Miscellaneous News

BoraTas

Captain
Registered Member
"China is going up against a country that has destroyed, physically or geopolitically, every one of its great-power rivals over the last century. China may be the most formidable competitor america has ever faced—but america is perhaps the most dangerous enemy the world has ever produced."
Roman Empire, Abbasid Caliphate and Mongols: :rolleyes:
You know these guys used to raze down your cities and sell your people to slavery for treating their envoys badly.
 

voyager1

Captain
Registered Member
Every failed state:
We were so great once, so good, now we are the best.

Mao did a lot of bad stuff, but sometimes you need a somewhat clean break from the past in order to break your shackles and move forward
 

hashtagpls

Senior Member
Registered Member
This is so cringe; up there with the "Asians are Not Virus" shit that boba liberals and white worshipping asians do.

in other news, Czech leaders decided white anglo supremacy is their bag:


I've noticed this with some "lesser whites/caucasians" ie eastern european migrants to the anglosphere, turks etc that they are horrendously racist against a rising China since they feel it threatens their White Privilege which they never really got to enjoy in the USSR/poorer home country.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Good op/ed by Tom Fowdy in response to article in foreign Policy by neocon Dan Blumenthal as usual Hubris in the same vein as G Chang "the coming collapse of China" make an entertaining reading
They have been saying that for decades

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America’s fantasy that China will soon collapse like the Soviet Union did is based on arrogance and ideology, not facts and reason​


Tom Fowdy
Washington’s dream that Beijing is doomed to failure seems as strong as ever, despite events of the last year showing that American triumphalism is misplaced, misguided and potentially moribund.

2020 was a year to forget, but it was also immensely geopolitically significant. The outbreak of Covid-19 was a world-changing event which will profoundly alter the globe. Not least because the political shockwaves it created have brought relations between the United States and China to their lowest ebb in modern times.
In what many describe as a “new cold war,” the Trump administration has used its remaining time in office to escalate confrontation with Beijing and forcefully set a legacy for Joe Biden to follow. In setting out this scenario, some in the United States have framed the situation and its risks in very “short termist” thinking. It assumes China only has a short space of time to achieve its goals before, apparently, it becomes economically and socially depleted.

An article published in Foreign Policy, titled
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and covering the book The China Nightmare: The Grand Ambitions of a Decaying State, by American Enterprise Institute’s Dan Blumenthal, argues that China’s political system is weak and lacking in legitimacy. It then proceeds to argue that it is therefore, apparently, ideologically incapable of generating sustained growth or the innovation required to truly become a superpower and “displace” the US. As a result, the piece argues, Beijing only has a short period of time to “accomplish its goals,” thus making it dangerous.


Not surprisingly, I don’t buy into this argument. If anything, I would describe this kind of attitude, which I term “collapsism” as an ideological expression of overconfidence from some within the United States. It is a view which has become endemic since the end of the Cold War in 1991, which simply assumes China must be destined to fail at some point, while America marches on.

This of course is to be expected from the American Enterprise Institute, which, it goes without saying, is a ridiculously neoconservative and pro-war institution, but it nevertheless represents a broader and more misleading set of assumptions in American politics. The idea, perhaps more famously put by Gordon Chang’s “The coming collapse of China” ( 2001), is simply that the Chinese system is doomed to implode because it doesn’t tick the right ideological boxes. If anything, this view risks America being overconfident.

“Collapsism” better known as the “end of history thesis” is a strand of Cold War thinking which assumes that liberal capitalism is the only way to create a successful and stable country. It holds that all other ideologies are fundamentally flawed and cannot truly replicate the success of the West, even if they represent a geopolitical threat. It is an expression of American triumphalism following the collapse of the Soviet Union, based on the premise that in the end the West became more prosperous than the USSR and had outmatched it on innovation.

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