• hglman
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    20 days ago

    What I like is that the west is the one failing to stick to its own stated principles of capitalism and private property.

    • protist@mander.xyz
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      19 days ago

      The US has basically always had some level of federal control over some private property, beginning with construction of the National Road in 1806. “Principles of capitalism and private property” as you describe it here is a much newer ideology popularized by Reagan in the 80s that’s still a libertarian fever dream much more representative of the US Republican party rather than “the West.”

      • hglman
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        19 days ago

        No doubt, but it is the rhetoric of today. But this is still yet different than control of limited physical resources. It’s a company who built a product. It’s clear nationalism over principles.

    • Weslee@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Tbh I’d say it’s more about the fact china doesn’t allow western companies in china to do what tiktok was doing in the us.

      • Sodium_nitride@lemmygrad.ml
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        20 days ago

        And yet all of the concessions that tiktok has made until now show that it is perfectly willing to play ball with the US government, it just isn’t willing or allowed to sell its algorithm because China clamps down on capital exports heavily for economic reasons.

      • nekandroOP
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        19 days ago

        I mean… These terms exceed what Douyin does in China. It’s actually an insane level of concessions.