(Part 3) Top products from r/China

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We found 21 product mentions on r/China. We ranked the 346 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/China:

u/slappymcnutface · 4 pointsr/China

> There are absolutely no indicators that US hegemony is in decline. In fact, every indicator is that the US is more powerful today than ever. Only whiny types like Chomsky seriously suggest American power is fading in favor of China.

You're joking right? Like, that's sarcasm?

  • This dude wrote a book about the decline of the US imperial power in the face of Iraq
  • Fareed Zakaria wrote a book in detail describing the modern decline of US hegemony
  • Jeffrey Garten wrote an article about the decline of US hegemony:
    Is American Decline Inevitable?
    World Policy Journal
    Vol. 5, No. 1 (Winter, 1987/1988) (pp. 151-174)

  • Michael Cox wrote an article about "the failing american empire":
    Is the United States in Decline -- Again? An Essay
    International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)
    Vol. 83, No. 4 (Jul., 2007) (pp. 643-653)

  • Paul MacDonald and Joseph Parent wrote an article about possible retrenchment strategies to delay the inevitable american decline of hegemony:
    Graceful Decline? The Surprising Success of Great Power Retrenchment
    International Security
    Vol. 35, No. 4 (SPRING 2011) (pp. 7-44)

  • Timothy McKeown wrote an article about the likely future decline of US policy in the wake of the Cold War - academics predicted an end to the American Empire even before it had begun:
    The Foreign Policy of a Declining Power
    International Organization
    Vol. 45, No. 2 (Spring, 1991) (pp. 257-279)


    Here are some more articles on the subject:


  • This Time It’s Real: The End of Unipolarity and the Pax Americana
    Christopher Layne
    International Studies Quarterly (2012)
    Vol. 56, 203–213
  • Hegemony, Liberalism and Global Order: What Space for Would-Be Great Powers?
    Andrew Hurrell
    International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs), Vol. 82, No. 1,
    Perspectives on Emerging Would-Be Great Powers (Jan., 2006), pp. 1-19
  • After Pax Americana: Benign Power, Regional Integration, and the Sources of a StableMultipolarity
    Charles A. Kupchan
    International Security, Vol. 23, No. 2 (Autumn, 1998), pp. 40-79
  • Hegemonic overreach vs. imperial overstretch
    Dennis Florig
    Review of International Studies (2010), 36, 1103–1119

    Some html friendly articles:


  • A review of Mortal Splendor: The American Empire in Transition
  • The Decline of US Helmed Global Hegemony: the Emergence of a More Equitable Pattern of International Relations?
  • The Decline of U.S. Hegemony: Regaining International Consent
  • Visions: America after Hegemony
    And here's a really good forum thread on the very subject of US hegemonic decline


    I just wrote my thesis on this subject, so I have some sources..
    The theme of all these articles varies, some are about the future, some are explanatory, but the overarching theme is that the US is definitely in decline. Academia is mostly over the hump debating whether or not the US is actually in decline, and is now focused on what we can do about it to make transitions smoother.
    China has been growing tremendously faster than any other state on the globe the past few decades. At this rate, China will overtake the US in terms of gross product by (most estimates) about halfway through the mid-21st century. The reality is that in many ways, there are more economic opportunities in China than the United States - that's why many expats like the ones in this subreddit are there. As /u/hittintheairplane pointed out, it's not so much that the US is declining from it's 1990 level of economic, political, and military power as much as all the other nations are catching up. Relatively the United States is losing power, and that's all power is, relativity to others. You take any international relations course and invariably the topics include the structure of the 21st century, most professors would describe it as a shift from unipolarity to bipolarity in that while China is growing the fastest, there is no real contender to overtake the US and replace our hegemony. Rather, we're more likely to see a state structure of power like this than the bipolar political forces of the Cold War or the unipolar political power the US has today.
u/Adventure_Time · 1 pointr/China

Atrophy and Adaptation is good, but very academic.

This is pretty much the best book. Informative and readable.

http://www.amazon.com/Party-Secret-Chinas-Communist-Rulers/dp/0061708771/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1300422937&sr=8-1

u/IrateGuy · 3 pointsr/China

The book he quotes looks really interesting - Plenty of really good reviews on amazon too. Thanks for sharing!

u/Taidoboy · 2 pointsr/China

Honestly. Check this out.

If you want literature, I really like these books:

Check out Fairbank, it's amazing.
Or maybe: John Keay
Or try: Ying-Shih Yü

Or alternatively, google it (see first link). If you don't want to pay for any of these books just check your local library (-Genesis). I wouldn't call you out for torrenting/DLing them, since that would make me a hypocrite.

u/Hopfrogg · 1 pointr/China

Couple of recommendations:

First, here is a great book about an expat who started jamming with some Chinese musicians and eventually they became a pretty big band in China. He had a Gibson ES-335 shipped over and the neck was snapped when it arrived. As a guitar player, you probably just cringed at the thought of that.

Soooo.... you might want to think twice about bringing instruments over. You didn't mention where you are heading, but it sounds like you are looking for knock-offs and as you know, just about all knock offs are made in China. Epiphone's main plant is in Qingdao and iirc they have a big outlet there. You won't have trouble finding quality guitars to buy in the major cities and you'll find the prices similar.

If you're still thinking about shipping your stuff over after reading the advice in this thread... check out this video of some professional Chinese baggage handling.

u/marMELade · 2 pointsr/China

I just read John Gittings The Changing Face of China: From Mao to Market for a course and thought it was a pretty good read. It sounds like it covers the time frame you're looking for.

u/noidanoid · 2 pointsr/China

Just calling you out on your pseudo-science crap!

We're talking r/K traits, not fertility rates, you spastic.
Reproduction rates aren't fertility rates.
Totally separate thing.
Granted you may need a basic knowledge of biology, which I assumed you had, so I'll spell it out for you in simple terms.
If r/K traits applied, reproduction rates would be faster.
Have you heard of anyone that gives birth quicker than one child every nine months?

Seeing as you want to talk fertility, I can spell that out for you pretty simply as well -
Wealth makes people need fewer children.
Africa is still incredibly poor and primarily rural/agrarian.
Mortality rates are also high, for children and adults.
As a result, women tend to have more children, knowing some of them may not survive to adulthood.

If you look at the second picture on the link you sent you can see how fertility rates change over time due to development.
This picture also shows how countries develop.
I thought you might need a picture as reading comprehension doesn't seem to be one of your strengths.

> arguments/evidence to support your claim

Here's links to some books, Evolution of Life Histories and The Evolution of Life Histories that pretty heavily debunk r/K.
Give them a read, if you're capable of reading a whole book at a time, you might just learn something.
Or you could just browse this part of the wiki.

Fuck me you really are a racist cunt.
Retarded anecdotal evidence aside, here's actual statistics:
In 2013 the total fertility rate of Australian born women was 1.91, and for overseas women 1.79.
Taken from here as I can't be fucked scrolling through the ABS website right now, i'll do it tomorrow for you if you want.

Redpill's a good place to quarantine likeminded mongs like yourself, where facts don't actually matter and outdated pseudoscience is king.

> Piss off, you fucking drug addict

Nah i'm going to keep calling you out, it's easy and fun

Edit: So you delete your comments when proven wrong? Interesting tactic there.

u/leorio-san · 1 pointr/China

The story that the article introduces is in the book Country Driving by Peter Hessler. It's a really good book. It made me want to live in China along with other books like Iron & Silk by Mark Salzman and Riding the Iron Rooster by Paul Theroux.

u/MitchellHolmgren · 9 pointsr/China

My professor used Signals and Systems as the textbook. Since the professor can't speak English and the lecture was boring, I decided to skip the class and watch online lectures instead. At the final, I found out the exam was copied from other schools and translated into English.

One time, I failed a class because the professor lost my paper. the paper is still to be found.

Chinese education loves math riddles. Sometimes, they will give out riddles for students to solve. I can't possibly solve those riddles in the limited time without coming across them before hand.

I tend to skip classes and read textbooks by myself. Chinese textbooks are poorly organized and work load was heavy. I always found that the final exam questions were not covered by the book.

In C programming class, students are required to answer ambiguous questions and write snips by hand. It was ridiculous. Students who can't write any program by themselves could earn a perfect score. I just merely passed.

If I lived through boring lectures, made notes on what types of questions would be on the exam, had previous final papers on my hand, and made the professor know my face, I could have passed. If I did a bunch of exercises and understand the material perfectly, I might have passed (since I never got to see my papers, I am not able to make any conclusion). For some subjects, since I kinda understand the material, I could have failed but I got a pass. For some subjects I had absolute confidence, I failed.

I am responsible for my failing. If I had the chance to do it again, I would choose not to waste my time in CQU.


u/domfitz · 3 pointsr/China

Although probably a bit dated now, Mr. China by Tim Clissold is a good read

u/GlobalPowerElite · -17 pointsr/China

Deep state doesn’t exist? An unelected, unaccountable, secret society government making decisions behind the scenes with a rotating roster of cronies doesn’t exist?
Please read. https://www.amazon.com/Deep-State-Constitution-Shadow-Government/dp/0143109936/

u/ghostofgarborg · 2 pointsr/China

Chinese history is a vast field of study, and if you want a real understanding of it, not just a rushed and superficial summary of thousands of years of events, you should study a few well chosen historical periods in depth. If you want to understand modern China, you should start at the beginning of the Qing dynasty, and read up on the historical forces that set China on its course through the republican era, like the coastal threats of Zheng Chengong et. al., international trade since the Portuguese entered Macao, the Opium Wars, the MacCartney Mission and Napier fizzle, the Nian rebellion, the Taiping Rebellion, France's entry in Vietnam, Russia's abuse of political clout, the unequal treaties, the war in Korea and Japan's budding nationalism including the extremely politically relevant Treaty of Shimonoseki, ...

The best book I've found that covers the history from early Qing through the Republican era until today is The Rise of Modern China by Immanuel C. Y. Hsu. It is a big tome of 1200+ pages, but does a great job in taking you through essential historical events, connecting the dots and making a coherent historical analysis without being too ideological or political.

u/Getalliwant · 1 pointr/China

No need in particular order. It depends on your taste. If you like short stories, you can start reading https://www.amazon.com/Strange-Stones-Dispatches-East-West/dp/0062206230

u/zerohalo · 1 pointr/China

No, I'm talking about the systematic wiping out of the rest of the population who didn't die from disease, stealing their land, killing those who resisted, and herding the rest into the reservations on the worst land in the country with no way of sustenance. None of that had anything to do with lack of knowledge of communicable diseases.

No, not even the Japanese did that to the Chinese.

Also, 90% of North American Native Americans didn't die from disease. You're confusing with the natives in Mexico and the Caribbean Islands. It spread to some places in the south of the United States but not the rest of the country (which was not integrated or connected by kingdoms, etc.) Yes, a very large percentage of Natives in the Northeast (perhaps as many as 90%) died of disease because that's where the Europeans first landed. By the time the Europeans started taking over the Midwest and West, it wasn't as big of an issue.

For more fun reading: http://www.amazon.com/American-Holocaust-The-Conquest-World/dp/0195085574