You atleast addressed some of the points directly though were economical with the truth on some points.
But some posters are just trolls. Probably Pakistani though plenty of Chinese trolls also abound. Look at the posts of one senior moderator here. He is a complete embarrassment.
Bottomline from Indian viewpoint is that India is now firmly entrenched in the anti china camp.
I see India and China coming to serious blows in the next few years.
Whether China acted for strategic reasons or to salvage the pride of the Chinese leader after the doklam humiliation , Indians now see China as a nuisance to be dealt with. As opposed to previously as a country that could be ignored from a short term security perspective.
India needs to test some tactical nuclear weapons. Its a much cheaper alternative to conventional arms. And shelve the no first use policy. Unnecessarily tying up our hands.
Using nukes in face of conventional attacks is a well established practice in western Europe and in our neighborhood.
I disagree with what you have said (first half) but to each their own. You seem displeased that people aren't agreeing with you. I get that many are also heaping on the insults and exaggerations but you did also initiate many of those.
As for on topic discussion. I doubt India and China will come to blows over this in the next few years. Many reasons for that. Even if India isn't suffering from Modi hopeless handling of covid, there wouldn't be a war in the next few years. India simply doesn't have a chance. You may disagree but we can discuss this with civility. It is a more interesting line of conversation and relatively on topic. If you're interested in discussing this, you can begin that conversation by stating why you think India can fight a border war with China.
As for Doklam, the objective of the Chinese were achieved. I don't think there was a humiliation.
The Chinese talked with Bhutan about building a road through a disputed zone with Bhutan. In exchange for getting the disputed piece, China gave Bhutan another piece which Bhutan wants. India then interjected "on behalf of Bhutan" and stopped the negotiations. China then built the road elsewhere. It wasn't worth the trouble of negotiating with India and Bhutan since India's interjection is there to work against China. Can you not see that though? India interjecting wasn't for its own sake of Bhutan's but just to screw with the plans. It is therefore reasonable for China to view India with suspicion after this whether it was acting under instruction or acting for its own gain (there was none for India).
Since then, China has just built the road around another stretch that isn't disputed. I'm not too familiar with the details but this 2013 drama has long been resolved. I wouldn't consider this a humiliation for anyone and frankly it is strange to read how often Indians want to lap this up as some Indian victory. India has a lot of pull in Bhutan and is legally rightful to interject but the interjection itself makes it a clear suspect with bad intentions for China. Anyway this definitely contributed to greater animosity between the two.
India and Indians will never accept handover of territory under its control. The best that can happen is to accept the areas of actual control and settle it. No exchanges are going to take place.
Which territory currently under Indian control are you talking about? India doesn't control the remaining 20% and the parts between the edge of the 20% and what China claims, there is a tiny insignificant slither and China has offered in the past to demarcate WELL east of this claim (whereas India has never offered compromise on Aksai Chin claim it holds).
So two points I'd like to get into especially with Indian perspective (which is actually nice to have in this regard IF it remains civil) is; 1. do you think India has a chance in escalated conventional war with China and why? and 2. Which Indian territory under Indian control will Indian ever accept handover ... presumably to either Chinese control or to become a buffer zone.