Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
January 26, 2017 at 12:27 PM in reply to: OT: PSA (from AN)… You will no longer need to go to South Coast Plaza for one of the best Taiwanese Eateries #805147January 22, 2017 at 8:26 PM in reply to: OT: So what exactly does the term “alternative facts” mean? #805041ocrenterParticipant
LOL!!!
Alternative fact = Faux News
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]I don’t know, OCR, China has done pretty well compared to the Phillipines. The Phillipines was the richest country after WWII, and it’s fallen steadily behind the other countries the region.
If there a war for Taiwan independence, what do you think happens to the substantial wealth in China owned by Taiwanese businessmen?[/quote]
True, but the Philippines also did not have 78 million death from the Great Leap Forward and the cultural revolution. The Philippines was the richest due to US involvement, but was the “richness” real? This is like saying Puerto Rico is the richest in the Caribbean, but that’s due to US tax breaks and social services and handouts, why do you think PR can have independence and chose not to.
Most likely a lot of the Taiwanese businesses will be forced to swear allegiance to China, but they already do now. In addition, funds can’t be repatriated to Taiwan to cook up the housing prices. (You know that’s why Taipei real estate is the most inflated in the world compared to wage right? Repatriated money from China just go into buying real estate, that’s why). China will likely invade Kinmen and Matsu and claim victory as well. China doesn’t have capability to launch amphibious invasion of the Taiwanese mainland.
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]Well, the baltic countries are sovereign nations with seats at the UN.
Taiwan does not even have consensus within the island on independence. . In fact, the KMT still asserts claims to all of China.
I don’t think Taiwan is our job.
We should work with the countries in the Pacific to establish a trade and political sphere where we lead. The problem now is that trade with China is so big that Pacific rim countries have no choice but to acquiesce to China. Not so good for us. What is Trump gonna do about it?[/quote]
Spoken like a true leftist proletarian. This is the domestic benefit Trump was looking for, to paint the left leaning media as appeasers and biased. Boy did he succeed on this account.
As for the KMT, you are aware of how badly the KMT has been doing in Taiwan, right? Of the 113 seats in the legislature, it was left with 35 seats, essentially a 30% representation. Of the cities and counties within Taiwan, it retains one metropolis out of six, and otherwise only control two off shore islands, the central mountainous county of Nantou and the poorest agrarian county of Mauli. Only 3.5% of all Taiwanese think of themselves as pure Chinese, only 9% wishes to consider future unification. So the island pretty much has consensus.
You are right, it isn’t really our job. Just like it really isn’t our job to station troops in S.Korea and Japan and we are pretty much the de facto navy for the Philippines. But we are. Luckily for you, if Taiwan goes, there goes all of that extra responsibility that weren’t really our job in the first place.
Maybe then those Filipinos and Japanese will truly taste the proletarian paradise that the 14 billion Chinese has had the pleasure of enjoying for the last 67 years.
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]OCR, we already recognized that Taiwan is part of China.
What’s good for China is for them to decide. Is it our job to interference in their affairs?
We are better working with the other countries in the Pacific and develop our own sphere of influence, so they lean to our side.[/quote]
silly Brian, the US “acknowledges” Chinese claim on Taiwan, but we do not recognize Taiwan is part of China.
I thought you are skilled in the intricacies of diplomacy?
If it is up to China to decide, they would decide to march in a few decades ago.
I think what I’m hearing overall is let China recreate their old tributary system in the Western Pacific and we just withdraw into our own little circle in North America. If you have it your way why did we even extend the NATO umbrella to the Baltic countries?
ocrenterParticipant[quote=flu]So originally I thinking that the U.S. was going to be messed up with Trump at the helm, while the rest of the world more organized is going to jump ahead of the U.S.
I’m beginning to think of the opposite. Maybe it’s Trump’s genius to do this. Or maybe it’s just his plain ignorance that ends up producing the same results….But the scenario I’m thinking is that by a few subtle things Trump does, he ends up causing so much conflict abroad, that the rest of the world ends up being just as screwed up, if not more screwed up, than we will be.
Take this taiwan/china issue. In one little phone call, if Trump manages to destabilize Asia, that’s pretty impressive. I mean, combined with the idea of U.S. pulling out of Asia politics, I wonder if this would start an arms race back there. The greatest threat to progress is if you have with ethnicity get into conflict with themselves. And this China/Taiwan spat might just do the trick back there. Although my roots is Taiwanese and I am pro-taiwan independence…I’d like to get the point that we don’t split hairs and say things like “I’m not chinese, I’m taiwanese” and vice versus. It doesn’t help the greater cause for asians in the 21st century, imho. And I personally wouldn’t want to see either Taiwan or China fail, since I have no desire to seeing us asians set back in progress.
edit:
looks like it was intentional…
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/nation-world/ct-donald-trump-taiwan-call-20161204-story.html%5B/quote%5DI felt it to be intentional as well. Quite frankly, if all it takes is a phone call to upset the apple cart, the Emperor really has no cloth! And I think that’s Trump is getting at: that China huffs and puffs a lot but liberal appeasement is silly and I’m going to show you why.
As for China, it has a lot going for it. But the danger of unbridled nationalism lurks and quite frankly frequently flamed on by the CCP. Taiwan is China’s Sudetenland. The moment China gets Taiwan, its nationalism would be raging, with the Philippines just 200 miles away and the nearest Japanese islet just 70 miles away, the temptation to “erase past humiliation” would be far too great to resist.
Taiwanese independence is ultimately good for China, there’s a competing model of governance within the same cultural sphere, it keeps the CCP on their toes.
ocrenterParticipant[quote=harvey][quote=ocrenter]This is an anonymous letter from one liberal [/quote]
It seems can’t go more than few sentences without saying the word “liberal”
Obsessed much?[/quote]
This whole liberal disdain of progressive Taiwan is an odd observation that others have picked up as well, in fact, concerned enough to actually generate a letter to their fellow liberals. Thought I would share it here especially with our resident liberal representative, who also has very low opinion of a place that beat the US to a woman president, universal health coverage, and will enact a law for gay marriage (a bit different in court overturning gay marriage ban).
ocrenterParticipantThis is an anonymous letter from one liberal social activist to another, on the recent uproar over US President-Elect Trump’s call with Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen.
Dear Social Activist Friend,
I hope you are staying strong in the wake of this election! The aftermath has been struggle, and it’s important that we all support each other in trying times. I’ve definitely appreciated your encouraging messages these last few weeks about Black Lives Matter, defending American democracy, and the Dakota Access Pipeline protests.
Since you and I are very much in sync on the issues we care about, I wanted to reach out to you about the country of Taiwan, which the media has covered these past few days. I’ve already seen activists attack Trump for having a phone call with the president of Taiwan, citing fears that it will anger China. But while it seems natural to use this incident to bash the president-elect, the call isn’t what the media has made it out to be. I was hoping to share a different perspective, so we can look at the actual substance of America’s relationship with Taiwan.
Despite having only 23 million people, Taiwan is one of America’s largest trading partners—it ranked 9th last year. And we are their 2nd largest trading partner, so it’s evident that our two nations have a close commercial relationship. (For example, regardless of its brand, your laptop computer was probably made by a Taiwanese company.)
Taiwan is a successful democracy. It elected its first female president in January of this year, which was a massively historic event. Her name is Tsai Ing-wen, and her championing of social justice and economic issues won her broad support, including young people, the working class and the middle class. Taiwan’s legislature is poised to legalize gay marriage, as The New York Times has reported, which would make it the first country in Asia to do so. Oh, and did I mention, that it has universal healthcare?
Ever since the U.S. Congress passed the Taiwan Relations Act, in an overwhelmingly bipartisan way, to legally authorize many types of ties between our nations, America has continued to contribute to Taiwan’s defense.
The media has missed both the contemporary and historic context. While the Carter Administration broke “official” ties with Taiwan in 1979 to try to cozy up to China, the United States has kept up strong commercial, cultural and other relations up through present day. Trade and military exchanges happen on a periodic basis, and we have what amounts to an embassy in Taipei, the country’s capital. (We’re technically just not allowed to call it an “embassy,” although it is staffed by State Department foreign officers.)
While the United States may “acknowledge” that China has made a claim that it should be allowed to take over its democratic neighbor Taiwan, our government certainly does not “recognize” the validity of this claim. The difference between those words matters in international affairs.
Even though Trump is a problematic president-elect who has said things that harm democracy in the United States, in this instance, he’s actually done a very simple and decent thing: he had a friendly phone call with the leader of one of our closest trading partners and allies. Perhaps this action appears to flout certain diplomatic practices, but in my mind, it’s actually a good thing to try to talk more with our friends. Talking doesn’t imply that any major policy changes have taken place; it’s simply a chance to have a dialogue so we understand each other better.
On issues of trade, the environment, and security cooperation, increasing numbers of scholars and experts (including people on both sides of the political aisle, who have served in China, in Taiwan, and in Washington D.C.) are questioning why we must keep Taiwanese representatives at a distance, solely based on a set of rules drafted by the Carter White House 37 years ago, as part of persuading China to help us oppose the Soviet Union.
Let’s not lump in a friendly phone call to Taiwan with Trump’s very real problems, such as his conflicts of interest, ill treatment of minorities, and pledges to “build the wall.” Rather than jumping to conclusions about whether something is good or bad, right or wrong, depending on what Trump thinks about it, I hope we can look at issue on their own terms.
Whatever Trump’s intentions with the call, the act of supporting a small democratic country is something I think all Americans can get behind. After the repeated scares about Russia they had to endure during the presidential campaign, our NATO allies Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania (populations or 1.3 million, 2 million, and 3 million) might be feeling a little bit better now. The same goes for the people of Taiwan, who have long been concerned about China trying to suppress them with political threats and military force.
I don’t think anyone intends to help big countries bully small ones, but by not being up to speed on the issues, the American media has unintentionally parroted the lines commonly used by the authoritarian Chinese regime—it’s quite unfortunate. Hopefully reporters will strive to be more informed next time, instead of punting an entire democratic nation like a political football, just to score anti-Trump points. But it will take folks like you and me getting the facts right and staying engaged, so we can make sure news organizations report more accurately in the future.
I completely stand with you, as we fight for human rights, spur action on climate change, remain vigilant about the Trump administration’s shenanigans, defend our POC/LGBT/working class brothers and sisters, and strive to achieve social justice for all. Let’s do the same for our democratic friends in Taiwan.
In solidarity,
Your fellow American
P.S. I think you’d love Taiwan’s president Tsai Ing-wen. She’s a very smart lady with a great sense of humor (who also loves cats) http://qz.com/596269/taiwans-new-president-is-a-female-academic-who-loves-cats-and-supports-gay-rights
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]
Knowing China, there will be a price to pay for this indiscretion, so you may not be glad after all.
International relations is all about a grand game of reciprocity among the major powers. Don’t do anything that isn’t well thought out. Trump is harming US interests for doing things that don’t accrue benefits.
BTW, the Republican lame duck congress would have passed TPP if Hillary had won and Obama would have signed. The rejection of TPP shows failure of US policy in the Pacific, a retreating of the US, and years of negotiating hard work down the drain. We are weaker and China is stronger.[/quote]
I would have wanted TPP as well. but remember the GOP won congress, so I’m not quite sure where you get the idea that they would have allowed TPP to pass.
Regarding China, appeasement doesn’t work. Remember nationalism is strong and growing, and every step given is just looked at as something that was rightfully theirs to begin with. the KMT appeased China for the last 8 years and Taiwan’s space got smaller still. the strategy of keeping Taiwan in the closet wasn’t working. sometimes you need someone to point out the obvious.
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]I don’t follow Taiwan’s politics. I just read some international papers, but I believe that Taiwan still pretends to represent all of China though there is an independence movement.
I wish Taiwan all the best, but China is 14% of international trade vs 12% for the US.
Too late now to support Taiwan independence, and not worth the tradeoffs and war. Better to engage China.
I honestly don’t think that Trump knows anything about Taiwan.
“Mr Trump, we have the president of the Republic of China on the line”.
Trump to self: “wow, I’m a big dude, they are groveling before me like Mitt Romney.”Trump and his uneducated supporters: “China, Taiwan, same shit. The liberal elitists are splitting hair.”[/quote]
FYI, Taiwan doesn’t pretend to be all of China and Mongolia. The Republic of China moniker is the reason for that age old misnomer.
Liberal elitism is nothing more than appeasement to the strong and powerful.
Taiwan is sovereign and independent, much more so than failed liberal pet projects like South Sudan.
Although you did not answer the root cause for liberal disdain of Taiwan, you do confirm that stereotype.
I’m quite glad Trump is the president after our convo today, thank you.
ocrenterParticipantBrian, you being the leading liberal here on Piggington, just a question I have had for while now:
there seem to be a consistent anti-Taiwan sentiment among most liberals in my readings throughout the years. Maybe this is based on the fact that the right leaning KMT escaped there, where as China represented the proletarian revolutionary class.
However, things are very different now. China is all about capitalism and right winged nationalism, whereas Taiwan is a genuine democracy that is the most progressive in all of Asia. It has every liberals in this country would absolutely die for: Universal health coverage, gun control, upcoming in a couple of weeks legalized gay marriage, and within just a few more years abolishment of the death penalty.
yet there is still zero love for Taiwan by the left.
can you explain this for me?
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]Ha, Trump embracing a young democracy. That’s why he’s kissing Putin’s ass and criticizing NATO while Ukraine is torn apart by Russian backed separatists.
On Taiwan, yeah the phone call was all great PR for Taiwan but there’s nothing in it for us. We need our allies in the Pacific to push back against China’s territorial and maritime claims. For that to happen we need to have their backs.
Trump fucked up by answering the phone call from the president of Taiwan who’s not even his equal in protocol. You know, Trump, the guy who’s all about image and red carpets.[/quote]
she’s the sitting president of a sovereign nation, what do you mean not even his equal.
Taiwan is part of that push back in case you forgot.
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]Is that why Trump killed TPP? Because he doesn’t want to kowtow to China?
Well China is not in TPP. Do you think his ignorant, uneducated supporters know that?Vietnam, the country that would benefit the most from TPP, in now kissing China’s ass because there won’t be preferential trade with the US. Same goes for the Phillipines and Australia. Anyone challenging China on the South China Sea island military buildup and oil drilling? Not much anymore. We turned our backs on our allies and they now need China. China won. The emperor looks well dressed to me.
You enable Trump, you will be responsible for his actions that harm us.[/quote]
Clinton was going to kill TPP too. The pendulum swung way to the side of protectionism this year for anyone to be able to move forward with TPP. Do you really think it would even pass congress? No chance in hell.
Everyone are trying to play both sides, no one is putting all eggs in one basket at this time. You do that and you’ll get fried. Why do you think the KMT did so poorly in Taiwan?
As for the issue at hand, Taiwan will be used for domestic and foreign purposes. Domestically like I said the liberals are coming out of this one looking like they support an authoritarian fascist regime against a model citizen in democracy. Internationally this gives Trump the bargaining chip he needs in trade talks with China.
Taiwan of course know they are being played too. But a small shrimp has to take up the protection the US offers when faced with an eternal threat of forced annexation and gradual suffocation.
ocrenterParticipant[quote=flu]Lol. I laughed.
China sure got its panties all bunched up.
.or maybe that’s Trump’s plan afterall, and he’s smarter than people give him credit for.[/quote]remember China’s nickname in Taiwan: mighty nation with fragile crystalline hearts
ocrenterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]Trump is probably too ignorant to know the Taiwan implications. If the president of Taiwan (or any other country) calls to congratulate, he’d be like “oh, ok. Put him through”.
Taiwan played him. There is no protocol and few gatekeepers to reach a president-elect.[/quote]
that’s the typical liberal portrayal and narrative of Trump that they are pushing. I have come to believe that is definitely not the case.
in this case, I’m sure he was briefed on the topic and decided to “say it like it is” and cry out that the emperor (one china policy) has no cloth.
I have read a lot of articles on this since last night, and it isn’t just China getting all worked up, every single liberal media outlet are all in a huge panic.
Brian, this thing is well played by Trump and it makes liberals look really really bad. afterall, Taiwan is the good guys here and the liberals are looking like a bunch of appeasement happy lackeys ready to kowtow to China at every step of the way.
-
AuthorPosts