• It’s cool how it went from “haha poorly built dam is gonna fall apart, any minute now” to “we’re gonna nuke it”

        Weird, western man, i thought it was going to collapse on its own??

      • Gucci_Minh [he/him]
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        4819 days ago

        Americans love fantasizing about the mass murder of innocent civilians of geopolitical rivals. I think its a response to their own decline and increasing impotence, lashing out while they still can.

    • ThermonuclearEgg [she/her, they/them]
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      4619 days ago

      For anyone needing the reminder, the Three Gorges Dam is the world’s largest power station located in Hubei Province, China. The plant has faced some criticism due to displacement of people around it and other environmental impacts, although some of this is criticism is of course coming from The China Bad Times.

      • thethirdgracchi [he/him, they/them]
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        4819 days ago

        The environmental impacts of this dam were immense, as were just the like impacts on real people. Millions of people were moved to newly built cities or existing cities because their homes were flooded. Entire cities were dismantled. It was an absolutely massive project that unequivocally made the lives of millions worse (at least in the short term and watching their homes be flooded intentionally). Granted taming the Yellow River is a massive feat, and the power this thing generates is insane, but there are plenty of legitimate critiques to be made.

        • BeamBrain [he/him]
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          3419 days ago

          This is what actually good-faith criticism of socialism looks like, as opposed to liberals’ “communism no iphone 100 billion dead.”

          • LaughingLion [any, any]
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            818 days ago

            you have to weigh the destruction it causes in the short term to the preservation it contributes to in the long term

            • theturtlemoves [he/him]
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              718 days ago

              Even in the long term, it (1) breaks the river into pieces, preventing fish moving up and down, (2) causes silting of the reservoir and lack of silt deposition downstream, and (3) can stress the underlying rock, which is not a great idea in earthquake-proe areas (like northeast China).

              • LaughingLion [any, any]
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                217 days ago

                in the long term it is another piece in the energy puzzle that prevents the death of all life on earth but i can understand your concerns

      • Nakoichi [they/them]M
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        4619 days ago

        Oh yeah don’t get me wrong there are valid criticisms of it. Particularly environmental ones as dams tend to fuck up river ecology a LOT. But these people don’t care about that, they fantasize about blowing it up as a genocidal act against innocent civilians.

    • @REEEEvolution@lemmygrad.ml
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      15
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      18 days ago

      “So after we nuke it, what happens in the next few hours?” - Dunno, what happens a few hours after, but a few minutes after you guys evaporate in a nuclear explosion.

      China considers any attack that damn equal to a nuclear attack. Ergo, it would activate its second strike capabilities and retaliate.

    • FedPosterman5000 [none/use name]
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      318 days ago

      Umm if amerikkkans want to blow up dams effectively they should start practicing at home - maybe start with your local low-head dam and go from there? Who’s got the money to fix them if they were to be damaged irreparably? 🤷‍♂️