How China deals with corporate corruption
We all know how white-collar crime is punished in the United States - it isn't.
At best there is a fine of less than the amount that was originally stolen. Sometimes the CEO loses his job, but not without a golden parachute.
Basically, there are no consequences in corporate America for fraud, corruption, or incompetence.
It's the exact opposite of how capitalism is supposed to function.
Let's contrast this with how China deals with their corporate leaders.
Let's start with Evergrande, since it's been in the news. Evergrande isn't going bankrupt from corruption (that I am aware of), but simply because it's been poorly managed.
How do you think officials reacted to this situation?
Chinese authorities have a message for Hui Ka Yan, the founder of Evergrande: The buck stops with you.Chinese authorities issued a directive for him to use his personal wealth to help pay off some of the sprawling property developer’s debt, Bloomberg reported. The order came after Evergrande missed a coupon payment for a dollar bond on Sept. 23.
Evergrande’s liabilities swelled to as much as $300 billion at the end of June. Hui wouldn’t be able to make much of a dent in that on his own, though, because his net worth stands at about $7.8 billion now, a fraction of the $42 billion he had four years ago.
What a concept! The billionaire executive of a company has to pay for his mismanagement.
Now let's look at what is essentially the untouchable criminal class in America - bankers.
China has a slightly different way of dealing with their bankers.
A Chinese court has sentenced a former banker and party official to death, in a high-profile bribery, embezzlement and bigamy case that has shocked the country.Lai Xiaomin, previously chairman of one of China’s “big four” state-controlled asset management firms, China Huarong Asset Management Co, had pleaded guilty to the dozens of charges. He had been accused of soliciting almost 1.79bn yuan ($276.7m) in bribes over 10 years, a period when he was also acting as a regulator. The Tianjin court said Lai had abused his position to obtain the “extremely large” bribes, and the circumstances were “particularly serious”, including taking bribes to get people jobs, promotions or contracts.
I approve! Something tells me that executing a couple Wall Street bankers would go a long ways towards changing corporate culture there.
About eight years ago China realized that they had a corruption problem, so they launched a massive anti-corruption program.
China has punished more than one million officials for corruption over the past three years, the government says.
Another 409 people, said to be fugitives, have been detained overseas this year.
So what sort of response in the political/corporate environment do you think this caused?
The surge follows the discipline committee's January 2020 decision that officials who voluntarily surrendered would be shown leniency, while those repeatedly accepting bribes would be dealt with harshly.People voluntarily surrendering roughly doubled from just over 5,000 between October 2017 and the end of 2018 to 10,357 in 2019 and then climbed 54% in 2020, according to the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the party's top anti-graft body.
High-profile cases last year include a former Qinghai Province vice governor found to have ignored illegal coal mining, and a party chief of the Hebei Province city of Handan.
What do you know? When you actually punish corruption, it makes a difference!
Who knew?
Comments
It's no wonder the western capitalistic countries
need to destroy China. China's government works for its citizens - not it's billionaires. They have no intention of allowing these companies to rape and pillage Chinese citizens and walk away like their American counterparts did in 2008.
It's too bad the average American can't scare their government and make it behave like the Chinese can.
China's government is scared of its people for a good reason
Because three different times in the past 120 years the population of China has launched successful revolutions.
And at the end of those revolutions they took took a significant percentage of the ruling elites, lined them up against a wall, and shot them.
Sounds like a plan!
THIS, I think is taking it too far
I see no reason to believe this; the CCP works for the CCP, and I would not - perhaps could not - live under the likes of them.
The enemy of my enemy is just that, and nothing more.
As I've said before, I foresee a "Right-Libertarian" near-future, more "Wild West" than the actual "Wild West" was; nobody my age, let alone younger, knows anything about "good government" but what sound like fairy-tales of Camelot passed down to us, and the "life" we are now being expected to live can only be borne for so long before people start asking themselves the serious, ugly questions about mortality and morality (as a matter of fact, I think some already are; they're just either invisible or vilified beyond recognition), most never fully realizing how sorely it didn't need to be this way.
Scylla VS Charybdis...
Clinton VS Trump...
Syphilis VS Gonnorrhea...
Jihad VS McWorld...
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
You are not Chinese. You do not think like them.
Their civilization is 5,000 years old - compared to ours at 250. The US has barely formed a cohesive country (many would even dispute that) and is already starting to come apart at the seams.
The fact is the majority of the 1.4 billion Chinese currently support their government. What they want are better opportunities and a cleaner environment. This is similar to 1950's America when the ordinary working people were also facing a bright future.
You're missing my point...
That aside, I am not terribly surprised by your data...but note well the timespan. A LOT has happened since that study concluded, and I'm sure you know what they say about what constitutes "a long time in politics".
If China really is still like the US in the 1950s...well, the '90s were an optimistic time too, and heck, so were the '20s.
Peer into the details beneath the grandiose banners of nations, and I find they occlude far more than they show; woe to any who begin to neglect the significance of those particulars (as state and corporate governments across the world, China most certainly included, have been doing).
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
My headline is in response to your comment
I doubt that I could either. I had the freedom of a Huckleberry Finn childhood. I was a latchkey kid since I was ten. I had my own raft and island where I killed pigeons and rabbits to cook over an open fire along with stolen potatoes.
Historically the Chinese have more of a collectivist mentality compared to the strong individualism in America.
Since curbing the COVID-19 pandemic, the Chinese are now even MORE supportive and proud of their government. The Chinese recognize their governments unprecedented efforts at alleviating poverty throughout the country. There is no other country in the world that has matched these efforts.
THAT'S where you lose me, though
One ALWAYS hears this, and I don't buy it; America was famously described as "a nation of joiners", and there is nothing ihdividualistic or liberal about the body-horror collectivism of Christianity. If anything, I see at the fundamental level the inverse of the above cliche.
I think that once one starts speaking in such inherently provincial/arbitrary terms as cardinal compass directions, one has already boarded somebody else's ill-conceived and ill-fated vessel (I'm a native Californian; when you speak of "Western civilization", do you mean Japan?). I mean, look who's using that terminology; Kissinger. Think maybe it has anything to do with his worldview?
I see no room in any of this for even acknowledging the existence of the divisions that have long concerned me most, such as the struggle between Imperial Abrahamism and paganism (AKA 'everything else'); it takes the ideas I've spent years seriously contemplating yet struggling to voice due to unique personal setbacks, and makes it impossible to even begin to contemplate them.
For that matter, what ever happened to "if the differences WITHIN groups outweigh the differences BETWEEN groups, then the latter are so insignificant as to be deceptive"? This is a staple principle of sociological reasoning I was taught as a college freshman, yet all the discourse of the past 6 years especially has a total violation of it; it could've and should've halted this devolutionary charge the instant it started...so why didn't it?
People fled Maoism for a reason; the CCP would love for us all to believe they are the true heirs to the totality of Chinese history...but Taiwan and countless immigrants to the US and elsewhere would beg to differ.
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
I'll leave you with the following
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwYu02BTL4s]
I see nothing new here
Speaking of which:
Really??? Neither of us may be Chinese, but if you literally mean this, you and I are clearly not from anything like the same country ourselves.
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Didn't you have a pellet gun when you were 14?
Get a 22 for your 16th birthday? Didn't you go camping, boating, fishing, hunting and "living off the land" during summer holidays? That's what I was doing in the late 50's.
Maybe you were a city boy...
Edit: I only killed an animal for food. Now that I'm a lot older, I leave the killing for the meat suppliers to the supermarket like everyone else.
That helps explain it.
I spent my 16th birthday toiling over a term paper, with breaks only for a sushi dinner and presents that, while I forget specifics, probably consisted mainly of computer games.
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Where is this from ... Walden?
I didn't find it in the link that CB posted.
No. It's from my misspent youth
Now I'm totally confused
about where this conversation is from and going.
Me too
Oh well, then best let it drop
[video:https://youtu.be/uw66FA6OTqA]
Western civilization is far more than 250 years old
And Communism is far less than 5,000 years old.
I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.
I think CB has a point
It may require more nuance, but I think that Americans have trouble with the idea that not everyone shares American values.
One of my favorite stories about Chinese culture is when Kissinger was meeting with the Chinese ambassador in the early 70's, and he asked him what he thought of the impact on the French Revolution on western civilization.
After pausing to consider, the Chinese ambassador said, "It's too soon to tell."
Two centuries was "too soon".
For over 2,000 years the main "religions" in China was Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism. None of those three have an all-powerful deity.
I could go on. I'm just saying that I don't think that Americans appreciate just how ignorant we are of China.
I was speaking about the US
as a country. You have to admit that the country has been formed from a "melting pot" of dozens of cultures that have disappeared in less than two generations. That makes it fairly unique in the world. Even Canada didn't have as great an admixture going on.
In China they still have 56 distinct cultures that have developed over the 5 millennia of their existence who are still supported. The one-child policy mainly focused on curbing the birthrate of the Han. Most ethnic groups were exempt or limited to 3 births.
That's why so many of these ethnic groups have survived and flourished until today.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RH4CwC6jhTA]
Chinese took communism and twisted it to such an extent that we can no longer recognize it. It would better be described as Socialism with Chinese Characteristics. Mao Zedong, said that the Chinese New Democracy was neither the socialism of the proletariat nor the democracy of the bourgeoisie:
Proletarian Dictatorship Vs Bourgeois Democracy.
The Peoples' Republic is not 5000 years old
You are comaring apples to orannges. Either compare civilizations or states.
But you cite the USA as a state and the Peoples' Republic as a civilization.
The CPR is just the latest in a series of dynasties and I'll bet Karl Marx is spinning in his grave over a Communist state with a stock market and corporations.
Granted the CPR controls its corporations unlike the USA which is the other way around.
I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.
The REAL question, then:
What would happen if "Winnie the Pooh" were caught in a honeypot-trap?
The fact that they go to great lengths just to prevent people from making that most innocuous of jokes about is hardly a good sign.
The closest thing to "collectivism" that doesn't translate to de facto autocracy I can even think of would be the notorious 4Chan in its heyday; even Twitter's wolf-packs have their personality-cult-icons.
"The Group" is merely the ultimate selfish individual, like ants, nationalists of any variety, Star Trek's Borg, or Marvel's Phalanx (I wonder if they'll make it into a movie?); the Christian (and Marxist) models of how morality work are catastrophically backwards, and I assert, by way of stark contrast, that the autistic mind is proof.
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Why corporate fraud is tolerated/encouraged here
because those in charge think "I'd like to do that myself". By "those in charge" I mean, of course, politicians and the judiciary.
Your brief analysis puts it in a tidy little package.
Thanks
Reminds me of Iran in 2011
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/iran-bank-fraud_n_1720906
4 people were hanged, and many more punished in other ways, including up-to-life prison sentences; I like to think we were ALL Iranians that day.
The writing is on the wall, and has been for DECADES; we know what the solution would be, we know what hasn't and isn't about to be...and we know that in the meantime, the toll in innocent fates just keeps mounting.
Will no one rid us of these turbulent oligarchs???
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
In the US/West capital controls the government.
In China, the CCP/government controls capital. This according Eric X. Li who is a mainland Chinese venture capitalist and political scientist. I would recommend videos of him on YouTube where he explains and defends socialism with Chinese characteristics.
I do know about of at least two men involved in tainted milk scandal who were executed a number of years ago. Which a Chinese buddy said even today that one of thee most sought after item in China is Western produced baby formula.
But the Chinese have set up two programs called Operation Sky Net and Fox Hunt to go after fugitive executives, company officials, etc. accused of corruption and other crimes in China. My sense is that corrupt American CEOs, etc. don't need to become fugitives as nothing bad except fines, etc. will be their punishment. Look at HSBC which money laundered Mexican drug cartel monies and nothing but a tax deductible fine. In their case they were actually warned about money laundering activities at their bank and did nothing.
Just to reiterate: there seems to be little to indicate
that there is any question the French had a hand in the development of the BSL 4 lab in Wuhan.
A casual search with Brave brought up a long string of results indicating that France supplied technical and supervisory expertise on the lab.
Many of the sources had an anti France or anti China or both slant to their reports. Many looked like they were from the same script.
On the other hand, many entrepreneurs in France were quite enthusiastic with the projects.
It was a public/private collaboration and apparently disagreement within France about the advisability of sharing highly technical information and expertise of French scientists with China.
The partnership lasted for many years ending mostly (from what I can tell) in 2017. It is murky what exactly happened.
The French lab partner is located in Lyon. Who knew?
MediaPart - behind a paywall it seems.
The Daily Caller
A society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit. Allegedly Greek, but more possibly fairly modern quote.
Consider helping by donating using the button in the upper left hand corner. Thank you.
First I've heard of it.
I thought it was the CIA.
I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.
I'm sure they were not left out. There are so many moving
A society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit. Allegedly Greek, but more possibly fairly modern quote.
Consider helping by donating using the button in the upper left hand corner. Thank you.
Amount must exeeed $10,000 for capital punishment. Also has to
be "wilful" Dont foget that $10000 is like a years income in China. Serial cheats might get executed, but they tyoically serve as a deterrent to others. And the pain that many Americans have from seing the thieves get off scot free doesn't happen. After Chinese crooks are convicted they are usually executed the same day.
What is the US to do with people like Jeffrey Epstein and Jefrey Skiling, Kevin Lay and so on?
They likely would have burned up hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars with appeal after appeal.
Many people wonder if they even really died.
. (Its still not 100% certain to many people that Lay and Epstein are dead.) Many Americans are suspicious that the two insiders deaths were faked.
But, Their victims really need closure for their mental health.
You made me curious. I thought I'd look it up
To get the death penalty, the crime has to fall under Article 264. It's brutal compared to America (or any of the western nations). Carrying a gun to commit a crime can get you the death sentence as can entering someone's home to commit robbery! I wonder just how large a "huge sum of money" would have to be?
The tainted milk scandal is
The tainted milk scandal is often brought up to me by Chinese as some thingthat must be understood to realize why the China of today is "broken" It lives large in the minds of many Chinese as an xample of why the Chinese oligarch of today is utterly amoral. (and implicitly "should be annihilated")
They are angry! In the past they did exactly that. That's what allowing extreme greed leads to.
Lets not go there! Its a vicious circle of bloodshed that repeats over and over.
How bitter is it? In North Korea I read of somebody who was sent to a concentration camp only the dead ever leave simply for having and preserving the (paper) deed for a property from "before Liberation" (which occurred after the defeat of the Japanese in 1945-1950) among their personal property. (Indicating a desire on their part to return to that state of extreme inequality, which made them officially "part of the enemy" because the Korean war has never ended. North Korea divides the entir nations people into approximately 50 categories, In a caste system "songbun" which determines everything in the DPRK. Of course the DPRK now is most certainly one of the least equal states in the world. One ruled by a single obsessively paranoid Kim family, with a totally made up past, a family that hides the rest of the world and all its knowledge from other North Koreans to keep them ignorant of the fact that they are not exceptionally wise or indeed anything, except greedy. Notso different than us, actually in the respect. A family which attempts to deceive the entire country into letting them rule by postulating a false meritocracy. .
As far as creatuing a false meritocracy caste system, The Big Four GAFA (Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon) companies who prioritize money as if it represented merit, seem to be taking us in a similar direction here in the USEUANZAC countries. (Based on your income and spending)
It seems they anticipate and are pushing us towards a future of debt slavery (n debt to themselves? Such is the goal in making everything cashless and all property and land and resources of all kinds, instantly alienable. (What it seems the trade deals are pushing onto us. All sorts of means of control. )
However in the past all such debts expired. Afterseven years they would be forgiven. (Not today)
However they should. But corporations should only be allowed to be forgiven of debts when they make it a practice of doing that for others.
See the discussion here. Of course they would never agree to frrgiving people of debts they owed them, no matter how much society needs it. Forgiveness of college debts should be a litmus test for politicians. As higher education should be free to all real scholars. People who are actually pursuing original research. (Not just people who like being students).
https://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/11/books/review/anarchist-anthropology.html
Parasitic corporations (not all or even a majority are parasitic -but, some really are, and we know them when we see them, should lose the charter that lets them operate as a corporation - shedding the responsibilityand liability, I think many would agree it should not be given by default.
I'm skeptical
When I see things like this my red flags go up.
First of all, I really don't think that you can even compare China with North Korea. That's like comparing Afghanistan with Indonesia because they are both muslim nations.
Second, I know for a fact that things in North Korea have been exaggerated (one example was the story that the NK leader had people executed with an AA gun. Later shown to be made up)
Marx must really be spinning fast
I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.
I don't consider myself particularly gullible
I ended up writing a long piece here about the collection of data on DPRK crimes against humanity and the problems that would be faced (are being) confronted by anybody attempting to document them.
If this interests any of you shoot me a note and I would be happy to interact with you in some manner.
Let me state here that Ive spent enough time with this difficult subject to be 100% certain that its not being exaggerated. If anything, some players are playing down, I mean really underreporting the dark and scary parts that really should be known better and their implications.
Important Note:
As Now, since around 2002-2003 its become possible to actually become witnesses to this situation (if you want to) by means of space imaging. (assuming you have a decent video subsystem and an OpenGL/ 3D card equipped computer with adequate bandwidth to the Internet (basically any computer capable for use in 3D gaming will do)If you pursue this knowledge, IMHO That carries with it a responsibility to - as a witness, to do more. A moral obligation
Could you point me to this account and why you think that?
For similar reasons that many people here are apparently successfully being deceived into beleiving misrepresentaions about the government 's deceptions here, most people make ssumptions about the DPRK which are fundamentally wrong. People asume certain things to be the case of countries that just dont apply at all. I highly recommend seeing a short video about so called PsyOps in Northern Island during the Troubles that has recently come out. Its basically about propaganda. As there is a lot of it around us we might as wll try to understand it better. Without some real ground truth to draw upon for reference one has little to no chances of recognizing propaganda when others try to fool us with it. Maybe you have some known facts, and some false "facts" fed you by disinformation spreaders. What the final outcome , the conclusion you draw, has a lot to do with the weighting you give to these various facts. What you want to believe has a lot to do with this. Understandably, most Democrats likely want to believe "other Democrats" as historically that has been right. But what when people who have gone to great length to "smell right" to you are lying.
The way to recognize them is to make particular note to recognize and remember obvious anomalies. Things that dont fit in, that dont make sense with things you know without a doubt happened. Like your own memories.
Remember that some time ago my friend who used to work on Madison Avenue of all places, for the tobacco industry told me that this group's Science paper was the paper I need to understand how the disinformation people work. Why they make the big bucks.
The ad industry is concerned with influencing people to do things. Usually buy things but sometimes its other things, like voting for people.