heybraham said:nd got replaced by a system that was not arguably worse, but was lead by an infinitely incompetent revolutionary (mao zedong). .
It's a country as far as you could give 'country' an operational definition, without the recognition from different countries/international organisations.turtleface said:Taiwan is not a country though, it has just been allowed to govern itself so far.
It has a pretty decent Economics and Commerce Organisation (TECO). :>Not-That-Bright said:It's a country as far as you could give 'country' an operational definition, without the recognition from different countries/international organisations.
Without taking into consideration the one-China policy, there are three de facto governments in China. The Central People's Government, the government in charge of HKSAR, and the government in charge of Macau SAR. Though these are techically temporary (fifty years), they are working well._dhj_ said:It's part of the same country as the mainland. The only question is over who governs that country. Imo one country can have two de facto governments but in the long run it's preferable for only one of them to remain.
yes. SAR is a model of "one country two system" olive branch that the central govt is offering taiwan.poloktim said:Without taking into consideration the one-China policy, there are three de facto governments in China. The Central People's Government, the government in charge of HKSAR, and the government in charge of Macau SAR. Though these are techically temporary (fifty years), they are working well.
China is comming around to Western-Style thinking as they become a nation much more like the USA.That's taking things too far. Yes, I prefer the USA to have an aura of officiality in world order, but attacking China? The likely event is that both with be so significantly reduced that a third country will try to claim the world.
Maybe. The combined populations of India and China will see the world back in the stone age when those countries' economies get going. On the other hand, Americans use 50 times more energy per person than other countries, and twice as much as Australians, so you could argue in favour of bombing them instead.Ktulu-Spiral said:I'm gonna get burnt at the stake for this, but oh well, it's my opinion.
The West seriously needs to put a dent in China's economic growth somehow. Sure the US kinda sucks, but I'd rather have America as the world's preeminent superpower.
Hopefully some freak mutation of birdflu will do the trick, or something. If not, I'm sure we can make up some mythical link between China and Al Queda, then go bombing the shit out of everything looking for weapons of mass destruction that we already know we're not going to find.