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Why does China consistently beat India on soft power?

Hard power is how you get global influence. Hard power gives you soft power to influence others using investment, market access, technology access, financing, currency, weaponary, infrastructure building, etc.
 
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Both countries have very limited soft power for their size to be honest. In fact even South Korea dwarfs both of them in this aspect.

Agreed. China's media power is quite ridiculous for a country of its size and might.
 
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Disagree, Even China lags far behind in soft power. which country has China used soft power on successfully? In fact, look at Taiwan which you still consider your territory. You haven't been able to convince them to reunite back with you guys under CCP for over half a century now. At this rate a century will pass with TAIWAN STILL BEING INDPENDENT. To make things worse, vast majority of Taiwanese don't even want to reunite with you guys and the percentage of anti china Taiwanese seems to be growing with each passing year. Shows again a failure in any soft power for CCP. In fact i will say even Russia has a far better soft power than China to be honest. Look at how easy it was for Russia to get Crimea, and i will admit that the vast majority of Crimean's wanted to join back with Russia way from Ukraine.
In fact even South Korea is ahead. Koreans still want to join back with North Korea. The only thing stopping that is foreign powers, and to some extent the mad Kim dynasty. I believe there is a higher chance of seeing a peaceful Korean unification than a peaceful Chinese one with Taiwan. You will definitely need to use had power to get Taiwan back, no other way around that, especially under CCP.
Taiwan case is not about soft power. It's about education. Taiwan had changed their text books. The new text books deny Taiwanese their Chinese idendity and embrace western culture. Similar case we can see is Muslims in western countries. Even though western culture has huge soft power, younger Muslims, who were born in western countries, still refuse to accept local cultures.

Edit: The whole Taiwan society has been penetrated by US. Taiwan is a half US colony. If a Taiwan politicain wants to become Taiwan president, he/she must receive US approval first.
 
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Soft power is a byproduct of hard power. When we compare Indian hard power , it turns out to be very primitive vis a vis the Chinese. India largely lives in the primitive age in most accounts. One doesn't need to be a Harvard grad to understand the critical Indian weaknesses. It is also very comical to compare India with China which will soon become the new industry standard.
 
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Disagree, Even China lags far behind in soft power. which country has China used soft power on successfully? In fact, look at Taiwan which you still consider your territory. You haven't been able to convince them to reunite back with you guys under CCP for over half a century now. At this rate a century will pass with TAIWAN STILL BEING INDPENDENT. To make things worse, vast majority of Taiwanese don't even want to reunite with you guys and the percentage of anti china Taiwanese seems to be growing with each passing year. Shows again a failure in any soft power for CCP. In fact i will say even Russia has a far better soft power than China to be honest. Look at how easy it was for Russia to get Crimea, and i will admit that the vast majority of Crimean's wanted to join back with Russia way from Ukraine.
In fact even South Korea is ahead. Koreans still want to join back with North Korea. The only thing stopping that is foreign powers, and to some extent the mad Kim dynasty. I believe there is a higher chance of seeing a peaceful Korean unification than a peaceful Chinese one with Taiwan. You will definitely need to use had power to get Taiwan back, no other way around that, especially under CCP.

That's fine because China has plenty of hard power. Meanwhile Serbia builds statues of Xi Jinping without being asked to or paid for.
 
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That's fine because China has plenty of hard power. Meanwhile Serbia builds statues of Xi Jinping without being asked to or paid for.

Both hard and soft power are important. China has built up a lot of hard power and continues to do so, but it should definitely invest more resources into building up its soft power.
 
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Indian "soft power" is being a disgusting shithole *BUT* having democracy and being "simple" and "spiritual". That was supposed to be the charm. Whatever reputation they had for the former is also slowly being eroded away so now all that's left is being dirty freaks who have a few quirky beliefs.

The Chinese have an autocracy but they also have decades of development and progress, which is a lot more alluring for Western elites now that they're beginning to feel the pain of stagnation and fear of losing the race against China. You can bet the fascination for China will only grow as the gerontocracy which presided over the West's decline steps down and the younger generations come into power.
 
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Both countries have very limited soft power for their size to be honest. In fact even South Korea dwarfs both of them in this aspect.
S/Korea would pretty much dwarfs any nation in softpower among genz ,South Korea is not competition but standard.
Disagree, Even China lags far behind in soft power. which country has China used soft power on successfully? In fact, look at Taiwan which you still consider your territory. You haven't been able to convince them to reunite back with you guys under CCP for over half a century now. At this rate a century will pass with TAIWAN STILL BEING INDPENDENT. To make things worse, vast majority of Taiwanese don't even want to reunite with you guys and the percentage of anti china Taiwanese seems to be growing with each passing year. Shows again a failure in any soft power for CCP. In fact i will say even Russia has a far better soft power than China to be honest. Look at how easy it was for Russia to get Crimea, and i will admit that the vast majority of Crimean's wanted to join back with Russia way from Ukraine.
In fact even South Korea is ahead. Koreans still want to join back with North Korea. The only thing stopping that is foreign powers, and to some extent the mad Kim dynasty. I believe there is a higher chance of seeing a peaceful Korean unification than a peaceful Chinese one with Taiwan. You will definitely need to use had power to get Taiwan back, no other way around that, especially under CCP.
I think you're mistaking state/political propaganda influence for pure soft power. It's determined by the propaganda disseminated upon the civilians rather than persuasion by appeal.In the case of Crimea, russian state propaganda is more wide reaching than CIA media,that's just fact.This is not the case for Taiwan where Anti- china propaganda from cia-NDP prevails.Taiwan isn't pisspoor like N.Korea so pointless comparison.

The US look like it leads in softpower simply because US operates on world language and has the widest reach,US pop music/movies are directly catered to public in almost every nation through influence medium like MTV/HBO etc.But the effectiveness is different thing. Bollywood is popular in Pakistan and it doesn't make Pakistanis wanna vouch for indians or flee to India,unlike koreaboos and weebs ,
.Even without pop culture boom, china can be pretty drawing in appeal based on ancient architecture,history,food and culture alone, now there's the tech gadget aspect and futuristic cities to adding to the attraction. In the cultural aspect, Korea can't compete with China..But in pop culture ,Korea/Japan provided china the blueprint. CN is very behind from Korea or Japan in softpower effectiveness but still ,it's the 3rd most effective pop culture softpower from asia. You look at popular asian tiktok fashion/trend videos in youtube all of those are are from Douyin China.
Indians are China's no.1 rabid hater on internet, yet,top comment section of any popular chinese drama on youtube look like this(all Indians and indian dialects-tamil/malayali )
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These Indians would flee India for CHina given the choice. And you think China doesn't have soft power? russia leads.... ,CHina's one of the biggest player in other areas for softpower appeal like - Games) and in light-novels(a sphere not dominated by korea & japan)you will be surprized to know the size of reader base and reach of light novels.Many Chinese celebs are up there with kpop stars in fandom, they have similar visual and aesthetic appeal,so why not? China does have the blueprint.
After japanese manga,China/korea are head to head in manhwa/manhua popularity,actually china leads there.

These all stacks up,it's how Japan and S.Korea dominates softpower in genz.India isn't even in contention.

I think you just stress too much on the political part of the internet ,which are heavily influenced by cia media and teeming with state sponsored troll farms. The other side that actually isn't interested in political stuff( which is majority) might be way more positive toward china.
China's softpower is way underrated than it actually is due to CIA media's slander. Softpower and economy goes hand in hand,as China gets more and more wealthy its soft-power will rise further,even though CN might not be picture-perfect as smaller nation such as Japan and korea.Rather than china being weak in softpower,it's just that s.korea and japan are too strong in softpower.
 

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Apple Daily, Hong Kong's Leading Pro-Democracy Newspaper, Shuts Down After Relentless Hounding By Beijing-Backed Local Government

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  • Apple Daily, owned by now-jailed media tycoon and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai, has been hounded by the government for more than a year now. Earlier today, city police detained the paper’s lead editorial writer for allegedly colluding with foreign forces to endanger national security.

  • The board of the media company decided to shut down after Hong Kong authorities blocked access to the company’s bank accounts following the arrests of senior editors and executives.

The board of Next Digital Ltd, which owns Hong Kong’s popular daily Apple Daily, announced today (Jun23) that the pro-democracy publication would close on June 26.

Apple Daily will stop publishing online from midnight. It will publish its last print edition on Thursday (Jun 24).

The board of the media outlet on Monday (Jun 22) had said it would shut down the newspaper’s operations by Saturday (Jun 26) if Hong Kong authorities do not lift the access to the company’s bank accounts following the arrests of senior editors and executives.

Earlier today, city police detained the paper’s lead editorial writer for allegedly colluding with foreign forces to endanger national security.

Last week, one of the paper's editor Ryan Law Wai-kwong and current publisher Cheung Kim-hung were arrested under national security law.

Apple Daily, owned by now-jailed media tycoon and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai, has been hounded by the government for more than a year now.

Lai, who was also the publisher, is a vocal critic of Chinese communist party. He was first arrested August last year under the provisions of city’s draconian national security law that was imposed by Chinese government in June 2020.

Lai, an hugely influential figure in Hong Kong, took an unapologetically pro-democracy position and was a fierce critic of Beijing.

Lai’s newspaper earned the ire of city’s pro-Beijing leadership during the months of massive peaceful protests and violent clashes with police that rocked Hong Kong in 2019.

Lai had described the city’s new national security law as a death knell for freedoms enjoyed by Hong Kongers since the city was returned to China in 1997.

Lai was arrested under the draconian new law for alleged collusion with a foreign country to endanger national security. He also faces charges of uttering seditious words and conspiring to defraud.

Lai had met the then US Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Washington DC to discuss the controversial extradition bill and the status of Hong Kong’s autonomy under the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ framework.

Lai along with other prominent pro-democracy activists have frequently urged U.S. lawmakers to pass pro-Hong Kong legislation such as the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act.

In Aug 2020, the U.S announced imposed sanctions on Hong Kong Leader Carrie Lam and leading officials of Chinese Communist Party for their involvement in stifling political freedoms in Hong Kong.
 
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