Originally posted by pchang
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US military will defend Taiwan
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Originally posted by Trillion View PostI don't think China will invade Taiwan. Too disruptive to their economy. They like making money it seems to me.
A regime in Peking that is losing the grip on power might decide it was a good idea to invade Taiwan. Cost doesn't matter when power is at stake.
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Originally posted by Egbert View Post
I seem to recall an Argentinian government that was losing power thought it would be a good idea to invade the Falkland Islands to gain popular support.
A regime in Peking that is losing the grip on power might decide it was a good idea to invade Taiwan. Cost doesn't matter when power is at stake.
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Originally posted by My Wife Hates CIV View PostUS military will defend Taiwan - the White House responded with a 'Yes'. I believe Binden also said 'Yes'. So now the question is - will China double down and show some balls? Or will China simply blink? I guess you could say it's all up to Xi Jinping now. With this said the US should send more weapons to the island - some heavy-duty top of the line equipment.
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Originally posted by BeBro View PostIsn't China occupied these days with lockdowns and economic troubles? I read somewhere their growth may even fall behind the US one this year - no idea if that comes to pass.
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Originally posted by Geronimo View Post
No chance. They'll abandon COVID zero tolerance before that happens and pretend it all went according to official plan. In the meantime they continue to extract economic windfalls from Russia by importing more of everything from them at a steep discount.China calls emergency economic meeting
May 28, 2022 - 2:42PM
China’s cabinet has held an emergency meeting of more than 100,000 officials to discuss measures to stabilise its economy as strict COVID measures take their toll.
High ranking politicians attended the meeting – urging city and provincial officials to intervene to stem unemployment.
China’s economy has suffered across various sectors since a major COVID wave spread in March – prompting strict lockdowns in major cities including the financial hub of Shanghai.
The committee also proposed easing some restrictions – such as allowing trucks to travel from low risk areas.
China’s economy is projected to grow by just 3 per cent this year – down from 8.1 per cent in 2021.
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Originally posted by BeBro View Post
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Originally posted by BeBro View PostAha. So when will they start "letting covid rage", what will the impact on Chinese growth be, and how will they sell it to the public, given that so far zero-covid was - in the regime's view - the best approach?
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