Throughout history, China and the US have had many different views about Economic systems, such a how much control the government should have, are the people allowed to have free speech, and how things should be sold. There are a few similarities as well, such as wanting to keep the people’s rights protected, making sure that education is the priority, and being able to own private property but there are more differences. One can think that there are more important arguments on the differences side than on the similarities side. Even though the US and China have many differences, they also have a few similarities as well, such as keeping the people’s rights protected. With Communism, in China, one of the reasons they are communist is to make everything that the people get is divided up equally, with the “Constitution of the People’s Republic of China”. With the US, the bill of rights protects …show more content…
A man who works at McDonald's does not get paid the same amount as the man who works for IBM as the CEO. Having the government protect the people’s rights is one of the reasons that people love their government system. Another similarity is that education is very important to both groups, in China the government runs the education systems and they believe that having education is very important to them. With the one-child policy, it is easier to push one child very far, than having to push 2 or 3 like the average American family. Along with China, the US believes in higher education as well, granted that the US does not have the one-child policy, they still manage to push all of their children to the top. Private property is yet another big thing that the US and China both agree on, China used to not have private property
Earlier this week we focused on ancient eastern China during the Han Dynasty and the east asian philosophies that arose during this time period. We reviewed three great asian philosophers, Confucius, Lao Tzu, and Buddha. In class we also picked from a list of quotes from these three philosophers a quote they said that really resonated with us and wrote a descriptive essay on it and shared it in class for extra credit.
Since the start of the 20th century, with the fall of the Qing dynasty, when China was in shambles with no industry, a corrupt government and no international presence, all the way up until today, where China has evolved into one of the strongest internationally recognized countries with a highly globalized market, the relationship between the Chinese people and its government has been debated on whether or not Chinese society is one ruled and dominated by a central government or a society where social change occurred because of bottom-up forces leading to a government for the people. China, since 1949, has been a country, which has been run by a single party state, known as the CCP (Chinese Communist Party). The CCP is organized under the basis of a central, unchallenged party governing the people by the means of communism. Throughout the past century, the CCP has dictated and maintained a rule over the livelihood of its people by monopolizing Chinese politics and penalizing those who opposed it, through central command planning and on the other spectrum, radical economic reforms at the end of the 20th century in the interest of keeping the CCP in power.
Modern China and Japan share many similarities, such as geographical location, and the way the population has grown through the years. Although modern China and Japan bear similarities, the differences between the two nations are plentiful as well. China and Japan have two different forms of government, and separate economies as well. Despite these differences, the rich culture that both these countries boast, connect one nation to the other.
China became a communist country because it offered opportunities for the peasants to own their own farms, industries and businesses, china became a communist country because the chinese people were tired of wars and fighting after being under the rule of warlords around 1916 many chinese began joining revolutionary groups and politicals parties in hopes of changing their country during and after the Great Revolution China saw several movements which forced a moved to communism in 192, China became a communist state in 1949 under the leadership of chairman Mao. This then prevented the Sino-Soviet treaty to be made, Stalin saw an opportunity due to this, America believed China threatened the security of their nations, America then did not want communism to spread in the world we live in. The cold war tensions between the United states and the USSR eventually exploded in Korea when the soviet backed North Korea invaded South Korea in 1950 this determined to not let communism to spread in east asia from here truman order military spending and ordered General MacArthur to retake the southern half in peninsula. MacArthur success then pushed North Korea almost up to the Chinese border this threatened over million soldiers from Communist China in Korea.
The United States and China Relation started since 1784, but it wasn’t until 1970’s when The United States finally recognize the communist people from China. This led us to be influenced by their culture, politics, but the most important economically. The relation of these two countries was not so good at the beginning, since China is a communist country that was involved with many countries that were in war. The interaction of these countries goes back to 1785 when the first Chinese sailors arrived to Baltimore looking for wealth and then it increases in 1847 with the Gold Rush in San Francisco that attracted many Asian Immigrants in look for new opportunities. The U.S. Department of State mentions in their archive United States Relations
One reason I have this belief is, China is very male dominated and through the One-Child Policy, women have become more empowered and treasured. For example, “Perhaps the biggest beneficiaries of the one-child policy have been urban singleton daughters. Their parents’ only treasure, since the 1980s single daughters in China’s cities have enjoyed privileged childhoods little different from their male counterparts… With no brothers to compete for their parents’ attention and resources,... these teens have been socialized to value educational and career success and provided the resources with which to achieve it.” (Susan Greenhalgh, Document D). Opposing the gender norms, women are getting better education, more job opportunities, and markets are gearing towards women. The One-Child Policy was effective in shining light on women and advancing their
Many people tend to become frustrated with their daily lives and start to have a negative mindset of blaming other people for their problems. In David Foster Wallace’s speech, “This is Water,” he informed the audience of the importance for everyone to know they have a “natural default-setting,” which is the automatic way that a person feels they are the center of the universe and that negative situations are other people’s fault. He also discussed the importance of trying not to act in this “natural default-setting”, and try to think of problems that other people have to go through in their lives. The main purpose of Wallace’s speech was to persuade the audience to fight the urge of staying in their natural default setting to prevent frustration in a person’s daily life.
In Classical India and Classical China, the development of institutions and traditions were very different yet very similar in many ways. For instance, India and China both put women below men and considered merchants as a middle class. However, they differed in areas such as centralized government. Outside of the Mauryas and the Guptas, India was run by the religion-based caste system while China had a very centralized government, except for the Warring States period and the Three Kingdoms period. If you look closely, Classical China and Classical India are like opposites drawn in the same colours. They both socially stratified their people in ways dictated by their beliefs but while India made it impossible to move any way but down, China allowed movement in any direction through the pyramid of society if you could earn it. Furthermore, while China worshipped their ancestors and looked to learn from the past, India believed in reincarnation and looked to the future.
Thus, another difference between the constitution between China and the United States is the structure of each government. In China, the power is held in the hands of people, as the first article of China’s constitution mentions that “All power in the People's Republic of China belongs to the people.”, and in those of elected people in National People's Congress and the local
In time, China was hoped to find that social and political freedom is the only basis of that greatness. The United States has helped nurture this change by cooperating with China where possible, without allowing the differences that do exist, such as human rights, and nonproliferation commitments to interfere.
The ways we group society in the past and the present differ throughout countries. This is because many countries have different cultures and look at life differently. Throughout human culture we’ve felt the need to group up individuals and tell them where they belong. Although some civilizations may be more harsh than others, groupings still exist today in our society and other countries as well. For example, China and Confucianism and India and the caste system. While these groupings in their society started long ago, they are still in act today. For the United States, that is a different story. The United States has a society that is based on modern times. People get put into groups and discriminate against people for things that they may not even have control over. Like race, age, gender, and sexual orientation. To compare these three countries and how they group their society. We must learn about the systems in which they run under. All 3 civilizations, China, India, and the United States, are similar in a few key elements. Each one is unique and diverse in its own way because of the beliefs these cultures have.
in the US, upper, middle, and lower. They are determined by money, the rich are
When it comes to a communist country following the capitalist standards, they have to take in to consideration the need for freedom and the chance of prosperity for the people. The dictators in China will not be successful in using a capitalist system if they deny Milton Freidman’s thesis that prosperity will create individual freedom and end dictatorship, because for a capitalist government to work they cannot be in a dictator ship because there is no freedom to the people and that limits their chance to prosperity.
Over the past decades, the Chinese and United States economies have been in competition with each other, revealing several similarities and differences between the two. One may believe, with the given information, that the similarities outweigh the differences, such as how they are the two largest economies, both are very focused on education, and how individuals may conduct their own sales with government overseeing. It is no coincidence that the United States and Chinese economies exhibit many similarities. One is that they are currently the two largest economies in the world, the Chinese just recently surpassing the United States.
As many other countries around the world China has its long history of a struggle for equality and prosperity against tyrants and dictatorships. The establishment of People’s Republic of China in 1949 seemed to have put an end to that struggle for a better life. “The Chinese people have stood up!” declared Mao Tse-tung, the chairman of China’s Communist Party (CPP) – a leading political force in the country for the time. The people were defined as a coalition of four social classes: the workers, the peasants, the petite bourgeoisie and the national-capitalists. The four classes were to be led buy the CPP, as the leader of the working class.