Which is why I specified cultural part? I don’t think they murder them or anything like that, I think they are trying to integrate them in their economy, which, depending on your view of china, can be construed as capitalist integration for exploitation or elevation to modern living standards
And I quoted the “cultural” part. Cultural genocide is the intentional destruction of cultural artifacts and the eradication of a cultural identity.
depending on your view of china, can be construed as capitalist integration for exploitation or elevation to modern living standards
Neither of these are cultural genocide.
If you read a report of residential (sorry was wrong word) schools in usa or australia or canada for native Americans from liberal source, what would be the markers of difference with re-education camps in china? The only thing I see is the age of students
If there was evidence of China separating families, forbidding native languages, erasing all references to Uighur cultural identity, and sterilizing women - I would reconsider my position.
The only thing I see is the age of students
You are either whitewashing American crimes against indigenous people, or pushing unverified genocide allegations against China. Which is it?
Like, I actually cannot believe you wrote that. What the fuck.
With the Xinjiang camps, I haven’t seen evidence of and/or have seen evidence suggesting the lack of:
- sexual/physical assault
- terrible living conditions and deaths linked to said living conditions
- forced labour
- suppression of their native language/culture (I don’t really consider mandatory Mandarin lessons in and of itself to be language suppression)
- extended durations without family contact
Here’s a really good video that talks about the problem you bring up.
Tl;dw the erasure and othering of a culture was an integral part of the original definition of genocide, but when counties were voting on language (I think in the UN) to determine what could be punished as a genocide, many member countries refused to sign a law that included cultural erasure, forced assimilation, and the like because they were afraid that they could be prosecuted under such a law.
So our narrow definition of genocide comes from a process where the criminals got to write the rulebook.
Good thing there are no liberals amongus :dun-dun-dun: :ancom-heart:
Edit: emphasis on real bugs me, maybe change it to physical?
Oh shit cultural genocide isn’t real? Thank god that means the the irish weren’t kept from speaking you know irish or that occitan is still a thriving and alive language, hey all those kids that got ripped from their families because they were roma and had to be ‘civilized’ it’s ok it’s a relatively peaceful integration program.
I’m Roma, tbh I wouldn’t call what people did/do to us “cultural genocide” it is just straight up genocide. I don’t know if there is a specific difference (ESL speaker)? But I don’t see why it should be separated from a regular genocide and can feel like a downplay of the absolute horrendous extremes countries have gone to in trying to get rid of us completely. But again if there is a specific difference between genocide and cultural genocide, let me know. Maybe I am misinterpreting.
Can you suggest a name for it then? It’s ethnoculturecide? I agree the word is hyper charged tbh with images of death camps, which are not related to this.
Genocide is the word for this. The author who coined the term genocide considered the cultural erasure and othering of an ethnic group to be an integral part of the definition of genocide, and that these things by themselves were sufficient to label something as a genocide without needing mass murder in addition to these things.
The UN definition narrowed the scope of genocide because many member nations would refuse to sign a law that included cultural erasure, forced assimilation, and the like out of fear that they could be prosecuted under such a law. The idea that these things aren’t as serious and don’t count as “real” genocide is the result of the criminals getting to write the rulebook.
Here’s a great video on the topic: