from schizoidman@lemmy.zip to world@lemmy.world on 22 Feb 15:10
https://lemmy.zip/post/59579417
The term, borrowed from competitive gaming, refers to a health threshold where a character is vulnerable to an instant, unblockable finishing move. In the context of American life, Chinese observers use it to describe a terrifyingly low “margin for error.” This is the point where a single stroke of bad luck—a $3,000 ambulance ride or a sudden layoff—triggers a terminal collapse into homelessness.
This shift in perception is driven by radical transparency. For the first time, the “American Dream” is being filtered through the lens of real people rather than Hollywood studios. Through international students and overseas Chinese on TikTok and Weibo, the “unfiltered” America has been revealed.
Instead of the manicured suburbs of Desperate Housewives, Chinese netizens see the sprawling tent cities of the West Coast. They witness the “Great Reckoning” on Xiaohongshu, where American users share medical bills that look like mortgage statements.
#world
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are Chinese citizens allowed to read this article? Or will their computer report them for a forced confession in the tiger chair?
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/9266398b-4491-49e6-91bd-f97126614dd4.jpeg">
Nice whataboutism. Try engaging with the actual content.
Keep pushing that propaganda.
It’s unclear who this is directed at.
This is the real reason neoliberals and conservatives want homeless people out of sight; they make it clear that the US doesn’t care about you if you don’t have money.
Most people who hit the kill line have someone to go live with.
The tent cities aren’t a symptom of two totally different issues: mental health and drug addiction.
And THESE are due to a more endemic cultural issue of: who takes care of people when their friends and family won’t, coupled with the people rejecting the help that’s offered because from their perspective, the tent cities are better than the alternatives?
Respectfully, this is kind of incoherent. I can see that you disagree with the characterization of America’s poverty trap, but I didn’t really understand what part of the fundamental thesis of the article you dispute.
Totally incoherent; the first half was meant to be a reply to a completely different comment. Fixing.
This article points out something I think a lot of Americans – particularly younger, educated ones – don’t know about: America has for a long time actually been a place people around the world dream about. That includes dreaming of coming here, either to study and return; to move here permanently; or just to emulate in their own countries.
I think most American millennials were told this, but as they learned that most of what they were told about our country – its fairness, commitment to justice, opportunities – were lies, they assumed the concept of the American dream abroad was another myth.
I think more people – particularly American leftists – should understand that despite so many other failings, the American mythology has some value. Rather than deride it as anither imperialist lie, we should recognize that it has had some truth to it in the past. And we should aspire to actually make it real in a way it has never quite been.