By what metrics is China not democratic? What mechanically would they have to change for you to accept the opinions of the Chinese citizenry on their own system? I recommend this introduction to SWCC, it goes in-detail about how elections and the democratic model work in China. what mechanically would China have to change in order for you to accept the system that the Chinese have implemented by and for themselves, and approve of at rates exceeding 90%?
Yeah. Now I’m wondering how it does. I had assume deletion on my end would delete for all. Is that determined by server if it does or something I suppose?
If you delete a comment, it may not be deleted for those visiting the instance you delete your comment on. As an example, you’re on Blahaj, visiting .ml, so it’s deleted on both of our ends. But, for someone visiting .ml from .ee, it won’t necessarily federate the deletion, as it shows the version of .ml from .ee’s perspective.
Depends on how you define “best,” I suppose. I’d say we are already there.
deleted by creator
All governments are authoritarian, as in they exert authority. What matters is which class is being represented, which class is exerting its authority. China is democratic. It doesn’t have a western liberal democracy, but it does have a comprehensive Socialist democracy. You can read this article talking about why the Chinese democratic model is in place and why the people support it, or this article on how the Chinese model of democracy works in contrast to western democracy, or this short video on how it works, or this video on how elections work, or this article on the makeup of the NPC.
By what metrics is China not democratic? What mechanically would they have to change for you to accept the opinions of the Chinese citizenry on their own system? I recommend this introduction to SWCC, it goes in-detail about how elections and the democratic model work in China. what mechanically would China have to change in order for you to accept the system that the Chinese have implemented by and for themselves, and approve of at rates exceeding 90%?
Yeah I deleted that when I noticed. I’m curious how you saw it actually… Because I immediately deleted it
What? I don’t know what you deleted but I didn’t see it. I just pointed out you’re replying to an .ml account.
My first comment the one you replied to, is deleted on my end.?
Perhaps deleting messages on Lemmy doesn’t work how you think?
Yeah. Now I’m wondering how it does. I had assume deletion on my end would delete for all. Is that determined by server if it does or something I suppose?
If you delete a comment, it may not be deleted for those visiting the instance you delete your comment on. As an example, you’re on Blahaj, visiting .ml, so it’s deleted on both of our ends. But, for someone visiting .ml from .ee, it won’t necessarily federate the deletion, as it shows the version of .ml from .ee’s perspective.