Cyber Attacks on US Linked to Chinese Military? 698
wiredog writes "Security expert Bruce Schneier is reporting on a continuing effort to penetrate US government and industry computer systems that most likely stems from the Chinese military." From the Terranet article: "The attacks have been traced to the Chinese province of Guangdong, and the techniques used make it appear unlikely to come from any other source than the military, said Alan Paller, the director of the SANS Institute, an education and research organization focusing on cybersecurity."
The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Interesting)
Take, for example this story [freerepublic.com] which includes the quote:
Let's not forget how important our information infrastructures are and how dependent we have been on computers for quite sometime. Let's also not forget common rules of war one of which is cutting off an enemy's supply line ASAP to reduce their cone of influence. A pre-emptive move to "test the waters" of U.S. security by China would not surprise me.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's pretty naiive. Off the top of my head I can think of severals ways around that... modem dial long distance into another country, or buy a T-1 into a neutral country into another neutral country etc etc, you know... like how countries on our 'naughty' list buy weapons now, from USA to Great Britain to Germany to Sub-Saharan Africa to the Middle East, etc.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:2)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Insightful)
Uhm... I think big companies that rely heavily on Chinese imports and outsourcing services might not be too happy about that.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Interesting)
In fact they might be tipping that to happen behind the scenes
Total supposition there
I think they see it as a game of patience, and feel that once we are fully and
royally screwed in the mid east, they will then take back Taiwan
Which by the way was part of china, before the USA existed
I don't agree with what china is doing, but that is the facts
The funniest thing of it all is we paid china to do it by whoring out most of our
economy to them
Made In The USA: Tools Of Warfare (Score:4, Insightful)
An excellent point, which is why the vast majority of weapons systems used by the US are built in the US with US components. The COTS gear is another matter. The post-war situation would without a doubt be seriously screwed up, but I'd imagine in-sourcing would come back into fashion.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Insightful)
As of today, the two countries econmonies are too intertwined for either to seriously screw with the other. Kind of an economic vversion of MAD.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a scenario that is a loser for the Chinese as well, at least according to Thomas Friedman [google.com]. If our economy goes, so does theirs. It's a GOOD thing that we are entwined. This is a major factor keeping us off each other's throats.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Insightful)
Pacifism might work against a somewhat just enemy, but against one who actually IS willing to create millions of graves it doesn't do much good.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:2)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:2)
A real war between China and the US is not in the offing. Our economies are too intertwined. But there's no doubt we spy on each other.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Insightful)
It would be a naive point of view to think that it hasn't already started. It would be equally naive to assume that the U.S. is not at the forefront of such a war.
Seriously, it makes no sense to think that the U.S. government is not involved in digital warfare and espionage. The U.S. is the greatest military power in the world, especially when it comes to technology. The Internet was created there - by the military orginally.
If the U.S. government didn't take digital warfare seriously, this will without a doubt at least have changed after 9/11. The current administration is extremely militant, party with cause, and party without cause. Their ideology is based on 'first strike' principles - on elimiting potential threads as they surface. It is only logical to assume that this ideology extends to all possible fronts.
Now, who wants to bet big bucks that the United States military is not deeply involved in aggressive digital warfare at this very moment?
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:4, Informative)
We already lost the war.
America spent over $1 trillion in the 70's, 80's, and 90's creating the information economy.
Then shipped it to China and India in a matter of a few years.
They couldn't have taken $1 trillion in advantage from us in a shooting war, but they got it anyway.
The war is over, and this activity by the Chinese is to protect them from our attempt to take it back.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:2)
No, its the same sort of low-level who's-got-the-biggest-dick thats been going on between China and the USA for years.
China and the USA's economies are far too intwined for either party to seriously start something.
Oh - and rest assured that the US is doing similar things to China. This isjust what superpowers feel that they have to do.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:5, Interesting)
It happened once, could happen again:
CIA slipped bugs to Soviets [msn.com]
In January 1982, President Ronald Reagan approved a CIA plan to sabotage the economy of the Soviet Union through covert transfers of technology that contained hidden malfunctions, including software that later triggered a huge explosion in a Siberian natural gas pipeline, according to a new memoir by a Reagan White House official.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Insightful)
let's also not forget that Microsoft is a corporation, so it's motivated by only one thing: profit. If they'll put in a backdoor for the US government, why not do it for other governments? They work for the highest bidder.
Re:The mouse click heard 'round the world? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Now please explain to me why... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, it's because you and everyone you know is unwilling to pay $3000 for a computer, which you would if cheap Asian parts vanished, because North Americans figure that it's a right to earn $15 an hour.
Got any hard questions?
Blame Game (Score:5, Interesting)
These attacks come from someone with intense discipline. No other organization could do this if they were not a military organization
Does this rhyme with "Space exploration is both demanding and dangerous. No other nations could do this if they did not have a space shuttle".
Re:Blame Game (Score:3, Funny)
I assure you, as an anarcho-capitalist, I run into this same absurd "argument" on all kinds of subjects.
"Dams are just too big and expensive, they cannot be built privately." Oh, but don't notice that Boulder Dam was a private project expropriated by the Fed.Gov and renamed Hoover Dam...
Re:Blame Game (Score:3, Informative)
-Peter
Re:Blame Game (Score:5, Interesting)
China == "Goldstein"? See 1984 by George Orwell [amazon.com]
I don't think so (Score:5, Insightful)
This is not the first time this story has appeared on Slashdot. The last time it did (last year, I think), it covered a person who had traced the attacks back as far as China and gave some basic information about the methods and types of attacks. Also there is some reason to think that some military systems have indeed been penetrated and such items as flight control software stolen.
My own suspicion is that you have some sort of DMZ from which these attacks are occurring. You have a number of people stationed in shifts around the clock logging into these systems (possibly remotely) and using them for the attacks. There is plenty of reason to suspect the Chinese military here. These are not defacement attempts but are pretty surgical attempts at military data theft. This means organized crime (terrorist or not) and military are your only major suspects. The military is more likely the purpetrators given not only the specific type of data being targetted but also the Chinese Gov't's general unwillingness to cooperate with an investigation.
how they really figured it out (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Blame Game (Score:5, Funny)
Costello: Well then who's the president?
Abbott: Yes.
Costello: I mean the fellow's name.
Abbott: Who.
Costello: The guy in power.
Abbott: Who.
Costello: The president.
Abbott: Who.
Costello: The guy calling the shots...
Abbott: Who is the president!
Costello: I'm asking you who's the president.
Abbott: That's the man's name.
Costello: That's who's name?
Abbott: Yes.
Propaganda machine in action? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Propaganda machine in action? (Score:2)
I corrected your question for you.
Bad news sells.
Anti-Chinese Sentiments (Score:5, Interesting)
Unlikely (Score:3, Insightful)
Second china is not an iraq or vietnam. It would kick americas butt in both a ground war and a nuclear exchange. Massive losses for the chinese sure, but so what? Not like they are going to run out.
Third russia would have a fit.
Fourth India would have a fit.
Fifth non-commercial blokkade would suit the chinese just fine. Less capatalist
Villianizing China... why??? (Score:5, Insightful)
The price of peace is eternal vigilance.... even your friend will stab you in the back to butter his own slice of bread.... learn the lesson, go on and get over it.
so (Score:5, Funny)
Linux, I think it's called?
Re:so (Score:3, Funny)
Ho, Ho! Good luck, China! (Score:5, Funny)
Just ask Britain and France! If anyone understands that national standing on the international scene, once established, is permanent... it's them!
Re:Ho, Ho! Good luck, China! (Score:2)
Re:Ho, Ho! Good luck, China! (Score:2)
Hmh, this beeing Slashdotage I for a moment got all burned up by my latent imperialistic whorshipping latencies,,, Just ak Britain and France! If anyone understands that national standing on the international scene, once established, is permanent... it's them!
But then I saw the light, and you where just kidding. Oh my God, you must be a terroris
Re:Ho, Ho! Good luck, China! (Score:5, Informative)
I was really surprised by the whole energy of the place. When I went to McDonalds and they didn't have my food immediately, they said no problem we will find you and bring it to you when its ready. 2 min latter I had my fries. This particular McDonald's had around 30 registers all open. They said that they served 6000 lunches everyday -- just nuts. You won't find any fast food resturant in the US that can manage that volume and provide good service too.
The only downside was all the street vendors, which annoyed our tour guide. She said that they all had day jobs, but would often call in sick to go run side businesses to make extra money.
In closing, the US needs to sell $3,000,000,000 in bonds everyday to China just to keep running. If they really wished us harm they could just stop buying our debt. Once China no longer relies on exports we will be at their mercy. That will happen in around 10 - 20 years just when the US needs money to fund SS payments to baby-boomers.
swing and a miss (Score:5, Funny)
sarcasm -------->
O
-|-
|
/ \
you
Re:Ho, Ho! Good luck, China! (Score:5, Funny)
From your second paragraph (the first one quoted above), it appears we've already figured out what to do to cause harm to them.
Re:Ho, Ho! Good luck, China! (Score:4, Interesting)
Beijing is hardly a futuristic city (not really sure why you included that one. It's a beautiful city, but it hardly fits in with the other two). Hong Kong's prosperity is completely and absolutely the result of the British rule and law, and it has diminished since the takeover.
If you go to Shanghai you should try the sooper high speed mag-lev train.
One thing about a statist economy is that you can put billions towards really dumb money sinks, all to get gullible citizens and tourists to proclaim about how futuristic it is. I hear Brazilia in Brazil is a real futuristic city as well.
I was really surprised by the whole energy of the place. When I went to McDonalds and they didn't have my food immediately, they said no problem we will find you and bring it to you when its ready. 2 min latter I had my fries. This particular McDonald's had around 30 registers all open. They said that they served 6000 lunches everyday -- just nuts. You won't find any fast food resturant in the US that can manage that volume and provide good service too.
You're impressed that they brought your food to you? Wow, your opinion really needs to be considered suspect. Fastfood restaurants everywhere bring food to you.
Regarding the McDonalds being big --- if that's your measure of prosperity... That's like saying that a town is a great town because they have the largest Walmart. I'm going to have to presume that you're being sarcastic.
In closing, the US needs to sell $3,000,000,000 in bonds everyday to China just to keep running. If they really wished us harm they could just stop buying our debt. Once China no longer relies on exports we will be at their mercy. That will happen in around 10 - 20 years just when the US needs money to fund SS payments to baby-boomers.
Ah, good old fear mongering and ignorant economics. Ignoring the fact that China isn't a big financer of debt (and hasn't been for some time), countries don't buy bonds because they're benevolent - they do it for their own best interest. In the case of China they buy up US $ (and formerly bonds) to prop up the dollar, which keeps the yuan undervalued and serves China.
Secondly, if China did something (ignoring that they couldn't do anything that could be rapidly circumvented) they would punish the US $, depreciating their own holdings in US bonds (most of which can't be cashed in for years and decades. Boy, win win!
Idiots that don't have the slightest clue about economics, and that are wide-eyed about isolated advantages (OMG! I hear that North Korea has gigantic pyramid towers! They must be super first world!) should just keep their ignorance to themselves. China is eventually joining the ranks of the first world, and will soon earn some "problems" like citizens that don't like being poisoned by the air and water, and who like some rights, but this pissy nonsense about how the US is doomed reeks of ignorance.
Are we surpriced? (Score:2)
Re:Are we surpriced? (Score:3)
Two Things (Rhetorical). (Score:3, Funny)
1. How do they know that it's the Chinese Military? It could be a criminal organization.
2. Do you really think that anything really sensitive would be able to be accessed from the Internet?
Re:Two Things (Rhetorical). (Score:2, Flamebait)
This *is* the US gov't we're talking about here. I can almost guarantee you there are dozens of machines with highly sensitive data that are accidentally left accessible to the outside world.
Re:Two Things (Rhetorical). (Score:2)
Especially considering how cheap labor is in Guangdong. This is where gold-farming ops in MMOs get a lot of their labor. There are probably a lot of more technically competent people who also could be hired, as well as an easy cover story for a warehouse full of terminals.
[sarcasm]Don't buy gold in MMOs! You are supporting the Commie military / criminal underworld / Chinese paramilitary / terrorists!!!111[/sarc
Re:Two Things (Rhetorical). (Score:5, Funny)
There is no crime in China. Repeat: There is no crime in China.
2. Do you really think that anything really sensitive would be able to be accessed from the Internet?Hey now! I'm sensitive and accesible from the Internet.
Idea (Score:2)
From Mars to the Moon? (Score:3, Funny)
Now China is planning on landing men on the moon within 15-20 years......coincidence?
oh noes (Score:2, Funny)
Re:oh noes (Score:2)
Act of War (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Act of War (Score:2)
Two way street (Score:5, Insightful)
I would have been shocked if this was not going on in both directions - in dozens of directions for that matter.
Re:Two way street (Score:5, Informative)
Titan Rain, anyone? (Score:2)
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/08/28/17
Next move? (Score:2)
Chinese government gasps and says, "WE'RE trying to hack you? You must be mistaken. We would never attack the US! It must be those pesky rogue agents and splinter cells. The ones that we're still funding and paying. China's a big country, you know? We can't really control all 12 billion of our citizens. Never mind that the hackers are using a dual OC-3 with state-of-the-art equipment s
Act of War (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh this is new news ..... not (Score:5, Interesting)
China or a group of Chinese people? (Score:2)
Forget the military... (Score:2, Funny)
A lone voice (Score:4, Interesting)
Peace, please.
Complete Media Lie (Score:5, Funny)
Everyone knows that the Chinese could shut down the U.S. military by mailing a baker's dozen fingercuffs to the Commander in Chief and the War Cabinet.
Can't push the nuke button without use of your fingers, can you?
Nothing New (Score:3, Interesting)
This is not big news IMO just a resurfacing of info that has been seen before... (FUD for new book sales maybe?)
I don't understand the US/China relationship (Score:5, Insightful)
The China situation probably pisses me off more than any single other issue. Its an issue where both parties are on the same side; the side of profit-whoring multinationals that have no problem selling out American workers and small business and buddying up to the rights-abusing monster that is the Chinese govt.
Re:I don't understand the US/China relationship (Score:5, Insightful)
Stop blaming China, and start blaming Walmart.
marketplace (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I don't understand the US/China relationship (Score:5, Insightful)
To the first point -- the Nixon adminstration saw benefits to detente with Beijing. Better China talking with the US than China talking with the USSR, anyway.
In the present day, they still share an interest in keeping the Korean peninsula from going -completely- bonkers, because if it did, they'd be flooded with vast numbers of Korean refugees. And in this case, they have a huge potential to be helpful because North Korea is heavily dependent on Chinese economic assistance; should they turn off their energy aid, for instance, Pyongyang would definitely notice.
There are other potential avenues for cooperation, such as a mutual opposition to Islamic militants. The Chinese have a slight issue with Islamic separatists in Xinjiang, if memory serves. If they were in communication with a broader movement, then the two governments might be able to help each other here.
To the second point, China's lower cost of labor and potentially huge market makes it an interesting place for investments, reduced somewhat by the higher corruption. Cheaper manufacturing means that the US dollar can essentially go further. And as has been noted by assorted pundits -- we send dollars and receive actual goods or services. It's not in China's interest to cut off trade, either; they've got enough potential problems with labor unrest and so forth to do so.
And as for nuclear weapons, China -is- a nuclear power, estimated to have at least twenty nuclear-capable land-based ICBMs with sufficient range to hit parts of the United States, if memory serves. The US does not have a feasible way of stopping them; nor does China have a feasible way of stopping a theoretical US nuclear strike (whether it be first or retalliatory). Pragmatists on both sides might suggest that it's a bit late for a full-up military confrontation. Instead, we can push for trade liberalization and hope that their government is gradually undermined by their population's increasing desire for a higher standard of living, including perhaps political liberalization.
Also helpful, their leadership appears to be more pragmatic and self-serving than ideological or insane. It's easier to find room for agreement with leaders who aren't convinced of their own perfection or a need for extreme isolation or what-have-you.
Re:I don't understand the US/China relationship (Score:3, Insightful)
The US cannot - cannot - fight China militarily.
wut
Assuming you exclude the nuclear capabilities of the respective governments, (although you can pit China's 20 odd ICBMs against god knows how many thousands of American ones if you like), the American military would nail China to the wall in short order. I'm not an American, and in general have a fairly contemptuous attitude towards the "America uber alles" brainwashing endemic to that society, but I am a realist.
You are assuming that sheer force o
U.S. is naive. (Score:5, Interesting)
I have been worried for a long time about the apparent naivete of the U.S. government and military regarding the Chinese.
The Chinese government and military are extremely savvy so long as they are not blinded by their communist dogma. When it comes to trade, information, spying, and weapons technology, they understand the reality that those who play fair lose.
If you are a businessman, have no illusions that your papers and files are safe in your hotel room in China. There have been documented cases of government-sponsored spies following businessmen and bugging or entering their hotel rooms to scour their belongings for useful trade secrets and intellectual property.
We can see clearly that they are pursuing a strategy of mercantilism in trade, to our great disadvantage, thanks to the cluelessness of free-traders in Congress and the White House.
Who can doubt that the same issues exist with regard to sensitive military information? The Chinese sponsor students to come to the U.S. with the express goal sometimes of infiltrating research staffs and supplying tech info back to China. The same surely occurs with U.S. government and military employees, although the screening is more thorough.
In my opinion, the CHinese government would see hacking U.S. government or military sites as a requirement for successful international competition. Hopefully, the NSA and others like them are on top of the problem. I don't doubt, though, that they have gained access to lots of systems on the lower end of the confidentiality spectrum.
It needs to be impressed on people in government, military, and intelligence work, that the Chinese are playing one mean game of chess in everything they do vis-a-vis the U.S. Their sense of time spans centuries and millennia rather than decades. Any suspicious activity on their part needs to be treated with the greatest skepticism by our guys, rather than with apathy or giving them the benefit of the doubt...
Re:U.S. is naive. (Score:5, Interesting)
If you are a businessman, have no illusions that your papers and files are safe in your hotel room in China. There have been documented cases of government-sponsored spies following businessmen and bugging or entering their hotel rooms to scour their belongings for useful trade secrets and intellectual property.
We can see clearly that they are pursuing a strategy of mercantilism in trade, to our great disadvantage, thanks to the cluelessness of free-traders in Congress and the White House.
If you are a businessman, have no illusions that your electronic correspondence is safe _anywhere_, thanks to your 'naive' US. Ever heard of the uses of Echelon [hiwaay.net] in your so-called 'free trade'?
Some quotes from the link above:
"Yes, I'm paranoid - But am I paranoid enough?"
ALL YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US (Score:3, Funny)
This is a non-event... (Score:5, Insightful)
Even then, how is this not anticipated? Governments spy on each other (and their own citizens) prolificly, even their allies. We do it, they do it. European countries and the US are constantly one-upping each other in government sponsored corporate espionage. The Internet's done nothing but created a new medium. We steal corporate and military secrets from them, and they from us. Big deal.
The fact is that this means nothing. We know how to prevent this from being a problem, we do it, and we even disseminate disinformation this way.
The Iraq boondoggle aside, countries are actually very good about researching each other. There's a level of transparency between nations that is completely hidden to the average citizen. I think that everyone understands that at some level. The problem is, of course, that the public understanding of geopolitics is quite different than that of world leaders and the intelligence community. China could be an invasion threat, or on the verge of a dramatic shift to democracy and becoming our (USA) 51st state -- but, honestly, how many people are privileged enough to have access to sufficient information to make that call? Almost certainly not you.
By avoiding transparency, governments can avoid accountability to their citizens and other nations. That lack of accountability makes people easy to assuage, makes governments appear artificially effective, etc. In the US we demand little transparency because making information available puts us at risk (so the logic goes). Thus, by simply augmenting the perception of risk (nwes about terrorists, spies, etc.), people will lower their accountability demands, enabling more flexibility for things probably not in the public interest.
Of the top 100 economic powers in the word, 52 are corporations, and 48 are countries. About 1/3rd of goods transferred over a national border are goods that don't transfer ownership because they stay within a multinational corporation that is internally transferring those goods). It seems that some good geopolitical FUD can make you richer than Croesus if you're an inside player in the game.
Anybody remember the first rule of hacking? (Score:5, Interesting)
hack us, (why not, I am sure it's not just them and I'll bet money we are doing
it too), why would they source an attack from their primary location? Even if
the "attacks" are coming from there, that doesn't mean it's the Chinese. It
could be an American or British kid who took over a box there. And I gotta
tell you, if it were me, I would bounce my traffic around the world twice
before I even took a look at a
"military trained" hackers backed by the Chinese government could and would
have far more resources and could cover their tracks better than that. If it
were me, I would have all the attacks sourced from Britian or Iserail, or some
other friendly US ally. Color me suspicious.
SealBeater
Re:Block 'em at the firewall (Score:2)
If they're good, then it would be difficult to trace and to just completely block at the firewall. Unless, of course, you are referring to the Great Firewall of China?
Re:Block 'em at the firewall (Score:2)
Ever wondered where you motherboard is made, and most of you consumer electronics for that matter? Why does that matter? Hint: BIOS.
Re:Block 'em at the firewall (Score:3, Informative)
Back then there were many people on Slashdot suggesting that they block all foreign traffic, but that becomes problematic given the size and scope of the US Armed Forces.
So the short answer is "no" there is no easy way to block these on the f
Re:Block 'em at the firewall (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:And the third front of WWIII opens (Score:2)
Re:And the third front of WWIII opens (Score:2)
Re:And the third front of WWIII opens (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:And the third front of WWIII opens (Score:5, Insightful)
"World war..." I do not think it means what you think it means.
See, when cities start getting wiped off of the face of the planet and an entire generation of young men gets decimated and then decimated again, then you get to call it a "World War III." Ask Europeans or even Chinese of the proper age group to tell you what a real world war looks like.
Very, very few people in North America have seen what a war actually looks like since the freakin' 1860's (and they had to travel to see it), which is probably why people like tossing around the word "war" without having any fucking clue what it entails ("War on Poverty," "War on Drugs," "War on Terrorism," "War on Christmas," and the silliness of calling the whole Red State vs. Blue State thing the "Second American Civil War).
Sherman said "War is Hell" and went on to aptly demonstrate that fact. This, this isn't even a hissy fit. If you have the liesure time to piss away posting on a website, it ain't war.
War on $foo (Score:4, Insightful)
"War on Poverty," "War on Drugs," and "War on Terrorism" are perfect examples.
Re:And the third front of WWIII opens (Score:3, Funny)
War on War.
Re:And the third front of WWIII opens (Score:4, Insightful)
Ten thousand years of civilization and warfare, and the face of war has always remained the same: people killing people and breaking things en masse, wholesale slaughter. The means and methods may have changed, but the results, the aftermath has always been the same: smouldering cities and bloodsoaked soil. Are you so vain as to believe that humanity is somehow above all that now and things have magically changed in the past hundred months that haven't changed in the past hundred centuries?
And before you start pointing at 9/11, not even that qualifies. The Romans did far worse to Carthage and they didn't have airplanes or the Internet. Try finding something in Atlanta older than 150 years.
"and that there are people starving to death in America due to WWIII already?"
Any more than, say, the Great Depression? Even with the surge of population in the US since the 1930's, I'd still wager the raw numbers are higher from the '30's, and that was peacetime.
Again, you have zero sense of scale.
Starvation during wartime comes because international shipments of food are seized/sunk and domestic food sources are torched, blighted, salted, or otherwise eliminated by human violence, and everybody knows it. You sure as hell don't start talking about a freakin' obesity epidemic. Hell, look at postwar Japan, and that was even after we called off our submarine fleet.
And, again, this is something North America has not seen in almost 150 years. No rational person would even pretend this qualifies as a war.
Re:And the third front of WWIII opens (Score:2)
Quite possibly both will be required before this is over, but in reality all I meant was "be coldhearted, creative, xenophobic, and willing to sacrifice large amounts of profit and manpower to the task".
Re:Politically Incorrect (Score:5, Insightful)
I will never forget the images of those young people being shot at, arrested, stampeded out of the square by the Chinese military.
Their government is not warm and fuzzy and has nothing to do with basic human rights. They are fellow humans, the people of China. They deserve better than that gang of thugs in power. I wish them luck in outlasting their predecessors' mistake in choosing to empower those creeps.
Re:Politically Incorrect (Score:5, Insightful)
Forget all that "Freedom is on the march" propaganda and start looking at our REAL foreign policy.
Re:Politically Incorrect (Score:2, Interesting)
Once you realize that this is becoming a country by, for, and of The Management most of the rest of government policy becomes extraordinarily clear.
Or.. (Score:3, Insightful)
And as far as human rights go I don't think the US has a leg to stand on right now. Tiananmen Square like a big FUCK YOU to the world, to divergent ideologies, etc. Guantanamo Bay or the unintentional results du
Re:Politically Incorrect (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's see, out of 1.3 billion people, there would be 130,000,000 people in the 90 percentile of intelligence. The US population is about 250 million. In other words, China could fill almost half of the US with very smart people. My point? I agree with you.
Re:I'm going to hell too, I guess... (Score:2)
Re:I for one welcome our new Chinese overlords (Score:4, Insightful)
So? If you read the whole article, you'll notice that they point out that, funny thing is, the vast, vast majority of all Chinese speakers live in one place. China has always believed it is the center of the world and waited for everybody to come to them instead of, say, exporting themselves and their language. Unless you're actually going to China, you will get far more mileage with English, French or Spanish (i. e. the ones who did go out and export people and langauge).
In my own layman's opinion, the obsession with whatever flavor of Chinese dialect you're looking at is little more than a fad. Twenty years ago, "the" langauge for us to all go out and learn would have been Russian or Japanese, two other examples of isolated languages.
IMO, it makes more sense to run out and learn Portuguese. Brazil is closer to the US than China.