Im a bit of a Doctorow fanboy, but I think hes hit the nail right on the head.
The reason most American trade sanctions seem so poorly defined or defended as of late is because we're not actually fighting to keep china from gleaning yet another ICBM Secret or gobbling up all of our data (American tech companies already do that.) What we're fighting so vehemently against is Huawei's introduction of 5G technology to the global market nearly a full year before any US players myopic market vision decided the US needed it. We're fighting chinese chipmakers --not because they are theives-- but because they are arriving to market with challenging, responsive, disruptive, and in some ways more advanced offerings than traditional western players. The Tiangong space station should have basically settled the oft rattled question from the octogenarians in congress: how close to the US is chinese technology. its there in most cases, beyond it in some.
the sad part of Corys article is the conclusion that for every $chinese_company that now makes it to market with faster tech or better tech, the US will be forced to escalate using counterproductive and increasingly meaningless non-competitive responses like sanctions and tariffs. its a slow death unless the US gets more competitive, and by competitive i mean it cant just be axing domestic labor and posting higher revenue. US companies are going to have to eat their crow and actually offer something customers want, not something theyre told to want.
The battlefield isn't (only) economic. Whoever deploys more networking gear has visibility into more networks around the world via "accidental" backdoors.
Same goes for IoT devices. They're all just sleeper agents awaiting orders. Be it on price or features, the more commercial appeal the device has, the broader its deployment around the world. There's at least one foreign-produced, internet-connected listening device in every boardroom (and bedroom).
We can insist on pushing Cisco gear so the former exploits are available only to ourselves, but we don't have anything that competes with the latter since we don't actually make anything in this country-- no smart TVs, drones and IoT vibrators that we sell to Chinese consumers. iPhones are about it, and we outsource their production to...China. We make "intellectual property," which is easily stolen and replicated.
They're NIH-adherents so we can't push software on them either-- not only do they subvert ours (Equifax, Grindr almost), they onboard us to theirs (TikTok).
The language of their biggest competitor/adversary is taught in schools. The US curriculum is limited to introductory French or Spanish. Never in my life have I needed to communicate anything in either language that couldn't be conveyed in English. Mandarin or Russian would have been more useful.
They beat us at the spycraft game big-time, but we can't address that in public. So instead we're sowing confusion through vague trade sanctions to disrupt their deployment strategy. Since we never had a coherent plan to begin with, it won't achieve anything. The ultimate disruptor usually ends up being war.
Could you give some specifics on where the Chinese chipmakers are more advanced than western players? (Note that Taiwan does not count as "Chinese" for this.)
Also, note that the US didn't try to sanction Taiwanese chipmakers at all, so Doctorow's explanation of "why" seem to not hold water.
> it's a slow death unless the US gets more competitive
It's a slow death no matter what. China has 3x the population of the US, and Chinese people are both just as smart as Americans, and likely better educated. If the US has lost its lead, it's not getting it back.
The working/retired population ratio also matters; supporting your family might also make you less productive as a worker. (Speaking heartlessly and capitalistically.)
I know several people trying to take care of elderly parents in different ways and it absolutely does take time just for the logistics.
Taking care of an elderly parent is a massive undertaking to do in your own home and is still an effort if you hand them over to the state in a nursing home.
SKR/JP/TW all have extreme work cultures relative to west for highend sectors that are globally competitive, society structuring labour to work 100% harder to be 10% better than your lax competitors is not "efficient" but still viable way to brute force into leadership. Heartless capitalism works.
As for work/retirement dependency ratios - some considerations (and blame Zeihan for popularizing spasming over demographic pyramid and neglecting the politics in geoPOLITICs) there's a reason Chinese households have some of the highest house hold savings rate, most don't expect retiring with comprehensive safety net. CCP + citizens know they're not going to transition into developed high-income country with comprehensive welfare state anytime soon. Culturally and structurally PRC is relatively well calibrated to to weather a demographic decline, with likely a reversal in demographics when multiple inheritances starts concentrating into single children households once deaths > births in coming years. I'd expect baby & consumption boom especially among more affluent/educated regions with spare wealth.
TBH I'd be more worried over developed west ALREADY breaking down from being unable to support onerous welfare obligations that's been getting worse with immigration. There's a reason protests over generational QoL decline is happening in west not PRC. IMO implementing these trial [0] community centers for elders is pretty much enough to keep Chinese seniors content - cheap meals is enough to bribe people who rememeber hunger - old people who can't vote nor have energy to protest. Combine with recent focus on building out pharma & medsci sectors with automation [1] and ability to negotiate cheap bulk med acquistions = CCP should be able to take care of elder on a pareto budget. Few are going to complain CCP won't be spending magnitude more resources to stretch life expectancy from already above average of 78 to "high" level of 80-84. Nor would CCP want that burden if speaking heartlessly and strategically.
I might really encourage you to read some Peter Zeihan.
The Chinese economy has aged drastically the last decade, is coasting on fumes by manipulating its own currency, and is entirely dependent on whims of the global market for important commodity prices.
To the extent that they pose any sort of economic threat to the US, it's because we let them by ensuring safe shipping lanes to the middle east for oil and letting them trade in dollars.
I totally agree, and this is very wrong because it means the government is trying to pick winners.
I like eink readers and phones from China, and I don't like it when daddy government tells me I can't plug a simcard in the device I purchased to use it on say AT&T network, while the device is compliant with international formats.
If the government was so concerned about malicious non-compliance, they could prepare a doomsday removal of all "bad" devices IF AND WHEN they start doing bad things, with the same IMEI blacklist approach, and NOT BEFORE which is only going to hurt customers.
Doing the IMEI blacklist before any device is caught doing bad things means it's just a commercial war.
Well, hang on, what's the counter strategy here? Part of the reason that Chinese chipmakers are so advanced is because they work 80 hours a week, 52 weeks a year. The whole essay is about returning dignity and prosperity back to the American worker - although I disagree with his socialist slant on how that should be done, I don't think adopting the Chinese work-til-you-drop mentality is the right way to get there, either.
There is a big disconnect between Doctorow going on about his middle class Phd parents and the plight of 'the workers'. Phds are around 1% of the population and their earnings typically put them in the top 20%. IMO it seems more likely that the interests of this class, and others similar -- the lawyers, doctors, engineers -- will align more with the elite than the serfs, and until that changes the possibility of true structural change in the US feels remote.
Also, a lot of this analysis only makes sense to children of the elite (ie, the child of a successful author).
There's a natural regression to the mean. Kids of poor parents will be better off than their parents. Kids of rich parents will be worse off than their parents.
So when he looks around at his peer group, he sees the same thing - people who were worse off than their parents. But it's really only a view shared by middle class white people.
> IMO it seems more likely that the interests of this class, and others similar -- the lawyers, doctors, engineers -- will align more with the elite than the serfs.
It often feels like this in the US. We (educated, well paid, middle class people) do have a closer cultural experience with the true elite. But despite the similar cultural experience the economic underpinnings are very different. Paying your bills from the wages of your job is categorically different from getting yield on an investment.
This economic difference becomes apparent in how the system evolves - when jobs shift offshore, you might see the well paid jobs disappear while owners* continue to make profit from the offshored business.
In other words, it turns out that well paid wage earners like me are actually in the same fundemental economic situation as "the serfs" even if our day to day lives look like the elite, for now.
* Many working people do have stock, especially when you count retirement (thanks to the 401k). This does them owners in one sense - the do literally own part of corps and get some of their profit. But while that's still just a supplement to wages as the main income, it doesn't really matter. If you lose your job or it becomes low-paying, your ownership will dry up rapidly. It hasn't changed your position in the system.
>It often feels like this in the US. We (educated, well paid, middle class people) do have a closer cultural experience with the true elite. But despite the similar cultural experience the economic underpinnings are very different. Paying your bills from the wages of your job is categorically different from getting yield on an investment.
Sure the "elite" and the "well educate and paid but still laboring for money" classes have very different economic reality but the cultural gulf between the techie and the plumber is an order of magnitude greater than any differences the "elites" and the "just barely not's" have.
We're agreeing on the economic and cultural realities, I think. What I'm saying is that it's the economic reality that matters, long term. The article is talking about generations long trends, and on that time scale culture is completely mutable.
Who in the United States are the "elites" exactly? This forum has many graduates from top schools in the United States and elsewhere. Many here have made millions from being early employees, investors, or founders of various startups and household name tech companies. Even Elon Musk has a day job. What does it mean to be "elite"?
That depends on the elites (presuming Doctorow's perspective is accurate). Truly smart elites would keep the top 10% in the game. But if Doctorow is right, the elites almost always eventually get greedy and blow this, and the system then collapses, because the elites are not competent to actually run it well (and, my own addition, because the 10% quit propping up the elites' incompetence).
The article has a glaring omission - the US from 1800 to WW2. Never before have such a vast quantity of people been raised from owning nothing to the middle class. You can see it in the stats - dramatically rising height, lowered infant mortality, and longevity. You can also see it in old pictures - lots and lots and lots of middle class housing.
Yeah, that kind of gets missed out when people analyze the Post War boom. Much of it is a very delayed correction of the prolonged Great Depression. Most of the New Deal labor rights and social programs were blown up during the war, so soldiers returned home to a very liberalized US economy.
Getting to choose your favorite window for your "30 years" is completely a cherry pick.
I think he's anchored his idea of "middle class" to a specific set of possessions, rather than to an economically reasonable definition. Specifically, he seems to be using a 1970s definition of "middle class". He gives a description that's all about having specific things like dishwashers and television. People in 1920 didn't have dishwashers, because dishwashers weren't really a commercially-available thing yet. But they were still middle class in terms of their economic relationships.
This is not correct. Average American height actually decreased between 1810 and 1900. It wasn't until after 1900 that we see it start to increase again.
Moreover, the increase in height stagnated and even begun to fall at the beginning of the neoliberal era, even while adult heights continued to rise in the more egalitarian European countries.
Does that count American adults by birth year, regardless of where they were born? (I couldn't immediately tell from the link.) I would expect immigration trends to be a big driver during that timespan.
It makes sense, then, that the first generation children born after labor started winning better pay and conditions would be better nourished and taller as adults, roughly 20 years later.
You might want to check out the museum at Fort Henry, which contains pre-US adult clothing. It looks like clothing for children. Then go see a Civil War museum. The uniforms look like they're for boys. George Washington was a giant in his day at 6 foot. I saw Henry 8's armor in London. Looks like it would fit a kid.
Wait till you find out what USSR managed to do when it comes to lifting people from owning nothing. Russia went from a backwards agrarian society where people travelled by horse and carriage to being the first in space in the span of 40 years. Russia showed incredible growth after the revolution that surpassed the rest of the world:
USSR doubled life expectancy in just 20 years. A newborn child in 1926-27 had a life expectancy of 44.4 years, up from 32.3 years thirty years before. In 1958-59 the life expectancy for newborns went up to 68.6 years. the Semashko system of the USSR increased lifespan by 50% in 20 years. By the 1960's, lifespans in the USSR were comparable to those in the USA:
Quality of nutrition improved after the Soviet revolution, and the last time USSR had a famine was in 1940s. CIA data suggests they ate just as much as Americans after WW2 peroid while having better nutrition:
In 1987, people in the USSR could retire with pension at 55 (female) and 60 (male) while receiving 50% of their wages at a at minimum. Meanwhile, in USA the average retirement age was 62-67 and the average (not median) retiree household in the USA could expect $48k/yr which comes out to 65% of the 74k average (not median) household income in 2016:
The Soviet Union had the highest physician/patient ratio in the world. USSR had 42 doctors per 10,000 population compared to 24 in Denmark and Sweden, and 19 in US:
Professor of Economic History, Robert C. Allen, concludes in his study without the 1917 revolution is directly responsible for rapid growth that made the achievements listed above possilbe:
Study demonstrating the steady increase in quality of life during the Soviet period (including under Stalin). Includes the fact that Soviet life expectancy grew faster than any other nation recorded at the time:
A large study using world bank data analyzing the quality of life in Capitalist vs Socialist countries and finds overwhelmingly at similar levels of development with socialism bringing better quality of life:
That's an embarrassingly ignorant statement. US sat out the war while the rest of the world was being devastated. While Europe and Asia suffered massive destruction, US was building out its industrial base, Then when the war ended, US invested into rebuilding western Europe turning it into its vassal. Meanwhile, USSR had to rebuild all on its own while being plunged into the Cold War by the US. The people who were "fleeing" were the top talent like scientists and engineers who could use hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of free education they received to make huge amounts of money in the west.
Really? I've seen the Wall. I've gone through Checkpoint Charlie in 1969 and visited East Berlin. I saw the barbed wire, the machine guns, the tank traps, all obviously pointed east to keep people from escaping.
I have friends who grew up under Soviet domination.
I have a number of books on live in the USSR.
Your version of the USSR won't fly.
P.S. You mentioned lots of doctors in the USSR. That may or may not be true. In a thread on Chernobyl on Reddit a while back, people who lived there at the time of the disaster mentioned that while root canals were free, there was no anesthetic. Yah, no thanks. You can live in a communist paradise if you like, but include me out. Enjoy the wall keeping you in.
I literally grew up in USSR, so unlike you I have direct lived experience. I can guarantee you that nobody I've ever met was thinking about escaping anywhere. Vast majority of people lived happy lives without many of the worries people in the west have today. For example, nobody worried that they're going to lose their job and end up on the street, or that they wouldn't be able to retire in dignity. It's impossible to describe how much stress this removes from people's lives.
However, the original point here was that the Soviet revolution improved conditions for the people far more rapidly than US has. As all the sources I've linked above clearly show, the quality of life saw drastic improvements happen at a rate never seen in capitalist countries like the US.
All they did was start using technology and techniques already developed by the capitalist countries. Of course it's going to be quick. Buying a modern tractor is a great leap over a horse drawn plow. Even so, the USSR was never able to feed itself. In the 1980s, Kansas was known as the "Breadbasket of the Soviet Union". The Soviets also overlooked the illegal capitalist black market, because the planned economy simply couldn't meet its citizens' needs.
> I can guarantee you that nobody I've ever met was thinking about escaping anywhere
The Soviet Bloc didn't spend a significant percentage of their GDP on the Iron Curtain for no reason. There wouldn't have been anyone left in East Berlin if the wall wasn't built.
> Vast majority of people lived happy lives
The state of peoples' happiness tends to be a constant regardless of their economic status. In any case, why do you think the Soviets jammed western TV signals? Why do you think that soviet citizens would stop tourists on the street and try to buy their blue jeans? Why do you think the Soviets wouldn't allow travel abroad for anyone who didn't have family that was held hostage until the person returned?
> without many of the worries people in the west have today
People in the US don't worry about being sent to the gulag slave labor camps. When you're completely dependent on the state for your job, apartment, etc., that can all be taken away by bureaucratic whim. Off to the gulag for saying the wrong thing, or offending your local party commissar.
>All they did was start using technology and techniques already developed by the capitalist countries.
All they did was make a century worth of capitalist progress in a couple of decades. As the many studies I linked above clearly show, the rate of development in USSR eclipses anything ever seen under capitalism.
>The Soviet Bloc didn't spend a significant percentage of their GDP on the Iron Curtain for no reason. There wouldn't have been anyone left in East Berlin if the wall wasn't built.
That's frankly nonsensical. The Soviet bloc was under an attack from the most powerful empire in the history of the world during its whole existence. That's what the Iron Curtain was built against.
>The state of peoples' happiness tends to be a constant regardless of their economic status.
You should go tell that to 30 million Americans who are food insecure today.
>In any case, why do you think the Soviets jammed western TV signals?
Soviet Russia could access BBC, Voice of America, German TV. Today Americans are not permitted to hear what Russians are saying. The US today has imposed constraints on access to info beyond Soviets.
>People in the US don't worry about being sent to the gulag slave labor camps.
US today has highest rate of incarceration in the world and holds 20% of world's prison population despite accounting for only 4% of overall population. This is higher rate of incarceration than USSR had even under Stalin! Modern US gulag system is far more horrific than anything USSR has ever done.
Furthermore, US uses prisons as literal slave labour which is a large part of US economy. There are also volumes of books written on how US systemically imprisons minorities.
It's a term that accurately describes the relationship between US and Europe. US provides bulk of security for Europe, and in exchange Europe is politically subservient to US. For a deeper discussion, I highly encourage you to watch this interview with Michael Hudson where he explains the nature of the relationship in detail
There are strikes and growing protests across many European countries as people are losing their jobs and are no longer able to afford to pay their bills. But yeah, aside from that Europe's totally alive and everything is fine.
You clearly have no clue regarding the subject you're attempting to debate here.
Economic repercussions of Covid and Putin’s war are to be expected and not ‘suicide’. Reliance on Russian energy was something the US strongly disapproved of.
The economic repercussions are from Europe choosing to cut itself off from Russian energy, 60% of which cannot be replaced. Without Russian energy Europe cannot function, and it was Europe under pressure from US that decided to start the trade war with Russia.
This supposed economic ‘suicide’ seems more like something that exists only in the mind of Vladimir Putin.
You also may not be aware that in the 1940’s Europe experienced war on their own territory. I am surprised you haven’t considered that they have their own reasons for wanting to disassociate themselves from Putin’s state.
They are either a vassal of the US, or they are not. Clearly, since they only do what the US wants when it suits them, there is no serious argument to be made that they are a vassal.
>You seem to overlook the fact that Europe became dependent on Russian Energy against the wishes of the US.
And you seem to overlook the fact that US has been continuously interfering in European politics to force Europe to stop using Russian energy against its interests. Now, US has finally accomplished that.
>You also seem to have selected an unrepresentative set of scare headlines.
The articles I linked are very much representative, and talk about large scale systemic problems Europe is experiencing due to lack of available energy.
>Gas prices are in fact plunging in Europe, and the winter is turning out to be unexpectedly mild.
Now there's an example of an unrepresentative headline. The context there was that gas prices dropped because there aren't enough LNG terminals in Europe to unload the gas. It's not for lack of demand. Thanks for once again confirming you don't understand the subject you're opining on.
>You also may not be aware that in the 1940’s Europe experienced war on their own territory. I am surprised you haven’t considered that they have their own reasons for wanting to disassociate themselves from Putin’s state.
That's a nonsensical statement. Creating tensions with Russia does not help Europe in any way. The way to avoid conflict is by creating economic ties and a mutually beneficial relationship. The only country that does not benefit from that is the US.
>They are either a vassal of the US, or they are not. Clearly, since they only do what the US wants when it suits them, there is no serious argument to be made that they are a vassal.
> to being the first in space in the span of 40 years
Never mind the USSR's rocket program was based on the German V2 ballistic missile and captured German rocket engineers.
(To be fair, so was the US space program.)
There's some evidence that Eisenhower drug his feet on the space program because the matter of orbiting over other countries was not settled and he worried that the USSR would regard it as an attack. By letting the USSR go first, then the US space program could not be seen as a provocation.
If you have ever read Thomas Piketty’s 1000 page tome “Capital in the 21st Century” (I have ), this short article can be thought of as an extremely short summary, with some very nice nuances added.
Guardian Columnist Jack Schofield suggests China is making a Totalitarian Bet - that with enough software, enough sensors and enough State Security the people of china can be forever controlled and directed.
I think software is too complex, society and opportunity too complex for directed development to work - it must evolve, and like science needs openness and spread of ideas - a Democratic Bet.
One kind of society will be utopia and one ... not.
Everyone will want to live in utopia - and it's on us to code it, vote for it, nurture it.
Code isn't going to solve anything unless the people deciding on what to code are the people who are directly affected by it. Code today written by America's engineers is dictated top down by their CEO's or board who are only looking to enrich themselves, so the result will be the same.
It is to be noted that this road was chosen through democratic means. Reagan was elected. Clinton was elected. Thatcher and Blair too.
Only fairly recently people have realized their mistake and started to resist [0] but that's probably too late now. Corporations are people and money talks and have spoken.
> According to Piketty, capitalism always leads to rich people running the show, and that always leads to the follies of the wealthy few taking precedence over the material needs of the majority, which eventually leads to some kind of collapse, wherein wealth is destroyed and a space opens for a new society.
This is NOT what Piketty's work says. And I wish people would stop regurgitating it. The entire onus of his book (much contested) was that, in a natural order, private wealth grows faster than an economy overall. Everything past that is pure conjecture. And depending on what your view of what "capitalism" is, this probably supersedes it. The presence of market economies is irrelevant - his dataset included non-market based economies.
I think the truth is somewhere in between- Doctorow does seem to have overstated what Piketty said, but not by a huge margin. I don't think this error dilutes Doctorow's argument very much.
From wikipedia (the article on Capital in the 21 Century):
"The book's central thesis is that when the rate of return on capital (r) is greater than the rate of economic growth (g) over the long term, the result is concentration of wealth, and this unequal distribution of wealth causes social and economic instability."
Doctorow got a little hyperbolic and replaced "instability" with "some kind of collapse", and "capital" with "capitalism" which is, as you point out, misrepresenting what Piketty said. But not tremendously.
Honestly, in retrospect he is saying something very similar to Keynes who says unemployment is caused by an interest rate (r) above the marginal productivity of capital (g).
The difference between Piketty and Keynes however is that Keynes has the concept of a liquidity premium which explains how it is even possible for r to exceed g assuming the central bank doesn't set interest rates.
It takes a really distorted world view to on one hand describe so accurately the problems and lack of freedom in America, the disrespect for workers and how they seek freedom and will eventually overthrow the existing order.
And then on the other hand to say China which the author himself described as even more oppressive work environment will somehow be better off in this new enlightened world.
Socialism solves nothing. There's no free healthcare, doctors need to work for that. No free phones either. One way or the other you always pay the price. Authoritarian governments are always worse off because they suppress the criticism that would progress them further.
In some funny way this author is quite similar to the elite in that he is views the working class of china the same way the elite view the working class of rich countries.
> they can turn their wealth into pro-wealth policies
He's arguing (of course) for cradle-to-grave socialism while overlooking the obvious: the ultra-wealthy are using their wealth to promote the exact same thing.
Categorically untrue. The one percent have had their taxes cut enormously, and their share of the national income has doubled since the 80's, meanwhile all sorts of welfare programs and boons like almost-free college education have been slashed. Unions were attacked and are now almost non-existent. The minimum wage has been allowed to stagnate for so long that it's now meaningless. Jobs were shipped overseas where labor was cheaper leaving a vast rust belt.
And it's the political donations and patronage, usually made discreetly, of the ultra wealthy that has allowed this to happen.
The ultra-wealthy have controlled the country for longer than you have been alive, so if they'd wanted socialism, you'd be living in it. The ultra-wealthy also paid Glenn Beck to convince Americans that there was a conspiracy amongst the ultra-wealthy to oppress the ultra-wealthy, so the best way to stick it to the ultra-wealthy was to remove all limits on the activities of the ultra-wealthy.
>But by the Reagan era, the party was over. People had all the stuff they needed. They’d replace it from time to time.
Capitalism doesn't work if everyone has everything they need. Perfect markets reduce profit margins as close to zero as possible. People will then stop investing because they can just sit on cash instead and do nothing.
If you base your economy on constant profits and endless growth then you will have to reset it with a war every now and then.
If this comment was meant to imitate a high school debate club team member rhetorically feigning a lack of understanding of the point their opponent was making, it's really masterful. Bravo.
Anyone can check my comment history and see that the vast majority of the questions I ask are not rhetorical. If you believe I meant it rhetorically, it wasn’t.
Your reply is incoherent so I’m not sure what other meanings you intend.
When I'm assuming that your lack of understanding is rhetorical, it's that I'm assuming bad faith over comprehension difficulties (due to the quality of this forum.) I understand that's not what Hanlon teaches.
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edit: so, assuming good faith, saying an adult's writing and opinions are like the opinions of a student going through a phase is, ironically, a childish criticism (especially when directed at a very successful writer and opinion-haver.) If you have or know little kids, you've probably noticed that the first way they speak condescendingly about other little kids is by saying they act like babies. Adults should have more substantial criticisms, based on the claims made. Any of them. Literally any reference to any claim that you're criticizing. That's got to be a minimum standard for being interesting or constructive.
You’ve got multiple ideas all jumbled up here. I’ll give the first part a try.
> When I'm assuming that your lack of understanding is rhetorical, it's that I'm assuming bad faith over comprehension difficulties (due to the quality of this forum.)
Your assuming that I’m writing in bad faith… because of…?
And why would the quality of a forum affect your belief in the likelihood of comprehension difficulties in the userbase?
> I understand that's not what Hanlon teaches.
Presumably you mean Hanlon’s razor. If so, what relevance is your understanding of it to the former points?
Also, just on the face of the claims it doesn't make any sense with the rest of the thesis.
By design, wealthy people do not pay meaningfully more into the social security program. So the idea that eliminating it is part of some pro-millionaire agenda seems a bit weird.
Not one Republican in the article you cited literally admits to wanting to get rid of Social Security.
Most of them mentioned in the article are apparently 8 Senate Republicans who are co-sponsors of the TRUST Act which would create Congressional committees to come up with plans to deal with federal programs that are heading towards insolvency, including Social Security. The act was also co-sponsored by 3 Senate Democrats, one Senate Independent, 2 House Republicans and 3 House Democrats. If that is "wanting to get rid of Social Security" (it isn't) then getting rid of Social Security is a bi-partisan effort.
Then you also have one Republican who thinks we need benefit cuts at some point to deal with insolvency, one who thinks Social Security should be moved to discretionary funding rather than non-discretionary, one who thinks all federal programs should need to be voted on every 5 years, and one who made comments about getting rid of Social Security in 2010 but who now says we need to raise the retirement age to deal with insolvency.
That's the attitude that allowed Prohibition to happen. Weird virtue signaling over something very few people actually wanted allowed people to gain political clout, but then it all backfired and we accidentally got the thing.
It was ratified by 46 states. Eliminating social security has zero support with democrats. And not much more with millions of republicans. Won’t happen. Historical comparisons aren’t necessarily Illuminative.
The reason most American trade sanctions seem so poorly defined or defended as of late is because we're not actually fighting to keep china from gleaning yet another ICBM Secret or gobbling up all of our data (American tech companies already do that.) What we're fighting so vehemently against is Huawei's introduction of 5G technology to the global market nearly a full year before any US players myopic market vision decided the US needed it. We're fighting chinese chipmakers --not because they are theives-- but because they are arriving to market with challenging, responsive, disruptive, and in some ways more advanced offerings than traditional western players. The Tiangong space station should have basically settled the oft rattled question from the octogenarians in congress: how close to the US is chinese technology. its there in most cases, beyond it in some.
the sad part of Corys article is the conclusion that for every $chinese_company that now makes it to market with faster tech or better tech, the US will be forced to escalate using counterproductive and increasingly meaningless non-competitive responses like sanctions and tariffs. its a slow death unless the US gets more competitive, and by competitive i mean it cant just be axing domestic labor and posting higher revenue. US companies are going to have to eat their crow and actually offer something customers want, not something theyre told to want.