Miscellaneous News

NiuBiDaRen

Brigadier
Registered Member
I find that people nowadays take politics too personally, as if opposing viewpoints are an attempt to invalidate someone’s existence or something.

Ehh if China didn't take its politics too seriously it would still be a poor country. I mean sure if you're Caucasian you can just laugh things off.

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I would be interested in invalidating dem Ukrainian Nazis' viewpoints becos they killing people different from them man. Same with Israel and Gaza this weekend.
 

Overbom

Brigadier
Registered Member
Good, can smell their weakness from a mile away. Can't hide behind "separation of powers" and other such bs
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China holds EU to account for criticism by European MPs​

  • Veteran diplomat says Beijing does not recognise bloc’s separation of powers
  • Series of recent visits to Taiwan by EU lawmakers has sparked diplomatic rebukes
At a reception in Beijing last month, the European Union’s outgoing ambassador was warned by a senior Chinese official that the words and deeds of European lawmakers towards China – including visits to Taiwan – would be viewed as official EU policy.
“China will never deal with two EUs,” Wu Hongbo, a veteran diplomat and special envoy for China on European affairs, said at a leaving party for Nicolas Chapuis on July 8, according to sources familiar with the conversation.
“You are telling us that you have nothing to do with the European Parliament,” he said. “That’s not OK for China. China sees the EU as one, so whatever the separation of powers in the EU – we recognise only one.”
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
China is so fascist. It holds parades to scare its people into submission. It should become a normal country and keep military hardware visible to the public all the time 7/24. To become as normal as the USA it should also use the said hardware to shoot 2 civilians every day.

I blame this on America’s poor basic education system.

These poor stormtroopers obviously got mixed up and thought that since their maths teacher taught them that two negative makes a positive, double freedom must equal repression.
 

BoraTas

Major
Registered Member
Good, can smell their weakness from a mile away. Can't hide behind "separation of powers" and other such bs
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Yes, using lawmakers to hide behind the separation of powers is the new trick of the West. If a country's lawmakers have special interests that require them to act against the official policy, their party can't manage that, or the foreign affairs (which is THE institution that is responsible for foreign relations) can't openly discredit such lawmakers, then it sucks to be that country. None of China's business. China is basically saying discredit such individuals when they do their act or we will assume the gov is complicit.
 

Overbom

Brigadier
Registered Member
When fiction:
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Decoupling is happening, and the past week may raise the political volume on decoupling to unprecedented levels. Any real acceleration, however, may be illusory

meets reality:
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In the first seven months this year, China's exports to the US rose 15.1 percent to 2.25 trillion yuan, while imports rose 2.3 percent on a yearly basis. China's trade surplus with the US widened by 21.7 percent to 1.57 trillion yuan, customs data showed.


In fact the copium FT is right, decoupling is happening but from a different country. China is decoupling the US while the latter further sinks in the black hole of depending on China
 

Helius

Senior Member
Registered Member
China must do something quickly before the end game. No time to waste.
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I find it funny that you would be the one to break the news to us, Peas, as I was literally thinking London of all places had polio making a comeback, and of course New York gets it, too, like two peas in the same pod, on so many levels.
 

Overbom

Brigadier
Registered Member
From NYTimes' Editorial Board
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The U.S. Relationship With China Does Not Need to Be So Tense​

The Biden administration has ditched the xenophobic rhetoric of the Trump White House, but it has not offered its own vision for striking a balance between competition and cooperation. Instead, it has conducted America’s relationship with China largely as a series of exercises in crisis management, imposing sanctions for China’s human rights abuses in Xinjiang and Hong Kong while seeking its cooperation on Covid, climate change and the war in Ukraine.
There are several concrete steps the United States could take that might help improve relations.

First, instead of relying on punitive trade policies rooted in fear of China as an economic rival, the United States needs to focus on competing by investing in technical education, scientific research and industrial development. It is past time for President Biden to make a clean break with the Trump administration’s failed gambit of bullying China into making economic concessions by imposing tariffs on Chinese imports.
The United States also needs to move past the old idea that economic engagement would gradually transform Chinese politics and society. Instead of trying to change China, the United States should focus on building stronger ties with China’s neighbors. Fostering cooperation among nations with disparate interests — and in some cases, their own long histories of conflict — is not an easy task, but recent history teaches that the United States is more effective in advancing and defending its interests when it does not act unilaterally.
When Mr. Biden said bluntly in May that the United States would defend Taiwan against a Chinese attack, aides insisted he didn’t mean to shift American policy.

But the White House should be clear that America’s commitment to recognize only a single Chinese state — the “one China policy” — has always been premised on the mainland’s peaceful conduct toward Taiwan.
Neither of these efforts — strengthening the American economy and building stronger alliances — is meant to isolate China [comment: literally fake news]. To the contrary, they offer a stronger basis for the Biden administration and its successors to engage China on issues where there are real differences but also real possibilities for progress, especially climate change.
Treating China as a hostile power is a counterproductive simplification. The two nations occupy large chunks of the same planet. They do not agree on the meaning of democracy or human rights, but they do share some values, most important the pursuit of prosperity.

The uncomfortable reality is that the United States and China need each other. There is no better illustration than the cargo ships that continued moving between Guangzhou and Long Beach, Calif., during Ms. Pelosi’s visit — and will continue long after her return.
 
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