation. And many felt compelled to seek citizenship in order to cast a ballot. “Deliberately depressing naturalization rates was one of the most shortsighted strategies pursued by the Trump administration,” said Wayne A. Cornelius, the founding director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at the University of California San Diego. “The uptick under Biden mainly reflects the insecurity caused by incessant demonization of immigrants by Republican politicians, as well as greater confidence that they can pass the revised test,” he said. (President Biden reinstated the previous test after he took office, in preparation for revamping it even further.) Ms. Leveille had lived in the United States for more than three decades, raising four American-born children, before deciding to become a citizen. “I had a green card and had never given it another thought until Trump became president,” she said. At that point, she said, “I realized that I needed citizenship to be safe.”
Ana Maria Schwartz, an immigration lawyer, in her office in Houston.Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times Many immigrants were moved to naturalize after the assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, said Ana Maria Schwartz, an immigration lawyer in Texas. She said she was seeing an increase in the number of clients seeking assistance with citizenship applications. “They want to make sure the United States is the safe and stable place they came to,” Ms. Schwartz said. A green card had sufficed for Miguel Escobedo, 56, a Houston resident who was brought to Texas from Mexico as a toddler. His legal resident status enabled him to serve in the National Guard and the U.S. Army. But in early 2021, he said, he felt increasingly disturbed by the hateful rhetoric and violence engulfing the country. “What the hell was happening?” Mr. Escobedo said. “With the direction I was seeing my adoptive country heading, I wanted the right to vote.” He hired Ms. Schwartz to help expedite the citizenship process and took the oath in April. Immigrants who demonstrate continuous permanent lawful residence in the United States for at least five years, or three years if married to a U.S. citizen, are eligible to apply for citizenship. They must pass background checks, submit a bevy of supporting documents and pass civics and English tests during an interview. The 970,000 naturalizations in the 2022 fiscal year were the most since the 2008 fiscal year, when 1.05 million immigrants became citizens, an all-time high. (Numbers have been tallied since 1907.) A spike in naturalization applications occurred in 1997, after 2.7 million undocumented immigrants obtained legal status under a 1986 amnesty program, which made them eligible for citizenship years later. The number of applications also soared in the 2005 fiscal year, before a fee increase. The government fees now total $725, and hiring a lawyer can add several thousand dollars to the cost. The population of naturalized citizens in the United States tripled between 1995 and 2019, to 22.1 million from 7.6 million, according to Pew estimates. The share of all eligible immigrants who were naturalized has climbed steadily, to nearly two-thirds in 2019 from 38 percent in 1995. Newly minted voters could be crucial in states like Pennsylvania, Nevada, Michigan and Arizona, whose large naturalized-citizen electorates have been influential. Many more permanent residents in such battleground states are likely to naturalize in coming years. “With the direction I was seeing my adoptive country heading, I wanted the right to vote,” said Miguel Escobedo, a U.S. Army veteran and naturalized U.S. citizen from Mexico.Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times “These new voters are ripe for mobilization and will help determine which party comes to dominate in these states,” said Louis DeSipio, a professor of political science at the University of California, Irvine. “Needless to say, these states determine which party wins the presidency.” Some nine million immigrants in the United States are legal permanent residents eligible to obtain citizenship. Less than half of those from Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Japan are naturalized, compared with at least 80 percent from Cambodia, Iran, Laos, Poland and Vietnam. In addition to conferring the right to vote, citizenship allows people to serve on a jury and to sponsor other family members for U.S. residency. It also gives them access to certain federal benefits and government jobs. Yet, even with the Biden administration’s efforts to speed up the process, it will take a while to make a significant dent in the citizenship application backlog, experts said. “Things are going in a positive direction, but it’s hard to catch up,” said Xiao Wang, the chief executive of Boundless, a technology company that helps families navigate the U.S. immigration system. “They are getting more people naturalized,” he said, “but the wait time is still long, 15 to 18 months.” Boundless estimates that nearly 300,000 would-be citizens should have been eligible to vote in the 2020 elections but were unable to cast a ballot because of the suspension of naturalization services. With pandemic restrictions lifted, U.S.C.I.S. has begun holding naturalization ceremonies in large venues. On Dec. 7, nearly 2,000 immigrants from 120 countries were sworn in as U.S. citizens at Wintrust Arena in Chicago. Alex De Mola, an Italian immigrant, submitted his application in September 2020. More than a year went by, and he did not hear a peep from the government. “I think my files were buried in a cave during Covid,” he said. “I thought they were lost.” Finally, he was invited for an in-person interview in April, passed the test and attended a naturalization ceremony the next month. “I didn’t want to be a person caught between two worlds,” said Mr. De Mola, 39, who runs an online skin care retailer in Austin, Texas. “I want to spend my life here. I want to vote, have an impact on society and make choices as a citizen.”
为什么不能用?行为类似的这种人可不是职场和两性关系里面才有。土共那叫群众路线是它自己宣传的吧,当然拥抱土共的就信了。
人家几倍的军费cover全世界多少地方,你以为都用在军舰上?
在这不利于美国的言论不要发,会被大妈们喷死😌
用错地方了呗,pua意思就是两性,不是政府和民众关系上 这和土共的群众路线成立与否也没啥关系 好多人吧,英语汉语都不咋灵光
川粉都是这么盲目自大 去问问中部红脖 绝对是老子天下第一 Dont mess with Texas
你把十几个共和党红州打算禁止中国人买房叫 多种族均衡发展? 看来是玩政治的一把好手
这就把土共那套文化自信套到美国来了? 没有实力再自信也只能找虐
怎么个卖法? 集装箱托运到中国卖淡水? 都是一拨不干实事的MBA打算在北美涨水价 割本地韭菜在造势 结果韭菜还真的信了 以为可以去割外国韭菜