Comment by bawolff

4 hours ago

> Let’s not forget Buffet also funded BYD significantly and is responsible for their growth,

What is this weird nationalism? Investing in a company from a foreign country does not make you a bad (or good) person. There is no moral duty to make your own country the most economically powerful one.

I don't like Chinese companies that much either, but if you look at the current US administration's stance on electric cars (and related topics like renewables, battery storage etc.), investing in BYD was actually a smart move...

> There is no moral duty to make your own country the most economically powerful one.

No? Then why do we ask people to give their lives to make it a safe one?

  • Safe isn't the same as economically powerful.

    Look at Bhutan with their Gross National Happiness as an alternative.

  • Are you in America? No one in the Us military is giving up lives to keep citizens safe.

    For other countries, it’s because the nation state is the current agreed upon divider for certain things like borders.

    To moralize nationalism is weird and anti-humanity.

> Investing in a company from a foreign country does not make you a bad (or good) person. There is no moral duty to make your own country the most economically powerful one.

Maybe you don’t agree, but I think there is a moral duty to not make the literal enemies of the free world into a superpower. Do you think the Chinese government believes in basic human rights like free speech? No. Buffet could have invested in many other countries. He chose China because he doesn’t have the moral compass he pretends to have.