CriticalThought
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Yer welcome. Just another item in the technical fields that your Chinese friends will never be able to give and be honest about it.
Nonsense.
In engineering, we cannot afford to 'live in the past', another vague and usually meaningless pithy saying. But what am talking about has to do with dealing with the consequences of the past, and consequences are inevitable. You can force an inanimate object to do whatever you want at any time, but you cannot make a cultural change overnight, over a year, or even over a decade. For any cultural change, you need a new generation of people and China is still changing, not yet complete that transition. Corruption is still widespread at all levels of governance and corporations.
All the achievements that your Chinese friends boasts about here ? They are the exceptions, not the rule. The proverbial 'old guards' are still in influential positions of power in government and corporations. They change only if there are personal benefits involved, not because they feel anything for China as an ideal. That idealism belongs to the young and even though that change is happening, China still has a long way to go, pal.
But to return to semiconductor...
I do not support any sale of any US semicon company to any Chinese interests. And yes, I do believe it is our national interests to block such sale. Why should I care about China's national interests, other than to make them disadvantageous to the US ? You think any country is any different when it comes to their national interests ? You think I care if China is continuously behind US ? Do not talk to me about cooperation for humanity's sake. I can argue at the same level of abstraction that since China was committed to communism, an evil form of governance, why should we cooperate with any country that is willing to do such political harm to humanity in general ?
If China cannot acquire any tier-one semicon company, Western or Asian, China must work to develop her own indigenous semicon industry. That means government subsidies no matter what. Successes or failures must be taxpayer supported. Only thru trials and errors can any pure Chinese semicon company become intellectually independent and on the path to become a genuine innovator. Right now, China is NOT intellectually independent. Charge me with being a 'racist' all you want. It will not do away with the reality that China's semicon industry still needs foreign assist at every level. But then the problem of corruption remains. As long as taxpayers' money -- an apparently endless source of wealth -- are involved, taking a little bit here and a little bit there, who is going to miss those 'little bit', eh ?
So if you were to estimate a timeframe when China will acquire this technology what would you say?