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  • #91
    Originally posted by joseph1944

    The difference between you and me is that I actually care about the welfare of the Taiwanese people.
    If you really cared for the Taiwanese people than you would not advocate a policy of independence. Such a policy only leads to war, death and destruction. This is why the American government supports the peaceful re-unification of China.

    If a Taiwanese government foolishly declared independence, the Mainland government would react with force, either blockage of missile bombardment. That would lead to a war that neither side can win.

    If the Americans go to the aid of Taiwan, then the entire world face the risk of war between two powers armed with ICBMs.

    The best solution for Taiwan is reunification along the lines of Hong Kong. A federal system, like the one the Iroquois first developed. But that's another thread.
    Golfing since 67

    Comment


    • #92
      http://www.leksu.com/ If you want to read about Taiwan go here.

      Comment


      • #93
        Originally posted by joseph1944
        From 1500BC to 1600AD not a single person of China lived on the Island.
        Originally posted by joseph1944
        Would you agree that it was the Dutch who move the first Chinese to the Island?
        Originally posted by joseph1944
        Taiwan on the other hand has never been a part of China. The Communist Gov is the first Chinese Gov to claimed Taiwan has part of their country. All former Chinese Gov never claim Taiwan.
        Even disregarding some obvious bias within that site you provided, I cannot find where your statements above are founded. In fact there were statements which suggests very much the contrary and supports what I said before.

        Quote from the FAQ section of the site:

        "...the Hakka people immigrated from south China near Hong Kong. By the year 1000 A.D. there were a large number of Hakka communities in western Taiwan. They engaged in fishing, farming and trading." (my emphasis added)

        "The Fukien Taiwanese who came from China's Fukien Province across the Taiwan Strait began to settle in Taiwan nearly a thousand years ago, but most migrated in the fouteenth through the severteenth centuries."

        Doesn't this refute the first 2 statements I quoted from you? Doesn't it suggest that your two statements are completely false?
        As for the 3rd statement i quoted from you, it's even more obvious from that site that the Qing dynasty did claim and control Taiwan.

        Comment


        • #94
          Here read some for yourself.

          Chapter 1 The Great Voyages
          At the end of the fifteenth century, Christopher Columbus discovered the New World (1492), and a few years later (1498), Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama opened the sea route between Europe and India by way of the Cape of Good Hope. It was the era of the great voyages, and from a European historic viewpoint, a period of "great discoveries".
          Portugal was the first European power to invade Asia. In 1510, they captured Goa of India, destroyed the kingdom of Malacca, and by having control of the Strait of Malacca, the Portuguese expanded their influences towards the southeast and northeast Asia. Moving north in an endeavour to trade with China and Japan, they occupied Macao in 1537.
          In 1544, a Portuguese fleet sailing through the Taiwan Strait on the way to Japan sighted Taiwan and called it Ilha Formosa, meaning "Beautiful Island." This is the origin of Taiwan's other name, Formosa. However, whenever they came across a beautiful island on the sea, Portuguese sailors had the habit of calling it "Ilha Formosa", so there are more than ten islands in Africa, South America and Asia which bear the same name. Nevertheless, Formosa has become the proper name of Taiwan, and is now commonly used among Westerners.

          During the period when Western European powers were moving eastward, the Chinese and Japanese pirates knowned as Wo-k'ou , who had plundered the Chinese southeastern coast, used Taiwan as a base or hideout for geographical reason. When chased by the government forces, these pirates would flee first to Penghu (Pescadores) Islands, and then to Taiwan. Government forces might chase the pirates to Penghu, but would never persue them to Taiwan. In the sixteenth century, the Ming government (being unfamiliar with Taiwan) regarded Taowam as a dreadful, barbaric region spread with pestilences.
          In the middle of the sixteenth century, there were only a small number of Han immigrants and Malayo-Polynesian aborigines who had dwelt on Taiwan for many thousands of years. Although presently these aborigines have become minority, they were once the major inhabitants spread over the entire island. All the aborigines are Malayo-Polynesian, however, they do not belong to same race. Beside the nine tribes of Atayal, Saisiyat, Tsou, Bunun, Rukai, Paiwan, Ami, Puyuma, Yami, there are Ketagalan, Luilang, Kavalan, Taokas, Pazeh Papora, Babuza, Hoanya, and Siraya, who are commonly called the "flatland aborigines".
          These aborigines have their different languages and customs, and constitute unique independent societies. From their different languages, customs and dwellings, one can imagine that they migrated from different places during different periods of time. The flatland aborigines were assimilated by Han settlers through inter-marriage, and are now almost indistinguishable from Han people. Because the aborigines were divided into so many racial groups, they have not been able to establish a united kingdom, and have been overwhelmed by foreign invaders and consequently hve become the minority.
          The Origin of Taiwan
          All the aborigines, with the exception of the "flatland aborigines", were gradually squeezed and forced to move towards the mountains, and eventually became the "mountainers". TheYami tribe that lived on the isolated island of Lanyu are the only aborigines still retaining the lifestyle of an oceanic race. While these "Mountainer" aborigines were called "Takasago" by Japanese during their occupation; the name was changed to "Gao-San-Zu" (mountain tribes) by the KMT regime of the Republic of China after the World War II.
          Be it "Takasago" or "Gao-San-Zu", these names were given by the Japanese and Chinese, and are definitely not what the aborigines call themselves. Fundamentally, it is in contempt of the aborigines seeing them as uncivilized savages. Moreover, all the foreign invaders who ruled Taiwan have under the pretense of "Savage Administrative Policy" segregated the aborigines from the Han immigrants by adopting the "divide and rule" scheme, deliverately creating the impression that the aborigines were "untamed savages".
          In fact, Malayo-Polynesians, who are widespread among Southeast Asian islands today, have become the primary races of the countries such as Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Borneo, etc., and are very proud of their cultures and traditions. On the other hand, the aborigines in Taiwan have, since the era of the great voyages, been continuously oppressed and isolated from the modern civilization, and consequently have not been able to develop and refine their unique traditional cultures. Above all, they have been driven out of the flatlands to remote and mountainous regions.
          "Taioan" did not originate from Han language. The Siraya aborigines who dwelled in the vicinity of Tainan called outsiders and visitors "Taian" or "Tayan", and it had been misheard as "Taioan". Han immigrants and Japanese had applied different Han characters and Kanji, which became the name of the island itself. Between the years 1573 and 1620, Ming government began calling the island "Taiwan", and the Dutch also used "Taioan" in their writings.
          You can see from the origin of the name that, to the aborigines, the outsiders were just some visitors "passing by". The aborigines never realized that the "passers-by" would become masters of the island, and treat them as "uncivilized savages", the objects of "Savage Administrative Policy". In this respect, there is a close resembrance to the fates of the Indians and Indeos in North American continent.

          The Dutch, who fell one step behind the Portuguese and the Spanish in invasions, arrived at Jakarta, Indonesia ("Batavia" as called by the Dutch) in 1596. In 1602, the Dutch formed the first stock company in human history called the "Dutch East India Company". With headquarters in Amsterdam, the Company was chartered for monopolized trade as well as managing newly acquired colonies. After establishing a foothold in Batavia, the Dutch planned immediately to trade with China and Japan, and began searching for a midway base. In 1603, the Dutch fleet sailed toward the Pescadores of Taiwan Straits, and landed on the main island Penghu. This was the first time that Western European power ever set foot on the land of Taiwan.
          During theYuan Dynasty, the Mongol government had a garrison stationed at Penghu Island, but in 1388, the Ming government abolished the garrison station and abandoned the Pescadores. Having heard the arrival of Dutch fleet, the Ming government immediately sent troops to Penghu and expelled the Dutch from the island. After failing to occupy Penghu, the Dutch tried to wrest Macao from the Portuguese, but also failed. In July 1622, the Dutch made another attempt on Penghu Island and finally succeeded in occupying it.
          After landing on P'enghu Island, the Dutch mobilized the residents and fishermen in the harbor to build a fortress in Makung, and a trade base linking Batavia, Makung, China and Japan was established. The Dutch started to use this base to control traffic on the Taiwan Strait and to harass Portuguese vessels travelling to and from Japan. The Ming government, as a countermeasure, issued a decree in September 1623 banning all ships from approaching southeast coast of China.
          In January 1624, Ming forces attacked the Dutch on Penghu Island, and after warring for eight months, the Dutch signed a treaty with the Ming who gave the Dutch posts on Taiwan and other rights in exchange for withdrawing from Pescadores. It was a pleasant surprise to the Dutch, for even if they decided to defend Penghu they were no match against the towering Ming forces. Not only wasTaiwan a much bigger island than Penghu, it was also located in a strategic point of the trade route in East Asia, making it possible to monopolize trade with China and Japan. So, the Dutch immediately signed the peace treaty, and moved their fleet to Taiwan after destroying the fortress and military facilities on Penghu Island.
          The Ming government agreed so easily to let the Dutch take over Taiwan, simply because China had never looked upon this island as its own territory.


          Chapter 2 The Dutch Era

          After retreating from Penghu island, the Dutch fleet sailed towards Taiwan, and on Aug. 26, 1624 landed in southern Taiwan, near the present-day city of Tainan. Through governor of Batavia, a Taiwan governor was appointed by the Dutch East India Company. Different from the heads of the Dutch trading houses, the governor of Taiwan was not only the trading boss, but also the administrator of the colony.
          Immediately after landing on Taiwan, the Dutch started to build Fort Zeelandia at present-day An-ping, which took eight years to complete. In 1625, construction of Fort Providentia (present-day Chih-Kan-Lou) was also started. Both forts were military fortresses, however, Fort Zeelandia was used more for trading, and Fort Providentia was used as living quarters and warehouse.
          Compared with the Ming Dynasty, the Dutch were more conscious of the value of Taiwan: it was not only an ideal trading base, the land was also fertile and abundant in products. From the beginning, the Dutch had shown profound interest in developing Taiwan as a colonial enterprise. During the thirty-eight years of Dutch rule, the total number of Dutch personnel assigned to Taiwan was less than two thousands; half were soldiers. Right from the first day, the Dutch had been prepared for resistance from aborigines and Chinese immigrants as well as attacks by the Portugues, the Spanish and the English. Cannons set up in the fortresses were not just aimed at invaders from the sea, but also at local residents. Surprisingly, the aborigines and the immigrants did not resist the Dutch occupation, but rather helped them build their fortresses. They did not realize that these fortresses were later to be used as means of their own oppression.

          The first problem the Dutch faced upon landing, was how to deal with the problem of aborigines. In those days, although aborigines were not familiar with the concept of "territorial rights", but they were conscious that it was the land where they were born and grew up in. Japanese and Chinese pirates, who invaded Taiwan and used it as a "den", had never claimed Taiwan as their "territory", hence there was no master-slave relationship. Now that the Dutch dominated this land, and aborigines lost the freedom they had enjoyed before. Certainly they would uprise and resist. In order to cope this problem, the Dutch "enlightened" the aborigines with Christian religion, and used force in suppressing the stiff-necks. More than ten years passed before the Dutch finally had full control of the aborigines.
          Soon after the construction of Fort Providentia began, Rev. Judinius was sent to Taiwan from Batavia in 1627, and many other missionaries followed him in the endeavour of preaching to the aborigines. These missionaries not only propagated Christian belief in Taiwan, but also mitigated the resistance of aborigines, and at the same time, provided an opportunity for Taiwan to come in contact with European civilization. In order to preach the gospel, the missionaries romanized the languages of the aborigines to print the Bible, thus leaving various traces of cultural history behind. One example was the "Shin-kang Document", a land contract exchanged between immigrants and the Sirayas who lived in Shin-kang near Tainan. The Shin-kang Document which was written in romanized aboriginal language has become valuable historical material for studying the customs of the past.
          The Dutch East India Company gained great profits from trans-shipping trade in Taiwan: Southeast Asian products such as spices, tin, amber, cotton, opium, etc. were transported from Batavia; silver was imported from Japan; silk, fine chinas, herbal medicines and gold were imported from China; sugar and deer skin were exported exported from Taiwan to Japan; and besides sugar and jerked deer meat, Southeast Asian products were also exported to China. In addition, silk, fine chinas and gold were exported from Taiwan to Amsterdam through Batavia. Ther profits obtained from the multilateral trade were tremendously high.
          Since the Dutch took over Taiwan, the pirates infesting the island had greatly decreased, especially in the areas under Dutch control. However, the vessels on the open sea were often attacked by pirates. In order to ensure safe transportation on the sea, the Dutch concluded an agreement with the powerful pirate chief, Cheng Zhi-long. It is interesting to know that the secret of the Dutch's success in trans-shipping trade was by obtaining the cooperation from Chinese pirates.
          From the fact that deer skins and meats, and sugar were main export products from Taiwan, one can see that Taiwan in the old days was the habitat of deers and sugar canes. The Dutch encouraged aborigines and immigrants to hunt for deer, taxed hunting equipments, and obtained enormous profits from trading deer products. It was reckless plunder. Herds of deer became nearly extinct in Taiwan, mainly because of indiscriminate hunting by the Dutch. From the beginning, the Dutch rulers controlled and exploited Taiwan with the same political and economic systems which was colonialist pattern of seizing and ruling under the mercantilism. Not only heavy taxes were levied on all production and consumption, but head taxes were also collected from newly arrived Chinese immigrants. This only promoted resistance from aborigines and immigrants.

          Dutch East India Company gained exclusive rights to commercial ventures in Taiwan and ruled Taiwan as a colonial enterprise. The Company leased land and agricultural tools to the peasants and introduced oxen to till rice fields. The Dutch dug wells, conducted land surveys, intruduced cash crops such as sugar, and romanized aboriginal languages.
          While the Dutch obtained excessive profits from transshipping merchandise, they also made considerable efforts in agricultural development. All lands were seized and owned by the Dutch monarch (hence the name "King's Field"), and were managed by Dutch West India Company. Lands were then leased to Han pioneer farmers from whom 5 to10% rent or taxes, called "king's field rent contributions," were collected. Incidentally, the land measuring unit of "jia" (9700 square meters), which was used in Dutch era, has been carried over to this date.
          The Company leased agricultural land and tools to peasants and introduced oxen to till rice fields, and at the same time, dug wells, conducted land surveys, and protected farmers from aborigines' attacks. However, the Dutch provided protection and supports to immigrants not out of charity, but simply in order to obtain higher profits for the Company. The Dutch not only improved the breeding of plants, but also introduced new crops such as cabbage, bean, tomato, mango and chilipepper, which became popular produce today. The Dutch opened two breeding farms, raising oxen imported from India, and by replacing human labour, productivity was increased remarkably. As a result of the agricultural developments, production of rice was not only self-sufficient, but also had surplus for export.
          The development of the sugar industry is something worth mentioning. As climate in southern Taiwan was suitable for growing sugar canes, sugar was produced and exported even before the Dutch gained control of Taiwan. However, the Dutch, who realized the profitability, established sugar cane plantations in an endeavour to increase production and promote sugar as the major export industry. Since then and for about three centuries, the sugar industry has continued to hold an important position in Taiwan export.

          The Dutch were not the only western power which wanted Taiwan as a base for trans-shiping trade. The Spanish, who already controlled the Philippines, also intended to expand their power to Taiwan to ensure the security of the Philippines and to prevent the Dutch from monopolizing trade with China and Japan. On May 5, 1626, a Spanish fleet, detoured eastern Taiwan coast in order to avoid clashing with the Dutch, reached the northeast tip of Taiwan and named it the Cape of San Diago. Next day, Spanish forces seized the port of Keelung and established control down the west coast a short distance from Tamsui. Forts San Salvador and San Domingo were built in Keelung and Tamsui respectively. In the following year the Dutch sent a fleet to the north trying to drive the Spanish away, but was defeated. At that time, the Dutch had devoted their efforts in developing southern Taiwan, and was incapable of stopping the Spanish from taking over northern Taiwan.

          Although the Spanish successfully controlled northern Taiwan, neither trade with China and Japan, nor the propagation of Catholicism in Japan went smoothly. Moreover, supplies from Manila was often obstructed by typhoons and more than half of the limited number of personnel succumbed to either by aborigine attack or epidemics such as malaria. The Spanish plan of controlling Taiwan was severely hampered, and in 1638, the Spanish withdrew after destroying Fort San Domingo in Tamsui. What they left in Taiwan was a small defensive system and an advanced base for trade. Seeing the Spanish forces in northern Taiwan weakened, the Dutch fleet moved northward in the summer of 1642, and took Keelung, putting an end to the Spanish control of northern Taiwan. With the withdrawal of the Spanish forces, Dutch control over Taiwan spread from south to the north.
          The period of Spanish rule in Taiwan was short, but they brought new immigrants from China to work with aborigines in pioneering projects, such as mining of sulphor in Peitou. In the effort of propagating Catholicism to residents, the Spanish edited a "Tamsui Dictionary", and together with missionary's medical service in treatment of malaria, teaching of western medical science, etc. had left significant impact in the cultural history of Taiwan, just like the Dutch who propagated Christianity in the south.

          Colonial rule by force undoubtedly would incur resistance from people who are subjected to it. During the Dutch's era, resistance and uprisings frequently happened; in which "Ma-tau Incident"(1635) and "Hsiao-liong Incident" (1636) resulted in massacre of large numbers of aborigines. After these incidents, the Dutch forced aborigines to show their obedience by holding a "ceremony of obedience". A similar ceremony was later utilized by the Japanese as a scheme to deal with Taiwanese residents.
          The Dutch were in need of labour for developing Taiwan, so they imported great numbers of immigrants from China, not only enslaving them, but also taxing them heavily. The hatred and anger towards the Dutch by the immigrants multiplied year after year, and finally developed into an armed uprising headed by Kue Huai-yit. This incident was inevitable because there was a limit to the immigrants' tolerance under the hard-hearted rule of the Dutch.

          Comment


          • #95
            Yes I read it already. Where does it suggest that:

            Originally posted by joseph1944
            From 1500BC to 1600AD not a single person of China lived on the Island.

            Would you agree that it was the Dutch who move the first Chinese to the Island?

            Taiwan on the other hand has never been a part of China. The Communist Gov is the first Chinese Gov to claimed Taiwan has part of their country. All former Chinese Gov never claim Taiwan.
            ??? Whereas I found in the same site the contrary facts?

            Comment


            • #96
              I find it incredible as well as depressing that there are people who don't realize that Mao was one of the 2 biggest murderers in history. Yes, the final word on Mao is not yet in, but it is impossible that history will exonorate him. The record of his atrocities is simply too clear. There are better choices for the game. Someone said someone else's description of some of Mao's actions sounds like Pol Pot. Yes it does:



              Mao's most famous executions were not his most numerous. In the so-called Cultural Revolution, Mao ordered massive purges of the Chinese Communist Party and of educated professionals. After Mao's fall, purge survivors such as Deng Xioaping seized power and ultimately exposed this crime to the world. About one million Party members and intellectuals were killed during Mao's Cultural Revolution - many by execution, others in the camps. Overall, however, Mao's killing actually declined during the Cultural Revolution. During earlier periods, millions of landlords, better-off peasants, dissidents, former Nationalist civil servants, and other "counter-revolutionaries" were executed. Numerical estimates are difficult to make, but probably add up to about 10-15 million.



              Torture, death sentences imposed for non-offences or trivial crimes, a
              contemptibly inadequate justice system, the suppression of religion and
              dissent, political prisoners held in unspeakable conditions in strings of
              labour camps, and the continued programme of murder and cultural destruction
              in Tibet are all substantially documented. However, secrecy makes the precise
              scale of these horrors uncertain; we merely know enough to be sure that we know
              only very little. Tiananmen Square was a rare mistake - cameras and Kate Adie
              are not usually present when the Chinese authorities carry out their duties.


              Such a record makes it clear that despite yesterday's stunt of releasing the
              dissident Wei Jingsheng after a 14-year prison term, the present government is
              implicated in the horrors of the whole priod since Mao Tse-tung's revolution.
              Mao remains the godfather of the Chinese regime and his psychopathic brutality
              towards his own people persists in the minds of the men who now rule China.

              These men, let it never be forgotten, think, among other things, that it is
              reasonable to charge the families of people executed for stealing a bicycle for
              the bullet used; or to employ hooks to yank out the tongues of Tibetan
              dissidents lest they cry out "Long live the Dalai Lama!" just before they are
              publicly executed.

              The full post-war history of China has not yet been written, but it is possible
              that in the combination of the Chinese Communist Party and the People's
              Liberation Army we have, in simple numerical terms, the vilest organisation
              ever created by man. The record of slaughter certainly dwarfs anything achieved
              by the Nazis and may well improve even on Stalin's closing score.

              Comment


              • #97
                It's really ironic that most Mao supporters are Chinese or their descendents who may have suffered under him, while most Mao haters are foreigners who had never suffered under him.

                I'm also questioning some people's assertion that Mao should not be included as the Chinese because he killed MANY. Well, that can be said for any "great" leaders such as Alexander, Caesar, Ghengis Khan, Tamerlane, Catherine of Russia, Oliver Cromwell, Edward III of England, Charles V of Spain, Louis XIV of France, and many many others. Even Vlad the Impaler, who enjoyed his lunch in front of 20,000 cruelly impaled villagers, is a celebrated national hero in Romania. Somehow people forgot to apply the same moral standard to these people while they passionately hated Mao, Stalin, and Hitler.

                El Hidalgo, by your reasoning, the majority of the leaders included in Civ3 should be replaced by someone else.

                Comment


                • #98
                  [QUOTE] Originally posted by Transcend
                  I'm also questioning some people's assertion that Mao should not be included as the Chinese because he killed MANY. Well, that can be said for any "great" leaders such as Alexander, Caesar, Ghengis Khan, Tamerlane, Catherine of Russia, Oliver Cromwell, Edward III of England, Charles V of Spain, Louis XIV of France, and many many others. Even Vlad the Impaler, who enjoyed his lunch in front of 20,000 cruelly impaled villagers, is a celebrated national hero in Romania. Somehow people forgot to apply the same moral standard to these people while they passionately hated Mao, Stalin, and Hitler. [QUOTE]


                  You are right, but do you think people in the 20th century are getting nervous and scared because they see the face of Julius Caesar?
                  There are still Mao-, Stalin-, and Hitler-victims walking around on this planet. And even supporters of these terrible governments (like neonazis) still worship these dictators. Changing the German leader into Hitler, makes a very long queue of civ-3-wanting racist skinheads in the recordshop where I'll buy my civ 3 game.

                  Comment


                  • #99
                    Originally posted by Tingkai


                    If you really cared for the Taiwanese people than you would not advocate a policy of independence. Such a policy only leads to war, death and destruction. This is why the American government supports the peaceful re-unification of China.

                    If a Taiwanese government foolishly declared independence, the Mainland government would react with force, either blockage of missile bombardment. That would lead to a war that neither side can win.
                    1950 North Korea wanted to conquer South Korea, it lead to war.
                    1960 North Vietnam wanted to conquer South Vietnam, it lead to war. And they did after the US left South Vietnam, and they kill thousand.
                    1776 the Colonies (US) wanted to be free from England, it lead to war.
                    400 to 500 AD. England, France, Spain, South Germany wanted to free of Rome, it lead to war.
                    ??? France wanted to free of England, it lead to war.
                    East Timor no longer wants to part of Indonesia, there is war.
                    China invaded Tibet, kill thousand.
                    Iraq wanted Kuwait, it lead to war.
                    Israel wanted to be free, it lead to war.
                    China want Taiwan, it can lead to war. If you want to be free, you have to fight for it. You are right thousand will be kill, either fighting for freedom or after the Communists take over and punish them. Either way they will died.
                    When George W. Bush was running for Pres. I wrote and ask him to help Taiwan. I'm free and I want them to remain free.
                    Tingkai, sometime you must fight, and sometime you can walk away. I don't believe Taiwan can walk away without a fight if they want to be free and remain free.
                    Scotland wanted to be free of England and to this day England has never conquer Scotland.

                    Comment


                    • Joseph1944, explain this: why is Taiwan not free after an unification with China? Didn't the Confederate States of America want freedom back then? And what about Native Americans, the ones you killed and their land you stole? Why can US squash rebellions and conquer new lands while China can not? It seems that your are nothing more but a hypocrite, hiding the US national interests(money and power) behind the propaganda of human rights and freedom, and applying moral double standards for the US and rest of the world.

                      Comment


                      • Hell, in international politics power and national interest are everything, morality is nothing, and double standards are applied by everyone, you just can't say that anymore nowadays. It's perfectly clear why the Chinese want Taiwan back and almost everyone else doesn't - their country is big enough already - and the fact that nationalism has become a major if not the main prop of the "communist" regime is highly important as well. And having read this thread I unfortunately consider it a bit more likely that the US and China will come to blows at some point, two countries which each consider themselves to be the centre of the world must find it difficult to coexist. The whole situation of a rising nation being anxiously watched by its neighbours while it itself believes that it is being denied its rightful place by the established powers fatally reminds me of Europe pre-1914. Why don't you guys just play Civ against each other and vent your respective grudges there?
                        Roma caput mundi

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by joseph1944

                          You are right thousand will be kill, either fighting for freedom or after the Communists take over and punish them. Either way they will died.
                          When George W. Bush was running for Pres. I wrote and ask him to help Taiwan. I'm free and I want them to remain free.
                          Tingkai, sometime you must fight, and sometime you can walk away. I don't believe Taiwan can walk away without a fight if they want to be free and remain free.
                          Scotland wanted to be free of England and to this day England has never conquer Scotland.
                          You overlook the obvious. Hong Kong has retained its freedom even though it is now part of China. The same can be done for Taiwan. One country, two systems.

                          Contrary to what you wrote, historians would say that the English most certainly did conquer Scotland.

                          The Scots are now gaining more political power through a peaceful process.

                          Canada obtained its independence without having to fight Britain.

                          I agree that fighting for freedom is sometimes necessary. The Vietnamese had no choice but to fight against the French and the Americans to gain their freedom. Millions of people died because of American support for the French, and later, the military dictators in the south.

                          But violence is not always required. There is often a peaceful alternative. For every Mandala, there is a Ghandi.

                          War is the first choice of the foolish, the last choice of the wise.
                          Last edited by Tingkai; August 26, 2001, 22:08.
                          Golfing since 67

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Transcend
                            Joseph1944, explain this: why is Taiwan not free after an unification with China? Didn't the Confederate States of America want freedom back then? And what about Native Americans, the ones you killed and their land you stole? Why can US squash rebellions and conquer new lands while China can not? It seems that your are nothing more but a hypocrite, hiding the US national interests(money and power) behind the propaganda of human rights and freedom, and applying moral double standards for the US and rest of the world.
                            The Confederate wanted State Right to be above the Nation Right and they wanted to keep Slavery. The Union did not want the Nation to be divided. After the war was started, Lincoln decided to free the Slaves. No one alive in America today kill an Indian. One of my Great-Great-Grand Mother was Indians. And you; here you are living in Co. have full advantage of the US and yet you want the people living in Taiwan to live under Communism when maybe they don't have to.

                            Comment


                            • To El hidalgo:

                              In your last message, five of the six paragraphs were copied from another website. I don't think it is necessary to cut and paste large amounts of text when you can just provide a link. All of that text just takes up space.

                              As for the links you provided, the information is rather tainted and hardly objective. The stuff from the free Tibet site is just a rant. The stuff from the econ professor is interesting, although I'm not convinced it is true. The guy sounds like he has an axe to grind. Nonetheless, his stuff is worth thinking about.
                              Golfing since 67

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by joseph1944
                                I don't believe Taiwan can walk away without a fight if they want to be free and remain free.
                                THE MAJORITY OF TAIWAN PEOPLE DON'T WANT INDEPENDENCE. They don't want to be free. And there is no logical reason by historical analysis that they would want to be free either. I have shown that in my last few posts. It seems it is u who wants them to be free without any logical basis out of bias against communist China. I see no reason why, just bcos mainland China is communist, Chinese people who identifies with each other are not entitled to come under one nation.

                                As Tingkai pointed out, Taiwan doesn't even have to come under communism if they don't want to. Even the mainland leaders agreed the terms for unification with Taiwan can be more loose than with Hong Kong.


                                As for Mao, I think there are feasible substitutes, like Sun Wen. whose image is definitely not controversal. People in Hong Kong and Taiwan calls Sun Wen "father of the nation", although obviously this won't be in the mainland.

                                Comment

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