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I don't recall any US prison in the last 70+ years where people on the order of a million people, largely from a single region or ethnicity, were imprisoned on suspicion of mere affiliation. Every country probably has a signature few cases of prosecution that may provoke our indignation. That's not the same as putting people into prison because their religious beliefs make them enemies of the state.


Nobody wants China to get away with their camps, but no one wants the US to get away with Guantanamo Bay, either.

> That's not the same as putting people into prison because their religious beliefs make them enemies of the state.

Isn't this what some people ended up in Guantanamo Bay for?

Edit: TIL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uyghur_detainees_at_Guantanamo...


No. It's not. In some instances people were in the wrong place at the wrong time, or treated poorly based on pretty minor actions, but even at it's height Guantanamo housed < 1000 people. If we were sweeping up any an all Islamists I'd expect a good deal more than that.

Also, the U.S. didn't 'get away with' Guantanamo. It was a big news cycle and the prison is nearly shut down now, and operates with much more consideration for the prisoners, giving them access to counsel and repatriating then when able.


> housed < 1000 people

Normal numbers are zero.

> Also, the U.S. didn't 'get away with' Guantanamo

Who ended up in prison for it?


> Normal numbers are zero.

Name a government that hasn't abused it's power at one point. Not sure what your definition of normal is in this instance.

> Who ended up in prison for it?

I'd be ok if China simply stopped what they are doing without sending anyone to prison.

To answer your question though, no one. It's hard to prosecute individuals for an organization's failings without dismantling the organization, which is the US military in this case. The best we can hope for is fixes to prevent such abuses inches future, which we got.

Many Americans, myself included, wish some people were put away, and also sincerely hope that the perpetrators of abuses in Xinjiang find similar ends.


I'd be okay if the US simply stopped invading some countries or toppling random governments every 5 years.

Many people of the rest of the world wish for the responsible US politicians to be put away. I hope the American perpetrators find similar ends.

Its an awful kind of mockery to see the US displaying themselves as the hand of justice in the Xinjiang situation. I wish countries like the Netherlands or Switzerland would do it instead, their hands are much, much cleaner.

This is the same kind of mockery as having Saudi Arabia on the UN panel for womens rights.


> I'd be okay if the US simply stopped invading some countries or toppling random governments every 5 years.

Me too, not sure what that has to do with anything.

> Many people of the rest of the world wish for the responsible US politicians to be put away. I hope the American perpetrators find similar ends.

ok? Not sure where that fits in though.

> Its an awful kind of mockery to see the US displaying themselves as the hand of justice in the Xinjiang situation. I wish countries like the Netherlands or Switzerland would do it instead, their hands are much, much cleaner.

If you consider doing nothing at all about bad things happening clean, then sure. Also, your diction leads me to believe you are Chinese yourself, so maybe a little bias?

> This is the same kind of mockery as having Saudi Arabia on the UN panel for womens rights.

The US doesn't have over a million people in a concentration camp right now, so I don't see the similarity.


>> I'd be okay if the US simply stopped invading some countries or toppling random governments every 5 years.

> Me too, not sure what that has to do with anything.

Nothing about the topic at hand. It's a distraction, an OT axe to grind, or both.


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Ooof, if you're German, then, by your own logic, you don't really have room to speak on the atrocities of other countries... no?


Its also racist to make people held accountable for their ancestors. This is what the Nazis did to the Jews, and the US teached germany the hard way that it is not right. How comes you didn't learn that lesson?

Germany got the Nürnberger Trials, the US (clarification: politicians) was never held accountable for anything.


> Its also racist to make people held accountable for their ancestors.

That's incorrect. It's collectivist. Racism is a specific subset of collectivism.

German isn't a race, despite what Hitler & Co wanted to believe.


"Abstammung" nach Article 3 Paragraph 3 des Grundgesetzes: https://dejure.org/gesetze/GG/3.html

Find a better translation if you don't like "racism". IMHO anything inheritance-based qualifies as racism.


> Guantanamo Bay

Other than that the US kidnaps people from various countries, often without approval of the country where the kidnapping happens, brings the rebel (patriot?) to Guantanamo Bay without even trial by US legal system and waterboards and tortures them and holds them indefinitely - although some are realized to be the wrong identity and let go - there is another point...

...Cuba has denounced the US military occupation of Guantanamo Bay for decades, and requested the US to leave. So this is happening against the wishes of the country it is happening in.


> ...Cuba has denounced the US military occupation of Guantanamo Bay for decades, and requested the US to leave. So this is happening against the wishes of the country it is happening in.

It's not a military occupation in the sense you imply. It is a perpetual lease made between the US and Cuba. [1]

[1] https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrse/installations/ns_gua...


See, it's not an occupation, it's a "perpetual lease". That I happen to enforce with my army. And we didn't steal that land, they kindly gave it to us. When we held a gun up to their heads and made them sign a document they did not understand. Oh, and these aren't slaves, they're workers. Who happen to be on an unbreakable contract.

(and also, how could I forget, "these Uighurs aren't prisoners, they're just people who, realizing their mistakes, kindly happened to voluntarily come here for education")


Please quit trolling. Your comment is disconnected from anything I wrote.


The point is that some party insisting that they have some legal contract giving them permission to do something does not mean that contract is legitimate or voluntary.

The remainder of the comment illustrates some very obvious examples of this from the past.


Please quit your US newspeak.


What do you believe to be incorrect in what I quoted?


Quote from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guantanamo_Bay_detention_camp#...

> U.S. control of Guantánamo Bay came about through the end of the Spanish-American war and the Platt Amendment. This amendment was initiated in 1903 and outlined seven conditions for the U.S. withdrawal from Cuba. The United States intervened at the end of the Spanish-American War, taking credit for Cuban independence from Spain. The Platt Amendment was an amendment to the Cuban constitution that supposedly gave Cuba sovereignty, however it included conditions that allowed for U.S. intervention and the ability for the United States to lease or buy lands in order to establish naval bases. The U.S. was allowed to create up to four naval bases on the island of Cuba, but only ever built one, at Guantánamo Bay. The Platt Amendment was repealed in 1934, which is why the Cuban government considers the U.S. occupation of Guantánamo Bay illegal.

"conditions for the U.S. withdrawal from Cuba" = military force. "perpetual lease" my ass.


There was another lease, which was perpetual, signed with Cuba after that. See the link I posted. [1]

"A 1934 treaty reaffirming the lease granted Cuba and her trading partners free access through the Bay, modified the lease payment from $2,000 in gold coins per year to the 1934 equivalent value of $4,085 U.S. dollars, and added a requirement that termination of the lease requires the consent of both the U.S. and Cuban governments, or the U.S. abandonment of the base property."

[1] https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrse/installations/ns_gua...


Can you point to some less biased source than the US military?


> Can you point to some less biased source than the US military?

Yes. I called the 1934 document a lease, but it was actually a treaty that also included a modified form of the earlier lease's provisions.

  In 1934, a new Cuban-American Treaty of Relations,
  reaffirming the lease, granted Cuba and its trading
  partners free access through the bay, modified the lease
  payment from $2,000 in U.S. gold coins per year to the
  1934 equivalent value of $4,085 in U.S. dollars,
  and made the lease permanent unless both governments
  agreed to break it, or until the U.S. abandoned the base
  property. [1]

  United States - Cuban Agreements and Treaty of 1934 [2]

  Cuban–American Treaty of Relations (1934)
  Yale Law School, Lillian Goldman Law Library [3]

  Cuban–American Treaty of Relations (1934) [4]
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guant%C3%A1namo_Bay

[2] https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/United_States_-_Cuban_Agreeme...

[3] https://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/dip_cuba001.asp

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuban%E2%80%93American_Treaty_...



Absolutely. I didn't pick "70" randomly.


Sure, you deliberately placed the goal posts as such that they exactly put the US on the moral high ground.


Hey, I could have cited the untold millions who perished under Mao in that same range, but I didn't, because it's not relevant to the point: no one who made the decisions today at Guantanamo was also responsible for Japanese internment, and I'm happy to exonerate the CCP leadership today of Mao's misdeeds by benefit of the doubt. The length of time matters.


The US did have the moral high ground, which is a remarkable thing given what we're talking about: that's how horrific what China is doing is.

Were the Japanese released from that internment? Yes. Were they genocided? No. Were they stripped of their culture, heritage, social lives, and tortured for decades due to their beliefs? No. Does the US today recognize the Japanese internment as a moral crime? Yes.

That last one is a critical difference between cultures.

In China today you can't even discuss what's going on in Xinjiang.

You are of course lambasting the US, on a US website. Nothing bad will happen to you because of that. And in this thread you won't find thousands of bots attempting to say that the Japanese internment is ok, or otherwise justify that it should have happened; instead, most of the replies are fully agreeing that it was atrocious. Try that in China, see what happens.


> Does the US today recognize the Japanese internment as a moral crime? Yes.

Not only is it recognized as a moral crime, but the US government passed a law to give restitution to interned people. Does that clean the slate? No. Does that make it ok? No, of course not.

The point is not that the US is perfect or even good. The point is that the US system allows open discussion, criticism, protest, legislating, etc. It has built-in mechanisms to improve itself which it has done and continues to do.

China has none of that.


The point is that you forget all the inconvenient facts - from American national guard murdering students in broad daylight, without any kind of punishment afterwards, to secret military kangaroo courts - and build your arguments on plain ignorance ("China has none of that").


In the US, we can acknowledge those "inconvenient facts", freely discuss them, educate people about them, push for accountability for those who did them and to change policies so that they do not happen again.


And then, quite often, the police at various levels of government infiltrate the groups seeking accountability, engage in provocations to discredit them publicly and frame them for unrelated crimes for which they are prosecuted and punished, and actively coordinate with and/or passively use non-enforcement to enable opposed non-police groups to carry out violence against their members. (Of course, we can then acknowledge those inconvenient facts, educate people about them, and push for accountability, if we are willing to start the cycle over again.)

Is the US government less effectively repressive of dissent than the PRC? Sure. But it still does tend to violently repress dissent, especially when that is about conduct of policing or war.


Nice theory, doesn't work. Weed was made illegal to suppress ethnic minorities and war protesters, 50 years later that law is still serving the same purpose. Meanwhile US lawmakers are busy denying voting rights to those same minorities, and making it illegal to teach inconvenient parts of american history.


It's silly to bring up Kent State in a discussion comparing openness to criticism between the US and China. Kent State is well documented, it's taught in school. Tiananmen Square (government troops murdering protesting students) is actively supressed in China.

Yes, the US has done bad things. And some of those bad things have been forgotten. But if you want to find out about them... the government is not going to prevent you from doing so. China is much worse in that regard.


Tienanmen Square is taught in Chinese schools as well. There's a key difference however: people responsible for Tienanmen were punished, with Prime Minister spending the rest of his life in house arrest. Those responsible for Kent State didn't. And that's a common pattern with "bad things" happening in US.


I won't argue with that. The US has vastly improved in that regard over the last 70 years (or however far you want to go back), or the West in general, and could be considered ahead in many ways. However, if you want to put yourself on that high ground, it always comes across rather weird if you add overly specific inb4's. And actually, I think "well at least we can openly call out our government for having done fucked up shit even though nobody in charge will get prosecuted" is kinda rather a sad state of affairs too.

As a side node/regarding initial topic, I also really dislike the quick jump to "whataboutism" to try and kill off any form of discussion that draws parallels and comparisons with other countries (or, to anything else more generally). Because this is unfortunately how it mostly gets used today.


> In China today you can't even discuss what's going on in Xinjiang

You absolutely can, they openly put it on their own government websites and everything even. These measures are written into public law. All of this is behind some misleading language of course, but chinese people aren't stupid. People, especially in Xinjiang, being aware of what's going on is in fact beneficial to the government, as it serves as a warning to anyone who might resist in the future.


I also always pick out the nicest cherries.


[flagged]


>> Absolutely. I didn't pick "70" randomly.

> ... prick move.

No it isn't.

Also, aren't you German (https://hackertimes.com/item?id=31001842)? Would you agree that the lesson of Nazi Germany is Germans have no grounds to criticize any human rights abuses anywhere in the world ever again?

Why are you criticizing the US for human rights abuses? Aren't you a hypocrite?

Shouldn't we be talking about the Holocaust, right now? After all, what China's doing here pales in comparison to that atrocity. They're only imprisoning one million, while Germany murdered six million.


Thats fine, where is your Nürnberg Trials equivalent? Which of your politicians have been hanged or gone to jail?

Worse, why should we accept Nürnberg as right and just, when the US continuously gets away with their crimes?


> Thats fine, where is your Nürnberg Trials equivalent? Which of your politicians have been hanged or gone to jail?

There is none, because the US didn't lose an aggressive war during which it also exterminated six million people based on ethnicity.

No one in Germany would have been hanged for Nazi crimes if it hasn't lost a war totally.

When you don't lose like that, past human rights abuses are handled differently. For instance, the US government has formally apologized to Japanese Americans for wartime internment and paid reparations for it.


> because the US didn't lose an aggressive war

Saigon didn't happen, sure.

I get it. The US needs to loose, totally.

I think the EU should ally up with China and Russia. Korea and Vietnam will probably also want to join us.

If you like to read my other threads, don't forget this part: https://hackertimes.com/item?id=31002000


> I think the EU should ally up with China and Russia. Korea and Vietnam will probably also want to join us.

So is this about human rights, or just monomaniacal anti-Americanism?

I'm sure you're aware of the quite Nazi-like aggressive war of conquest happening in Eastern Europe right now, where civilians are being indiscriminately shelled. Why would you want to ally with a country doing something like that?


> Why would you want to ally with a country like that?

Same about bombing of Korea and Vietnam. Why should anyone want to be allied with the US?

> where civilians are being indiscriminately shelled

North Korea.

You are quick to point fingers, fix your own country first.


> Same about bombing of Korea and Vietnam. Why should anyone want to be allied with the US?

I don't know, maybe ask some South Koreans and find out?


Go fix your own country first before pointing at others.


> Go fix your own country first before pointing at others.

I'm sure the Uyghurs would appreciate that.

Should the US have followed your advice during WWII? After all, slavery was quite a sin that hasn't yet been fully atoned for, and even less so in the 40s.


Yes.


>>> Go fix your own country first before pointing at others.

>> Should the US have followed your advice during WWII? After all, slavery was quite a sin that hasn't yet been fully atoned for, and even less so in the 40s.

> Yes.

Even if that meant the Nazis won or achieved a negotiated peace that left them in power (e.g. no Nuremberg trials, no hangings)?


The allied victory was paid in soviet blood. The axis had lost before the first US soldier stepped foot on European soil.

Fuck off with your US white liberal savior complex.


> The allied victory was paid in soviet blood. The axis had lost before the first US soldier stepped foot on European soil.

It's quite possible that things might have been different if the Nazis were secure on their Western front or the Soviets hadn't received American aid (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lend-Lease#US_deliveries_to_th...).

> Fuck off with your US white liberal savior complex.

Really?


Yes. This is not the first time i feel this, it might be a cultural thing in the US.


> Yes. This is not the first time i feel this,

I'm sure it isn't.

> it might be a cultural thing in the US.

No, I don't think it's that.


coughinternment of japanesecough


When China shuts down their internment, officially condemns it, gives restitution to the interned, and stops censoring any education, discussion and criticism of their internment on message boards in their own country but instead welcomes it as part of the self-correcting mechanisms that allow a nation to continually bend towards greater justice and not repeat the old injustices, then the situations will be equivalent.


Let me remind you that a number of US states is fighting to introduce censorship of education, because apparently teaching objective truth is "anti-american".


And yet you can openly criticize those actions, mobilize people to fight against it, file lawsuits, create and distribute alternative resources to continue to educate about whatever is being censored, and no one will stop you.


Same in China. Your point being?


>> I don't recall any US prison in the last 70+ years where people on the order of a million people, largely from a single region or ethnicity, were imprisoned on suspicion of mere affiliation.

> coughinternment of japanesecough

cough2022-70=1952cough

That was also like three generations ago: there are a lot of things that happened in the US at that time that the US itself now roundly condemns.

You may return with this comparison when the PRC makes a formal apology to the Uyghurs, pays reparations, and teaches about the Xinjiang camps in schools as a shameful event of Chinese history.


I don’t recall China invading and destroying a successful Middle East country twice and utterly laying waste to the region and throwing it into chaos. One can debate over which crime is “worse” I suppose.

What’s also interesting is that towards the late 80s and 90s the USA was really warming up to China at a time when they were carrying out pretty horrible atrocities, far worse than the USSR, but that was the political agenda of the time.


> Every country probably has a signature few cases of prosecution that may provoke our indignation.

A “few signature cases”??

I completely agree that what China is doing is completely wrong, immoral and bordering on genocide but let’s not swing too far the other way here.

The US has used the prison system to persecute black people en mass for the past 70 years. Look at differing rates of incarceration and length of sentences.

On top of that, the reason that the US has the highest prison population is because of the war on drugs, which the US has long used as an excuse to persecute minorities, whether they are black, Hispanic, Chinese or Mormon.


> The US has used the prison system to persecute black people en mass for the past 70 years. Look at differing rates of incarceration and length of sentences.

Do you mean the absolute difference between rates (black people in prison for 1000, white people in prison for 1000) or relative to the crimes that people commit (X people getting a longer sentence on average than Y people for the same crime)?


> bordering on genocide

It should be noted that it is only "bordering on" genocide by the very watered down defintion that the UN countries themselves were willing to approve such that their own actions (notably the native american genocide) were not considered genocides.


Given that in the order of million people were killed abroad as a result of certain escapades people on the opposite site of the fence are never going to view the west as sitting on a high horse. Hell the US openly accused china of purposefully not keeping extremism in check few years prior when some ended up flowing into Afghanistan.

Fuck the CCP but I'm sure they have an easy time using the US's own actions in the domestic arena where they have the upper hand. As they can magnify every bit of hypocrisy and flaw just like happens here. Countless incarcerated? Still much less than in the US! Hell they too can probably make up some stuff on the go. Refer to the Tibetans that were armed and then paid by the US to leave and claim similar stuff is happening now. It doesn't take much for their people to align with em. Hell plenty were already mad about exemptions the uighurs got from the 1 child policy and such.


Japanese internment camps were first thing that came to mind.


Whataboutism is a distraction from discourse regardless of the conduct of the target. As an example, if even Nazi Germany had held the US accountable for interment of Japanese citizens, that would still lead to a positive outcome. Their own acts of genocide wouldn't excuse the US's actions.


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> The incarceration rate is around 5 times that of China

You have no idea what the incarceration rate is in China in fact - part the charm of the zero human rights modern China, which is itself an authoritarian prison state - and their supposed official figure does not include millions of Uyghurs.


So you have no problem trusting statistics from a warmongering country with world's highest incarceration rate, and very obvious racial skew among those imprisoned (those fortunate enough to not be shot on the street by police), but you up front assume that it's the Chinese statistics that can't be trusted.


Please, tell us all the FOIA equivalent in China, and the laws protecting freedom of the press to promulgate that data.


You mean, the mechanism that allows one to ask government for something, and for the government to deny that information for whatever reason?

Okay, show me some example. US Air Force droning a wedding, where can I find information about that? Drone video recordings, perpetrators' names etc? Let me guess - that's "national security" and can't be public. And that's somehow different from how it works in China (if China was droning random civilians that is).




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