• Blake [he/him]
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    9 months ago

    Clearly everyone should just let China do whatever they want to avoid war, if we appease them by expanding their territorial claims and avoiding conflict then surely everything will be fine. The politics of appeasement has historically been very successful.

    Edit: Stop replying please, I don’t want to waste any more time arguing with y’all.

    • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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      9 months ago

      It is the USA that has been the target of appeasement. Every expansion, every death squad, every war crime, every black site, every assassination, every war of aggression, every single time the world appeases the USA.

      If you think the USA is appeasing China, your head is screwed on backwards. I know it’s a common trope for abusers to feel offended and attacked when their victims standup for themselves, and I know you probably stand with the victims and see through the abusers’ bullshit. You need to do that with the USA.

      Abu Ghraib - appeased.
      Nord Stream 2 - appeased.
      Solemaini - appeased.
      Iraq - appeased.
      Iraq 2 - appeased.
      Vietnam - appeased.
      Laos - appeased.
      Cambodia - appeased.
      Korea - appeased.
      Hiroshima - appeased.
      Nagasaki - appeased.
      Guantanamo - appeased.
      Libya - appeased.
      Syria - appeased.
      StuxNet - appeased.
      Pulling out of nuclear treaties - appeased.
      Refusing to be accountable to ICC - appeased.
      Refusing to sign landmine treaty - appeased.
      Agent Orange - appeased.
      Napalm - appeased.
      White phosphorus - appeased.
      Depleted Uranium - appeased.
      Yugoslavia - appeased.
      Afghanistan - appeased.
      School of the Americas - appeased.
      Wiretapping the entire US civilian population - appeased.
      Wiretapping every embassy through Siemens supply chain attack - appeased.
      NATO expansion - appeased.
      Economic shock therapy kills millions - appeased.
      Training terrorists - appeased.
      Airlifting terrorists into other countries - appeased.
      Environmental devastation - appeased.
      Sending expired vaccines - appeased.
      Refusing to send vaccines - appeased.
      Refusing to follow the predefined protocol for sharing vaccine research - appeased.
      Iranian regime change - appeased.
      Color revolutions - appeased.
      Extracting trillions from Africa - appeased.
      Child separation - appeased.
      Toddlers in solitary confinement - appeased.
      Forced hysterectomies - appeased.
      Collective punishment of civilians - appeased.
      Support for Israeli apartheid - appeased.
      Iran-Contra - appeased.
      Fast and Furious - appeased.
      CIA drug trafficking - appeased.
      Haitian assassination - appeased.
      Bolivia - appeased.
      Nicaragua - appeased.
      Pinochet - appeased.

      I can keep going if you want.

      • Blake [he/him]
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        9 months ago

        Fuck the United States. They’re easily the worst, most imperialist nation on the planet. But we’re capable of more nuance than “any country in opposition to the US can do no wrong”

        • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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          439 months ago

          What the fuck is wrong with you? The idea that the USA could possibly engage in appeasement is completely undermined by the fact that THEY ARE THE AGGRESSOR WHO IS BEING APPEASED. When China pushes back against the USA they are not doing something wrong, they are doing something against the USA’s interests. When China doesn’t push back against the USA, they are appeasing.

          The entire analysis of “oh everyone is bad and therefore the USA shouldn’t appease them” is completely structureless. It’s all moron vibes.

          • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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            389 months ago

            You see - fuck the US - but if the US is putting 12 000 km away from their mainland military equipment on what they recognize as China’s territory, it is actually “CCP imperialism” if they react ;)

          • Blake [he/him]
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            39 months ago

            Thanks for your reply, before I address it, I have to ask, would you support it if the CCP government launched a military invasion of Taiwan?

            • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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              9 months ago

              I would need to analyze the situation. The CPC has established it will not do this for any reason except to protect Chinese national security interests. If it turns out that the USA delivers advanced missile “defense” systems and other nuclear capabilities including submarines, air power, and other plaforms and assets, then it will be all but strategically certain that China will be forced to use military action to push the USA off the island and out of the surrounding waters.

              Given the analysis of the Ukraine conflict, it’s possible that China may need to include other considerations that I am not fully up to speed on about American capabilities and American proxy war strategies.

              In short, yes, I trust the CPC to only use military force when all other options for defense against the USA have been exhausted. This has been their policy and doctrine for a while and there are no indications of it changing anytime soon.

              • Blake [he/him]
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                29 months ago

                Honestly, I don’t think we really disagree all that much in broad terms. We both hate US imperialism. I just don’t see the CCP as an omni-benevolent state which can do no wrong. Until the world is ready to fully transition away from capitalism, greed and totalitarianism, it is best to limit the power and influence of nation states. And that includes states which claim to be transitioning towards communism. Checks and balances against supremacy prevents anti-revolutionary elements from seizing control of the state and turning its power against the people. Let’s just agree to disagree, move on with our lives, and spend our energy arguing with people who still support capitalism instead.

                • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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                  269 months ago

                  We do disagree, a lot. For example you think I believe that China is omnibenevolent. I don’t.

                  Another example, you think it’s possible to limit the power and influence of nationstates without simultaneously expanding the power and influence of nationstates. Exactly how do you think this is possible? Who, exactly, is going to limit the power and influence of China? After that power and influence is limited, what do you think will happen to the power and influence of others.

                  What you don’t seem to understand is that China is STILL going through the process of limiting the power and influence of the North Atlantic in China’s own physical location. The USA however, is busy limiting the power and influence of other nations in those nations’ physical locations. Pushing back against the North Atlantic is literally how you achieve the goal you say you want.

                  The idea of having checks and balances in an international world order that has spent the last 600 years dominating 80% of the world’s population with abject brutality and genocide required the expansion of power and influence of formerly oppressed states. Like it or not, you can’t just reduce the USA’s influence with vibes while the USA reduces China’s influence with nukes.

        • 420blazeit69 [he/him]
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          9 months ago

          Fuck the United States. They’re easily the worst, most imperialist nation on the planet.

          “But somehow I keep finding all these familiar geopolitical flashpoints where I support them.”

        • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]
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          9 months ago

          I agree, we are capable of more nuance than the ludicrous position you just made up right now to shut down the conversation before you have to do any uncomfortable introspection.

          • Blake [he/him]
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            49 months ago

            TIL, thanks! I’m not an American so I hadn’t ever heard of that one. I removed my comment on it.

          • Blake [he/him]
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            59 months ago

            I’m not a lib. And no, I don’t believe in supporting the lesser evil. I don’t support any evil.

            • queermunist she/her
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              259 months ago

              I’m not a lib.

              Oh sorry, you’re an ultra, my mistake.

              How is it idealistically opposing everyone everywhere and never accomplishing anything?

              • Blake [he/him]
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                79 months ago

                Why do you try to attack an identity you’re assuming that I hold, rather than addressing my actual arguments? Could it be because you’re incapable of actually successfully arguing against the points I’m making?

                And no, I’m not an “ultra”, though it’s quite a vaguely defined term, I’m not opposed to all of the structures that ultra-leftists are traditionally opposed to. Keep guessing, though. You’ll probably get it eventually. The world is a nuanced place and you shouldn’t try to shove everything into a convenient box to make it easier to deal with. That’s lib behaviour. You should know better.

                • queermunist she/her
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                  9 months ago

                  Your argument seems to be that we should oppose all sides equally, regardless of context.

                  Do you even support anything?

              • Blake [he/him]
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                49 months ago

                Pretty good, actually! Thanks for asking. I don’t want to get into too many details, but let’s just say that the roles were reversed from what you’re imagining. He was a lovely guy, it’s a shame that he was so inflexible with his beliefs, we got along really well because we shared a lot of common ground. I think the India/China thing was the first thing we actually disagreed on, and that was enough to end our relationship. Which is absolutely fair, but it took me a bit by surprise at the time.

      • FaceDeer
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        79 months ago

        Whatabout, whatabout, whatabout.

        You realize that if country A does something bad, “Country B did something bad too!” is not actually a defense of country A’s behaviour? Indeed, it just implies that you agree that that behaviour is bad.

        • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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          Moron vibes.

          China isn’t doing something bad. The USA is an aggressor in the region and has been for decades. The USA took over for the French in Vietnam, and that goes back a long time. The USA took over from Japan in Korea, and that goes back awhile too. The USA is the active aggressor here. The idea that China pushing back against USA aggression could ever be considered appeasement is completely illogical.

          What China is doing is not capable of being appeased. It would be like saying that if Nazi Germany left Poland alone because Poland was fighting back then Germany would be guilty of appeasing Poland. It’s moronic beyond fucking belief.

          No. It’s not whataboutism, it’s evidence that your argument is illogical. The USA cannot possibly appease China because the USA is the one being appeased the world over. The USA is the Fourth Reich. When China opposes it, China is doing its part to create a future where the USA no longer can hurt the supermajority of the world’s people.

          Fuck your liberal brain rot.

            • Krause [he/him]
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              9 months ago

              Military exercises on their own territory as recognized by the United Nations and almost every single country on Earth? What is the issue here?

              The Taiwan Province is an inalienable part of the People’s Republic of China:

              And this is recognized by the United Nations ever since 1971 after UNGAR 2758.

              Source, page 546: https://web.archive.org/web/20230503050030/https://legal.un.org/unjuridicalyearbook/pdfs/english/volumes/2010.pdf

              Video of the votes happening: https://invidious.projectsegfau.lt/watch?v=sfOIEjuXFyU

              • blazera
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                19 months ago

                why are you showing me excerpt’s from PRC’s constitution? Yeah, China claims Taiwan the same way Russia claims Ukraine, I dont care what the aggressor imperialist country thinks, I care what the people within the territory think. And what they wanted was to host a US official in their territory, and then China decided to threaten them. I get the impression folks in your circle have nothing but disdain for the people in Taiwan and dont care what they want.

                That UN vote is not about Taiwan being a part of PRC, it’s about who represents ‘China’ in the UN.

                • Krause [he/him]
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                  9 months ago

                  That UN vote is not about Taiwan being a part of PRC, it’s about who represents ‘China’ in the UN.

                  Exactly, and the Taiwan Province is a part of CHINA, which is represented by the government in Beijing (PRC), before UNGAR 2758 it was represented by the government in Taipei (ROC).

                  “Taiwan” is not a country, regardless of one’s position on this they are either a province of the People’s Republic of China or of the Republic of China.

            • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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              09 months ago

              If this is bad behavior than what do you call the countless military exercises the US does all over the world as a show of force against other sovereign nations?

              The reality is that doing a military exercise in your own backyard is required for national security. Look at a map some day. Tell me what’s wrong with China doing exercises off their own coast.

                • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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                  09 months ago

                  Which is a) literally off the coast of China and b) internationally recognized as China’s sovereign territory

    • CascadeOfLight [he/him]
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      399 months ago

      Also “appeasement” is a made up post-hoc explanation for the western Allies’ actions before WW2, blaming the supposed naivete or lack of spine of the leaders for simply allowing the Nazis to make expansionist moves uncontested, rather than it being an intentional policy to get out of their way and try to direct them eastwards against the Soviet Union.

    • TheLastHero [none/use name]
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      9 months ago

      The 21st century indo-pacific is not a comparable issue to 20th century Central Europe. Also appeasement wasn’t even the complete disaster casual observers like to make it out to be (who still won the war after all?) but that’s beside the point here. Taiwan is not some defenseless independent country being threatened by the reincarnation of Hitler calling for world domination. It’s a part of China that broke away in an ideological civil war that China wants back. Even the US state department acknowledges this fact, yet they still believe it is very important that they protect one part of China from another part of China and extend their civil war which should have ended for good decades ago. This is not an act of peace or charity, this is creating a conflict situation, with Taiwan right in the center of any potential explosion.

      See, the US doesn’t care about these concerns is because the real reason America is in Taiwan is so they can use it as a strategic base for operations to oppose and weaken the PRC, a “West Berlin of Asia” so to say. And somehow, liberals and social democratic opportunists have deluded themselves into believing that stationing the most powerful naval fleet in history (US 7th Fleet) to permanently do ‘freedom of navigation exercises’ (armed provocations) in Chinese coastal waters is the “moderate” solution to this conflict. And I suppose we’ll just have to keep the navy there forever right? Or until the PRC finally collapses? (I’m still waiting lol)

      I say we should cut a deal with the PRC, let them have Loser Island in exchange for mediating other border disputes with their neighbors. A majority of Taiwanese citizens want more integration with China, and they’re still their largest trading partner. While immediate annexation wouldn’t be popular, a gradual process of integration would be best for the entire region. It would allow the two biggest military powers to step down their aggressive actions against each other, end the period of Taiwanese citizens being used as a geopolitical pawn, and provide a solid diplomatic framework to settle future disputes in the region (as this would be a massive rapprochement in Sino-American relations) This wouldn’t even weaken American national security (which is what everyone hates about ‘appeasement’) since it’s, you know, an occupied imperialist outpost on the other side of the world’s largest ocean, not even in America’s hemisphere.

      Of course this option would be totally unacceptable for the American imperialist apparatus, they would never be willing to lose such an important base in the Pacific (just ignore that they would still have Japan, Guam, Philippines, etc). So what’s going to happen instead is that the US is eventually going to get distracted and entangled in some other imperialist mess, because they can’t recognize their empire is hopelessly overextended, and China will just take Taiwan when they think the balance of power is in their favor. This would be the worse thing to happen: a chaotic breakdown of the region instead of a negotiated reordering. There will be decades of bitterness and calls for mass violence. Maybe it will also escalate and some ships get sunk and the nukes fly and oh well its World War 3. Beware those who call diplomacy ‘appeasement’ in the post-atomic age, they seek your death.

      • blazera
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        199 months ago

        I say we should cut a deal with the PRC, let them have Loser Island

        shock, gasp, Hexbear user thinks Taiwan should surrender to China.

      • Blake [he/him]
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        149 months ago

        How can you consider yourself anti-imperialist when you’re talking about unilaterally giving entire countries to other countries?

        • Doubledee [comrade/them]
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          9 months ago

          Is the Donbas a separate country because it declared independence from Ukraine?

          EDIT: Which is actually more than Taiwan has done, the government in exile on Taiwan considers itself the rightful government of the entirety of mainland China and parts of Mongolia.

          • Blake [he/him]
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            99 months ago

            Way to just completely ignore my point and move the goal posts?

            Are the 13 colonies a separate country because they declared independence from the United Kingdom?

            Don’t bother replying. I don’t want waste my time talking to people who can’t answer a simple question

            • Doubledee [comrade/them]
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              I’m not moving the goalposts, I’m just pointing out that it’s a bit disingenuous to frame a question about what should happen in an unresolved civil war as a question of nations and their sovereignty. It would be disingenuous to frame Russia’s intervention in Ukraine as defending the independence of an entire country, I think it’s a similar situation between ROC/PRC, the primary difference being the length of the dispute.

              Which is relevant if we’re talking about how one can consistently be anti-imperialist, I think. I agree it’s a bit flippant to say stuff about ‘giving up Loser Island’ but I think it’s important to recognize that it’s more complicated than ‘two independent countries fighting over the territory of one of them.’

          • TheDankHold
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            59 months ago

            Donbas isn’t comparable. The government in Taiwan has had a continuous existence since before the CCP.

            If the rebellious territories of the Donbas was actually a preexisting government that had all the rest of its territory taken in a civil war you might be onto something. In reality Ukraine gained sovereignty from imperial USSR and now imperial Russia wants to take it over again.

        • 420blazeit69 [he/him]
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          219 months ago

          Taiwan isn’t a country. They don’t consider themselves independent, China doesn’t consider them independent, the U.S. doesn’t consider them independent.

          How can you consider yourself anti-imperialiat when you don’t know the basic facts of the situation?

        • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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          199 months ago

          Did you even bother to read the comments you’re replying to? Taiwan isn’t a country and it never has been. It has been a part of the nation of China for centuries. When the civil war broke out, it was between two political groups inside the nation of China, a nation that includes the island of Taiwan. The communists won the war and the KMT lost and fled to Taiwan, an island in the nation of China. Because the KMT fled, the civil war continues, but the imperialist countries (UK, USA) intervened to protect the losing army that was holes up on an insland in the nation of China.

          That army, the KMT, never declared independence, never said they were a separate sovereign entity, and never created a new country. They said they were the rightful rulers of the nation of China, which includes the island of Taiwan.

          The imperilaists wanted the civil war to continue because they wanted control over the nation of China, which includes the island of Taiwan. So they made the KMT their proxy and funded and armed them, even while the KMT engaged in brutal mass murder campaigns and brutal political repression for 4 decades. It’s called the White Terror. Look it up. People living on Taiwan, an island in th nation of China, were Chinese nationals. When the KMT lost, many of those people wanted to end the war and recognize the communists as the new leaders of the nation of China, of which they were a part. The KMT murdered thousands of them. The imperialists agreed that this was right and good.

          The UN had a seat for the nation of China. The recognized the KMT and gave them the seat at the UN. Not two seats, one for one nation and one for another, one seat for one nation, the nation of China which includes the island of Taiwan. Eventually it became untenable to recognize the KMT as the leaders of the nation of China and the world shifted to recognizing the communists of the nation of China, a nation that has an unbroken history of having an island called Taiwan which no one has challenged.

          And since then, the imperilaists who cannot allow other nations to govern themselves in their own interests, has been maintaining and exacerbating the civil war to keep their proxy war against communists going.

          It is anti-imperialist to support China against the interests of the West.

        • SexMachineStalin [comrade/them]
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          9 months ago

          Have you considered the possibility that people living in Fuzhou, Putian, Quanzhou, Xiamen and Zhangzhou (among many millions of others along the coast) don’t want to have American nukes pointed at them a mere 200-300 kilometers away?

          Also neither China, the US, the :international-community-1::international-community-2: or the rest of the world do not recognize Taiwan as independent. Only the :nato-cool: despite this, want to wrest Taiwan away to build a puppet state.

          Oh yeah and the official acronymn is “CPC”.

      • kitonthenet
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        129 months ago

        different from a hundred years ago and compared to a world without any nuclear weapons

        I don’t see why, China is constrained by the same consequences of nuclear war, and has the same responsibility to avoid it, e.g. by relaxing claims that it owns and controls the entire South China Sea. Especially because I don’t think you’d say the same would be justified if the US claimed the entire Gulf of Mexico, or bearing sea, for example

      • 420blazeit69 [he/him]
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        109 months ago

        Your second paragraph is a great point. Even taking whatever the U.S. State Department says about China at face value, comparing a nuclear standoff to 1930s Europe is ridiculous.

      • Blake [he/him]
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        99 months ago

        The United States is clearly evil and doesn’t have good intentions. I’m not an idiot. But we also need to be critical of the wrongdoings of the Chinese state.

          • Blake [he/him]
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            119 months ago

            There is a spectrum of options between “do nothing” and “go to war”. I would not support a US military intervention in a war between Taiwan and the CCP.

            Clearly, the CCP is nowhere near on the scale of Nazi Germany, though when we talk of appeasement, it wasn’t quite at the levels of conquering all of Eastern Europe at the time, but I’m not going to split hairs over that - your point that I shouldn’t compare them is completely valid and fair.

            I think continuing to keep things at a stalemate where neither country gets invaded is the best state of affairs for the time being, until something changes geopolitically. For that reason, I am not going to decry the supply of weapons to Taiwan, because that provides disincentive for an invasion of Taiwan, and makes military conflict less likely.

              • Blake [he/him]
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                49 months ago

                I agree with your comment completely, stability and peace in the region is definitely not what the United States wants, long term. But that doesn’t mean that every single thing they do is wrong, and it doesn’t mean that every thing the US’s opponents do is right. We should take the actions and outcomes of these actors at face value, continue to advocate for peace and reconciliation and encourage more nuanced, balanced takes rather than hugely polarising positions. Thank you for engaging and considering what I wrote, we can build a better world if we keep building consensus, treating those with whom we disagree respectfully (assuming that they’re not being intolerant assholes!) and talking things through! <3

            • Doubledee [comrade/them]
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              59 months ago

              I appreciate your openness here. I think the PRC would also prefer peaceful engagement with the longer term goal of peaceful reincorporation, the trade ties they’ve cultivated in spite of US hostility I think lend credence to their sincerity there. In the big picture I just don’t think the region can sustain two governments that each claim sovereignty over the same areas, and given their historical cultural and economic ties I think reunification would be the outcome of a process of dialogue between them.

              • Blake [he/him]
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                39 months ago

                I agree, it seems that the political instability can’t last for too much longer, and I’m hoping for a peaceful resolution in whatever way that is. I have to admit that I would prefer a peaceful bipartisan result where each state relinquishes their claims on the other, but I have to admit that seems very unlikely and that your conclusion that they would most likely reunify is the most likely result.

          • blazera
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            89 months ago

            if China were to launch an invasion of Taiwan, would it justify an intervention by the United States?

            yes

            would the results of that intervention ultimately be good for anyone but the American military industrial complex

            Taiwan

            • @MrBusinessMan
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              19 months ago

              US military intervention has historically been really good for the countries involved

    • Sasuke [comrade/them]
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      9 months ago

      The politics of appeasement has historically been very successful.

      the one singular lesson liberals were able to tease out from all their history classes on ww2

      • Blake [he/him]
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        139 months ago

        “I can’t refute your argument so I’ll just call you uneducated, instead.”

        I’m not a liberal, by the way.

          • Blake [he/him]
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            99 months ago

            Again, not a liberal. Opposing imperialism from China doesn’t make one a liberal. This is like an example of what a school kid would write as an example of affirming the consequent. Pretty funny stuff!

              • Blake [he/him]
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                79 months ago

                Yeah, I wanted to be on a relatively small, relatively politically neutral instance with a lot of normal people, where I could express myself freely, argue for balance and nuance in an increasingly polarised world, and build working class solidarity where it actually needs to be built, rather than confining myself to an echo chamber.

    • GaveUp [she/her]
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      239 months ago

      feddit.uk

      lmao is this literally a lemmy instance for British feds? this has to be some reverse psychology from the Ml5

      • Blake [he/him]
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        99 months ago

        Britain doesn’t have “feds”, fed is a really American thing. It’s short for “federated reddit” basically.

        • Arthur Besse
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          9 months ago

          Britain doesn’t have “feds”, fed is a really American thing.

          wiktionary says otherwise and even has a newspaper citation for British use of it to refer to local cops.

          (I guess thanks to Hollywood’s influence…)

    • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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      179 months ago

      These are the territorial claims of the government on Taiwan, from a state the US and much of the Western world support or at least de facto like to defend in Asia. They never made any remarks regarding Taiwan’s claims with 18 other countries. If the US supports peace in the Asia Pacific (besides looking at a map and asking why the US has even a say about Asia in the first place), then surely Mainland China must be supported, as by protecting & legitimizing Taiwan’s constitution, you’re approving this shit in Asia.

      But let me guess, neoliberal countries get a pass from the crackerverse?

      • Blake [he/him]
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        249 months ago

        Holy shit, you’re telling me that both sides in a civil war think they should have full control of the country they’re in a civil war over? Hang on I need to sit fucking down my head is spinning

        • queermunist she/her
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          9 months ago

          Civil war is when two sides of a nonviolent conflict peacefully negotiate reintegration.

          Better send weapons to Taiwan!

          • Blake [he/him]
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            129 months ago

            Here’s a question for you: would you support a Chinese military invasion of Taiwan?

            • queermunist she/her
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              129 months ago

              No, but if it weren’t for Western provocations that would never have been on the table. What do you think giving weapons to Taiwan does? China will not tolerate an arms buildup in Taiwain, it will attack as a result. That’s not good and I don’t support it, but that’s the material reality that you refuse to accept.

              • Blake [he/him]
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                129 months ago

                If the Taiwanese state would never capitulate and reintegrate peacefully with the CCP state, which is their claim, then wouldn’t that make an invasion of Taiwan inevitable, regardless of weapons?

        • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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          19 months ago

          No, I think you need to read my comment and your’s again. You say appeasement politics will lead to no good, so… you protect the ROC’s claims instead, which is even appeasing more that just leaving China. I caught your illogical argument, and distilled it to the meaningless content that it was. Now you pretend stupid to run away from that illogical claim. But you can’t win against me, who studied at Oxford, Nato boy

          • Blake [he/him]
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            169 months ago

            you can’t win against me, who studied at Oxford, Nato boy

            This is the most unbelievably embarrassing thing I have ever read on Lemmy. Honestly, if you regret writing this, please let me know. I will amend my comment to erase the fact you ever wrote it.

            you protect the ROC’s claims

            Please cite evidence of my support of Taiwan’s territorial claims. If you believe that opposing CCP imperialism means that one must also support Taiwanese territorial claims then you have made an incorrect assumption - and a converse error on your part does not constitute a failure on mine.

            I’m very sorry that I refuse to defend the strawman you so thoughtfully prepared for me. By all means, whack away at him. I would suggest that you take your own advice, by the way, and read my actual comment and respond to the text of what I wrote, not some imagined subtext your Oxford-educated brain conjured to allay your cognitive dissonance. Oh, and one last thing - whatever your parents paid for that education, unfortunately it would appear to have turned out a poor investment.

            • VHS [he/him]
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              129 months ago

              what do you think imperialism is? the island of taiwan has historically been part of china, the KMT just held onto it after losing the civil war. it’s like if the CSA somehow kept florida

              • blazera
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                79 months ago

                why does “historically been part of” matter, do you want all former colonial terrirories returned to their original empires?

              • Blake [he/him]
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                39 months ago

                And United States has historically been part of the United Kingdom. Does that mean if the UK redrew maps to show that the US was their territory it wouldn’t be imperialism? Imperialism is the expansion of the territory or influence of a state especially through the use of violence. The CCP wishes to extend its influence into Taiwan and they are willing to use military force to do so. That’s why they’re so mad about Taiwan being provided with the means to defend themselves. It would make a military invasion more difficult and costly.

            • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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              -19 months ago

              Then get prepped, cause I did my postgraduate at MIT as well. There are no smarter guys than those graduating there. I knew you would now claim “where did I said we need support Taiwanese territorial claims mimimi”. Did you read the article and what it is about? What is the US and what is China’s point of conflict? Tell me, how can you say “we can’t appease China blabla…” to do what? Taiwan is the exact part of their sovereign terrorial claims. Opposing them on the fact that Taiwan becomes/remains independant is exactly enabling the territorial claims of the state on that island, ROC.

              And now you backpedal, “I’m commenting on the article but in fact I do not support US point of view and argue without the context of any article we comment on!!!1! Its my isolated opinion from those events and blabla” or “Actually I meant we should oppose China but also make demands on Taiwan’s contitution and put conditions on their clams blabla…”. I know that if you would understand any of this conflict or history you wouldn’t actually call under the article of US warmongering, encirclement and violation of the One-China policy regarding China’s claim of Taiwan, an act of “CCP imperialism”. But know you backtrack and try to slip away like a oily snake. There is no escape from my superior arguing skills, and you’re critic of appeasing hypocritical is false even on the level of formal logics.

              whatever your parents paid for that education, unfortunately it would appear to have turned out a poor investment.

              This is the real strawman in this thread.

              • Blake [he/him]
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                139 months ago

                You sound like Donald Trump lmao. “Oh I went to Harvard got really good grades”.

                I haven’t backpedaled on shit. I wrote a top level reply in an off-site comments section. I am not required to take an all-or-nothing position, either wholeheartedly agreeing or disagreeing with every claim in the article. The world has nuance.

                • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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                  “Oh I went to Harvard got really good grades”

                  Then next, guess where I did my PhD.

                  I haven’t backpedaled on shit. I wrote a top level reply in an off-site comments section. I am not required to take an all-or-nothing position, either wholeheartedly agreeing or disagreeing with every claim in the article. The world has nuance.

                  A lot of words for saying you have no consistent logic. If you understand the claims of Taiwan and that the US is supporting this state, you can’t impossible speak of “CCP imperialism”, in the context of ROC’s claims, and call their right for their territory as appeasement. But I know that people outside of Harvard have liquid arguments.

                  Btw lmao I neither studied at US nor UK, that only a joke. Yes I think he said something along that with Harvard lol

              • blazera
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                39 months ago

                oh my god he’s got the 1’s mixed in with exclamation marks, god thats old school childish

          • Nefyedardu
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            129 months ago

            Holy fucking cringe, if I was the CCP propaganda office I would want my money back.

      • blazera
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        59 months ago

        What actions have they taken in pursuit of these supposed claims?

        • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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          -79 months ago

          Well, if they are so democratic, and support other nations sovereignty as they would like their own, why don’t they remove them from their constitution? I have a feeling you have no idea of the ideology of the state on that island.

          • blazera
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            69 months ago

            So no actions needing attention like we’re giving to China for threatening the sovereignty of other independent nations.

            • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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              -79 months ago

              Wdym? I said it does not make sense to say appeasement politics is bad but then by supporting the government on Taiwan, and appeasing their claims. If anything we need to define sovereignity first and then support a side on conditions. Which are obvioulsy not made regarding Taiwan’s claims because of Westerners lust for hegemony.

              • blazera
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                69 months ago

                the only claim being appeased is to what they already control, Taiwan. That’s their country. I asked for specific actions being taken by Taiwan to take territory from sovereign nations. What other claims are we appeasing? Has there been military action against Mongolia, or Japan, that we are hypocritically ignoring? What threat to other nation’s sovereignty are we ignoring from Taiwan?

                • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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                  -49 months ago

                  the only claim being appeased is to what they already control, Taiwan

                  That’s not true, or at least what I would argue. You can point me to any article where some Western politician is saying “as long as Taiwan want it’s island we support that, but not more than that”. In fact, I don’t know of any conditions the US or anybody who defends Taiwanese independence, is making regarding their claims. There is no “Taiwan only” constitution that the US supports. This is the needle in the ass of the PRC. I think it would be a different situation, if Taiwan (and the US) would say "we want Taiwan to be its own country, and we recognize the PRC as the successor of China.

                  But they don’t do that. They actually support the ROC and everything on their constitution. Including the 11-dash line in the South China Sea, that is larger than what China is drawing with their 9-dash line That they are for the “will of the Taiwanese to just be independant on their island” is for the public of the G7 countries. Nobody is willing to give up the territories of ROC afaik. Yes the ROC can’t do anything about it in terms of military power, but they equally don’t make any steps to remove them. (But I think if the US tells it’s guys at the DPP to create such a constitution that claims only the island of Taiwan, they will only do it to provocate an attack by China. But that’s beyond my point and the map above.)

    • @zephyreks@programming.dev
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      99 months ago

      The only territorial claims China has tried to enforce recently are to literally uninhabited lands (Aksai Chin and the SCS islands) and Taiwan (which they are still at war with).

      How much do you really care about a piece of rock with no people and no animals living on it?

      • Nefyedardu
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        109 months ago

        So the CCP is full of idiots that are willing to weaken their international relations for a bunch of useless pieces of rock? Is that what you are saying?

      • blazera
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        99 months ago

        Damn Taiwan is a piece of rock with no people on it?

      • @PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca
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        49 months ago

        Can you explain to the crowd how you felt comfortable enough to pretend that the country of Taiwan is a barren rock without any people living on it?

        Inquiring minds want to know.

  • Deceptichum
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    9 months ago

    China creates conflict with all its neighbours and tries to steal their territorial waters.

    China threatens the existence of an independent Taiwan.

    China commits literal genocide against Uyghurs

    And it’s the US starting shit this time? Give me a fucking break imperialist sympathisers.

    • So first, the US having military bases surrounding China is tied into why they disagree with their neighbors. They allowed the US on the boarder so it makes sense they aren’t stoked about it. The US has at least 750 military bases around the world in 80 countries. The next closest country has 145 bases and thats the UK. If we want to reference imperialism, then starting with the US is the most practical based on this alone.

      In addition, only 12 countries consider Taiwan as an independent country. Regardless if this is correct, the actions the US has recently taken with Taiwan is without question increasing tension in an already tense situation.

      Furthermore, following the numbers on the Uyghur women being forced to have contraception implants would mean each woman has 8 impants. This makes absolute zero sense. The fact the US media’s primary source on the Uyghur situation is an outright lunatic does help make it all add up though.

      All in all, it takes two to tango for sure. Yet the US seeing it’s global power drastically decline makes their moves less obfuscated and vividly more desperate.

      • @sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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        309 months ago

        It’s not imperialism when the bases are invited and accepted. These bases open up because the host nations are worried about China and the US is the only country that has the scale to oppose a murderous regime from dominating the region.

        It’s not that the US hasn’t also done bad things - it’s that they’re seen as a safer bet, despite those bad things, for those countries maintaining their independence.

        • @cecinestpasunbot@lemmy.ml
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          -19 months ago

          Please give me an example of where the US was invited in by the people of a country. That certainly didn’t happen in Japan, Korea, or the Philippines unless you’re a fan of right wing dictators.

        • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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          -29 months ago

          Tell me you’re a lib who doesn’t know what imperialism is without saying it directly holy fucking shit

          Why are there so many brain dead takes in this thread? Who the fuck can possibly believe that imperialism can’t be imperialism if it’s “invited”?

          • @maus@sh.itjust.works
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            29 months ago

            Tell me you’re a tankie who doesn’t know what communism is without saying it directly holy fucking shit

            Why are there so many brain dead takes in this thread? Who the fuck can possibly believe that communism can’t be communism if it’s “invited”?

        • If you’re concerned about human rights, why gloss over the US being notorious for human rights abuse? They have the largest prison population ever, comprised primarily of minorities who were obscenely experimented on during MK Ultra. Plus the prior and current treatment of Native Americans or the 6,000,000+ innocent citizens killed in the war on terror. The US is no longer even classified as a first world country. But it doesn’t matter cause the news said the US is definitely the best choice for the world police.

          Are you for bombing Mexico to stop the opioid crisis too? While the idea is gaining traction stateside, it takes minutes to understand of the 14,000+ pounds of fentanyl seized at the Mexican boarder in 2022, over 90% was from US citizens. But logic is totally overrated when it comes to international law I guess.

    • @regul
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      -149 months ago

      Explain why any of that is the US’s problem or necessitates a response from the US at all.

      • RustledTeapot
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        219 months ago

        Morally, we made a commitment to preserve democracy and we keep our word.

        Geopolitically, microchips.

        • we made a commitment to preserve democracy

          Huh, when did you make such a commitment? Sometime in between of toppling democratic governments, installing dictators around the world and invading sovereign nations?

        • @regul
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          -29 months ago

          Well the moral argument is obviously false on its face.

          But the microchips argument is also bizarre. Taiwan isn’t the only country that makes microchips. In fact the US has been spending large amounts of money to stand up domestic chip manufacturing. And China is also the leading global supplier of plenty of other commodities. Why is it that only matters for microchips?

          • andyburke
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            149 months ago

            “The West” is essentially the group of nations attempting to abide by a moral code. It is not always, or maybe even often, successful, but there is a vast gulf between their morality-based approach and what China, Russia, DPRK, and other fascist/semi-fascist nations are doing.

            • @cnnrduncan@beehaw.org
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              Nah the west pulls plenty of shady, awful crap but that’s just a reason for the west (and everybody else) to try to be better - it shouldn’t be used as an excuse for other countries doing evil shit.

            • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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              -39 months ago

              It’s amazing anyone can believe they are well informed and unironically say this bullshit

      • Silverseren
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        159 months ago

        The well-being of the world should be everyone’s problem. It’s just that with the largest economy and comparative power in the world, the US has a greater responsibility than most. Queue the Spiderman quote.

        • @regul
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          39 months ago

          This role of “world police” has not paid off for the US for the last 50+ years we’ve been doing it.

          • @cnnrduncan@beehaw.org
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            79 months ago

            Idk their economy definitely has benefitted from stuff like international shipping (which their “world police” have been essential in protecting) it’s just that they allow their oligarchs to seize most of the profits. Their government definitely didn’t take up the role out of the good of their hearts!

            • @regul
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              29 months ago

              I don’t think international shipping was under much threat from Iraq or Afghanistan.

    • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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      -259 months ago

      Hogwarts School of Witchcraft is a boarding school for wizards.

      Same energy in this statement.

        • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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          -179 months ago

          I mean, you posted provably false bs. How can I not troll? Even the state on Taiwan claims Taiwan is only a region of a country, and not a nation lmao

          • Deceptichum
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            179 months ago

            25% of Taiwanese want independence.

            6.8% of Taiwanese want to join China.

            The others want things to stay the same, I.e functionally independent.

            But hey let’s ignore the will of the people and impose imperialist rhetoric on why they don’t deserve self-determination.

            • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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              -69 months ago

              What are you even talking about? The original commenter began trolling by on purpose stating some basic fact even these people whose will you support would say is not true. There is no constitution or state that calls itself Taiwan.

              • Deceptichum
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                79 months ago

                I’m talking about Taiwanese calling themselves an independent country. They are because the people living there consider themselves as such.

                The government cannot come out and say it because they will be invaded if they break the status quo.

                Hence we have to look at the will of the people to determine such things and that proves you wrong.

                • @TomHardy@lemmy.ml
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                  -69 months ago

                  Yes I know what you mean, but see, there is ROC whose contitution currenlty says Taiwan is only a region, and the PRC, who says the same. This is what I adressed before. And besides, by the poll you mention, that even undermines it, as when the rest supports things stay the same, means the majority supports Taiwan is a part of ROC.

              • Deceptichum
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                9 months ago

                The 6.8% not wanting to be independent is the telling part.

                Everyone else either wants to openly call themselves independent on carry on as they are in already being functionally independent.

                tl;dr: No one wants to be part of China or not independent.

                • queermunist she/her
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                  -59 months ago

                  The vast majority of people want things to stay the same. Both independence and reintegration are very small minorities.

                  What that tells me is China has a lot of work to do to entice Taiwan. That’s it.

    • PZK [he/him]
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      229 months ago

      If the source isn’t negative about China, or doesn’t cast them as the villain in every scenario, it must be propaganda.

      But naturally, the opposite is never propaganda.

  • kitonthenet
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    9 months ago

    containment, encirclement, etc

    Exactly what Russia said pre February 2022

    How weak do you have to be that sailing boats 100 mi from your shores is an act of war, and by the way, if it is an act of war there’s a concerning lack of response to it

    • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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      -19 months ago

      No see it’s NOT a threat when the US surrounds China with literally dozens of military installations placed as close to their border as possible and actively practices military drills on their borders with their puppet states because the US is “good” and China is “bad” and our understanding of geopolitics shouldn’t go any further than that because China scary bad

      • kitonthenet
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        29 months ago

        Vietnam us puppet state confirmed

        If China wants to set up navy bases in mexico or whatever they’re more than welcome, but they should recognize that their own harassment of shipping hundreds of miles from its shores is why those bases are there in the first place

        • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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          You know full well that if China were to attempt to establish a military base in Tijuana then the US would invade Mexico within the month. Don’t be dense. The last time a geopolitical rival set up a base near the US we invaded, nearly started a nuclear war, and blockade them for 80 years.

          The US is the walking embodiment of “rules for thee, but not for me” in international politics

          • kitonthenet
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            9 months ago

            Don’t be dense

            I would suggest you start by admitting you know that the entirety of the South China Sea is not Chinese territory, as the Gulf of Mexico and bearing sea is not the US’

            a geopolitical rival set up a base near the US

            That’s a funny way of saying “covertly placed nuclear missiles in range to attempt a decapitating first strike” which is especially weird because you said we’re done being dense, I guess you’d be the expert in “rules for thee but not for me”

            • @nonsense_boyo@lemmygrad.ml
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              9 months ago

              “covertly placed nuclear missiles in range to attempt a decapitating first strike”

              Ah the nice retcon of history. Cuba missiles were only placed as only covert first strike weapons, while being invaded, having wide spread US state sponsored terrorism, and direct evidence that the US would further esclate soon. Not for a retaliatory strike against expected extreme American aggression- but for covert first strike.

              I think youre better off referring to actual “covertly placed nuclear missiles in range to attempt a decapitating first strike” in deployed in Turkey.

            • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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              09 months ago

              We have nukes in Turkey, The Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, and Italy. All of which are within easy first strike distance of Russia. Especially Turkey. And that’s just the ones we know of. I have no doubt there are others we haven’t told the public about.

              Yet when Russia tried to get nukes in Cuba for the same reason, you’re claiming it was definitely for a first strike. The Russians said that the nukes in Cuba were not for a first strike, just like NATO does with the nukes in Turkey. Why do you believe NATO and not Russia? Only one side of the cold war had EVER used a nuclear first strike, and it wasn’t the Russians…

  • circuitfarmer
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    69 months ago

    Wars are great for the economy. Color me completely unsurprised if politicians are starting to see it as strategy.

    • M68040 [they/them]
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      9 months ago

      Hell of it is, with how set in their ways a lot of the US’ high level politicians are there might be some plain force of habit in there. Most of 'em seem to still think it’s 1975.